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Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): May 10, 1898
Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): May 10, 1898 Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Champ & Miller Paris, KY 1898 bou1898051001_sn86069873 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Bourbon news (Paris, Ky. : 1895): May 10, 1898 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. -- V - - - - 3K i V v i1 UUK BON 11 PRINTED EVERY TUESDAWAHD FRIDAY NEW Established i - n feb 1381 CHAMP MILLER Editors and Owners EIGHTEENTH YEAR llTUlll1 PARIS BOURBON CO E1Y TUESDAY llIIPll H llllllitWPi nllllMl l fmjl MILLERSBURG News Notes Gathered Mil 10 1898 We are the peoples friends NO 37 if v yf r Sturdy Americanism Is fostered arid nurtured in the homes of our land Ittis our mission ro make the home attractive to put within the reach o all the means of beautifying the dwellings Here are a few hints of some of the special offerings for this veek - In And About The TSurc Chiffoniers China Cases Book Dining Chairs Wall Paper them now in Bourbon County testify to their merits Try one If not satisfactory return it and get your money back For sale by 500 Ada Smith is some improved J Smith Clarke is improving slowly Try Vaudever at Thorntons shop for expert horse shoeing It MrsC M Best went to Louisville Solid Oak with five drawern Maple and Mahogany yesterday on business Also a number of patterns is nicely finished from 500 to 61000 Mr Root Salter of Danville visited lady friends here Sunday Mrs Eliza Corrington i expected to This most essential feature of dining room furniture has never been arrive home to dav from Memphis We have a nice assortment so pleasing in price and design as now Mr W W Hall and R D Adair of form 1350 to 2500 Paris visited friends here Sunday Cases T M Purnel sold 50 papers here Sun ¬ SPECIAL THIS WEEK In Oak or Mahogany finish a combina- ¬ day Leave orders for next Sunday tion desk and book case at 9 Mis J M Brown of Lexington is a Triumnhytn Photographic Art guest of relatives here for several days WMc Offers at 100 8110 A solid Oak Cane Seat Chair this week at 90 The Canbon Photograph will stand Mr Albert Hawes well known here and 125 and at Paris is very ill at his home in the test oqKiuie aud atmospheric influences ffiHade in all sizes and is dur- ¬ Chicago able ThjBlkeness is nl ways preserved Mr A V Waits wife and daughter in winntejugjietail New Patterns Orieianl Colorings Low Prices See our medium line and cau be made of Harrison were guests of friends here from anyjgMpicture v to luc I invite all who XVJl yesterdaj are interested in large pictures to exam- ¬ W Miss Katie Vaucht of M F C spent ine this wMRlerfnl picture before giving from Friday until Monday at her home your orderiffor any copying and enlarging of oldjKictures 1 make your sit ¬ in Versailles tings frtjjben vou desire a large Mr Kirby Denton of Ruddles Mills picture frjmplife nd guarantee satisCarpets Furniture Wall Pape was here Sundiy to see his daughter at faction lETery respectfully Mr Ben Jones L Grinnan Artist Paris Ky been the guest Miss Lida Clarke has 29mar3ll Rogers near ParL-of Mrs Roseberry Qiiequiafr Crsceai Excursions for the past week Ladies of the Baptist Aid Society will Generation f er en ce A 3E Church meet Friday at two oclock p m with ColnmbiajgK C May 4 18 Ylies Katie Eagan SonthgBiblicil Assembly Knox Mrs Thos Shipp of Winchester has ville TenJuue 16 25 been the guest of her sister Mrs Hettie SouthlctraBtndeuts Conference Ashe Brown since Friday ville NvWjqne 17 27 Mr Will Dodson of Paris wis down Finest Splin eervic e in the South Sunday to see his mother who has been Liberal limUson these low rate tickets quite ill for several days Chas Chancelor has bought the Be sure vour tickets readjvia the Queen oute Cresc grocery and bakery owned by Smith of Mx Clarke near the post office YouaEife Insured lc a Day Mr F H Laird of Richmond Va has been the guest of his uncle Mr H Our in asjance is protected oy bank- R Laird for several days able pap the Capital City Bank of Mr H C Jefferson of Newport Columbu There can be no stronger yen you We dare not use came up Friday and is visiting his guarante e without authority if you a bank father Mr Perry Jefferson e them Good health is doubt i Miss Annie Tom Miller of Paris at- ¬ Wrights the bes rawiit e insurance tended the buiial of J M Layson and Cele wWS you guuu ueaim tjgivea visited friends here yesterday the yicp tuaney ana otomacn Mrs fm Miller and Wm Moore tr ati8m Constipation and days treatment and daughter of Cynthiana attended of Layson ht draft on above the funeralofMartin tiffin f0 Mrs ¬ We re- ¬ pair your linen and put neck bands on An Interesting Jaiuble Of News And free Comment Haggard Reed All of thjapikes in Mason are now We use the soap that tackles the iii t free Excessiyelnge of cigarettes killed Mart and not the shirt tf Bourbon Steam Laundry Eckman QMSTabash Ind Tobacconds are boiug torn up by Now is the time raiders inMmlisou county every one Vei s liliflHnas a new telephone ex ¬ should take a change witniabont fifty subscribers spring tonic to The CynjgTana Knights of Pythias strengthen the will decofatffithe graves of their dead on May 3lm They are arranging an system and pre ¬ interrfstirigfl migram and are expecting pare for the extra a large crew demands of Nature Every spring m SCINTILLATIONS DPIOISLIW that L H Landman M Of No 503 W Ninth Street Ohio Dr Paris Cincinnati Ky Will be at the Windsor Hotel TUESDAY MAY 10TH 1898 n 4 BRiWER ¬ ¬ WHY IS NOT Reeerence Every leading physician hauled there is a general house of Paris Kentucky cleaning going on within The impurities that have been accumu ¬ lating for a year must be got- ¬ ten rid of and the system reno- ¬ TO THE F1RHEH5 OF BlUBBOl vated and prepared for the siege COUNTY of summer Unless Nature is as- ¬ sisted in this task the strain on the system is too severe and a As agent of The Page Woven Wire breakdown is the result Some Fence o I am prepared to put up the people neglect to supply this as- ¬ best wire fence on the market It is guaranteed to turn all sistance and as a result they are and to give satisfaction kinds of stock overcome by an enervating de- ¬ I have put up fence this season for pressed feeling their energies re- ¬ the system is thoroughly over- ¬ month returning every second Tuesday in each lax appetite fails and they sre totally disabled for a season Everybody just now needs a tonic and Swifts Specific is logically the best tonic on the market The general health needs building up hence a tonic is needed that is entirely harmless S S S is purely vegetable and is the only blood remedy that is guaranteed to contain no potash mercury or farmer- who have had the Page Fence in use for seven or eight years I am also prepared to put up the bes Chicken Fence on the market If you are needing any fence give jne a call - 0 W MILLER Agent THE BEST PLOW MADE SSSKeBlood Paris Ky Pouy For Sale nearly black 12 hands hands 4 ft in high weiirhc 550 pounds heavy mane and tail is irind and gentlff enough for any child to handle saddles nicelv In appearance he is a model For further information call on or 2 pony 3 ypars old I have for sale an extra nice Shetland color dark brown QmLV O EDWARDSHere is one I -- - V jr T Ms m jfmL79w vertised remedies or have become discouraged at the failure of other medicines to help them and who will ¬ ¬ immsBwm those mw JOIO vrlL Vl 4t M3MiftrM0MmpW P Jr 1KJ1CJ VrTWW uiuiimug jruuiMasnviue xenn ana I - K2M j A1- ASbL HT3t-5-l-ifrr- f succumb to the grim destroyer without knowing of the won derful value of Foleys Honey and Tar for all Throat and Lung troubles ¬ Sold by James Kennedy Druggist 1EXE H IDIR reliable Female PUJL ever offered to Ladies BI especially recommend n a ii Ert I w an H s b GzBKuxyl ed to married Ladies Ask for BS MOCTS PESTETZEO2AI PIIiIiS and take no other 83T- Send for circular Price 100 per box 6 boxes for 500 - nrii JSO812 wnffwfflfl nas - The only safe sure and m Df H M f 0 the guest of Mrs G S Allen Charley Bryan was the only recruit accepted from this place in the Second Kentucky Brigade at Lexington Mrs Wm Gill of Washington is the guest of her sister Mrs Jas Arthur who is much improved in the last week Mr Robert Thompson and wife re- ¬ turned Friday from a visit to Louisville They were accompanied by their niece Miss Jennie Ward The people of Millejsburg are cor-¬ dially invited to call and inspect J T Hintons stock of hors furnishing goods He will save you mon y Hon W O 0en8 now Major of the Second Kentucky Infantry at Lexing- ¬ ton was the guest of his mother Mrs Owens from Saturday till Monday Mr Morrison Miller and Miss Nona Fox of Winchester were the guests of Mr Reynolds Lettnn and Miss Lura Letton near town from Saturday till airtpicureMyonf -Ai75mnnc4UUttDi UX UJglOL - mm mm remedy being made address GEORGE CLAYTON from roots and herbs gathered 5apr lmo Futchison Ky from Natures great storehouse It thoroughly cleanses the blood of DR CALDWELLS alljmpurities tones up the gen- - other harmful mineral ingredient It is Natures yrTemp erat ur e v lfMaheplthepipetia i new life and vigor to arid imparts C Cl REiCO N T IP ATI V p M ftjimwm inii uotedylsrayr by A J of this cityt 7a m 8 9 10 11 S- TheSE mnViRr the temneraturfi Winters v the entire system aft Dangerous Co typhoid fever and other prevalent Kew Training Stables latelv occupied by John T Hedges A splendid track is attached to these stables which have every modern con¬ 44 A - a in am am a m- 53 56 58 B2 summer diseases seldom attack a ¬ secured Doug Thomas I person whose system is thoroughly ing have in the snburbs of ParisTrain Kyt Stables cleansed and toned up with MicSvlHHfl S S S 12 2p 3p mV mi m t 63 74 in the G spring SS et S 7U 72 4p m 7p m 5pm 70 63 and be pre- ¬ pared Sold by all druggists venience I will be glad to greet all my old frionds and patrons at my new quarters W G SWEAKENGEN PAdlS KENTUCKY 22mar lmo h yueen Crescent Kates MOTTS CJIEjVIXCILi CO Cleveland Ohio For Sale By W T Brooks DrujcRlst way kills the weeds lets the air and moisture In makes the crop crow Its a cultivator as well as a hoe does either kind ror work eauallv well If you till your farm or Garden with w TV rlfinetl r fnnla xmn will Vw nnrnriBfrt M rhp ripcrpnsnw In- wnTlr nt w 7 JV rnna T increase in nrout Tnere is a score oi tnese macnines Mr ine f any one of which will do as much asfiveorsixeood men -fand do it better The latest Ideas in modern farming are Dlainlv set forth In the PlAnet Jr Book for 1898 f Mailed free WW W W- best ss xon can ao it Hoe easiest aaickeetwithaiianet Jr No S Ilorse It pulverizes the eartb in a scientific Stir the Eart sara jr KHHBM9V SJP2T XST m -- jr v ar m hfiM i -- BIALLEHJbCO 110 Market Bt Phllada WTTm r ti AiTP sMMmm i j H m Why U 0 YS tout Succeeds Here are a few reasons why H S Stout has succeeded in building up the largest tailoring business in Pans T fi TJ TITTCT julc nnAn7nJ uiic lcniu uncut uvc y i jl jxivj l iiuu cai is clgu TA tlie Only cuumicu Vn Isj day of big profits and small sales was past SiLCOND He cuts the price of tailor made garments at least 40 PERCENT THIRD He kept up the quality of his materials his styles and his workmanship FOURTH He always does as he advertised As a result of this system he has built up a large trade that appre oiates the fact that they save twenty dollars on a single Suit or Over- ¬ coat Many customers at a small profit rather than a few customers at a big profit says H S Stout If you want credit your high price tailor gladly extends it for he makes you pay dearly for it in the end Wny not turn over a new leat wear the best save money by giving H S Stout a trial He makes the Finest Imported Suits for 3000 AND h 3500- - PARIS FURHISHIHCM TAILORING C0 H S STOUT Manager - JOE mUNSOK Gutter TJ4- J Half rates to Lexington May 4th to 7th good to reurn until May 10th from all points in Kentucky These rates account meetings of the Kentucky State Ep worth LeagUH und the Kentucky and West Virginia Grand Council CommerMonday cial Travelers Ask agents for informaJohn Thornton is now running the tion W C RINEARSON black sinith and carriage shop on Genl Passr Agt Ciu0 seventh street assisted by John Van- dever an expert workman Call and give them a trial they solicit your trade It Died On Saturday at Lexington J A Betnis Tobacco Planter good as Martin Layson aged 83 years after a new Will sell or exchange for live protracted illness The deceased is sur-¬ stock Address vived by his wife and three daughters J C MONTGOMERY Mrs Lucian Mann Miss Lannie Layson f2iny 4t and Mrs Conwav Cenierville Ky The funeral was held yesterday at the residence in this city Services were conducted by Revs Britt and Laird The pall bearers were John and Ed Reynolds Frank and James Conway and Robt Mann grand 8ons of the deceased The re ¬ 250 hogs weighing from 50 to 175 mains were interred in the Millersburg pounds Address cemetery C V HIGGINS Or R B HUTCHCBAFT N Excursions Ii 29apr 4t Paius Ky N will sell round hip TheL tickets at excursion rates as follows Annual meeting B- - P O E New Orleans Tickets on sale May 8th 9th limited 15 days from date of sale One fare round trip State Assembly Presbyterian churches 1 U S at New Orleans Tickets on sale that because we sell May 17 18 19 limited to June 4th Steinway Pianos we sell One fare round trip nothing else and they must State Encampment G A R Bowling necessarily pay a high price Green Ky Ticketd on sale May 24 and if they buy of us 25 limited to 28 One fare round trip Louisville races Tickets on sale May 3d to 20th inclusive limited to 31st One and one third fare plus 1 for ad- ¬ mission to races for we have other high Special rate excursion via L N to erade Dianos such as the Columbia S 0 May 2 3 and 4th limited to May 21st one fare round trip Hazel ton Smith Barnes Gabler account of the Qaadrennial General Kurtzman etc superior in touch tone and finish at prices most moder Conference A M E Church We offer intending purchasers To Norfolk Va May 2 to 6 limited ate to 15 days from date of sale with pro- ¬ greater variety and better value dollar West visions for 15 days extension by deposit- ¬ for dollar than any house in the If you can not come ing ticket with agent of terminal line in vyrite for full information Norfolk one fare for the round trip account of Southern Baptist and Au Co ¬ ¬ STYLIS stylish new iiiu ne of ¬ I aave just received a well selected For Sale Cheap Wagons on short class in every respect My repair department is first class as I em- ¬ ploy good workmen In soliciting your patron ¬ age I promise good work and satisfaction up-to-da- te OgS Wanted supply any need I can notice and with in the vehicle line jobs first - HSome J H HAGGARD mswmessm PeopleThink mmmMMMMsMMMrmm mvmwmwfwmt J wjKmTt mfrSSMrl- - MEETS EVERY REQUIREMENT OF A CRITI CAL TYPEWRITER USING PUBLIC IT IS LEADER IN IMPROVEMENTS THE MOST THE w MAAJtUTNCi r AlftUr IUNJJ UJMLX UN niTrw They are Mistaken SANDS OF FICES ALL i HUU- OF-¬ JL j m OVER THE 1 Ask for Oar Mf TO WORLD J CONTINUES TO PROVE A BE itself i4 New Art Catalogue THE JgpjMM mAj -- UilVCUUUIlB F B Carr Agent Ernest UfchsW 4th St I The Simth Premier Typewriter 3 Co v iMMmWi V 1 - 4lf2 Walimt Strtet1 Cinciriiiati Ohio J 121 123 Cincinoitti ivr - - Si i i- - MV flwtsS r J25Illw IMPERFECT IN MimmBKmmmBiiBim ORIGINAL ES2SaI jTfr THE BOUEBON NEWS PAKlS KY TUESDAY MAY 10 1898 -- 35 i TV C OFFICIAL REPORT iv - 5 4t Commodore vr Dewey Sends An L- - Account of the Engage ¬ ment at Manila SHIPS WERE DESTROYED SPANISH One Hundred and Fifty of the Enemy Were Killed and Many More Badly Wounded Our Ships Were Not Injured and Not An American Was Killed The Presi- dent Cables Congratulations Dewey Acting Admiral Washington May 9 Notwithstand- ing1 the fact that everybody for several days past has been in momentary expectation of cable advices from Commodore Dewey the town was thrown into the wildest excitement at break fast time Saturday morning by the issue of extra papers announcing- the arrival of the McCulloch at Hong Kong with dispatches for the government from Commodore Dewey The publi cation of newspaper dispatches telling of terrible mortality among the Spanish and the escape of the American forces men and ships from serious in jury added to the excitement and to the intense satisfaction with which the long expected news was received ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ - ¬ ¬ FLOOD IN ARKANSAS INVASION OF CUBA cheers which fairly shook the build ¬ ing Incalculable Damage to Property and an Preparations for Embarkation f Unite Washington May 9 By direction States Troops Almost Complete Seven Unknown Number of Iives fiost of the president Secretary Long sent Transports at Port Tmpa Situation Growing Worse the following cable dispatch to Commodore Dewey Washington May 7 Little Rock Ark May 7 The Ar-¬ TAMrA Fla May 7 Preparations Dewey Manila The president in the kansas river is on a rampage and has for the embarkation of the United name of the American people thanks left its bank doing incalculable dam ¬ States troops are rapidly being comyou and your officers and men for your age to property and causing the loss of pleted seven of the transports to be splendid achievement and overwhelm- an unknown number of lives The used in carrying the soldiers and their ing victory In recognition he has ap- situation is serious now and is grow ¬ horses and supplies to Cuba are now pointed you acting admiral and will ing worse every hour at Port Tampa They are the Comal recommend a vote of thanks to you by G oclock the gage showed 241 Allegheny Berkshire Florida Whit At Signed Long congress feet at Little Rock a foot above the ney Gussie and Decatur H Washington May 9 Secretary Long danger line and was rising very fast Miller the last named arriving after reading the dispatch from Com- The high water is increasing at Web Friday from Baltimore Nearly all modore Dewey said It was a most ber Falls and the Verdigris and of the ships have been given a full wonderful naval achievement and re- Illinois river are rushing great tor- supply of coal The Florida Berk flects the greatest credit on our officers rents into the Arkansas At Van shire and Allegheny had a large force and men The fire from our ships Buren miles of country are inun of carpenters working- - on them all must have been so effective that the dated farms in some instances being day erecting stalls for the accommodaSpanish were in a manner stunned eight feet under water Several farm tion of the cavalry and artillery horses They could not recover themselves un- ¬ houses have been swept away above and the pa6k mules and will be in til the battle was lost Little Rock and in one instance an en- readiness for loading by Saturday Secretary Alger said after the cab tire family were drowned Below the Rations enough for 7000 men for 30 inet meeting that he hoped to send city the situation is very alarming and days are expected to arrive Saturday 10000 trcops to Manila to sail from many of the big cotton plantations In spite of the intense heat the men San Francisco in a few days have already sustained heavy damage were given long drills Fridaj They Gen Miles says that he can send as The levee opposite Grady in Lincoln are rapidly becoming acclimated and high as 10000 men if so many are needed to Commodore Dewe3r if the transports are ready at that time Troops will be sent as soon as they THE NEW MAJOR GENERALS APPOINTED can be gotten transport BY PRESIDENT MKINLEY Washington May 9 The depart- ¬ ment is almost bewildered by the completeness of Commodore Deweys vie The officials until they got the to official dispatches could not conceive the possibility of our not suffering the rz AN ENGAGEMENT Bad Eruptions My son had eruptions and sores face which continued to grow vrogp in The sores discharged spite of medicines a great deal A friend whose child had been cured of a similar trouble by Hoods Sarsaparilla advised me to try it I began jgiving the boy this medicine and he was soon getting better He kept on taking it until he was entirely cured and he hasr never been bothered with eruptions Mrs Eva Dolbeake Horton 111 since ¬ Santa Clara Water Batteries and the Sores Broke Out and Discharged But Hoods Cured Vicksburg and Cutter Morrill Fight on his The Wily Spaniards Arranged a Trap for Our Vessels and They WalkedInto It Yankee Ingenuity How ¬ ever Got Them Out ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ hurt loss of any men It seemed an impos- ¬ sibility The official report is perfect- ¬ ly clear however Commodore Dewey saying that only a few of his men were ¬ Key West Fla May 9 Only poor marksmanship on the part of the Spanish gunners saved the Vicksburg and the cutter Morrill from destruction off Havana Saturday morning For over half an hour they were under the fire of the guns of the Santa Clara water batteries but both escaped with out material injury although shrap nel shells from eight inch guns exploded all about them and both now show the pitted scars of the Spanish bullets The wily Spaniards had arranged a trap to send a couple of our ships to the bottom They baited it as a man A small schooner would bait a trap was sent out from Havana harbor shortly before daylight Saturday morning to draw some of the Americans into the ambuscade The ruse worked like a charm TheVicksburg and the Morrill in the heat of the chase and in their contempt for Spanish gunnery walked into the trap that had been set for them Had the Spaniards possessed their souls in patience but five minutes longer not even the bad gun practice would have saved our ships and Sun day morning two more of our vessels would lie at the bottom within two lengths of the wreck of the ill ¬ ¬ HOOCI S parilla 1 six for 5 Americas Greatest Medicine Prepared only by C I Hood Co Lowell Mass Dillc are the best v ia ¬ Haac flllb pills aid digestion b after-dinner-IIO- 2c ¬ ¬ some nens undone condition If a mart is ruled by his feelings he is apt to travel in a zigzag course If riches didn t have wings there would be fewer flyers in the stock market If a man could only see himself as others see him he wouldnt say a word about it If a man thinks life isnt worth living hecan ver3T easily find a way to give it up If the saloons were open on election day it micht be possible to poll a full vote If Eve hadnt been forbidden to eat that apple the chances are it wouldnt have hap- ¬ pened Chicago Evening News - Tf manners make the man Ironical lis that explains ¬ ¬ X- - i ft K VICE ADMIRAL MONTEJO The Spanish Commander Who Suffered Defeat at Manila There was an instant rush of news- ¬ paper men to the navy department to secure further information from of¬ ficial sources and perhaps dismayed by the number and impetuosity of the k newspaper contingent the officials of the navigation bureau where cipher r dispatches are transcribed and trans- ¬ lated promptly closed and locked their doors against invasion One of the of ficers of the bureau had been on duty every moment of the 2 i hours for sev Vtr jfjtHJMBBWTOfciTaMJUhlu eral iveeks past waiting to receive ca- sffSRa8iIBRl blegiains of importance Secretary Long at 1030 oclock read the following to newspaper men as Deweys dispatch Manila May 1 The squadron ar- ¬ rived at Manila at daybreak this morn- ¬ ing Immediately engaged the enemy and destroyed the following Spanish vessels Reina Christina Castilla Ul loa Isle de Cuba General Lezo the Duero Correo Velasco Mindanao one - shared her fate The Spaniards had fought to their last gasp and now surrendered They had been annonncing that the Americans would kill every one in Cavite and when we landed a long procession of priests and sisters of mercy met the boat from the Petrel and begged our men not to injure the wounded As a matter of in the hospitals fact the Americans rescued some 300 Spaniards andVsent them ashore All the Spanish vessels are destroyed with 2000 men TheSpanish estimate gives their loss at 1000 killed and wounded In the Reina Maria GhristiHa200men are Deiievea to navexpeenykmea or ¬ helpless condition before they could do his fleet damage He is in possession of the island and is secure but needs more men London May 9 The Hong Kong correspondent of the Daily Mail gives the following details of the battle at Manila There was an act of treachery on the part of a Spanish ship which low- ¬ ered her flag and then fired at a boats crew sent to take possession of her She did not hit the boat but our guns were turned on her and tore her to She went to the bottom with pieces Several vessels close in all on board shore behaved in the same way and Not less remarkable than this was the fact that our vessels escaped in jury Our fleet smashed into the Span ish so quickly and with such impetuosity that he smothered the Spanish fire and had them in a bewildered and ¬ ¬ 0SWIttEEJEr Vtfw-a-SfcWE- V FrrHUGH Lee Friday evening the Vicksburg and the Morrill cruising to the west of J Morro Castle were fired upon by the big guns of the Cojimar batteries Two shots were fired at the Vicksburg and one at the Morrill Both fell short and both vessels without returning the fire steamed out of range It would have been folly to have done otherwise But Saturday morning the Spaniards had better luck The schooner they had sent out before day light ran off to the eastward hugging the shqre with the wind on her star ¬ board quarter About three miles east of the entrance of the harbor she came over on the port tack A light haze fringed the horizon and she was not discovered until three miles off shore when the Mayflower made her out and signalled the Morrill and Vicksburg Capt Smith of the Morrill and Com- ¬ mander Lilly of the Vicksburg imme- ¬ diately slapped on all steam and start- ¬ ¬ starred Maine A new through Sleeping Car line between St Louis and Colorado Springs will be estab- ¬ lished over the Wabash Rock Island Short Line May loth 1898 The time will be the fastest made with through service between these two points by many hours A through Sleeper will leave St Louis on Wabash train No 3 at 920 a m arriving at Colorado Springs the next morning at 1100 with a di rect connection for Denver arriving ut 1130 am This is the fastest regular through service ever established between St Louis and Colorado Returning the Sleeper will leave Colorado Springs at 245 p m and ar¬ rive at St Louis the next evening at 615 Patrons of this line will avoid the only un-¬ pleasant feature heretofore attendant on Col- ¬ orado travel inasmuch as the trip through Missouris fertile fields will now be by day- ¬ light and the unattractive portion of Kansas will be traversed during the night wiJh the mountain scenery to greet the tourists in the morning The fast time of this line will naturally commend the Wabash Route to intending Colorado tourists Particulars will be gladly furnished or ap- ¬ plication C S CRANE G P T A St LouiJS ¬ Fast Time to Colorado 4 VWNtfMrW 5lSYWM QTtf ed in pursuit The schooner instantly put about and ran for Morro Castle before the wind ing to the well conceived Spanish plot lead the two American war ships directly under the guns of the Santa Clara batteries These works are a short mile east of Morro and are a part of the defense of the harbor There are two batteries one at the ¬ On doing so she would accord- ¬ shore HEkjHHiMiHHVHMHHflHHi Tl- - Both the method and results whea Syrirrjof Figs is taken it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys Liver and Bowels cleanses the sys ¬ tem effectually dispels colds head ¬ aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro ¬ duced pleasing to the taste and ac- ¬ ceptable to the stomach prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known Syrup of Figs is for sale in 5f cent bottles by all leading drug ¬ gists Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand wiU pro ¬ cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO SAN FRANCISCO drowned C WLStfWKtA YlK n- - frNraSir London May 9 The Hong Kong correspondent of the Daily Chronicle says Manila is helpless and sur rounded by the insurgents The block- ¬ ¬ kvi dbvembrasu resil 6rieisrHtrinchri sruu s and tne other on the erest of the rocky eminence which juts out into the water of the gulf at the point The upper battery mounts modern 10 inch and 12 inch Krupp guns behind a six foot stone parapet in front of which - thrown up of sand and mortar with nvhich has been orecently maintaining a distance at once safe for his fleet- and deadly to the Span ¬ transport and the water battery at iards Cavite The squadron is aminjured The Times says The destruction and only a few men were slightly of the Spanish fleet was complete as - ade is effective The Americans have occupied Corregidor island and Com-¬ modore Dewey has exercised consum-¬ mate judgment and rare ability in are 20 y jC - J - - sv Wff - - rii rnrr 4 - - Hr complete as any achievement recorded in naval annals Commsdore Dewey showing himself worthy alike of the great traditions of the United States navy and of his kinship with the race that produced Nelson The Standard remarks Commodore Dewey has evidently taken as his model for dispatch writ ¬ ing that laconic British sailor of tions famous memory wTho reported a de- ¬ Shortly before noon Secretary Long cisive naval victorv thus Enerarred left the navy department for the white enemy yesterday Captured ships as house and an official confirmation was per margin made that a second dispatch from Corn more Dewey had been received The FOURTEEN KILLED secretary carried this with him to the white house and pending the conference with the president there was intense eagerness among the The Municipal Buildings at Linares Spain Sacked by a Mob The Soldiers Fire waiting crowd to learn the contents of the second dispatch on the Crowd Senators who saw the president secured brief intimation that Deweys victory London May 9 A special from Mad ¬ was overwhelming and that he had a large number of Spanish prisoners in rid says the municipal buildings at Li ¬ his possession At 1230 Secretary Long came from the presidents pri ¬ nares has been sacked and the crowd vate room carrying the copy of the fired on by soldiers 14 were killed second message from Dewey but in GO wounded order to give equal facilities to the and great crowd of people waiting to gain information he held it until he reached TERRIFIC CANNONADING his private office Then his secretary Mr Finney brought the message to It is Said to Have Been Heard Off Monte the large reception room where a hun- Christi A Battle is Thought to dred or more anxious newspaper cor- ¬ Have Been Fought respondents and curious observers took the dispatch as Mr Finney read Plata San Domingo May 9 Do-¬ it It was as follows minican officials report heavy cannon ¬ Cavite Mav 4 1S9S Long Secretary Navy 1 have tak- ¬ ading off the north of Monte Christi about 50 miles here en possession of the naval station at lieved Jhere thatfrom Adm It is be ¬ Rr Sampsons Cavite Philippine islands and de squadron is engaging the Spanish stroyed its fortifications - Haye de¬ CapeVerde fleet The firing began stroyed fortifications at the bay en ¬ bout 9qqlcickjSunday morning and trance paroling the garrison I con- ¬ was terrific trol the bay completely and can take The American fleet was due to arrive ihe city at any time The squadron in in Porto Rican waters Saturday after excellent health and spirits The noon The Spanish loss not fully known but very at about the Spanish fleet was expected same time heavy 150 killed including the captain Sampson came here with orders to of the Reina Christina I am assisting find the fleet and reduce it He will in protecting the Spanish sick and after destroying the Spanish ships wounded Two hundred and fifty sick begin a strict blockade and if neces and wounded in hospitals within our sary will bombard and capture Puerto¬ Much excitement at Manila Rico iines Will protect foreign residents The Americans Wounded at Manila Dewey Hong Kong May 9 Following are As the last word of the dispatch was uttered several of the onlookers in- - the Americans wounded in the battle eluding Senator Hanna called for of Manila all of the Baltimore Lieut three cheers for Dewey They were F Ws Kellog Ensign U E Irwin given with a will and the usual official Enlisted men Bartlow Budinger Cov t serenity of the navy department for ere urveeie Kecciordilla Vthe moment was broken by abound of grove jNone seriouslyi- ¬ I wounded The only means of tele ¬ graphing is to the American consul at Honjr Kong I shall communicate with Dewey him It is said at the navy department th advices also show that Deweys forces were not sufficient to make a landing but that this in no way inter ¬ fered with the complete control he ex ¬ ercises over the city and its fortifica- ¬ KBMUKWft county has broken and that town is threatened with destruction A boat sent down the river to rescue the people living along the river below Pine Bluff is unable to About 100 peomake the return trip ple were rescued At one place the re cuers learned that a family of four were entirely cut off by the water and were in great danger but they could not be rescued on account of the swift ¬ fcs HWiison current At Newport White river is on a big boom and is rising two inches an hour THE SPANIARDS Reported to Have Beheaded an American Major and Two English Newspaper Men in Cuba Tampa Fla May 7 Word was re- ¬ ceived here Friday that Maj W D Smith who was guiding several news- ¬ paper men to the camp of Gen Gomez had been captured by the Spaniards Col Dorst one of the and executed three American officers recently sent to confer with the insurgents brought Maj Smith and his the news party landed near Cardenas April 25 He was accompanied by Mr Nichols and Mr Hare who represented English papers Nothing so far has been learned of the fate of the newspaper men who were British subjects but it is feared they were killed According to the information brought by Col Dorst which was gained from a Cuban officer the Spanish troops beheaded Smith as soon as they discovered he was an American Spains Many Squadrons London May 7 If Spain possesses as when the time comes for shipment as bronzed and trained a lot of men as ever shouldered guns will break camp and embark Blockading Squadeon Off Havana May 7 There has been a feeling of unrest in the blockading squadron and some natural criticism owing to the failure to receive orders to occupy some port of Cuba The supposed na ture of the order recently received by Rr Adm Sampson has lessened this tension If the advantageous circumstances what present render Sampsons fleet so fit to fight would only continue indefinitely naval officers could possibly find some explanation for the delay but it is urged against this view that every 24 hours spent at sea detracts somewhat from the fighting capacity warships of Then too in a short time the rainy season will commence and military operations will then be conducted at a disadvantage At present there are many places suitable for landing troops under the guns of the fleet when the danger of yellow fever is nil where a naval and military base can be easily established and whence a fair sized army can operate with every chance of success No doubt of ultimate victory is harbored by any naval officer nor does any petty jealousy of the army prompt criticism of the campaign ¬ ¬ up-to-da- of railroad iron This battery is con- ¬ sidered the most formidable of Ha ¬ vanas defenses except Morro castle It is masked and has not been abso- ¬ lutely located by the American warships It is probably due to the fact that the Spaniards did not desire to expose the position that the Vicksburg and Morrill are now afloat The Mor- ¬ rill and Vicksburg were G miles from the schooner when the chase began They steamer at her full speed the Morrill leading until within a mile and a half of the Santa Clara batteries Com ¬ mander Smith of the Vicksburg was ¬ feet of earthwork and a belting the first to realize the danger into which the reckless pursuit had led them He concluded te haul off and sent a shot across the bow of the schooner The Spanish skipper instantly brought his vessel about but while she was still rolling in the trough of the sea with her sails flapping an eight inch shrapnel shell came hurling through the air from the water battery a mile and a half away It passsed over the Morrill between the pilot house and the smoke stack and exploded less than 50 feet on the port quarter The small shot rattled against her sides It was a close call Two more shots followed in quick succession both Shrapnel One burst close under the star board quarter filling the engine room with the smoke of the explosion of the shell and the other like the passed over first and explod ¬ it was time to lOUtSVlHF kv CAL flEW YORK NY OO ed gunners had the range and their time fuses were accurately set The crews of both ships were at their guns Lieut Craig who was in charge of the bow four inch rapid fire gun of the Morrill asked for and obtained permission to return the fire At the first shot the Vicksburg which was in the wake of the Morrill slightly inshore sheered off and passed to windward 1 1 under the Morrills stern ¬ just beyond The Spanish m mm TRADE MARX BAKERS m r t rilll sill ulr m Since April 30 Havana loaded with flour ana wine from Havana says have been pursued against has been captured by the revenue cuthostilities Gomez with the greatest activity and ter Hamilton The brig was towed in- Spanish Brig Taken Hostilities Against Goraea Key West Fla May 9 The Span Madrid May 7 An official dispatch ish brig Francisca from Barcelona to ¬ ¬ ¬ vigor Big Government Order for Pork and Bacon Kansas City Mo May 7 The Ja- ¬ Dold Packing Co received a gov¬ many squadrons as rumor credits her cob order Friday for 2500000 with she would be in a good way Fri- ¬ ernmentof pork sides hams and bacon Twenty fifth street was totally depounds days rumors talk of a squadrdn off to be delivered to the commissary de ¬ stroyed by fire Saturday The loss is California another going to the relief partment of the United States army 5100000 insurance 80000 Forty people were employed in the factory An- ¬ of Manila and a third going to Porto within 30 days other factor will be operated temRico porarily and the works rebuilt The Tragedy in New Orleans Triple Boosevelt Sworn In May 7 While re ¬ fire originated near the engine room Washington May 7 Assistant Sec¬ New Orleans retary of the Navy Roosevelt was sisting arrest in this city Friday a Ne¬ Last Chance for the Dynasty gro desperado named Dennis Burrell ¬ ¬ to this port Saturday morning Soap Plant Burned Detroit Mich May 9 The Detroit Soap Cos plant at Dix avenue and Celebrated for more than a century as a delicious nutri- ¬ tious and flesh forming bev- ¬ erage Has our well known YELLOW LABEL on the front of every package and our trade mark - i - La Belle Chocolatiere on the back NONE OTHER GENUINE 4tr - ¬ v X -- Made- - only -- by and-Sull- -J of United States volunteers toserve alias Brown shot and killed two mem- Orleans police yith the regiment of mounted rifle ¬ hers of the Newfinally killed by force¬ citi men tor De made up mainly of plains and was himself a long and exciting chasv zens after u- menrbiigh rider etc - sworn in Friday as lieutenant colonel I -- 2 - - v t military dictatorship headed by Mar shal Campos is probable as the last aHanceto save the dynasty -- Hendaye France near the Spanish frontier May 9 Madrid advices say a - -- wv DORCHEST1R CSTAaUVMM ¬ w LtU nAss 71 K - i iWVH lpST IWfyTWflT 1 J THE BOURBON NEWS PAEJS EY TUESDAY MAY 10 1898 THE HEART OF THE YEAR We b3v fafSiomefl the heart of tbe year An we ask as our pleasures atxAmd If In all the glad years we have found MPIII IMinM II 3 j There was ever anotlher so dear Was there ever such verdure before Or such fair fragrant lilies as these With whole meadows of daisies to please Or of fruitage so lavish a store And we think how we watched for th6 spring How we hailed the first bloom with de ¬ How we questioned by day and by night What the new year the strange year would bring And her heart she has shown us and oh There are pleasures and treasures of worth And she scatters them over the earth Where the feet of her lovers may go And we follow like children oer blest With more gifts than they see in their dreams And we linger by forests and streams And drink of the fountain of rest Oh year that is bonny and sweet For thy blessings so lavish we fain Would thank tihee agafinnand again And pour out our love at thy feet Emma A Lente in Good Housekeeping they clung to the shelter of their The name of Capt Flint though it was strange to me was well enough known to some there and carried a great weight of terror Some of the men who had been to field work on the far side of the Admiral Ben houses ¬ light ROBERT LOUtS STEVEfisbn f I PART CHAPTER Continued The poor captain raised his eyes and ai one look the rum went out of him and left him staring sober The expression of his face was not so much of terror as of mortal sickness He made a III ¬ ¬ movement to rise but I do not believe he had enough force left in his body Now Bill sit where you are said the beggar If I cant see I can hear a linger stirring Business is business Hold out your left hand Boy take his left hand by the wrist and bring it near my right We both obeyed him to the letter and I saw him pass something from the hollow of the hand that held his stick into the palm of the captains which closed upon it instantly And now thats done said the blind man and at the words he suddenly left hold of me and with incredible accuracy and nimbleness skipped out of the parlor and into the road where as 1 stood motionless I could hear his into the dis- ¬ stick go tap-tap-tapping tance or thecaptainseemed to gather our senses but at length and about the same mo- ¬ ment I released his wrist which I was still holding and he drew in his hand and looked sharply into the palm Six hours he cried Ten oclock do them yet and he sprung to his Well It was some time before either I feet A hand to his throat stood swaying for a momenti and then with a peculiar soundf ell from his whole height face foremtfsJthflQpi o I ran to- him at onceY calling iny mother But haste was all in vain The captain had been struck dead by thundering apoplexy It is a curious thing to understand for I had certainly never liked the man though of late I had begun to pity him but as soon as I saw that he was dead I burst into a flood of tears It was the second death I had known and the sorrow of the first was still fresh in my heart - Even as he did so he reeled put his ¬ CHAPTER IV THE SEA CHEST -- i should have told her long before and we saw ourselves at once in a difficult and dangerous position Some of the mans money if he had any was cer- ¬ tainly due to us but it was not likely that our captains shipmates above all the two specimens seen by me Black Bog and the blind beggar would be inclined to give up their booty in pay ¬ ment of the dead mans debts The captains order to mount at once and ride for Dr Livesey would have left iny mother alone and tinprotected which was not to be thought of Indeed it seemed impossible for either of us to remain much longer in the house the fall of coals in the kitchen grate the very ticking of the clock filled us with alarms The neighborhood to our ears seemed haunted by approaching foot- ¬ steps and what between the dead body of the captain on the parlor floor and the thought of that detestable blind beggar hovering near at hand and 2eady to return there were moments when as the saying goes I jumped in my skin for terror Something must speedily be resolved upon and it oc- ¬ curred to us at last to go forth to ft gether and seek help in the neighbor ing hamlet Iosooner said than done Bare headed as we were we ran out at once in the gathering evening and i the frosty fog The hamlet lay not many hundred yards away though out of view on the other aide o the next cove and what reatly endouraged me it was in an opposite direction frpm that whence the blind man had made his appear ance and whither he had presumablj eturned We were not many minutes n the road though we sometimes topped to lay hold of each other and fcearken But there was no unusual ound nothing but the low wash of he ripple and the croaking of the rows in the wood It was already candle light when we reached the hamlet and I shall never forget how much 1 was cheered to see the yellow shine in doors and windows but that as it proved was the host of the help we were likely to gat in that quarter For you would have thought men would have been ashamed of themselves no soul would consent to return with us to the Admiral Ben bow The more we told of our trou ¬ bles the more roanwoman and child I lost no time of course in telling niy mother all that I knew and perhaps sizes r doubloons and louis dors and guineas and pieces of eight and I know not what besides all shaken together at random The guineas too were about the scarcest and tit was with these only that ray mother knew how to make her count liow remembered besides to have seen When we were about half way several strangers on the road and tak ¬ through I suddenly put my hand upon ing them to be smugglers to have bolt- ¬ her arm for I had heard in the silent ed away and one at least had seen frosty air a sound that brought my a little lugger in what we called Kitts heart into my mouth the tap tapping Hole For that matter anjone who of the blind mans stick upon the frozen was a comrade of the captains was road It drew nearer and nearer enough to frighten them to death And while we sat holding our breath Then the short and the long of the matter it struck sharp on the inn door and was that while we could get several then we could hear the handle being who were willing- enough to ride to turned and the bolt rattling as the Dr Liveseys which lay in another di- ¬ wretched being tried to enter and then rection not one would help us to de ¬ there was a long time of silence both¬ within and without At last the tap fend the inn They say cowardice is infectious but ping recommenced and to our inde- ¬ then argument is on the other hand scribable joy and gratitude died slow-¬ a great emboldener and so when each ly away again until it ceased to be had his say my mother made them a heard Mother said I take the whole speech She would not she declared and lets be going for I was sure the lose money that belonged to her father- ¬ ¬ less boy if none of the rest of you bolted door must have seemed sus- ¬ dare she said Jim and I dare Back picious and would bring the whole horwe will go the way we came and small nets nest about our ears though how I had thanks to you big hulking chicken thankful I was that never bolted it none¬ met this tercould tell who had hearted men Well have that chest open if we die for it And Ill thank rible blind man But my mother frightened as she you for that bag Mrs Crossley to bring was would not consent to take a frac- ¬ back our lawful money in more than was due to her and Of course I said I would go with nry tion was obstinately unwilling to be content mother and of course they all cried It was not yet seven she out at our foolhardiness but even then with less a long way she knew her not a man would go along with us All said by she would have them and rights and they would do was to give me a loaded she was still arguing with me when a pistol lest we were attacked and to little low whistle sounded a good way promise to have horses ready saddled off among the hills That was enough in case we were pursued on our re- ¬ and more than enough for both of us turn while one lad was to ride for ¬ Til take what I have she said ward to the doctors in search of armed jumping to her feet assistance And Ill take this to square the My heart was beating fiercely when count said I picking up the oilskin we two set forth in the cold night upon packet this dangerous venture A full moon Next moment we were both grop ¬ was Ibeginning to rise and peered red ing downstairs leaving the candle by 1y through the upper edges of the fog the empty chest and the next we had and this increased our haste for it opened the door and were in full re- ¬ was plain before we came forth again treat We had not started a moment that all would be bright as day and too soon The fog was rapidly dis our departure exposed to the eyes of persing already the moon shone quite any watchers We slipped along the clear on the high ground on either side hedges noiseless and swift nor did we and it was only in the exact bottom of seo or hivy anything to increase our the dell and round the cabin door that terrors till to our Ivige relief the door a thin veil still hung unbroken to con- ¬ o7 the Admiral Benbow had closed be ¬ ceal the first steps of our escape Far hind us way to the hamlet very less than half I slipped the bolt at once and we little bejond the bottom of the hill we stood and panted for a moment in the must come forth into the moonlight dark alone in the house with the dead Nor was this all for the sound of sev- ¬ captains body Then mj- - mother got a eral footsteps running came already candle in the bar and holding each to our ears and as we looked back in others hands we advanced into the their direction a light tossing to and parloi He lay as we had left him on fro and still rapidly advancing showed his back with his ejes open and one that one of the newcomers carried a arm stretched out lantern Draw down the blind Jim whisMy dear said my mother sudden ¬ pered my mother they might come ly take the money and run on I am And now said going to faint and watch outside she when I had done so we have to This was certainly the end of both get the key off that and whos to touch of us i thought How I cursed the it I should like to know and she gave a kind of sob as she said the words I went down on mj- knees at once On the floor close to his hand there was a little round of paper blackened on the one sideiXP could tfofdouTH that this was the black spot and taking it up I found written on the other side in a very good clear hand this short iM Vfc You have till ten to night message He had till ten mother said I and Ur just as I said it our old clock began striking This sudden noise startled us shockingly but the news was good for it was only six Ajtr 2bw Jim she said that key ¬ I felt in his pockets one after an other A few small coins a thimble and some thread and big needles a piece of pigtail tobacco bitten away at the end his gully with the crooked heard a sound tliat brought my heart into my handle a pocket compass and a tinder I mouth box were all that they contained and I cowardice of the neighbors how I began to despair ¬ Perhaps its round his neck sug- blamed my poor mother for her honesty and her greed for her past foolhardi- ¬ gested my mother We were Overcoming a strong repugnance I ness and present weakness tore open his shirt at the neck and just at the little bridge by good for- ¬ there sure enough hanging to a bit of tune and I helped her tottering as she tarry string which I cut with his own was to the edge of the bank where gully we found the key At this tri ¬ sure enough she gave a sigh and fell I do not know how umph we were filled with hope and on my shoulder found the strength to do it at all and hurried upstairs without delay to the I little room where he had slept so long I am afraid it was roughly done but I and where his box had stood since the managed to drag her down the bank and a little way under the arch Fur- ¬ day of his arrival It was like any other seamans chest ther I could not move her for the on the outside the initial B burned the bridge was too low to let me do on the top of it with a hot iron and more than crawl below it So there the cornels somewhat smashed and we had to stay my mother almost en- ¬ tirely exposed and both of is within broken as by long rough usage earshot of the inn Give me the key said my mother and though the lock was very stiff she had turned it and thrown back the lid CHAPTEK V - ¬ of broken glass and a man leaned out into the moonlight head and shoul- ¬ ders and addressed the blind bejrgar on the road below him Pew he cried theyve been be- ¬ fore us Some ones turned the chest out alow and aloft Is it there roared Pew The moneys there The blind man cursed the monev Flints fist I mean he cried We dont see it here nohow re- ¬ turned the man Here you below here is it on Bill cried the blind man again At that another fellow probably ne who had remained below to search the captains body came to the door of the inn Bills been overhauled aready said he nothin left Its these people of the inn its that boy I wish I had put his eyes out cried the blind man Pew They were here no time ago they had the door bolted when I tried it Scatter lads and find em Sure enough they left their glim here said the fellow from the window Scatter and find em Rout the house out reiterated Pew striking with hisi stick upon the road Then there followed a great to do through all our old inn heavy feet pounding to and fro furniture all thrown over doors kicked in until the very rocks reechoed and the men came out again one after another on the road and declared that we were no where to be- found And just then the same whistle that had alarmed my mother and myself over the dead cap- ¬ tains money was once more clearly audible through the night but this time twice repeated I had thought it to be the blind mans trumpet so to speak summoning his crew to the as- ¬ sault but I now found that it was a signal from the hill side toward the hamlet and from its effect upon the buccaneers a signal to warn them of - Szc3i ifca eome of you shirking lubbers and tlie rest of you aloft and get the chest lie cried I could hear their feet rattling up our old stairs so that the house must have shaken with it Promptly afterward fresh sounds of astonishment arose the window of the captains room was thrown open with a slam and a jingle p The Exceptional Bride Young Mrs Hymen is Whats the trouble the most remarkable bride I ever heard We gave her a surprise party on her of birthday Mrs Violette In what way That ought to have pleased her Mrs Mermet She didnt write home Well it didnt We gave her a beau ¬ from herwedding trip that she had the tiful birthday cake with 40 candles best husband in the world N Y around it Chicago Beeord Truth Agnes wont speak to any of us Mrs Mermet Obtrusive Frieadlinesa Lady in railroad train on windy day place Dear me I cant get this window up Perhaps quite excusable be Gentleman behind I wouid as- ¬ But the chap who eats onions and talks in my face sist you madam but I presume the His language is too strong for me railroad compauy has glued the win ¬ Ij AW Bulletin dows down to prevent the loss of sv many patrons by pneumonia N Y THE PATIENT WAITER Weekly in its Strong language Strong Language I hate yet it might A Presumption J I 1 ir Oral Evidence How true it is muttered Mr Meek ¬ er that actions speak louder than words They strike the ear with mora force And he softly rubbed his right auric ¬ ular organ which his energetic spousu had just boxed Chicago Tribune Yes replied Miss Cayenne it is a characteristifc of human nature to view with awe things that we dont know much about Washington Star the young man who dabbles I have An Explanation a great respect for art said His Objection Mrs Trotter Oh doctor can you persuade my son that football is dan ¬ gerous Doctor Ah madam would you have me gain the enmity of the entire medi- ¬ cal profession Harlem Life ¬ approaching danger You will agree to this Kere Gesellschaft said one Theres Dirk again For him who teaches its a caie Where ignorance is bliss Twice Well have to budge mates The Tree of Knowledge Puck Budge you skulk cried Pew Full many an ill of most malignant mien systems bear The dark recesses of our DiricjKvas- a fool and a coward from the SHE KNOWS HIM But till some patent nostrum ad is seen first ybu wouldnt mind him They We live in blissful ignorance that theyre must be close by thej cant be far you there JjuA N Y Evening Journal have your hands on it Scatter and look for thejm dogs Oh shiver m- - soul Qualifying IlimMelf hecrickl if I had eyes Bill Isnt it strange Gill never joined a club to be continued 33L ii Jill Well I think hes going to join DID NOT MIND THE BURGLARS than u man Physician looking into his anteroom He What Why a woman is afraid where a number of patients are wait ¬ ing Who has been waiting the long of a mouse She Yes and a man is afraid of that est Tailor who has called to present his same woman X Y Evening Journal bill I have doctor I delivered the A Proverb Verified clothes to you three years ago Un When maidens dont know how to bike She ¬ A woman is braver Proof one now What makes you think so im srfms VjX - VC -- anJII Al Why tlie Optimistic 31i s Blank Was kers Statesman Glatl of Their Visit Mr flanks wife is so painfully clean Sweet and Innocent thai Miss Passay I was so embarrassed geLhas a gait like a kangaroo last night Mr Hunkley asked point tfiSs2retting down to clean his blank why I had never married 4isBiiuddy and taking long Miss Cuttyng I wonder he Uincxtracksf w V - came HoTdbtKat nade neverlseenSu n anfarose early one daj in flip flnrTma9 Plunorrn Tin lv STcriVt IlsW the Chicago Times-Her- Glad of t2ie Change Hrfo vcred that burglars had Who gives this bride away asked paid uuse a visit uuiiiij liiu uijiii ihTmrried back to apprise Mrs the minister I do willingly replied her father b - 6f their loss innocently with an approving smile at Theyve taken all the silver in the the groom Philadelphia North Amerhouse he gasped out of breath ican Well they wont get much for it theres that old comfort anyhow she A Balancing Feat said coolly problem great propounded by fate The But your sealskin cloak is gone from To the young married couple in town Is how they may keen appearances up the cedar trunk yet keep Im glad of it sealskin is out of AndY Journal expenditures down N date and now 111 get something new WHICH WAS FREQUENT TOO But your diamonds that were hid den in the rag basket they took t Hes been getting married Yon ii V M If ftP w wtF- LML2 IJ J- - fvl A fc A - if II iJSke - - iV - v ¬ stay another fortnight Yes- I wanted to but when I wrote my husband for the additional money he sent it so promptly and without ob ¬ jecting that I think the best thing I can do is to go home Heitere Welt Its Little Joke All wisdonj centers about rae For thered be you cant deny - What Are you going to leave so soon 1 thought 3 ou had decided to No men of letters without me And the alphabet winked its Chicago Tribune I - ¬ them there isnt an- - money in diamonds Im not going to worry Just put it in the hands of the police I dare say the poor burglars were driven to crime for want af bread I always had a good deal of sj mpathy for crimOh well And Xow Theyre Ensngrcil He See tlie ring around thenioon After a moment tf si- ¬ She Yes George can you tell me what lence is the difference between the moon anl -- my finger Brooklyn Life ¬ inals But theyve cleaned the house John you dont mean it And Ive been dreading fall house cleaning all summer I told you there was some good in everybody and Mrs Blank turned over for another nap His Masterpiece Footelight What do you think the best thing I ever did Sue Brette Why that piece where you died in the first act Yonkera Statesman Oh that I might die kissing you he exclaimed Well I expect papa home almost any Chicago minute now she replied Daily Xevs The Only Difference Little Clarence Pa what is the dif feience between firmness and qb An Invitation to Ivccp On rose from the interior but nothing was to be seen on the top except a suit of very good clothes carefullj- - brushed and folded They had never been worn my mother said Under that the mis ¬ cellany began a quadrant a tin cani kin several sticks of tobacco two brace of very handsome pistols a piece of bar silver an old Spanish watch and some other trinkets of little value and mostly of foreign make a pair of com- ¬ passes mounted with brass and five or six curious West Indian shells It has often set me thinking since that he should have carried about these shells tAvitli him in his wanderincsruiltv hunted life In the meantime we had found noth- ¬ ing of any value but the silver and the trinkets and neither of these were in our way Underneath there was anod boat cloak whitened with sea salt on- many a harbor bar My mother pulled it up with impatience and there lay before us faielast things in the chest a bundle tiedup in oil cloth and look ¬ ing like papers alld a canvas bag that gave forth at a touch the jingle of gold in a twinkling A strong smell of tobacco and tar show those rogues that Im an honest woman said my mother Ill have my dues and not afarthing over Hold Mrs Crossleys bagl And she be ¬ gan to count over the amount of the captains score from the sailors bag into the one that I wasliolding It wasa long difficult- business for the coins were of all countries and -- Ill t moment his voice showed me that I was right Down with the door he cried Ay ay sir answered two or three and a rush was made upon the Ad- ¬ miral Benbow the lantern bearer fol- ¬ lowing and then I could see them pause and hear speeches passed in a lower key as if they were surprised to find the door open But the pause w s brief and the blind man again issued his commands His voice sounded louder and higher as if he were afire with eagerness and rage In in in he shouted and cursed them for their delay Four or five of them obej ed at once two remaining on the road with the formidable beggar There was a pause then a cry of surprise and then a voice shouting from the house O Bills dead Eutv the blind man swore at them again for their dclav -- er than my fear for I could not remain where I was but crept back to the bank again whence sheltering my head behind a bush of broom I might command the road before the door I was scarcely in position ere my en- ¬ emies began to arrive seven or eight of them runninghard their feet beating out of time along the road and the man with the lantern some paces in front Three men ran together hand in hand and I made out even through the jiist that the middle man of this trio was the blind beggar The next THE LAST OF THE BLIND MAN M3 curiosity in a sense was strong- ¬ The Very Ulan Just before a recent dinner given in honor of a colonial magnate a young swell whose chief claim to distinction seemed to be the height of his collar and an eyeglass addressing a stranger said Beastly nuisance isnt it Spoke to that fellah over there took him for a gentleman and found he had a ribbon on his coat some blooming head waiter I suppose Oh no replied the other thats Blank the guest of the evening Dash it all now is it said the astounded swell Look here old fel ¬ low as you know everybody would you mind sitting next me at dinhei and tellingme who everyone is Should like to very much replied the other man but you see I cannot Im the blooming head waiter Answers ¬ stinac How did you first find out that you Mx Callipers Merely a matter of loved me darling sex my son Puck I found myself getting angry every Ally So Scd time pa called you an idiot When he sat down beside her Sloper- The color left her cheeks And oh upon his coat sleeve Loves Labor Lost I pity flowers said the maid With cool confidence of mien For what an awful awful thing It must be to blush unseen N Y World Nt Y Evening Journal It lingered there for weeks NOT EXACTLY SUITED I i VX He Coulilnt Kneel His Yearn Kneel sir kneel cried a lord in Mrs Flint skeptically Hm What waiting to a country mayor who had kind of a job do you want been given an audience by George III Seldum Fedd with surprising can- ¬ for the purpose of reading an address job dat I cant git But the mayor went on reading quite dor Any kind of a calmly Kneel sir kneel again cried mum Puck the I cant said the The Spring Question stopping his reading and turn Off now our overcoats we lay ma3or For loud the robin calls ing to the angry courtier dont you Mr Secondtime Well Ill be hanged But shall the clothes be put away Tit see that I have got a wooden leg When I took her to be my second wifa With gilt or camphor ball3 Bits Brooklyn Life she said she would be kind to her step- N Y Even ¬ son but this is too mueh Unkind In the Days of Long Ago t Elsie Lauras health seems greatly ing Journal Mltss Passleigh has had exceptiona A Great Rellvf social advantages said one young improved Ada Yes she has heard that her doc ¬ With Badger times are no lenger rough She has been presented to the woman With joy on nis way he goes tor is engaged X Y Truth queen Hes succeeded in borrowing money enough To pay every cent he owes Its strangs that never heard of It Va TIresonu- Judge replied theother it Did you think that story of mine was 40h she never mentions it You et top broad Texas Lumber Siiibped t Bombay V so soon rafter iter majestys it occurred A cargo of yellow pine lumber ha It wasnt as broad -asitvaisilohof cdTOcation Boston Globez v iniirnn beeh shipped from Texas to Bombay t W VA Yft l lord-in-waiting How did Fakem the hypnotist get along on his last trip First rate until he tried the impossi- ¬ ble He hypnotized a tramp one day and tried to make him saw wood Brooklyn Ijife Impossible r t -- - - iM f 4 - G JL rsmL 4 KpsssseawHawsESHss feftMJfMaiasaM 1W Mnummwn BVV 4 1 rHE nOTJUflOH N1V3 PARIS The Kentucky Press manes the food pure wholesome and delicious j KYM TUESDAY MAY 10 1898 i ll c Stay Of Watters Party Limited I Jfcoyal Jg51 Sis is DTlf I 1 PJliiSaL i POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO NEW YORK J 4M5k Jyw 1 - I V--- The Louisville Times hasj beeu sued The noted Watters Party will remain 0 damages by- - vvM John in Paris bu a short time and the days for 25 0 if which you can place your orders will Whallon soon be past Thei- studio at the Hotel Gen Fitzhugj Lee and Gen Joe Windsor is a very busy place as they are Wheeler former generals in the Con- ¬ putting the finishing touches on a num ¬ federate service have been mustered in ber of portraits now almost ready for as Major Generals in the United States delivery This opportunity to procure army Is any other evidence that the portraits by celebrated artists bhould South and North are one people nec- not be neerlected Remember their stiy essary in Paris is limited tf enemy who expected Our friends the Call and see the new line of the South to aid Spain in licking the U S are informed that those ungat boys waists 25 50 and 75 ing Sou heruers latzhugh Lee and Joe cents at Price Cos clothiers Wheeler are now generals in the U S No trouble to show goods army commanding thousands of sons of other fighting Southerners and that jen For Sale Two nephew of Jefferson Davis is nets fine stock Apply to Bennett Tarr a grand proud to be the bearer of the Stars and Paris Ky 19apr 4t Stripes for his company ¬ ¬ two-year-o- ld FARMERS FRIENDi AND HAMILTON iteel frame -- Cornutm jyjy T IS Vr STODDARD HAMILTON ¬ ROWS BROWN MALTA New Departure TONGUE AND TONGTJELESS tie Eighteenth Year Established mm order of Cn A srp A Letter From Camp Collier dews 1881 Published every Ihiesaay and Friday by WALTER CHAMP Rditorx and Owners J LER BBUOE o ayah le tn t nr Make all Checks Money Orders Mttjvek tc Bg Camp Collier Lexington Ky May 9th 1898 Company D arrived here Friday in a drenching rain and the boys are now quartered with the Second Regiment at Camp Collier the Tattei sails named in honor of Kentuckys Adjutant General The quarters of the Bourbon boys are as comfortable as any in the camp The members of Company D are in fine spirits and are progressing nicely in drill work and camp duties All of the Bourbon boys are well except private Wallace Wnaley who is in the camp hospital suffering from severe cold Tne bunks in the Tattersalls are heavily bedded with straw and are as comfortable as could oe expected in camp ¬ ¬ faTOCK AND TURF NEWS t l iCiC iicaUV bales and Traucfers Of Stock Crop Turf Notes Jtc doing tf Haggvkd Reeds new laundry is Give us a call Haggard Reed first class work Ba The following are the officers of pany D C D Winn Captain Latest War News - Com- ¬ r t k- iw - It was decided at Washington 37ester I - m - I v i 1 K M --m-a-- HiHHBMHnii mmmmm f 1 1 i- R jV fiA fe -- H ri J- - -- J II Urtt- day to invade Cuba at once with sixty thousands troops The volunteers will be mobilized at Chickainauga and will be sent to back up the regulars in Cuba A telegram frrin Frankfort said that it was probable that the Second regiment which includes Company D of this VVm Sweeney 6th Corporal J no W Spears 7th Corporal city would be ordered to Chickamauga W O Tarr 8th Corporal within forty eight hours The other J B Stivers Musioiau regiments will be sent later The Paris H B Utley Musician company and several other companies T K Marsh Wagoner of the Second regiment have not yet reThe company will be mustered in the ceived their uniforms or guns The DS army Tuesday vcl mteer forces at Chickamauga will be commanded by Gens Lee Wheeler The daily bill of fare is fat meat Wilson and Brooke bakers bread army beans coffee boiled The Oregon arrived ypsterday at cabbage and potatoes The members of Bahai Brazil The Cincinnati which Company D are expecting boxes of was reported sunk is safe at Key West more dainty edibles from relatives Up to four oclock yesterday afternoon this week no news had been received from the Montgomery or the Viscaya Camp Collier was visited Sjnndav br finve- thousand nien are being large crowds of Lexingtonis and perr mobilized at San Francisco to be sent to sons from other cities including about Manila thirty five from Paris Nicholasville Four columns of war news including sent a large delegation in which were Deweys messages are printed on page several ladies who presented the Nicbo two lasville company with a handsome flag The Now Orleans joined the Flying Squadron yesterday off Hampton Roads Lieutenant Vestal U S A has tele- ¬ It is thought that a battle will be graphed to the War Department at fought to day off Porto Kico The Washington for uniforms and field Spanish will have about twenty five pieoes for the troops The equipments ships to Sampsons eight but the latter are expected tne latter part ot this will include the battleships New York werk There will be 3100 volunteers Iowa and Indiana the monitors Puritan to uniform and Terror and several small cruisers 9 Congress thanked Djwey yesterday Much credit is due Mr Rudolph and made him a Rear Admiral Davis for making the arrangements for A detachment of the blockading the farewell parade in Paris in honor of squadron has been ordered to meet and Company D The demonstiation was a protect the Oregon success despite the rain With fair Seventeen Spanish ships are reported weather it would have been splendid tohave arrived at Porto Rico The British Cauiuet says that Spain Among the Bourbon boys who have Will surrender in two months done guard duty are Charleton Alex ¬ China yesterday proclaimed neutral- ¬ ander Ben Spears Ben Bishop Ed ity Doyle Stamps Moore Will Clark John Riots were reported at three points rovu Will Sweeney was Bedford yesterday in Spain The Yankee and Prairie left New and Isaac Alexander York yesterday ualer sealed orders Several of the soldier boys have been The Yale formerly the Paris is th first American war hip to reach the arrested since Friday but none belonged to the Paris company A member of Porto Rican waters She is guarding tne Frankfort company was arrested by the Virgin passage a policeman for lying drunk in the street Another guard was put in the Lace curtains all prices and quali guard house for refusing to quit smok ¬ ties at J T Hintons tf ing and for resisting arrest He had to be threatened with a bullet before he See sweet potatoes gave up Speaks McDekmott ¬ -- R P Dow Jr Is Sergeant C D Ray Quartermaster Sergeant Winsor Letton 2d Sergeant G Alexander 3d Sergeanc Custis Tulbott 4th Sergeant Jas J Hardy 5th Sergeant G T Arnold 1st Corporal Perry D Tucker 2d Corporal Vernon Leer 3d Corporal C D Lucas 4th Corporal E R Mann 5th Corporal L Cook 1st Lieutenant N C Fisher 21 Lieutenaut The Interior Journal says that F Reid refused 1 for his crop of 5000 Dont try to put down that old car¬ pet Buy a new one at J T Hintons bushels of wheat J T Hughes of Muir has sold a pair Use Parib Milling1 Co s Purity of bay carriage geldings to a New York flour for sale by all grocers party for 1000 The U S Crop Report for Kentucky Ask for it Take no other indicates that a very large acreage of tc- Van Hook Whiskey 50 cents per be planted bacco will Spears McDermott quart Ossian Edwards of this city sold The time for Spring house cleaning eight hogsheads of tobacco at Cincin- ¬ has arrived We are prepared to lend nati last week at 1450 to 1025 you our assistance in the shape of laun ¬ Clay Woodfords filly Terrene by dering lace curtains blankets bed Terra Cotta Duchess of Montrose won spreads etc Special care taken to re- ¬ a 300 purse Saturday at Louisyille turn lace curtains in as good condition The Metropolitan Handicap at Mor as when received ns Park was won Saturday by Bowling tf Bourbon Steam Laundry Turney Bros Dr Catlett ran Brook unplaced Spillman of Danville Anderson have bought 10000 bushels of wheat for July delivery at Burgin at eighty cents Tfc Cogar Davis of Danville have bought from Jessamine parties about 22000 bushels for the Southern Mills at ninety seven cents and one dollar -- are standard farm tools and the best of their kind Every one fully Warranted A1 olc3L ot tly lo5T re You m R A iFtis Pretty Bicycles E asilynred irz z i Km I - GOSSIPY PARAGRAPHS Theatrical And Otherwise The Foyer Remarks In v In Old Virginia is the name of new play written by Frank Kennedy u Robt Downing will prsenfhe arnn scene from The Gladiator attudevill Just remember that all your strength must come from your food Did you ever think of that Perhaps your muscles need more strength or your nerves or perhaps your stomach is weak and cannot digest What you eat If you- need more strength then take - PHOENIX BICYCLES are all right if you want something pretty to look at but there is a world of satisfaction in knowing you have a wheel that will stand the racket on all roads under all conditions The Phoenix will do it f theatres W WTTS of Cod Iiiver Oil with Hypo phosphites The oil is the most easily changed of all foods into strength and the hypophos- phites are the best tonics for the nerves SCOTTS fmC 1 irxT I I An exchange asks if a girl shows her Ti patriotism when she wears and blue hose On rairr8pej U fitVr red- - whit DAUGHERTY BROS DEALERS IN m Bicycles Sundries etc ri w T Bicycle Repairing Vulcanizing etc THEOEVtERiGf - The Frank Slaoe SIOH is the easiest lei i pany will give a GrancI and quickest cure for at the ODera house Thu Muiuu weak throats for coughs of every kind This occasion promises ioo musicaand for all cases of de ¬ event of the season arid willrfalV npi bility weak nerves to the standard of MrUlvers previous and loss of flesh concerts In addition to Mr Olver will 50c and 100 all druggists appear Harry Clinton Sawyer the talSCOTT BOWNE Chemists New York ented and clever Chantenr Eccen trique whose appearances in the larg cities always wins for him the highes RAIXllOAJD TIBIE CARD praise Mr Sawyer beins an engage L NRR ment in Louisville uext Mouday for twi ARRIVAL OF TRAINS weeks after which he will leave fo Europe to direct the concert tour of Mr from Cincinnati 1058 a in o38 p m 1015 p m Olver Mile Rosa Gores a highh rom Lexington 439 a in 745 a- - m gifted soprano will be the feature o 333 p m 627 p m the concert MPe Gores comes fron from Richmond 435 a m 740 a m Cincinnati but was formerly in Berlin 328 p m The sale of seats for this concert be From Maysville 742 a m 325 p m gan yesterday morning at Brooks Re DEPARTURE OP TRAINS served seats fifty cents General ad Co Cincinnati 445 a m 755 a m mission twenty five cents 340 p m Co Lexington 750 a m 1105 a m 545 p m 1021 p m To Richmond 1108 a m 543 p m 1025 p m Co Maysville 750 a m 635 p m Every expectant mother has F B Carr Agent a trying ordeal to face If she does not ¬ EMUIi fckfLj - CHEAP MEDIUM AND HIGH PRICED FUR NITURE GETTING READY A Good Memory -- often saves money and also good health If you are troubled with constipation indiges- ¬ tion or any form of stomach trouble remem- ¬ ber to take home a bottle of Dr Caldwells Syrup Pepsin and health wiJl be restored to you Trial sizes lDc lo doses 10c large size 50c and SI 00 of W T Br oks druggist Paris Ijan iin Ky Tea regulates the liver and kidneys cures constipation and sick headache 25c at all druggists Wrights Celery - -- J Kl i il lliSIS - Bf - J4 Some of the soldier boys from the Isgrig are mountains never saw a stret car until Davis Thompson offering surprising bargains in menV they came to Lexington but they can and boys stylish shoes The prices are give many of the city boys pointers on light tf shooting Awarded Highest Honors Worlds Fair JSR R t YtM Tai SSf CREAM BAKING r f E S- - - i J U H P0WDIR MOST PERFECT MADE A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder t om Ammonia Alum or any other adulterant Free 40 YEARS THE STANDARD get ready for there is no telling every time Tables and chairs Beautiful what may happen The best made See them Child birth is full wngnts Celery Tea cures constipa- ¬ Mail To Soldiers of uncertainties if tion sick headaches 25c at druggists An unequaled line The best and cheapest line ever Nature is not given proper assistance First Assistant Postmaster General shown in Paris Heath says that friends and relatives of To Cure ACold In One Day 50cts per pair and upv soldiers in the field in addressing letters Take Laxative Bfomo v Quinine Tab- ¬ Ingrains Tapestries Moquettes to them should mark plainly tne com- ¬ is the best help you can use at this time lets All druggists refund the money Velvets etc in great variety An elegant line pany and regiment to which they be- ¬ It is a liniment and when regularly ap- ¬ if it fails to cure 25c For sale by W long as by doing so the distribution of plied several months before baby comes T Brooks and James Kennedy Paris the mail will b facilitated This ap- ¬ it makes the advent easy and nearly pain- ¬ Ky plies to both the regular troops and the less It relieves and prevents morning Isgrig have in militia volunteers Davis Thompson sickness relaxes the overatrained mus- ¬ ¬ school childrens shoes extra good values Give the baby a ride in one of those cles relieves the distended feeling short¬ for very little moijey Try them ens labor makes recovery rapid and cernice new buggies at J T Hintons tain without any dangerous after effects General Conference 31 E Church South Try our special A coffee six Mothers Friend is good for only one Low Kales Queen Crescent Koute of pounds for 100 purpose viz to relieve motherhood Elegant line of Pictures and Room Mouldings Spears McDermott The General Conference of the M E danger and pain oena me your old iurniture to be repaired per bottle at all Church meets at Baltimore Md May by 1 dollar receipt of price drug stores or sent Your furniture moved by experienced hands mail on 4th to 28th and tickets will be on sale at It will pay the Carlisle people to call Free Books containing valuable Informa Wood Mantels furnished complete any addrMf on J T Hintdn and get liis pric will tion on low ratea from points on this line sell- ¬ upon for women to be sent to application Undertaking in all its branches carpets furniture lace curtains and ing May 2 3 and 5 Ask agents for REGULATOR CO THE BRADFIELD Embalming scientifically attended to anything else in the house furnishing particulars Attests G line ft CARRIAGES EOR HIRE- - Oos Purity flour All grocers it keep it Insist on having Purity TABLES Fancy parlor cheap VERNIS MARTIN new and elegant line just ceived A CHINA CLOSETS re- ¬ straw mattings CARPETS Mothers Friend V REFRIGERATORS WALL PAPERS LACE CURTAINS FANCY ROCKERS x tt will Give me a call on any of the above and I JT rv SAVE YOU MONEY H IN TON - ¬ l v 4 W n THE BOTJKBON NEWr PARIS K THE BOUEBON HEWS Eighteenth Year Established 1881 TUESDAY - MAY 10 1898 Company D Goes Into Camp PERSONAL MENTION New Military Company Despite the continuous rain Friday Oakford Hinton yesterday mailed a listed in a company of State Guar Is to fill the vacancy caused by the eulis -meat of Company D into the regm r army C 0 Hinton C R James Will H Davis Geo Goggin Kirtley Jameson Noah Spears John W Power- - J F Prather R M Mcllvain Dan Morris Rudolph Davis W A Hill Jr Allie Mann C K Thomas Johu Doty R T Bridwell W M Murphy J Wood Grinnan Duncan Taylor Ed Tucker W W Dudley C A McMillan jas R Link John W Lpwry J Clay Stone Fithian Lilleston E H Overby Robt Hunt W W Kenney J R Howe L I Nelson Dennis Dundon Roy Turner G E Browner Bedford Deaver W Grannon David T Doty Robt E Lee Frank Lyford Lilleston L S Ramp o morning a large crowd assembled at the farewell meeting at the court house of Enleied at the Post office at Paris Ky as Company D before it went into camp aecor f iiss mail matter at Lexington Rev F J Cheek and Mr T E Ashbrook made beautiful ad- ¬ dresses and Rev F W Eberhardt in ¬ TELEPHONE NO 124 voked divine protection for the mem bers of the Company SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Payable in Advance The company was escorted to thu S2 00 Sixmouths S100 L Oneyear Ndepot by the Carlisle K of 1 news costs yott cant even get a re ¬ band the Confederate Veterans tnts port FROM A GTJK FRKE OF CHABGE City and County officials and an im ¬ Make all Checks Money Orders Etc mense crowd of citizens assembled at payable to the order of Champ MiMiKR the depot to say farewell and bid Godspeed to the boys The scenes at Buy your refrigerator from court houBe and depot were very impres- ¬ sive aud sad and drew tears to the eyes J T Hinton -- of women and many strong men Co s one ring circus will Cooper The following is a list of the men who exhibit in this city nest Monday went with Company D to Lexingtons J F Brown TrY Dr Adairs Pearl Creme for Jas W Bedford Kenney Clark the teeth Ed Connell blanton Green Dr Louis Landman optician of CinH B Helthstien Ed Hill cinnati is at the Windsor Hotel to day Win Neal Jr Spears Stuart are building an ad ¬ John Pluinmer v J W Stone dition to their warehouse on Third B Utley H street Mike Wiles Gus McCarthy Rev McClure of Brooksville s Harry Morrison preached at the Methodist Church SunVernon Leer day morning Wm O Tarr W T Oliver The Monday Night Literary Club Albert Arkle Thos K March met last night with Miss Chornie Kern I ri Alexander near this city ¬ ¬ -- to Adjutant General Collier COMERS AND GOERS OBSERVED BY petition asking that the following names be en ¬ THE NEWS MAN Notes Hastily Jotted On The streets At The Depots m The Hotel Lobbies And Elsewhere Mr Robt Parks spent Sunday in RECRUITS WANTED wean To inspect the very latest styles in All up-to-d- ate Foot- - I ¬ Lexington Mr F Fuggazzi was in Lexington yesterday Mrs C M Clay Jr was in Cin- cinnati yesterday Mr E T Shipn is here from a trip to Asheville N C Mrs John B K nnedy has been very ill for a week Mrs B M Renick is spending a few days in Lexington Col R G Stoner and wife bae gone to Chicago for a visit Miss Jessie Kriener left Saturday f r a visit to friends in Maysville Mr John B Kennedy visited the military camp at Lexington yesterday Mrs Henry Power arrived home Saturday from a visit to friends in Versailles Mr and Mrs Mike Lavin were among the Parisians in Lexington yesterday Miss Jassie Turney made a short visit to Miss Anna Victor in Cynthiana ¬ ¬ j the new shades and patterns from the best manu- ¬ facturers of the country We want to enlist your attention wheh looking for Shoes that will give long wear solid comfort and up-to-dafe style Davis Thomson Is grig fW Presents For Major Owens For Men and Boys Major W C Owens Regiment K S G We have add d to our business the best assorted stock to be sold with a handsome horse by the citizens of Georgetown Frank Bryan has given at the lowest popular prices of furnifching goods for Men and Boys him a pistol and Judge Askew has given him the finest uniform that he wear ever placed on sale in Paris such as white Dress Shirts Neg- ¬ could purchase The Georgetown com- ¬ ligee Shirts in Percale Madras and Cheviots knit and muslin under¬ pany has been presented with a hand- ¬ some flag by the citizens of that city wear cotton silk and Lisle socks Suspenders Handkerchiefs and - of the Second has been presented N wall sell round trip tickets ta Louisville to morrow at 350 on account of the Louisville races The L The afternoon train from Cincin nati Friday was delayed nearly eight hours by landslides below Falmouth D McClintock G W Stuart and Thos Henry Clay Jr left Sunday for a fishing trip near Oil Springs Clark J County who was arrested for grabbing a pocketbook from a passenger in an omnibus in this city was held over to Circuit Court by Judge Webb Albert Helvey The strawberry snnnr to be given by the Rebekah Lodge at the Odd Fellows Hall on Thursday l ight has been Ipost- poaed till Thursday mghc Mav ltfth Forty Parisians went to Cincinnati Sanday to see the Louisville Cincinnati baseball game About the same number fent to Lexington to visit the military camp 0 The News is requested to ask the members of the Musical Study Club to meet in the lecture room of the First Presbyterian Church this evening at eight oclock be conducted at St Services will Peters Episcopal Church Wednesday llLv 5382 33 mU ton been arranged for the occasion VgHMKaJMitVfifA S3Si5CUi n J TJIoVirtr Rrirfnn nf TiATinP- A special mnsicar program nas gfc ¬ to the professional card of Dr L Q Nelson a popular dentist of Danyille who has located his office on Pleasant street in Attention is directed the office occupied by the late Dr Buck Knoxville which went into the hands of a receiver some months ago were made glad Sunday by the receipt of a ten per cent dividend Rev E G B Mann left yesterday fnr RulHmore 1o attend the General Conference of the Methodist Church Rev F J Cheek will conduct the prayer meeting services in his stead tomorrow night at the Methodist Church and Rev F W Eberhardt will fill Rev Manns palpit Sunday night ern Building and Loan Association The Paris stockholderfa of the South- ¬ at ¬ -- -W Bowles a Colonel in Col James the Confederate service under Gen John Morgan has written to a Paris friend that he is raising a company of cavalry and would like to have men ft He invitea from Bouibon county correspondence Letters should be sent in care of Louisville Trust Building Louisville Ky Jiarn Destroyed 15y Fire -Mr-Horace was the Respectfully Dedicated To The Memory complete for Men and Boys and all new and upto date iii style and Of The Dead William Clark guest of friends in Lexington Saturday prices W F Link Miss Rose McCherry aged twenty and Sunday John W Spears Alex Euoch -- Mr Rodney Withers of Cynthiana three of Ruddles Mills who was sent Come and see usNind we will save you monej- compared with G J Byrd from this city to the Lexington Asylum was the guest of his sister Mrs J W Richard Lewis about ten days ago died Saturday at that prices charged you at clothing and haberdasher houses Davis Sunday J W Wright institution The remains were taken to Catesby Spears Miss May Pepper who has been the her home for burial John M Clay guest of Miss Nannie Clay has returned Cook 9 Leonard Lyttleton B Purnell aed sixty one VV to her home in Frankfort B Bedford brother of Judge W M Purnell of this Frank ODonnell Miss Grace Goodloe of Lexing on J29 Main St Paris Ky city died Friday at his home in Balti- ¬ Wallace Whaley guest at the home of Mr Uhas is a John Pendleton more The deceased was a retired merjawtUwL Mdwn Stephens on Third street Perry Tucker chant being a member of the well W H Ward Frank arrived home known firm of Hurst Purnell Mr Robt Co Wm Sweeney College at wholesale dry goods merchants Saturday from Wabash of Ben D Spears Ind for a visit Crawfordsville Ray Mann He leaves a wife and Baltimore WEKing Mr Elisha Vanarsdall returned yes- several children Judge Purnell left Jace Howard terday to Harrodsburg afrer a visit to Saturday for Baltimore to atteDd the Ellsworth Dow his daughter Mrs C B Mitchell W L Clarke funeral Robert Dow Jr Miss Esther Margolen returned to Maj Henry T Stanton aged sixty Ernest Cooper Cincinnati yesterday to resume her four Kentuckys poet laureatedied Sun ¬ J B Stivers study of the violin at the Conservatory day at Frankfort af a brief illness of Jas Fredoiick oa B Bishn B of Music heart disease Major Stanton was a son J ok Rafferty Mrs Geo Harper and children who o- - Congressman Richard Stanton and Edward Doyle have been visiting relatives in the city served through the Confederacy being J O v ilsou Dress Goods from 5c to SI 00 per Splendid Hosipry for Ladies and Gens under General James J Hardy returned yesterday to their home in Adjjtitant yard Ont special lot at 39c Children at LUc per pair Mor WinorLetton Breckinridge C John Midway worth double Ouas McCarthy proEchols and was Dr F L Lapsley will leave in the gan and Notions of all kinds ver cheap C D Ray Dress linings at half price the rank of Major for John Hutchison morniDg for Maysville where he will moted to asked elsewhere Johu Brown attend the 43d Annual Meeting of the bravery Sinci the war he has devoted Extra wood bleached and un- ¬ J ihn B Bristow New Table Linens from 20c to bleached ctton at 5c jter yard Society histne to literary work His most the Kentucky State Medical Vincent Case poem was the Moneyless Man ff 75c per yard Special sale at 50c The session will continue three days Joe Vermillion 955ral will occur this morniug N C Fisher New York Mills Wheeling 18c Large line of Penangs at 4c per The Courier Journal Sunday dfab 9 E Short Jno ialtieJ Logan relict of Dr yard worth 80c a yard t J lished a photo of the Oinicron Chapter TSSCi Leander Ming iegjftiEasamg TWH itxirvii led Saturday nignr in TsilKOmegacFraterhityqf Eonta jkfc jrDoylef IWWiWHTllW wT spyeighty years Jk ifa geo about College of Dentistry Chas B Dicksor Stamps Moore tiiu iit C D Lucss Ilped who formerly uvea in cms of this city is Junior Grand Master wrjj urLoc n rlsinprhtpr nf the late Jas Mcllvain v 4U uuu uucipitri C Alexander Jr hti and was a noble Grimes Talbott Arnold Mr Alex Baird the clever Pullman rt W her char for womannotable W B Hash conductor is in the city en route to ol kindness her and J S Davis WE HAVE EE0EIVED A SPLENDID ST00K OF Beattyville for a brief visit He will ity Chas D Winn She was related to the Grimes week begin a two months run over heart next Custis Talboct city and Carlisle IMPORTED SUITINGS AiD TROIISERPS T H Nichols N between Cincinnati and families in this the L Funeral services were held at half past Wm Dayton New Orleans Dan P Sullivan ten yesterday morning at the Broadway Xlr Chas G Daugherty who has Wm Enochs Christian Church in Lexington by Eld studying medicine at the Bellevue Mark Collis Her remains were brought been Provisions 1or Company D Medical College in New York arrived to this city and interred at three oclock Our house Several persons having announced home Saturday evening highly pleased¬ yesterday afternoon in the local ceme- quality Prices are lower than any We ask in Central Kentucky whea style are considered and you to give us a caUL that they would send provisions to the with his progress at college and his resi- tery The deceased left no children warm- ¬ Bourbon Guards The News is asked to dence in New York He is being Reeds Send your linen to Haggard state that all provisions left at Mr G ly greeted by his many friends tf Miv Ed Nippert and pretty little Steam Laundry for a good finish W Davis store by nine oclock Thursday morning will be properly packed daughters Helen and Phillis of New Raceland Jersey butter for FXTJE MIJDTtOTTA iTTT TATTOT and promptly shipped by Mr Rudolph port aie guests of Mr and Mrs Phil sale by Newton Mitchell Davis who will go to Lexington with Nippert Sr They came Friday on the S E TIPTON Cutter evening train which was delayed about the boxes nine hours on account of a landslide near N will run a one dollar Falmouth Looking out at the rain The L excursion Sunday to Natural Bridge little d I Phillis observed the train passing Paris at 1030 a m dont ee why God makes it wain and Pleasant St opp First Presbyterian Returning train will leave Bridge at aud puts mud on the twack when Church 530 p m Dr Bucks old office people are going to 8e their gwandpas Try Dr Adairs Rose Creme for Just re eive I at Price JJCos a fine 8 to 12 a m 1 to 5 p m OfficeHours the teeth J A Wilson of straw aud linen hats Morin Moore Miss last week OBITUARY Gloves String Ties Bows and Scarfs Collars and Cutis Everything Etta Quieenberry - - ¬ CONDONS LOW PRICES ¬ Keep Condons Crowded Everything in Spring Goods Now on Sale at Special Cut Prices tr ¬ te W - i v Beautiful Pictures giyen away with - - -- I y - FOR SPRING AND SUMMER ¬ ¬ ¬ L a NELSON threF-eac-ol- lne tf Ed F Hutchcraft has accepted a Winns hardware May wheat reached 190 at New position at Cook York yesterday and touched at 175 at store The house vacated by Dr Jas Ken A barn and its contents belonging to Chicago between Duncan the highest prices reached in LOST On Saturday April 30th on nedy on Vine St Avenue Possession Miller of this city was Avenue and Stoner ten years streets of Paris two ladys short given May 1st Apply to destroyed by firo Sunday night on his shoulder wraps one a black cashmere MRS BLANCH ALEXANDER farm near Paris The barn was parSchool NewsA supposed unlihed the other black satin lined tially insured The fire was 29apr 3t tramps with rose colored silk Return to The to be the work of passing white The first examination of tf teachers will be on May 20th and 21st News office and get reward I Wheat Nearing S2 FOR KENT ¬ ¬ John I Moores Life InHurance aVaV9B The News learned yesterday from a very authentic source that John I Moore a former Bourbon citizen who died last week in St Louis had his life insured for 17000 He has two daugh- ¬ ters MrsC B McShaue of Cynthiana and Mrs John Lair of Lair t Bourbons Assessment Messrs John Allison A T Forsyth R P Dow and Perry Hutchcraft the committeo appointed by Judge W M Purnell to appear before the State Board of Equalization to protest against the r ll j G1 i assessment of Bourbon county lands be ing raised eight per cent returned home Saturday The Board in its final vote placed the increase at seven per cent The assessment shows a shortage of three thousand acres ¬ -- j and for colored teachers on May 27th a id 28th The Colored Normal School to be taught by T Augustus Reid will open o i the first Monday of June We heartily thank the friends in toe country and in the town for so liberally contributing to the festival for the bene fit of the Cirsulating Library also the publishers of the town papers for their As the free and full advertisements rain poured in torrents for two days we made very little in spite of our best efforts but we are not discouraged We hope for donations of books and money and will not be satisfied until we can place a box of books in each county school Pictures at Reduced Prices Mr Gibson a first class photographer who is located at the corner of Eighth and Main streets desires to inform the public that he is prepared to make strictly first class pictures at prices as lowVia8 is consistent with good work He wilj develop and print kodakvpig tures promptly in first class style Work done when promised He solicits your patronage 6my4t each month whb will test your eye sight and fit you with glasses and guarantee satisfac- ¬ tion Call in and hare your eyes tested free of Ladies Vesting top Shoes charge Next visit will be Thursday May 26 1898 Co of this city have en- gaged the services of an eminent optician to be attheir store on the first and last Thursday of A J Winters ri L Read J T Hintons display ad tf tf See DiLLjpickle McDermott 18 Spears good The vesting tops are the latest in Spring footwear They are as comfort- ¬ able as an Oxford and are extremely County Superintendent Buy no wall paper until you see J tf T showing is a them Ever niece of mattine J T Hinton pretty value q11 flmir iwm Pa rici TVTillirine f linen and silk handkerchief wit 6 E L Brannon representing Cooper the great ship on it for 25 and Rr on nimnc - - th mHr Thfi show your grocer you want no other will exhibit in Paris Monday May 16th All grocers keep it 50 cents at Price CoV V Remember the Maine buy a Hintons Black and Tan Vici Kid A variety of vesting tops tf All the newest and most fashionable lasts hi Dont use any other but Purity PriceB-r-to- o EUROPE HAS TROUBLES ENOUGH OF HER OWN washing her soiled linen without interfering in our little scrap You will find you have troubles enough of your own too if you take your soiled linen to a poor laundry Be on the safe side and bring it hero where we take special pains to render it beautiful in color and perfect in finish The Bourbon Steam Laundry f iv -- low to speak of - - WVM HINTON JR BRO- - Proprietors Telephons t- No4v Vfc wamw van i r7T T- - -- - vtw mwuninpi in mniwwwi ujaBMHMMiwffwiMBMiiiiiiffiwfi - MBJWptli THE BOUKBON NEWS PAEIS KY TUESDAY MAY 10 1898 THE BOURBON NEWS And she Eighteenth Year Established 1881 Published Every Tuesday and Friday by - 1 S - EiPttB haitora Bia 0wne THE FURROWED FIELD i b- Jvf sv ffi- With stinted stubble stone and tare The sterile field lay bleak and bare So desolate and flowerless The heart grew sad in weariness The bird in fear flew swiftly past The thrsty cattle stood aghast With frenzied eye and heated breath Then turned and fled the scene of death Again I saw the dreary waste Tjo Labors bands made busy haste The plowmans steady sturdy stride The stone and stubble parted wide The plowshare rent the stubborn ground With jarring unrelenting sound Until its quivering heart lay bare To blind night rain and noonday glare Anon the furrows broad and deep Ran straight as paths swift arrows keep And forth the sower came to sow With wisely cautious step and slow His provident Impartial hand Dispensing blessing oer the land And far and near the seed was sown Beauty for ashes bread for stone And then behold a fertile field In golden wealth of fruitful yield The plowmans pathway merciless Arrayed in shining plentousness Whose mellow incense fed the breeze To serve a thousand ministries What once was dead gave life to throngs What once was dumb burst forth in songs Behold In this thy counterpart The furrows grief doth plow the pain Of harrowing torture not in vain Shall pierce thee through with anguish sore And lay thee bare to inmost core Tn this th crucial trial see A plodge of richest harvestry J Zitella Cocke in Congregationalist O O bruised broken bleeding heart t o w 4ittiir i Dan Forbes Predicament o A jeats prosperity lies in the ear of him that hears it Loves Labor Lost GOOD BY You will fall ¬ s r ie VV a victim I have not the slight est doubt to Emmelines charms Yes but will she allow herself to be charmed illiTEhL i 9 Not ifshes wise But here is your train Good by and if you break your lieart the best remedy for such complaints is change of scene you know If 1 hear of you in Africa I shall under stand what has happened The speakers shook hands He found a place in the train and she made her way again to the pony carriage m which she had driven him io the station his farewell words not having been perhaps exactly what they would have been if spoken in the hearing of a less limited audience George was the husband for whom 3ier mourning- had now reached the lavender and white stage Poor George 2i had never liked her cousin But there was no harm in Dan absolutely none The pony took its time through the shaded lanes hedges garlanded ¬ ¬ - ¬ to apologize He would have to explain that it was only a joke Only a joke that was a pleasant explanation to have to make Well he had been in some nasty predicaments before in his life but this outvied them all As soon as the women had left the room the door of which he had held open for them with the most hang dog air that human being ever wore Capt Forbes sought refuge in the shrubbery and ransacked his brains to determine upon the best course of conduct to be pursued under the present terrific con- ¬ dition of affairs He had best he speed- ¬ ily concluded go and have it out with the old woman and get it over There was nothing really to be gained by waiting It was indeed past praying for Thereupon he retraced his steps and met Mrs Winterton as luck would have it immediately in the hall May I speak to you for a moment Mrs Winterton he asked Mrs Winterton acceded to the re quest She was always stiff and formal and whether there was much stiffness and formality added to what was usual the unhappy man was too much embarrassed to rightly determine I am exceedingl sorry that i should have happened he began as soon as he found himself in the drawing room Had I had the faintest idea that my cousin would take it that way and that this would have occurred I dont know what I wouldnt sooner have done than write that letter Mrs Winterton made no reply Her pale cold blue eyes were fixed upon Capt Forbes agitated She gives no hell he countenance and certainly I dont deserve thought it Ass as 1 was Delirious ass as Mac gregor would say You see he went my hesitating and stammeriiig on cousin Mrs liraekenbury did not un ¬ derstand that it was a joke or of course she woudnt have written to you treat ing the matter seriously 2o one can more regret than I do that I took Miss Wintertons name in such a waj You must think it quite unpardonable I do not quite understand you Capt Forbes Mrs Winterton replied in her rigid frozen voice I do not quite un derstand to what you are alluding I am alluding to my cousins letter to you that she inclosed in one to me I gave it to you not for an instant sup posing that she had taken seriously what I said about my engagement tc your daughter Capt Forbes an swered with the ¬ ¬ straw She believed such an out tageously impossible thing without the least hesitation or distress It was nothing to her evidently nothing at all Good Heavens what a position what in the world was he to do He scarcely dared look again toward Mrs Winter ton as she read the most unfortunate and ill conceived epistle How furious the woman would be He would have didnt seem to care one Et GLASS FENCE POSTS I TJiougrlit the Time May Not B Pmr Diatant When Such May Be Seen CHANCES FOR MARRIAGE HUMOROUS 1 caused some speculation and is prob ¬ ably an introduction of an important It is an interesting article in trade illustration of the tendency of modern science and inventive genius to discov er new uses for old materials One day it is the conversion of the pith of the corn stalk into a valuable article ol commerce and the next the application of glass to a practical purpose hitherto unthought of We have had the age of iron and brass the golden age and almost too much of silver Who knows but the twentieth century may be the age of glass It has not been very long since the metals or hard woods were regarded as the only fit materials for use where strength and durability were required Now paper as converted into materials for house building furniture railway car wheels boats and utensils of various kinds Glass is used for even more purposes and its increasing cheapness and improved methods of working are likely to bring itinto stall wider use No other material invented by man can be compared with it in the service it has rendered both in common life and in chemistry astronomy and other sciences Pure beyond the pos ¬ ¬ order that a glass firm has received 500 glass fence posts to be of the for usual size and grooved for the reception The order has of wire It is added an- A dispatch from Muncie Ind says ¬ ¬ ¬ f1 l iv ummsssMsm i r W- - others thatflSki IsraHvassttea drover more than once by the I7 rT9 ir1 v recipient It ran after this wise 1 patlelrvfyampjig t - taKSBla8 with wild roses and honeysuckle inhreft j -davs afterwards the nnst hTJ lCTT - i - 1 - - JI -- - Dear Lydia Words spoken in jest as you and the Greeks say come true I am ea 4aged to Miss Winterton Emmeline for so I have a right now to call her made me ihe happiest of men by accepting me this anorning I feel I cannot let a post go with- ¬ out telling you my news When I think of 3iow we made a subject for ridicule f t and merriment of an object to me now so pre- ¬ cious I indeed come to the conclusion that my fate is better than I deserve Yours always affectionately D FORBES P S Emmeline sends herest love and counts upon your presence at the wedding Lydias red and white grew very vivid r l i -- i as she read this communication the first time On the second perusal white predominated on the third her color sud ¬ denly returned and she laughed He is a silly creature she told her self I will give him a good time in re ¬ YOURS CERTAINLY SEEMS AN ILL ¬ TIMED PLEASANTRY Ewr- - I Capt Forbes was at breakfast when Lydias letter was brought to him The Winterton family were ranged round the table and without reading his own document he handed at once to Mrs Winterton the note inclosed and ad dressed to her in his cousins handwrit ¬ ing Then he read what she had writ- ten to hinvnucl his usually lively color turned to a positive gray This was awful A He had given to Mrs Winter ton a letter to say how much pleased Lydia was to have heard from him of his engagement to her daughter What predicament to be in I He v a frightful looked to the head of the table where ittrs winterton a most grim stilt and propriety loving specimen of the Brit ish mother sat behind the teapot He looked across to Emmeline in her prim unattractive oid maidish latter youth JTow should he ever get out of this Of course the letter was all nonsense There hadnt been a word of truth in it How could there have been Iteally Lj din might have known H had cer ¬ tainly taken a longtime to compose the eKusion and to make it seem as rea as possible but to whom would it have occurred even if she had believed such fn fc yponstrous impossibility that she wottdbave gouc and written off on the pur of the the uient to the old woman hf- e- h feeling now uppermost venge He deserves it How could I be in his distracted mind so foolish as to be taken in Emmelinei Mrs Winterton regarded him with a Absurd I Poor old Emmeline with her most withering expression dust cloak and bag of keys Am I to understand from you Capt Lydia sat down to her writing table and looking very much pleased with Forbes she inquired that you have herself all the while wrote as follows been amusing yourself writing to Mrs Brackenbury to inform her as a joke My Dear Dan I do not deny that your npte took me a little by surprise but I am that you were about to become the hus ¬ very very glad three underlines to each band of my daughter very of what you tell me Of course our I know it was abominable of me foolish little jokes meant nothing In fact Capt Forbes said I see perfectly that as a blind people often jbke about those they like best I think Emmeline is most it was wholly unjustifiable and I re admirably calculated to make you happy gret my most atrociously idiotic letter and I send my sincerest good wishes for your future life Always dear Dan with more than words oan say Yours certainly seems an ill timed love to Emmeline xour affectionate cousin pleasantry Mrs Winterton answered LYDIA BRACKENBURY her blue eyes colder and her icy man ¬ P S Please give the enclosed note to ner icier than ever and I should have Mrs Winterton I cannot forbear writing just a line to her to say how much your known nothing of the nature of your engagement of which I have heard from humor had you not kindly explained it you pleases me She will be so glad about to me There was no word referring to it herself I know your joke in Mrs Brackenburys let- ¬ about-the-bus- ¬ ter - delirious ass twice over he told himself If hed held his tongue the old woman would have known nothing He might he thought haVe trusted L3dia not to have been deceived in the way that during the shock of hir sudden dismay he had supposed But it was too bad of her 111 hisiovn T0orff he drew writing material--t- o hTnrSgain and sent her sw briefer letter thfs time than the first had been You have Wribja jih I he wroU hole I am going back to London tnouce The next morning he found a tele ¬ gram waiting for him at his club When do jou start for Africa She is really a little wretch he thought smiling But he could forgive anything better than that she should have received calmly even gladly the announcement of his engagement to well to anybody not only to poor Em meline in fact I start for Africa next week he telegraphed Shall I come arid see you Poor Capt Forbes thejanctuf VWoji riavMsa orlTJdbxr iliSlife I ¬ ¬ first N- - If yon like the answer came There Vas no going to Airicaior him Y LAdger -- f V- - m w MT DESIRE to sell my house and ot with blacksmith shop at Jackson¬ ville Ky I will sell for half cash balance in twelve months For further particulars address or call on ¬ BEN J F SHARON uses to which glass is put to day Jacksonville Ky il3oct tf century in elor of from 25 to 35 is worth three plied the professor say no more Such¬ As late as the sixteenth times as much to any woman as a a trifle is not worthy of a thought I asEngland only the dwellings of the sure you Chicago News wealthy had glass windows It is rea- marrying man as a bachelor from 35 JLlSTGr 3 to 45 sonably certain that Shakespeare who NEWSPAPER REPORTERS It is encouraging to learn that the exwas born in 15G4 first saw the light through lattice windows or oiled paper cess of spinsters is only 75 to every Common Error CorrectedFact Con ¬ and he was probably a grown man be- 1000 bachelors But to offset this is cerning Their Reliability and fore he looked through a glass window the disquieting fact that there are 230 Integrity Are Given 100 widowers which It was first manufactured in London widows to every admits The Blnegrass Nurseries offer every ¬ does tend to seven years before he was born and the statistician A very common error is prevalent thing for Orchard Garden Lawn No could hardly have come into general work against the interest of spinsters that the work of reporters given in Accents The spinster of use for a score of years or more Shakes- who wish to marry strawberry and general nursery cat¬ from 15 to 34 is more apt to marry a newspapers as a rule is not entitled to alogue on application to peare makes many references to glass respect or credence It is generally and glasses in his plays but at is al bachelor than a widower at ages 34 assumed that the reporter writes chiefly H F HILLENME3ZER ways to a mirror the glass that re- to 44 her chance of bachelors is still or wholly to make a sensation or in Lexington Ky flects or to drinking glasses which better than with widowers but after some way interest readers without re Telephone 279 45 she has to take a widower or rewere common in England before win gard to facts while just the reverse is dow glass was He also makes numer main single and even then her offers the truth in all reputable newspaper es- ¬ ALVA CRAWFORD ous references to windows but they are are not as numerous as those of the tablishments carl Crawford the eyes the windows of the soul or widow The best time for a widow who state- ¬ It is safe to assume open latticed spaces in the wall of a wishes to wed a bachelor is from 15 to ments of reporters giventhat the in the leading house The divine William knew a 34 after 34 she has a better chance reputable journals of the country are great deal about wine glasses and ale to marry a widower The chances of quite as truthful as are the genera glasses but very little about glass in spinsters over 30 marrying are very slim statements from the pulpit when the any other form If he shaved himself compared with those of widows of the reliof jftie ace he probably used a piece of polished lor instance between the minister gets outside very strictly more gious teachings and much 34 and 44 54 spinsters marry Shop corner Mam and Fifth Sts metai as a mirror ana xne ciiimces arei are the public expressions truthful he never looked in a glass mirror unfjM K5widows marry The difference of most than all of the leading proif not M he went to London Shakespeare knev yvardly noticeable but it in- - fessions M utifnixvSmxk pretty much everything that wasknow year Between the 4rSkTfa3SBBlHKfflSSJSH h5 JiliHevery there are With very fewrexceptiohs thenian able or thinkable in his timebu ligement of our letid ing daily newspa never dreamed of glass fence pos ginsters married between 55 pers enforce truthfulness and fairness - fff Indianapolis Journal TSu widows marry and only 78 PARIS KENTUCKY as the supreme attributes for a news- ¬ C 7 if srs wed Pittsburgh Dispatch i paper writer and yet it is common for tf IN MAINE BEARS KILLED iu Work guaranteed satisfactory Calls all who are displeased with any repor iprTT TS BY THE THOUSAND Your promptly answered U torial statement to say that its a mere solicited Prices reasonable work i The Sweet Incense from a Burning Candy Factory Urought Them Highland Regiments Are Provided newspaper story the managers of our Not only are Aronnd Bnlsror with New CostnmcH Once leading newspapers entitled to great R Erery Two Years CALDWELLS ¬ credit for the scrupulous care they en Nobody has yet been able to deterforce on their reporters and corre- ¬ mine whether it is the smell of flow- ¬ INDIGESTION 11 I think that the publication of regi- spondents to present the truth with ing sap which brings the bears out of mental journals is a step in the direc as exact fairness as is possible but the their winter quarters or the arrival of tion of really ameliorating the condi the bears which sets the sap to running tion of Tommy without which no ef-¬ public little know the ceaseless care J but every woodsman in Maine knows fective army reform is possible Thus that is exercised in every reputable FRANKFORT MCIWATI RY that the maple sap and the hungry I welcome the Bed Dackle which is newspaper office to prevent the publi ¬ cation of even the truth when it would bears come together and thinks there In Effect March 1 18D7 by the Black Watch It is a be more harmful to publish than to sup- ¬ be- ¬ published must be some tacit understanding price annas two The press it tween them If the amount of money 24 page quarto me was printed DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY at La- ¬ There is not a week indeed hardly a paid out in bounties by near by towns number before is full of interesting facts day that the newspapers of this city is any index more bears have been hore It Thus Ilearn that 15000 kilts are made do not suppress the facts proper for EAST BOUND killed since March 1 than there were in for the Highland regiments every 3 ear public information which would make tlie- previous 12 months Most of the man gets a new one only once in a most interesting story solely because Lvo Krn iik fort fi30am 300pm V hunters who have received bounties and a iiam y20pm two years The Bed Backle speaking it would bring a flood of sorrow to the ArrKlkhorn 51am 332pm have made oaths that their bears were Dargai says they Gordons 702am 348pm slain within 30 miles of Bangor Hith ¬ of the added one at more laurels to innocent and helpless and cast an im ¬ ArrStamniiijj Ground 70Xam 358pm LII V Jl IS J or have perishable shadow upon their lives 720am 415pm Arr Georgetown erto Bangor has not been considered Scotias crown and the Black Watch Georgetown 800am 430pm With all the errors necessarily commit ¬ Lve Newtown a desirable center whence to embark 812am 442pm Arr sent telegram complimenting the G 822am 452pm for bears but the statistics of 1898 Gs on their bravery and success and ted in a newspaper office by reason of Arr Centreville 828am 458pm the haste with which the articles must Arr Elizabeth show it to be the most promising bear 840am ftI0pm received a letter from them returning often be prepared the public little region in New England During the tlhanks for the good wishes knows with what thorough integrity two weeks ending March 26 130 has WEST BOUND The name of the journal is of course the newspapers as a rule protect the been paid out in bounties by towns and derived from the red hackle worn in the II innocent even at the cost of suppressing 020am 530pm cities that are not 40 miles away from a ArrEI izabeth bonnet by the old 32nm 542pm Bangor One nundred and thirty dol- ¬ featherthis distinction having been legitimate and interesting Inforniation Arr Centreville 38am 548pm Arr Newtown 948am 558pm lars in bounties means that 26 bears given them by George III for their con- ¬ The skeletons of hundreds of house Arr Georgetown 1000am l0pm holdsare carefully guarded in the news- ¬ have been killed 1040am 635pm The paper offices of the countrY and gener ¬ Lve Georgetown Guildermalsen in 1795 Arr uuvalls 1056am 046pm While people were wondering if duct at Watch are very proud of this as ally witihout even the knowledge of the Arr Stamping Ground 110am 653pm t Maine was going to be visited with a Black 1125am 704pm fr all the other Highland regiments have people who are thus protected Phila ¬ Arrfcwltzer ArrElkhorn 1135am 711pm plague of bears Grecnleaf Davis an and the Forty twas are delphia Timeshackles 1155am 725pm aged hunter from Iatten who has a white distinguished by wearing the further record of 212 dead bears to his credit Crntehes GEO B HA RPER C I BERCAW in their pith helmets when on came to Old Town On hearing of the hackles service being I believe the GenJTSupt A Kansas City dealer in crutches Genl Pass Agt foreign Fkankfokt Ky large crop of bears he said Crutches are staple articles said regiment in the British army so Huh Thats all right Whos been only favored In this connection I may men ¬ with us and we sell on an average ten burning molasses hogsheads bout here tion one or two peculiarities of other pairs per week or 40 pairs a month 480 pairs this spring regiments The Grenadier guards wear This of course ofwould make nuTn BV Nobody had so far as the people knew a a year This mind in the course white tuft in the bearskin sometimes you does but as Davis insisted that somebody called a shaving brush not include the crutches we M UflUU 0b UUIU U I but have a nao made a big bonfire of sweets the i sell at wholesale It is a conservative red band around the forage cap The residents finally reached a key to the Coldstream guards have a red tuft and statement to say that altogether we sell mystery One cool foggy evening strangely enough a white band around 1500 pairs of crutches annually and about tw6nvektippa big candy fac- ¬ frnf forage cap wh ereas the Scots our firm is only one of several in the EAST BOUND tory had burned in Bangor involving a guards have no tuft at all The Gren- ¬ citythat handle them The total sales JLv t Louisville 830am 600pm t loss of -- crutches annually in Kansas City Ar Lexington Kp00 There was a southerly 1115am 810pm adiers wear their tuft on tlie left side wind 30am and the smell the Coldstream have theirs on the right would be hard to estimate but I would fvixinton Ilearn 850pm y15a 550Dm fcMpm say that 5000 pairs would not be far a of burnt molasVS7Vj4 easily detected interlo1iain n9m ywam 705pm P1 Then the Northumberlandfusiliersare from the exact number Zt XT Washington 607am as far north as Grcfehmish The tne- KansasCity Ar Philadelphial0i5am 340pm proud of being the only fusilier regi ¬ Times rifvAr 705pm i Davis was accept ment wearing a plume all other corps ArNew York 1240un 90Spm His Idea pfjhe kind having pnly the brass gre ¬ WEST BOUND influx of bears- - N Y Sun Little Tommy Papa did you ever i nade in the front of the busby As in u jscea cyclone that blowed everything Ar Winchester 730am 4o0pm 655am 2Snm the case with the Black Watch Ar Lexington 800am 520pm 7S5au 345pm sirjers won thin distincfipp on the bat ¬ up in the air cows and horses and Ar Frankfort 911am 630pm ArShclbyvilIel00lam 750pm to his son fresh from academfgroves tlefield for at SU Vigie they took nVusesan d IhM ngs upsi de down Ar Louisville 1100am T haye been thinking the matte rover Enough plumes from the French gren ¬ Papa Well no Tommyyl al though Trains marked thus 815pm daily ex f run anM tfinfle conie fothe conclusion adiers to decorate the whole regjnient Ive Ireafdof i of ten J cept Sunday other trains run daily that I Well I thifflf itd be rather tiresome had better go toschbbt somewhere and When in 1829 the line regimetswere Through Sleepers between Louisville wear a white feather the toaIjYe so7png And never see any ¬ Lexington and New York withoai that you had better take the business ordered to Harlem Life change and run it It cannot help fmpVbving Fighting Fifth were granted permis- ¬ thing For rates Sleeping Car wear one of red and white and under the eye of one so gifted as your- sion to Altoarctlrer Different any information call on reservations 01 London still worn self Boston Transcript this plume is Papa Laura what time did young F B Carr Sketch Mr Spooner leave last night rj Overdone Laura Why papa he started home Saaradn the Doctors Just look at the color of her cheeks y Div J thalf Pass Agent The picture of health A doctor In France is not permittee Never mind when he started I want r left to him by a d Lexington kyShe er flatters it a bit dont vn tolnOierit property r to know when he left Jceascd patent lnktfetrpit Journal- J A J v v f Xi K sicMJhi ¬ ¬ sibilitv of contamination indestructi ble by any chemical agency the right hand of science the foundation of the telescope and microscope the material for thousands of utensils and ornaments and now to be utilized for fence posts it comes as near being the key stone of civilization as anything that can be named It is a long reach from oiled paper windows to the myriad ¬ Comprehensive Tabic Prepared tei Fair Visitor What a lovely parrot the Information of Spinsters To parrot Polly want a cracker and Widows Did you make ii Polly cautiously yourself Truth A benevolent writer with a weakness Little Clarence Pa what is the dif for statistics has published the result ference between firmness and obstiof studious investigation in registry of- nacy Merely a matMr Callipers fices and other records of womans ter of sex my son Puck chance of marriage The term woman They say poor Clara consulted the is elastic She may be a maiden from stars before marrying him And 15 to 75 or a widow from 21 to 80 and gave They all according to these cheerful statistics whatawas the result except one vaude him good character still stand a chance of drawing a mat ville star Life rimonial prize The best time for a Mistress severely If such a thing spinster to marry or at least the time occurs again Norah I shall have to get when she has the greatest number of another servant Norah I wish yez opportunities is the period between easily her twenty fifth and twenty ninth wud avtheres Boston enough worruk for us two Traveler years One out of eight spinsters marWhy Mrs Booser to Mr Booser ries at this age Next besttothisisthe you disgraceful creature youre never period between 20 and 24 when one in Mus Mr Booser No 13 marries then comes from 30 to 34 sober have been toxicated when I married when one in 23 marries Between the ages of 35 and 39 statistics show only you an not ponsible for actions one marriage in 28 After 40 the chances Fun Villainous looking Character Wots are not encouraging although more ther time guvnor Mr Bluff hit women between tie ages of 40 and 50 him over the head Its juSt marry than do girls between the ages ting struck one Villainous looking Charof 15 and 19 one in 73 being the poor acter groaningly I ope your watch showing for the aint a repeater Tit Bits misses Fuddy Do you really think tha3 But these facts are not the only ones of interest to unmated women that Baskers cares much for his wife He dotes on statistics show For instance so that Duddy Cares for her Scores of times Ive known him no time may be lost by the husband her to mke faces for his wife when she had hunting maid the statistician points Bos out that it is folly for a woman to waste to take nasty tasting medicine tor Transcript her energy trying to entrap a man of A Misinterpretation Hair Cutter some ages whereas if she directed her to parent Shall I give your boy a attention to another sort of man she Parent might find a conquest ready to her bang on his forehead sir Yes and if that doesnt an illustration of this a busily As hand bachelor of from 25 to 35 is worth to quiet him give him one in the neck a woman as a marrying man 50 young Hes been warned not to fidget in the Judge bachelors of from 15 to 19 for the barbers chair Good b professor said the sweet chance of the older man marrying with girl graduate I shall always remem in one year is 50 times as great as the chance of one of the younger men ber you kindly for to you I am indebted reSay no more Then a more common instance a bach- for all I know ¬ m 402 h dailey MAIN ST --Over Deposit Bank 8 LfL PARI M pm - Jt V Office hours to 12 a m 1 to 6 ¬ ¬ ¬ H A SMITH Office over G S Varden Office Hours 8 wi Co 1 ¬ to 12 am to 5 p m ¬ J No 3 5 p in R ADAIR Phone 79 Broadway 6 to 12 a Dental Surgeon Paris Ky m and 1 a- - Office Hour - ¬ 3dc tf t ¬ bread-and-butt- er GEO W DAVIS DEALER IN Furniture Window Shades Oil Cloths Carpets Mattresses Etc Special attention given to Undertak¬ ing and Repairing Main Street - -- Paris Kr HOUSE AND LOT AND BLACK ¬ SMITH SHOP FOR SALE ¬ I ¬ ¬ 898 ¬ TREES ¬ PLANTS VINES ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ CRAYFORD BROS ¬ 23sjp3rt Barbers JOHN CONNELLY ¬ - 7S-v-idd- ws ¬ s - t V- - 1 ¬ SDR PEPSI ¬ ¬ -- - V J 1 1 I Forty-and-tw- 1 -- - mn mm i TIME TABLE Mie He - - - 1 thf -- tT J - - Up-to-D- att -- i- -- V-JL- -- rIH ij - 1 s iiwiiiili mi AsaSaSsiA --- -- Q THE BOURBON NEWS PABIS KT TUESDAY MAY 10 1898 i SC3 TWO LAND LEVELERS Most CORN MEAL SOMETIMES Good Thing NEEDED HIM IN THE HOUSE laughed the man from Saginaw for Poultry Provided It The Cool Retort of a Witty Girl to wouldnt tell it in Bay City I had and I some business down in Texas that required a Her Complacent Fiancee Sets Is Given Properly and Especially good deal of railroad travel One day I Him to Thinlcin in Reasonable Quantities found myself on the parlor car Among weddings slated for the near fu- ¬ ture is that of a clever young lawyer who lias just won for his bride a charming girl to whose heart he had long laic- - siege The law ¬ yer is not without a certain amount of good opinion regarding Himself and particularly prides himself on being rather a favorite Nearly a among girls of his acquaintance year ago he first sought the hand of the bride to be but she demurred A few months later he met with a second refusal but determined to make one more effort By this time the young woman had come to regard him with a good deal of esteem This feeling grew in warmth and so when a week or so ago he once more urged his suit she said the word which made him the hap- ¬ piest man in town And you Avill be mine he asked Yes It seems too good to be true When shall the wedding take place no use tn putting it off 1 think not No she answered The young lawyer named a day preposter- ¬ ously close at hand and after some hesita- ¬ tion his charmer agreed I knew that you would realize that you would be happier with me than without me be suggested with just a hint of triumph in his tone Perhaps the girl concluded that this was as good a time as any to take him down a peg qv two for she replied very coolly Yes I do realize it now You see papa is out oi town on business a good deal so that mamma aunty and 1 are otten quite alone I have thought it all over and have come to the conclusion that it would he ever so much safer to have a man in the house all the companionship asserted itself After we had talked for a time during which he had the tact to address me as cunnel he ven- ¬ tured to inquire in an apologetic way where I Avas from Saginaw I responded whars I Sagnaw cunnel bow dat sail In Michigan mv O yes sah Michigan Dats in De- ¬ troit I had a genl from dar las wintah sah I simply went into the smoking com- ¬ partment and communed with myself for the rest of the trip Detroit Free Press Tts i little tough on our young Chicago Thrown Into the Shade Neither of Them Is Patented Yet Uotli Do the Work as Well as the Intricate Devices Land should be graded down to smoothness before planting to insure profitable and uniform crops This is necessary where irrigation is prac- ¬ ticed to secure proper moiature and equal distribution of water and where the rainfall is depended on ridges will not get enough water while the lower places will have too much The best plan is to plow a few acres and level as soon as possible to move the soil easily and grade the surface to hold the mois- ¬ ture I have tried patent devices logs planks and other leveling processes but a - f A SIMPLE LEVELER the most satisfactory results have been obtained from home made graders They cost almost nothing and can be made quickly by any man who can han ¬ dle a saw hammer and nails and can be repjaced every season if old ones are destroyed ented and no man can exact a royalty for their manufacture and use The cheapest device consists of a small log or pole about five feet long and six to eight inches in diameter notched at either end to fasten a rope or chain and having a three foot board nailed to the top and dragging behind Two horses can be quickly hitched bj taking the doubletree and clevis from iiie plow and attaching to the chain or rope The driver stands on the log Neither of them are pat- ¬ Cornmeal is a good thing to feed hens if it be fed properly and in proper qtiantities The writer has been very careful not to feed either corn or corn meal to an extent to induce a too great amount of fat This is about the only objection in feeding cornmeal to a fully developed hen With growing chicks there is the added danger that the fowls will not get enough ash to make iirm bones When hens are lay ing freely it is somewhat difficult to get them fat and at this time the feed ing of cornmeal once a day seems ta This spring be a very good thing when the hens of the writer were con fined for some weeks on account of the snow they showed that indigestion had taken hold of them hard green droppings appearing in numerous places under the roosts Knowing well that family physicians sometimes order the patients to eat more cornmeal food when a lax condition of the bowels is desired we made a like change in the food of the hens We put a small quantity in a pan and pour boiling water over it and then stir it up thoroughly The pan is then put on top of the hot stove and allowed to cook for say five minutes when it becomes a thickened mass After be ing allowed to cool to a point where the fowls can eat it without burning their mouths this is fed before any other food is given The fowls seem to enjoy this warm morning meal more than any other of the day The result this spring has been that the signs oi indigestion have already disappeared and the hens are laying vigorously One of the hens had shown sonic small signs of roup and the feeding of the warm soft meal has seemed to have an excellent effect on her about all signs of the trouble having disappeared The philosophy of this is plain Roup is principally an affection of the mucous membrane and the warm sofl meal is easy on that membrane We do not say that she showed some sj mptoms of it It inay have been ¬ ¬ but the porter and the natural desire for with no one Dr Ayers is the name to remember when buying Sarsaparilla Br Ayers Sarsaparilla has been curing people right along for nearly 50 years Thats why it is acknowledged to be the sovereign Sarsaparilla It is the original and the standard The record of the remedy is without a rival a record that is written in the blood of thousands purified by its healing power I nursed a lady who was suffering from blood poisoning and mast have contracted the disease from her for I had four large sores or ulcers break out on my person I doctored for a long time both by external application and with various blood medicines but in spite of all that I could do the sores would not heal At last I purchased six bottles of Ayers Sarsaparilla thinking I would give it a thorough trial Before the six bottles had been taken the ulcers were healed the skin sound and natural and my health better than it had been for years I have been well ever since I had rather have one bottle of Dr J C Ayers Sarsapa ¬ rilla than three of any other MndV Mrs A F Taylor Englevale N Dak ¬ I I dont is There know The bad pay and hard work of trained nurses has often been made the subject of benevolent remonstrance by eminent medi cal men and nonprofessional philanthropists It is well for an invalid before he gets so bad as to need a nurse or doctor to use Hostet ters Stomach Bitters if he has chills and fever constipation rheumatism dyspepsia and nervousness Use it regularly Bad Pay and Hard Work ¬ ¬ If we were asked to define repartee most of us would say that it was the brilliant thing Ave thought of saying when the occasion for saying it had slipped away from us Chicago Times Herald - Repartee ¬ - Get Ayers Sarsaparilla Wl mjRJLW MJIUlU1LMJmjllLMJJKJmJllMLMLW 2 aiHlNiwiwiwiKiKiiMiwiMiitiieiMiwii9itsicinieiMiwiwiiciiniwininiwiwiwiwimiHiwiwiiiwiioiwiieimiaiMiwiliisiisii2 S m ¬ time The accepted lover gasped in astonishment for a moment but then seeing a twinkle in his adored ones eye forgave her on the spot v n the way home however he voted that his future wife would be a dangerous customer in repartee Chicago Chronicle yj IMF V1 - A LITTLE MORE ELABORATE clods or stones The other leveler which costs more jtnoney and requires greater skill in making will fill the demand for larger areas and do all that anjT ordinary ma ¬ chine will This is made of two inch slabs or planks and should be bolted at the three corners It is A shaped and anade for rough hard work I use two pieces of plank eight inches wide and two inches thick about ten feet in length and another board about seven feet long The lower edges are cut down to about one half inch by an adz or drawing knife then bolted together the crosspiece at the back being only six inches in width A piece of wire or board nailed across on either side give strength to the crosspiece which is necessary in xoashing clods digging out jocks and roots and dragging the weight of mounds and furrows of earth found too higlu A short ten inch board nailed on the center makes a suitable standing place for the driver who shifts Jiis position according to necessity I use this for filling ditches and dead fur¬ rows breaking down weeds and corn ¬ stalks and smoothing the ridges and knots of new land The horses may be hitched to a hook or clevis bolted on the front Joel Shomaker in Farm and -- throwing his weight on either side or stepping back on the board as required A field may be leveled by driving round or by crossing back and forth Fur rows can be filled and ridges leveled by dragging across and over them This 5s made of two inch slabs or planks for small pieces of land containing few ¬ progress of the disease to such an extent that nature would be able to bring about normal conditions and throw off the disease Cornmeal so prepared is fed only in the morning and that too only to an extent that can be eaten To balance this whole oats are kept before the fowls for the rest of the day the only other food being table scraps At night the oat trough is taken out of reach so that the hens cannot fill upon them in the morning before the cornmeal is given to them Even the water is taken out at night for the same reason We doubt if this will be found to be advisable in the summer time when the hens have all the green grass they can eat and are also laying fewer eggs The rest they take in the summer makes it easy for them to lay on fat and this would be more likely to be the case in the summer than in the early spring We have spoken of this because at this time of year many mil- ¬ lions of birds are lost by indigestion due entirely to improper feeding In- ¬ digestion probably kills more fowls in the spring than any other trouble at this time yf vear Farmers Review ¬ Every woman cannot be beautiful but a cheerful face often supplies the deficiency But no one can be cheerful and bring joy to others unless they have perfect health ForF J Cheney Co Toledo 0 tunately science has placed this priceless Sold by Druggists 75c boon within the reach of every woman as Halls Family Pills are the best the following incident proves Mrs Amanda Robinson wife of William A Natural Effect farmer and stockman near Robinson Howesville Clay County Ind is thirty a good deal stuck on those jewels Im two years old and had for several years been Mrs Bongpong is wearing to night T in declining health and despondent For dont wonder at it Everybody savs thev three months she was not only unable to are paste Cleveland Plain Dealer attend to her domestic duties but too feeble to be up and about To day she is in good Shake Into Your Shoes health and able to attend to her household Allens Foot Ease a powder for the feet nothing but a slight cold We want affairs She relates her experience as folIt cures painful swollen nervous smarting this understood for we do not wish tc lows out of takes I was afflicted with female troubles and feet and instantly Its thethe sting comfort be tinderstood that cornmeal cooked greatest corns and bunions state of health I lost my discovery of the age can be regarded in any sense as a cure was in a delicate Allens Foot Ease makes appetite grew thin and was greatly deroup It might be possible that in pressed After taking various remedies tight or new shoes feel easy It is a certain for cure for callous and hot its early stages the feeding of foods without being benefited I was induced by a ing feet sweating day Sold by all tired achTry it to druppists friend to try Dr Williams Jf ink Fills that are easy on the mucous membrane and shoe stores 25c Trial package FREE Address Allen S Olmsted Le Roy N Y might have a tendency to retard the the ia r y in summer of ¬ ¬ A CHEERFUL WOMAN From the Democrat Brazil Ind Deafness Cannot Be Cnred by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There is only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional remedies Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever nine cases of of ten are caused by catarrh which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness caused by catarrh that cannot be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure Send for circulars free ¬ ¬ s a z YOU WILL REALIZE THAT THEY LIVE WELL WHO LIVE CLEANLY IF YOU USE s 2 i s 2 S s s Hl s s vasifiiMiMiaiMiMienuietieiiciieiieiiciiMiniatiHiMieuciioiiMieiiaiMiMiMiMiHiMieiiMiciisiiciiwMtiiaiMiMiciiMiMiiiiwi I Ltt jLJSI s U M kM m MI Permanently cured by using DR WHITEHALL8 RHEUMATIC CURE The surest and tho best Sample sent 7REE on mention oi this publication in a uk HfliitUALL aiukiauh uumuid jsana man ¬ ¬ ¬ 1 a living picture show once said the theatrical manager and I had sev-¬ eral queer experiences VVe always had trouble getting suitable music for one thing I remember that we struck a certain town where the music was furnished by a seedy freckle faced young man Avho officiated on one of those bangety bang pianos I asked him if he could think of music suitable to each picture as it was displayed Oh yes certainly he could and do it j I took out Appropriateness WORMS A CANDY cured them boxes of 1897 I pro five second box I began to im- ¬ prove and by boxes and before finishing the the time I had taken the five able There never was a day that did not bring its own opportunity tor doing good that never could have been done before and never can be again W H Burleigh coffee Boon A about and stoppedPriceless tha pulsv taking usual work go to my I was YCT Siv4 She lost flesh seemed to bel3loodl naa no amoiuon one L oii uvojjuoi pills and they restored her apetftt digestion and brought color tolfeij She is now in the best of healthtUt Dr Williams Pink Pills for Pale Pedpl best medicine we ever had in our familVa recommend them to all needing a remedyToi fnninn1 nr t1 nflq also afffirtpd with declineahdfcl Our daughter Anna twelve yea ialvnil liner o onafforpn tern ever Pink Pills for Pale People They restore strength and health to exhausted women when every effort of the physician proves unavailing These vegetable pills are every where recognized asji specific for diseases of the blood and nerves Author T No discovery of modern times has proved1 such a blessing to women as Dr Williams j GAPES IN CHICKENS Birds Afflicted with This Disease Should Be Separated from Others and Kept on Board Floors ¬ about my literary work His Friend How very foolish of you Why dont you get up and read portions oi it Boston Traveler Belle How would you like to enjoy a cen- ¬ tury of bliss Bettie Oh I have you know Will and I enjoyed one last summer on his tandem lie awake at night hour after hour thinking A Cure am troubled with insomnia I A Round of Pleasure The presence of gapes will be easily known by the drooping feeble appearYonkers Statesman ance and open gasping mouth of the And He Gets It chick Ted What kind of a fellow is it that buys Temporary relief may be afforded by green goods means of a looped horsehair or a partty Ned He must be a man who wants money stripped feather introduced into the bad N Y Journal trachea but the remedy is difficult to A never so anxious be applied thoroughly to young chicks when fellow is able Washington to work as he isnt Democrat Exuberant patriotism is often used as a clcak by knavish politicians Rams Horn can drink Grain 0 when you please and sleep like a top For Grain 0 dees not stimulate Homeseekers Excursions it nourishes cheers and feeds Yet it looks On the first and third Tuesdays in May Pleasant Palatable Potent Taste Good Do vdtastes like the best coffee For nervous and June 1898 the Chicago Milwaukee Good Never Sicken Weaken or Gripe 10c 25c 50c jrgons young people and children Grain 0 St Paul Railway will sell round trip excur ¬ CURE CONSTIPATION drink sthe perfect package Made from pure- sion tickets good for 21 days to a great Sterling Renedj Company Chicago Montreal New Yorfc 313 linsib- Get a from your grocer to- many points in South and North Dakota Sold y4 Tjryit in place of coffee 15 and 25c and other western and southwestern states Hfl Tfl RAP jiists ixnd pnjvrantecd by all drug-II1 U DAU to CTTKE Tobacco Hablt at practically one fare for the round trip -it goes nsning ana sits in a Take a trip west and see what an amount of 3k ipantWno anrled uninviting position all day and good land can be purchased for very little I10 frnpei w Jl5fcfiffi i ic WV nlinrw ixrVr nnvor gwwu tn money w llkS II AW IlOWiV XUIl IO Further information as to rates Wrh because the pews are uncomfortable routes prices of farm lands etc may be ob- ¬ 4mcago Daily JNews tained on application to any coupon ticket -m -t l agent or by addressing George H Heafford - HI A man marries a lovely creature in white General Passenger Agent Chicasatin and then lives with a woman who Proficient wears Mother Hubbards and dressing sacks Atchison Globe The idea of holding that woman is not H -r W amply fitted to enter public life she ex- ¬ What is there of more value tc Fits stopped free and permanently cured claimed -- Xehdyou name on postal cm fc No fits after first days use of Dr Klines one in public life than the art of extem- ¬ OUR 136 PAGE WE WILL SZND Y0D poraneous speaking and when it comes to Great Nerve Restorer Free 2 trial bottle ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE treatise Dr Kline 933 Arch st Phila Pa speaking extemporaneously My dear he interrupted for only the Wgkhesier Repeat Arms Marriage is a failure only to soured people night before he had failed to get home until Hew Haveh CohV 180ViNCHEsrcaAve who cannot find marrying mates N O late and the memory of what happened was still fresh with him your point is well Picayune taken When it comes to speaking extem- ¬ i poraneously man is really only a base imita- ¬ To Cure a Cold in One Day Chicago Post tion t ake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets carried over from 1ES7 mus Al oe sacnjicea bow a eu-gists refund money if it fails to cure 25 M fix Rm A2 Men tirade fff j gf iroA Wi all EtyleF She Was Surprised best equipment guaran teed S975 to SI700 Mrs Huntley It must have been very an ¬ The pulling of a sound tooth tries the Used whedslate modelr acoustics of the dental chamber Chicago noying to have had to appear in court all makes S3 to SJ2 you do when thev asked vou to What did r NeAvs Weshio on atmrovcl with ut acent vavment Writo-give your age iWZfP 52r lor barsraln lint and art catatofrud k --Why Mrs Dustleigh Pisos Cure is a wonderful Cough medi I gave it of course season to ior KweinSS isodelK BICYCLE FREE for advertise them Send for one Kider agrcntfi crne Mrs W Pickert Van Siclen and 31 My goodness And didnt they fine you wanted Learn bow to Earn a Bicycle and maJco monesr Blake Aves Brooklyn N Y Oct 26 94 W MEAD CYCLE CO CHICAGO Chicago EveningNews for contempt Scorching is apt to singe the popularity of When a firm decisive spirit is recognized cycling Chicago News it is curious to see how the space clears Opportunity may trip a giant Rams around a man and leaves him room and free- ¬ Is the only sure cure in tho world for Chronic V1 dom John Foster Horn cers Bone TUIcers Scrofulous Ulcers VarN U- Many People Cannot Drinlc at night It spoils their sleep You impromptu The performance opened He was seated at the piano and he turned to look at the first picture It was Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden He didnt hesitate an instant Like a flash he turned and began pounding out Theres Only One Girl in This World for Chicago Journal Me least came on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS This 1 am sure has caused my bad health for the past threo years I am still taking Cascarets the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people Geo w Bowles Bafrd Ka3s tape worm eighteen feet long at TRADE MARK REGISTERED - 1 m J lAlilUG E-f- a m of -- mmm1 - afM5Sgw THE DAWN OF WOMANHOOD Earnest Words From Mrs Pinkham to Mothers Who Have Daughters and a Letter From Mrs Dunmore of Somerville Mass The advent of womanhood is fraught with dangers which even careful mothers too often neglect One of the dangers to a young woman is belated menstruation The lily droops on its stem and dies before its beauty is unfolded or she may have en tered into the perfection of womanhood with little apparent inconvenience or disorder of health But suddenly the menses entirely cease Mother puberic malady is taking hold of your daughter and quick consumption may follow Take in stant steps to produce regular men- ¬ struation Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Com- pound is certain to assist nature to per--a form her regular duties procure it at once there are volumes of testimony froc grateful mothers who have had their daughters health restored by its use If personal advice is desired write quickly to Mrs Pinkham at Lynn Mass u It will be given you without charge and it will be the advice of abundant experience and success Eead the following from Mrs Chaeles Dunmore 102 Fremont St Winter Hill enne Ulcers Gangrene Fever Sores and all Old Sores It never falls Draws Out all poison Saves expense and suffering Cures permanent Best salve for Abscesses Piles Barns Cuts and all Fresh Wounds By mail small 33c large U3c Book free J I AJLLEN MJKBICINJC CO St JPuuI Minn Sold by WruRgristo THE MARKETS LIVE STOCK Cattlecommon Select butchers CALVES Fair to good light HOGS Common Mixed packers Light shippers SHEEP Choice LAMBS Spring FLOUR W inter family GRAIN Wheat No 2 red No 3red Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 Rye No 2 HAY Prime to choice PROVISIONS Mess pork Lard Prime steam BUTTER Choice dairy Prime to choice creamery APPLES Per bbl POTATOES Per bush LIVE CUTS ST06K GUm Fifth St Cincinnati O Cincinnati 3 00 4 15 May 9 3 S5 5 3 3 3 3 6 25 25 V5 75 35 00 450 4 40 6 00 38 4 05 4 05 3 75 6 50 We will furnish duplicates of LIVE STOCK or any OTHER CUT shown in any SPECIMEN BOOK at or below quoted prices for same A N KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO 335 W AM uuwj CfebfctaSsBlBflUBtt A BICYCLE 475 1 1 20 09 38 33 73 11 00 10 11 50 11 37 summer EXPLANATORY DIAGRAM Fireside Dissection of a chick affected with gapes the trachea pinned open A the glottis or LIVE STOCK POINTERS opening through which air enters the trachea from the mouth B the cut end CHICAGO Breed swine from well matured ani¬ of the oesophagus C the cut neck The FLOUR Winter patents gape worms are seen in the trachea or GRAIN Wheat No 2 mals red windpipe at the lower left of the illustraNo 3 Chicago spring Cows should have plenty of water in tion CORN No2 ¬ 5 75 11 3 00 80 5 30 1 18J4 3 50 SO EWJ wa njni m c KlflU WATCH or TEA SET by sellings fewboxes of onrgoods to your friends Everybody needs And will buy them No money required In advance Write today for particulars H E CQJlPAKll SaUearborn St nlllChleag GUfWEUBISgig Best in the world ADnroved hv Kntritch Royal Society Preventing cruelty to animals Circular free JBT C glCE Partington CU GIVEN AWAY body 5 50 1 70 1 08 2 34 - at lenca io tho OYKULAND BONTIILY SAN KlUMCISCO TWs magazine Is the Ue or JleCinreg and la HUperblyUlmtratcd TWO sending WWSB AKggffag animal subscriptions Tvet pasture Hogs should not be turned into low Feed hogs liberally but never more haps they are too elosely inbred Dont buy an inferior boar even if you can get him for a cent a pound If you want to sell a horse fatten it if you dont want to sell it dont fatten than they will eat up clean If your hogs are not doing well per-¬ it New blood every year is the way to make swine breeding the most profita- ¬ ble Oil mealin the spring fed to horses makes a glossy coat It is a hair making food Feeding oil meal requires the very GRAIN Wheat best of judgment It may be fed reck ¬ Corn Mixed Oats Med lessly to the great injury of an animal Ducks may sometimes be assisted out PORK Mess Western Plowman of the shells but chickens never LARD btearo ¬ Gorman recommends rubbing the neck from time to time with vaseline thor oughly mixed with a little turpentine the treatment to begin before the dis- ¬ ease makes its appearance Fowls when attacked after the first few weeks are likely to recover of their own ac cord Gorman finds that chickens kept on a board floor do not have gapes per ¬ haps because they cannot get earth ¬ worms which are supposed to convey the disease Chicks which have gapes should be separated from the others and the runs should be changed if possible Copperas should be added to the drinking water Wherever the disease is prevalent young chicks should be kept for the first month on a board floor Orange Judd Farmer ¬ PORK Mess LARD Steam NEW YORK FLOUR Winter patent WHEAT-No-S- red CORN No 2 mixed RYE OATS No 2 3 io 80 5 go 5 60 407 35J 10 75 10 85 5 82 6 00 41 57 treatment Free cae 9 DISCOVERY Q Hi E sr 13 V9 V NEW relief and cures gives STk f book 1 quick worst bend for Ve II II GHKKNa SOSS of testimonials and IO dava AUaauGa 162 353 W gam 7 nflll nnh FBEK CATALOGUE MRES Colony lands WIICRAWFOHD A CO Fanns Tfanber Mineral South cheap cur terms KashTUlo Tesa SrMixed PORK New Mess LARD Western BALTIMORE FLOUR Family 5 75 GRAIN Wheat No 2 1 363 Southern Wheat 1 36 Corn Mixed 39 38MJ Oats No 2 white Rye No 2 western 69 CATTLE First quality 4 50 HOGS Western 425 INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Wheat No 2 Corn No 2 mixed Oats No 2 mixed LOUISVILLE No 2 red z 11 00 6 15 6 00 1 36 1 41 39 39 C9 V 4 85 4 35 1 15 34 29 1 07 my HBO 5 25 374 -- day and night my doctor help me I could not seem to did not seem to find any relief until I took Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Compound I had inflammation of the womb a bearing down pain and the whites very badly The pain was so intense that I could not sleep at night I took Lydia E Pinkhams Vegetable Compound for a few months and am now all right Before that I took morphine pills for my pains that was a great mistake for the relief was only momentary and the effect vile lam so thankful to be relieved of my sufferings for the pains I had were something terrible f ¬ B Somerville Mass I was in pain READERS OP THIS PAPER DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK FOR REFUSING ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS Best Cough Syrup Tastes Good Us8 m jt time ooia oy arueKists TrTMMwa imJV7zrxm w GURFS WHFRK All FIKP F4IIS MH1msWVJIi ANK WJQUEX -- E ylease state that ymm mw tint Advertsweat ta WXXTIXQ Id 1708 AJIVSSTISIS - uli iiAfett Aa P nHHHUgWHmiJil HufvWMtB P1W 8 THE BOURBON HEWS PARIS EY TUESDAY MAY 10 L898 Linen sent to Bourbon Steam Lann the Ind Two Hundred Years Ago You can not duplicate J T Hintons In St Nicholas there is an article on prices on refrigerators quality con- ¬ The Great Lakes by W S Harwood tf sidered Mr Harwood says uD waiiB wiui11115 xu mjr Dteoiuu EvErYTHING comes 0ut in the wash at rnrougn cuuai iocks oi uju ouu carnea I stood one summer day near a hill on the Bourbon Steam Laundry even tfthe which now stands Fort Brady over- - dirt looking the rapids of the Soo as they flow from Lake Superior down into the St Marys river and so on to join at c C TT LI l i uu me last tne waters ui nuiuu r lU ilujj ui this hill as nearly as I could decide A1 person8 owinK the estate of Mrs from the topography of the country gallie A Collins will please call on me was witnessed two centuries and a quar aud settle at ouce Persons having ter ago one of the most remarkable one claims against her estate are requested of the most significant scenes in the to present them properly proven to me history of the new world It has been or to leave their claims for uie at the brilliantly described and I may but law office of McMillan Talbott Paris ii prices the offer A SCENE ON THE SOO We are off cringsoine choice ladies miess and ohiWreus shoes at special The King of France Took Possession Duu fail to take advantage of DA VIS THOiTPSON f dry is washed white not white washed IRONING MADE E2SY5 W Of Peck P To S Anderson IsgriG Chronic Dyspepsia Cored - I j Celery Capsules from James T Blaser drug gist Waverly O and used them for Stomach Trouble and Coustipation I was unable to do anything for nearly two years leased three boxes of your Celery Capsules and they have cured me For the benefit of other to afflicted I wish to send this letter Very truly yours Sold by all druggists at 50c and SI per box Send address on postal to the Wright Med Co Columbus O for trial size free W the Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio Gentsc I have purchased a box of Wrights ¬ O Kecommends O Pike Co Wrights Celery Capsules il - ANDEBSW Notice to Creditors j ill w j VACCINATION V wk I FTEE suffering for nearly thirty years from dyspepsia Mrs H E Dugdale wife of a prominent business man of Warsaw N Y writes For 23 years I was a constant sufferer from dyspepsia and a weak stomach The lightest food produced distress causing severe pain and the forma- ¬ tion of gas Ko matter how careful of my diet I suffered agonizing pain after eating I was treated by many physicians and tried numerous remedies without permanent help Two years ago I began taking Dr Miles Nerve and Liver Pills and Nervine Within a week I commenced improving and per ¬ sisting in the treatment I was scon able to y I kefin thfim vv imTininnri n cinrrio UUJW fliCnQi immm 1 v HH nt m0iw ncQ vaajxo any old symptoms 35nsi35Kvtifcffs3SfrI5 Dr Miles Remedies are sold by all dru cists under n nnsitivn guarantee first bottle ucubuls or money re- fnnrtnfi - 8388 n 3gT Mites L fSePVIBI ksL - v- SB s wA WwJ Iio Banmft Vp3 nerves free Address jVas DE MILES MEDICAL CO Elkhart Ind COUNTY DIRECTORY Officers of Bourbon County the Catholic missionaries the voyageurs and the Indians Weeks before word had been sent out to the chiefs of 14 of the different tribes of Indians in the re- gion to meet at the Soo on the date mentioned An immense cross of wood was made and carried to the top of the hill overlooking the swift flowing rapids A stout timber with an en- ¬ graved plate on it was set up near the deep hole in the ground which was to hold the foot of the cross When all had assembled St Lusson the representative of the king lifted in one hand a clod of earth and in the other his naked sword and in the name of his most Christian majesty the king of France took possession of the land pmhrnmnp in his assnnmtinn nil tlio 13 r region from the north to the sonth sea O il ana1 extending to uie ocean on tne west The cross was then raised before the motley throng the representatives of the government in their most gorgeous suits the priests in their rich vest- ments the voyageurs in their hunting garb of skins the Indians in their most iantastic leathers and paint As the cross assumtd position the priests in- ¬ toned a stately chant of the seventeenth century Then the French exclaimed Yive le roi while as one historian puts it the Indians howled in con- ¬ cert The plate upon the smaller timber bore an engraved inscription denoting the kings possession of the land I - composed of fonr classes the official representatives of the king of France 1671 a strange body of men was assembled on this hill It was On June 14 TAYLOR COLLINS JADr- wlth 3may 4wks - W1H G nfxei lviIleKy 1 MASTERS SALE OF XiXaeT3E3 IN TEAT MEES C0LUE3 TaTJMlj M AND GUFFS 8TIFF AND NICE ivlvuiru itt Mi ml i ij 4 INVEN r s nnii tBm ia mmm Wmmm laMMM i It appearing to me by the representa- ¬ tion of Dr Bowen the Health Officer of Bourbon County that there is a ne- ¬ cessity that all persons in the County should be vaccinated I hereby author- ¬ ize and empower the physicians of their respective precincts to vaccinate all per- ¬ sons who are unable to procure vaccina- ¬ tion oath of the persons so vaccinated by them with the charges thereof not to exceed 25 cents for each successful vac- ¬ cination The physicians shall furnish to me as Judge of said County a true list under a i 11 AJJVkWJ m mm ir riwx BOURBON CO ALSO LID W US WHEN FIRST BOUGHT NEW v i I I in I I im guBBEftejuJsyaiiiy I ii t nraill nJ 9mmTrrVJmfjWmWT TBI VS LOTS II UXIIGTII ONE POUND OF THIS STARCH WILL GO AS FAR AS A POUND AND A HALF OF ANY OTHER STARCH BOURBON CIRCUIT COURT Agricultural Bank of Paris Plaintiff John i UCHUBINGERBR0SC9 hKeokukJowa NewHavenonnS kn copyrighted fuSk JllilfiS All cities and towns in the county having Cou oilmen or Trustees do not come under this notice as it is espec- ¬ ially their duty to make proper pro- ¬ visions regarding vaccinations under Section 4611 of the Kentucky Statutes Every good citizen is interested in ob- ¬ serving and assisting in the enforce- ¬ ment of this notice a jjI 1 styled cause on the 2d day of April 1898 1 will sell publicly at the Court Houu door in Paris Kentucky on Turner Defendant By virtue of a jmigment of the Bour- bon i ircuit Court rendered in the above V I hope no further steps will become necessary I am Respectfully This starch is prepared on scientific principles by men who have had years of practical experience m iancy laundering It restores old linen and summer dresses to their natural whiteness and imparts a beautiful and lasting finish It is tho cny starch manufactured that is perfectly harmless containing neither arsenic alum or any otner substance injurious to linen and can be used even for a baby powder W M PUSNELL Judge of Bourbon County Kentucky I lfinTnlw Mi 2M 1898 For sale by all wholesale and retail grocers Judge W W K AL Sherifi Geoige V Buwen W Mitchell and Ja nes Burke Deputies Circuit Clerk Chas E Butler F L McChesney Deputv Count v Clerk Ed D Paton Pearce Paton Deputy- County attorney Denis Dun- don Assessor W G McClinlock r C Joiies Jailer WmwELwmMBmll Coriiner Dr H HJlnrjerts 1 Purnell I A SCENE IN SALON1CA The Jews and Jewesses That Inhabit tho Heart of the Town In the true ghetto in the noisome heart of the town where the cobbled streets run slimy and the people chaffer with the butchers for the refuse of the slaughter house and chicken block you see the unchanged Jew of the middle ages Be he bearded grandsire or tiny boy ho wears a long loose gabardine to his heels and the fez of his masters If ranwft t sroL i s 1 he is well to do the garment may to mmkmmmsmm WS iur uorcierea or it mav be of silk hnfc it ateJiJag ir could not more surely be soiled and Purveyor B F Bedford -J ienBy it iluu i ii law required iu BO tYVltn marriage this survivor of the dark ages Magistrates grows a beard full and thick and griz- zled in the old men wiry and black and Paris R J Neelv very sparse in the younger heads of fam- MilLersburs A C Ball ilies This is as it is in East Broad- Little Rock P S- See way and Chicago and Berlin but when North Middletown H C Smith you look poU Che wives and daughter Clintonville S L Weathers in Salonicas ghetto you see mediaeval j iilvnnqejTCrih -- mf 3 I-- TngtDnKentuckyMri 1U uula v x Wi ajuuuuu nQ iC r1D 11 umJ3IS ou T on tne vv siue ot JacKso1 teec J MRS LAURA WEISHAUF est and best bidder the following de ¬ scribed real toiate to vit Of Blurry Intl Recommends Wrights Celery Capsules All of the right title and interest V Turner in and to a of the said Jpbu Alurry Ind Sept 17 1896 tract ot about 240 or 215 acres of land lying in Bourbon count Kentucky The Wright Medical Co Columbus Ohio Irelaud onJ tbe E by the Kentucky Dear Sirs Last spring I purchased Mi lauU Kltllway Company on the S a box of Wrights Celery Capsules f r iin by the lands of 131ake and Simpson on the W and being the same land de- - L C Davenport druggist Bluffton vispd to the said Jonu W Turner for Ind and used them tor stomach trouble lite by his lather Chas Turnerexcept a with which I had been afflicted for more small portion thereof conveyed to W than 15 years Since taking your CapH day but there is included iu the sules I have lost all trace of pain and my above bouuiay of 210 or 2 15 stomach is entirely well I can eat any acres a tract of about 10 or 11 thing and can truthfully say that I have acrrs con eyed to said Turner by W H not felt better in years Clav by deed of record in the office of Yours Respectfully the Clerk of Bourbon County Court to Mrs Lauka Weishauft which reference is made for a r VV T Brooks at 50c and Sold by 00 ticular descuption per box Send address on postal to the wtL liWright Med Co Columbus Ohio for Also oup lot of rroun trial size free ¬ ¬ 1 at about the hour of noon to the high Sews ard CMmons OF I j I a1 r- T- - -- fit W MT IH xssr j i HOW TO TIND OUT Fill a bottle or common glass with urine and let it stand twenty four hours a sedi- ¬ ment or settling indicates an unhealthy con- ¬ dition of the Kidneys When urine stains linen it is evidence of kidney trouble Too frequent desire to urinate or pain in the back is also convincing proof lhat the kid- ¬ neys aud bladder are out of order WHAT TO DO There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr Kilmers 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 ii corrects luaoiniy to Hold urine and scalding pain in passing i or bad effects fol- ¬ lowing use of liquor wiue or beer and over- ¬ comes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate The mild and the extraor- ¬ dinary effect of wamp Koot is soon realized its It stands the highest for ca wonderful cures of the most distressing es If you a medicine you should have the best ned Sold by druggists price fifty cents and one dollar You may have a sample bottle and namDhlet both sent free by mail upon receipt of three Lwo ceni stamps xo cover cost oi postage on tne bottle Mention The Paris Ky News ami send your address to Dr Co Biughampton N Y The Kilmer proprietors ot tnis paper guarantee the gen uiness of this offer 24sp lmo National Importance TSE SUN CONTAINS BOTH- 1 Daily by mail - - - -Daily and Sunday by mail 6 - a year 8 ayear- - The Sunday Sun isthe greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world Fnce 5ca copy Bymail SUtvear 4 u run V Ad Also one lot of ground located in Lexington Kentucky being lot No 17 x f London Park Pf Per ln B i auu iuuui ti iUrtUti litk Darallel to 7th Street 1CCU c e r GRAND CHANCE FOR YOU - - ty th BU L1DCoiSPaD - S K - characters who have staid in the east but sent no representatives abroad These Jewesses love display and court admiration They are much fairer than the men milky skinned with a pale pink flush as if they were hothouse Standing Committees of Bourbon bred Their clothes are erav rftrl ptppu Fiscal Court and blue beinc their favorito nnlnrs and the married women all wear decol- Finance R J Xeely Chair- ¬ man H C Smith and E P Clay lete bodices fashioned very low in front and showing a fancy shirt of embroidery brook lace which Jail A C Ball Chairman J andtheir forms either reveals the mold¬ of or makes startling ex T Barlow and P S See posures of the forms themselves Their County Infirmary John How ¬ chests are always quite bare This in a ard Chairman S L Weathers and land where the other women expose H CSmith nothing but their eyes is all the more 1 Charities T Barlow Chair ¬ astonishing On their crowns the Jew man P S See and S L Weathers ish matrons wear very showy often Turnpikes H C Smith Chair beautiful headdresses composed of a man A 0 Ball and E P Clay cap of red green and yellow silk or cloth that is carried down the back of brook the head in a bag that envelops their tresses Often these bags are finished TurnpikeCommissioners at the bottom with heavy gold braid District Xo 1 EdjTurner Paris In the Wake of a War by Julian Balph in Harpers Magazine Ky District No 2 Thos McClin Equal to the Occasion tock Millersburg Ky They tell this story in London about District No 3 Wm Linnehan the Countess Waldegrave who was North Middletown Ky married four times One evening she appeared at the opera in Dublin during Court of Claims meets first her fourth husbands occupancy of the post of chief secretary for Ireland An Thursday in April and October audacious Celt oatchiug sight of her ladyship in one of the boxes shouted out with real Irish temerity Lady Waldegrave which of the four did you like best The countess was equal to the occa- ¬ sion Without a moments hesitation she rose from her seat and exclaimed enthusiastically Why the Irishman of course a remark whioh naturally brought down the house -- Hutchi ou E P Claybrook Center villo J T Barlow Ruddles Mil s John Howard Also one lot of ground located in Lexington Kentuckj- - being lot ijb 18 in Blck No 12 of London Park proper ty of tne Belt Line Company fronting on e W side of Jackson street and rUnmng back l7 feeL SS rroutiuJ After the most wonderful busines in Fcill and Winter Goods we ever had we are well satisfied 55 for the benefit of Bargain Buyers we will inaugurate an Inventory Sale of ET and now Clothing Overcoats Jackets Capes Dress Goods Dry Goods ¬ sarv to satisfy the nlaintiff r dpht intpr u e3t and costs as hereinafter stated Said sale will be made upon credits of six and tw lve months for equal parts of the purchase money for which the purchaser will be required to execute bonds with good surety to be approved by the undersigned Master Commis- ¬ sioner payable to himself and bearing interest from date until paid at the rate Worth of six per cent having the force and Worth effect of judgments Worth 1 f- OrnmnflitlwpnfaBmjp vo - ao you to call and see the goods and vou will be astonished at the prices we are sacrificing gucngood and honest goods No old stock but all fresh this Fall and Winter stock It will pay FOR NINE DAYS ONLY and Overcoats 18 Shoesc -- I -- RED 16 HEED AND YOU WILL NEED THESE GREAT BARGAINS Mens and Boys Suits Ulsters and Ladies and Misses Jackets Gapes 15 12 8 7 12 9 11 ands ¬ for 9 days only S999 15 and 14 for 9 days only 7fiS 12 and in for 9 days only 649 6 for 9 days only 4 37 8 and Said sale is made to satisfy a judg ¬ Worth ment in favor of the plaintiff against the Worth 4 for 9 days only 319 5 and defendant herein for the sum of Worth 350 and 3 for 9 days odly 229 382502 with interest thereon from February 2Gth 1898 until paid at the rate of six per cent per annum amount- ¬ 200 Ladies Sailors Black and all colors 25c ing principal and interest on the day Worth 100 of sale to the sum of 388934 and the 200 Ladies Mufflers worth 125 now 59c costs of this suit 12745 making the sum total to be raised on the day of Comforts worth 100 now 50c Blankets worth 100 now 50c sale the sum of 401679 Plaid Dress Goods 5c EMMETT M DICKSON Infants Wool Hose now 5c 20 yds Sea Island Cotton Lu0 Ladies Jackets worth each 1200 now 499 Ladies Jackets worth each 8 00 now 300 Ladies Jackets worth each 600 now 275 Ladies Jackets worth each now 2 19 Ladies Capes worth each 800 now 400 Ladies Capes worth each 600 now 299 Ladies Capes wortfi each 450 rfow 212 lb Ladies Canes worth each 300 now 163 7 Ladies Capes worth each 200 now 99 Ladies Wool Hose now 10c 5f 5 1 w iwvS kSxSssSSX wMmm WLDOUGLAS fc WS Xjfc HlxJ m M fi - PA -- if 14 years this shoe by merit alone has distanced all competitors W L Douglas S3GO 81 OO and S50O Bhoes are the productions of skilled workmen fImJnQiest material possible at these prices and SSOO shoes for men S350 aOO and for boys and youthi W Ij Douclas shoes are indorsed by over 1000000 wearers as the in style fit and durability of best any shoe ever offered at the prices They are made iu all tho shapes and styles and of everylatest vari ¬ ety of leather If dealer cannot supply you ¬ logue to W L Douglas Brockton write for cata Mass Sold by 3SHOEthle0Vc For Nothing unusual in that And John he told the poor man to go to you know where through ths speaking tube Pick Me Up a species of boa from to 15 feet long They are employed in many houses to hunt rats at night being otherwise perfectly harmless They become attached to a House like a cat or a dog 10 Shoes Mens Gloves and Mittens 10c worth double Mens Fancy Shirts 19c worth double Ladies Shoes 150 for 9 days only 75c THE Mens Celluloid Collars 5c worth double Ladies Shoes 200 for 9 days only 100 Mens Caps 19c worth double Ladies Shoes 300 for 9 days only 1 00 NEW YORK WORLD Mens Heavy Socks 5c won h double Ladies Shoes 400 for 9 days only 200 EDITION Wool Socks 12c worth double Mens Boots and Shoei worth 400 now 2 00 Mens Heavy Undershirts and Drawers 19c worth Mens Boots and Shoes worth 350 now 175 18 Pages a Week 156 Papers a Year Men Boots and Shoes worth 300 now 1 50 double Mens Hunting Coats 75c worth double Mens Boots and Shoes worth 250 now 1 25 FOR ONE DOLLAR Mens Suspenders 10c worth double Mens Boots and Shoes worth 200 now 100 5c worth double 14 yds Mason ville Cotton 100 Published every Alternate Day except Mens Hemstitched Handkerchiefs Sunday Canton Flannel Drawers 19c worth double 14 yds Lonsdale Cotton 100 A New Road Found Mens Heavy Working Shirts 24c wortn double 2l yds Bleached Muslin 100 The k Edition of The mOh John dear isnt vour Qncla iNEw York World is first among all George dreadful weekly papers in size frequency of publication and the freshness accuracy Whats up now Q T U niv Why I called at his office today and varfety of its contents It has all u Antr oi fVinon nrinoD o fa ononifll fnf Tlnira --- joue j uV TOuiuBi il piace t Kemember and he was talking to one of hia clerks the merits of a great 6 daily at the tise prices you will surely get it as above stated We still give a large beautiful frh fro when we adver the price of a dollar weekly Its politi- every 5 and 10 worth you buy Dont fail to call before P up stairs -the bargains grabbed cal news is prompt THRICE-A-WJEEK cut Master Commissioner Bourbon Cir Court McMillan Talbott Attorneys Specials For 9 Days y Mens Ladies and Childrens Thrice-a-Wee- I C-V -S- T-k- -f vy - pw v -- v 1 v a ki ¬ lt5 sees live snakes In the markets of Brazil one often SlS J P KIELY Slhere are l425cliaracters in the 24 Doojssuickeus wrote J complete accurate and impartial as all its readers will testify It is against the monopolies and for the people It prints the news of all the world having special correspondence from all important news points on the globe It has brilliant illustrations stories by great authors a capital humor page complete markets departments for the household and womens work and other special departments of usual interest We offer this unequaled newspaper and The Bourbon News together one year for 225 The Tegular subscription priceujf the two papers is 300 ¬ SPECIAL JUST RECEIVEDBIGILINE OF WHITE GOODS 7h tta I I twin brothers BOURBONS BIGGESTIBARaAIN BRINGERS 701703 MAIN ST PARIS KY J