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The Mt. Sterling advocate: n. Wednesday, September 20, 1911.
The Mt. Sterling advocate: n. Wednesday, September 20, 1911. The Mt. Sterling advocate. 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Harris and Mason, Mt. Sterling, KY 1911 mts1911092001 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. The Mt. Sterling advocate: n. Wednesday, September 20, 1911. The Mt. Sterling advocate. Harris and Mason, Mt. Sterling, KY 1911 $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. S y I jJ J lW L i I t t G iii lit IUIi SIERLINP ADVOZiTEj i r d LARGEST CIRCULATION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED MN MONTGOMERY COUNTYt I f7 VOLUME XXI MT STERLING KENTUCKY WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 20 1911 NUMBER 11 INew Management for Baumon hotel The Nicholas Advocate has the following notice relative to the now lesees of the Baumont Hotel itDr and Mrs GV Grimes have leased the Baumont hotelat y Mt Sterling and left Monday to f Itake charge of that largo and well f equipped hestelry In addition to 4 the hotel business Dr Grimes will fit up an un to date office for tin practice of his profession Dr Grimes is a graduate of the Lou isville Medical College and also a t y graduate of Polycline of New York For a number of years he was Health Officer of this county as well as serving as President of the Nicholas County Medical So- ciety 2 for several years Dr and Mrs Grimes have many friends t here who will wish them well in their new held f We welcome these estimable people to our city and believe after they have resided here a Ii short while they will know our Jcityto be one of the livest little cities in the state Judge A A Hazelrigg is Appoint t r 7ed District Deputy JGmnd Exalted Ruler John p1 f Sullivan of the Benevolent and r Protective Order of Elks has an nounced his appointments to serve during the coming t Grand Lodge year The selections for Kentucky were W J HAJbrifton of Mayfield for the iiIwestern division and Judge A A 1 Hazelrigg of this city for the iieastern division JudgeI HareI trig is one of the best posted lodge men in the state and his many friends arc glad to see hint I receive this honor It tChristian Church to Make Great Improvements 2Joe W Langston has been awarded the contract for the erect It tiondf an addition to the Christian church This new addition will be used as a Sunday schoolroom and willcontain a dressing room for baptistry The second story will be used for class rooms The J McCormick Lumber Co will t rfurnish the lumber G H Stroth er the bt ick Ed L William the tits and galvanized iron work and Chenault Orear will do the plumbing Other improvements will be made and the total cost be more than 10000 11will 4 1LostI Gold watch chain with 250 gold piece attached Reward if returned to R L 7anarsclell MT STERLING MAN K1NOFLORDBALTIMOR Is Sure He is One of then Heirs to Great Estate in Maryland City and Has Lawyers There Investigating His Claims Charley Humphries of this city claims that he is one of the heirs to an estate in Baltimore valued at 20000000 Mr Humphries states that Lord Baltimore was a greatgreat grandfather of his and that his father and brothers now have lawyers in Baltimore prov ing their claims The estate consists of 6000 acres of land located in Baltimore which was leased by Lord Balti more for a period of ninetynine years The lease has long since expiredand the heirs of the Eng lish nobleman claim that the property is justly theirsjIj Horse Killed on Railroad Early Sunday morning a nice bay horse belonging to Arch White on Spring street was found deadunder the railroad trestle near the reservoir Mr White says he fastened the horse in the barn Saturday night but in sonic vav thehorse got out of the barn and it is supposed wandered up the railroad to the trestle There were signs on the ties where his legs had been down between them I and where he had fallen over into the water The horse was re moved by the railroad crew Sunday morning and buried Albert 0 Winner Albert 0 owned by P L Hon sley of this city won the 000 pacing event at the State Fair last week His wonderful speed cre ated a great deal of commei t The CourierJournal has the folio ing I mceI winner of the pacing stake showed remarkable speed in the filial of the first three heats of that race After being badly outpaced in the early part of each heat he came the last half like a Dan Patch His wonderful burst of speed was the feature of the days sports rail Opening We will have our openinir Tues day and Wedresdav September 26th and 27th Dont fail to see this display of the newest and most fashionable designs in milli- nerY I 102 Roberts Mastin == ==r Tile Rtieri CO Incorporated Announce theirI Fall IOell11Jn n n Tuesday and Wednesday j September 26 27 th High Class Showing of LADIES J MISSES and- CHILDRENS WEAR To Cards y I j Judge McCormick Reversed By Jury in J W Henry Will Case After deliberating only a few minutes a jury last week in the Henry will case unanimously found the paper introduced in evidence before them to be the last will and testament of J v1 Henry deceased The decedent by his will undertook to dispose of certain real and personal prop ery to which his son J E Henry also laid claim The propounders of the will were represented by Attorneys Prewitt Senff and Lewis Apperson while the con testant J E Henry was repre sented by J G Winn and U C Turner Prentice ORear to Wed Promi nent Virginia Girl Mr and Mrs J F Bullitt of Big Stone Gap Va have announced the engagement of their daughter Margaret to Printice Oliear son of Judge E C OKear Miss Bullitt was the maid of honor at the recent wedding of Miss Helen Oltear and Ensign Caswell Saillley The announcement is of special interest here where Mr ORear has many friends I Anderson Will Case Now Being I Heard in Clark County The trial of the Alex Ander son will case in which a number of Montgomery county people are interested is now in progress at Winchester ID WHS begun Mon day and will be a bitterly contest edcase Attorneys Prewitt 1 Sentf H A Chiles and Lewis Ap person of this city are engagcc as counsel in it I i Sale of fine Mares I Mr R B Young of this city recently sold to C M Hutton olf Minden La 2 fine threeyear old j mures Fannie Hohnan and Bour bon Princess both by Bourbon Chief These are both excellentt mares and while the price paid I was private it is understood to b I a good one I Livery Business fails to Sell I IThe livery business of Horton offered for sale at public 1Vade I toIowners at the snore old stand I toIBest beef pork lamb and veal at Vanarsdells fOUR THOUSAND CATTLE ON MARKE In This City Court DayA Large Crowd At the Pens and Trade Was Brisk About 4000 cattle on the mark et 1000 were sold on Saturday The quality was fairly good Trade was very brisk quite a con trast to last court Good feeders were brisk at 5 cents but bulk of sales around 475 Yearlings 4i to 4t cents heifers 375 to 410 cows 3 to 4 cents bulls 350 to 385 old cows andrough oxen li to 2 cents stock ewes 4 per head Large crowd at the pens and everybody seemed to be buyers a few being from Ohio A great deal of business done dur ing the day and as one Fayetti county man remarkedat higher prices than other places in the State stris Wiley Stone 15850 pound steers to A S Hart at 5 cents Ben Stafford 401000 pound steers to Turley Bridgeforth at 475Jas Nnpcr 5900 pound cows to Win McKinney of Fayett county at 340- I W Wagers of Richmond bought 25 gOO pound cows at 325 Carl Trimble 14750 pound steers at 5 cents O II Downer 10500 pound yearling steers to Milt Lykins nt i50 Rice Bros of Sullivan Ohio bought a car load of cows at abou- tin average of 350 Bridgeforth Jude bough 40900 pound steers of Paris Trim ble at 475 Ben Murphy 10450 pound heifers to F A Ecton of Clarc county at 4 cents Chas Rose 22550 pound heif ers to Win YYhaley Paris Ky I l 4 centsA Kerns of Carlisle bough t 75 cows heifers and oxen at 3 heifereI s and Oxen Sam Wheeler 33700 pound steers to Marion Dunn of Lexington at 430 A Skidmore 22800 poundI steers at 5 cents W E Little 10800 pound1 bulls at 385 John Deboarcl 10 cows to Ma- soni Dunn of Lexington at S340 Geo Ilulsey 351500 poun heifers at 4 cents Joe lisle 10000 pound rending steers at Jcents Ben Stafford 15800 pound 5 cents Henry Lemastre 34900 poun steers to Edsell Ultukof Bour boo county at 480 Same party sold 83450 pound heifers at 395 Ollie Siicdegar sold 2070 pound heifers at 410 Fred McCormack bunch 1000 poundsteers to Henry Hall at 8470O B Swetmun of rilbllrKy sold HiS sheep to different parties it 350 pet head MULES H L Ratoliff bought a car of neclium suckling mules at from 50 to 70 for Pulaski Horse Yule Co of Pulaski Tenn Hoard Armstrong bought a car of suckling mules for Pennsylva lia party at from 50 to 75 Latest Designs in fall millinery Be sure andat fend my opening Friday und Saturday Sept 22nd and 23rd My styles are tne very newest and my stock is the most complete I have ever shown Mrs Fnnnic Wilson Stephenson d ti- v MII Sunday School Convention Plans are being made to have the Fortysixth Annual Conven tion of the Kentucky Sunday School Association the hugest and greatest ever held in the state The music will be in charge of Prof E 0 Excoll of Chicago the famous choir leader and musi calauthor He will be assisted bv Mr A W Roper as pianist Those two had charge of the mu sic at the Worlds Sunday School Convention in Washington last year and at the International Sun day School Convention in San Francisco last June There are none better in the world and Ken tucky is to be congratulated upon getting such musical attraction for itsconventionRev A Joplin General Secretary of the Kentucky Sunday School Association writes that the people of Louisville are making preparation for at least one thousand delegates at the State Convention Oct 1922 Witer to the State Office 7122 Louisville Trust Building for full information Every Sunday school in the state is entitled to a delegate We want our county to have a large delegationThree hundred pastors three hundred superintendents of Sun day schools and live hundred teachers in our Sunday schools are expectedat the State Sunday School Convention in Louisville October 1922 Miss Mary Wilson of Mays vine will tell the story of the San Francisco Convention at the State Sunday School Convention in Lou Wilsonttold the story of the Worlds Con Conventionslast year and all who heard it pro nounced the finest description of iaI convention they hind ever heard This one will be equally as good Among the many who will Utah addresses and take part in the conferences at the State Sunday School Convention Louisville Oct 1922 may be mentioned Mr J Shrove Durham of Chicago Rev Win Drescol of Evansville Mr C D Moigs of Indianapolis President E Y Mullins Baptis Theological Seminary Piesidcn t C R Hem phi11 Presbyterianl Church Rev Roger T Nooo Crescent Hill Christian Church 1Hew Aquilla ebbIIteIIi t Memorial Presbyterian Church hew T M Hawes Highland Presbyterian Church Rev Pres liethodistdChurch C C Stoll Member In ternational Committee Mr Waltei E Fraee Sunday School Episco pal Church Lexington Mr Lu cion Waggoner Danville Mrs E MissdJerrie Waiver Ashland Miss Nannie Lee Frayser and Miss Madeline Heager of Louisville All information in regard to en tertainment of delegates to the Kentucky Sunday School Con en tion Louisville Oct 1922 cnn be secured by addressing Mrl Huston Quin 712 Louisville Trust Build ing Louisville Ky Fall styles Stacy Adams and WulkOvcr ShoesPunch Graves For homegrown vegetables of all kinds Greenwades MONTGOMERY COUNTY ELECTION OffICRS Appointed Tuesday By Election Commissioners At a meeting of the Election Commissioners of Montgomery county held at the Court House last Tuesday morning the following gentlemen were selected as registration and election officers for the coming October registration and November election First Ward G E Coons Judge J II Wood Judge B J McDonald Clerk Joe A Steph ens Sheriff Second WardC C Schooler Judge Harry Campbell Judge- C F Thomas Clerk W C Moore Sheriff Third Ward Robt McCarty Judge PI W Stockton Judge T W Fitzpatrick Clerk Henry Botts Sheriff Fourth Ward Frank Gibbons Judge L G Howard Judge C T Coleman Clerk A lI Cline Sheriff Aarons Run D P Henry Judge W B Davis Judge E E Hastie Clerk J B Clark SheriffSide I View Jas Hon Judge English Anderson Judge Bing hum Anderson Clerk Joe Henry SheriffGrassy LichCrntrford Mason Judge D J Burchett Judge Will Howell Clerk Mike How ard Sheriff Levee Ernest Gillispie JudgeI J ll Adamson JudgeJ Raymond I Sheriff Knox Clerk Simpson Garrett Jeffersonville Vincent Vance Judge A W Ficklin Judge J1 1D Stephens Clerk E 1Hl Greer Sheri ifV1Uutumgo It M1 Bridgforth Judge Campbell Gibson Judge j I Ed Ensor Clerk P IL Cockrell ii SheriffUartsA S Bridges Judge- E J Shackelford Judge H C Ficklin Clerk J H Crooks SherifiSpencetFrank Fortune Judge Andy Wilson Judge Andy Hud dox Clerk Alvin Myers Sheriff Smith ville G B Swanco Judge Emanuel Tipton Judge Dim Skidmore Clerk Robt Marshall Sheriff Howards lillA 1L Turley Judge JI H Lewis JudgeJ Luther Bittinger Clerk Walter Anderson Sheriff Beans Price Calk Judge Tax well Burns Judge Ben W hall Clerk Forrest Lockridge Sheriff New Meat and Grocery Store Mr S Eo Kelly will be the manager of the new meat line grocery store which has jjst opened on the corner of Queen I and Locust streets and which will CoeI They will keep a full line of freshI and cured meats andn complete line of groceries Mr Kelly who is a son of the late M1 S Kelly is I a popular and deserving young man and will no doubt be suc cessful in his new venturo T 250 pumps and oxfords re duced to 198 1 II Bruner Stf The Shoe Man THE FEED THAT FATTENS High Grade Cotton Seed 3X eal V AND COTTON SEED HULLS Dont let the high price of corn and hay disturb your feeding plans Use Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls Write me for delivered pri- cesWi11iaamA 33umettBourbon Stock Yards Established 1901 LOUISVILLE hY Kentucky Agency for Owl Brand Meal 93t- y J I S frtf 1 1 fERVID Petition Put Up by a Colored Minister Who Wanted Rain U Last Sunday a colored preacher who is noted for his rugged elo quence was requested to pray for rain in that county says the Richmond Register Being of an IIj j accommodating disposition he readily consented and offered up a petition that was fervid varigated and unique He said in part Thou krowest oh Lord that l we is havin de wust droutht heap that you evah saw De craps is all dryin up de watch millions is wiltedon de vines sweet taters isII about all killed de streams is about stopped runnin an famine 1 is about to bust forth in all its fury De whole Ian is as dry as an ornery unconverted niggah in a prohibition town an somethin raly must be done or thy sarvents will all perish Now what we need is a good soakin rain an we implore yhee to heah our prayers an turn de Hood gates of heaven loose De time has gone by when de gentle dew will do any donthwant no gentle showers wid rain bows an twittcrin birds nor any sizzlysozzly sprinkles but we wants a regular ripsnortin roar in scramhv sodsoakin gully washin gravelheavin trash movin rootsearchin downpour in rain uDen oh Lawd let de thundeh beller let de lightnin Hash let de clouds bust an sen us rain dat willsoak de groun cleah down to the bowles of de girth and cause springs to bust forth in all be valleys an make de desert bloom as de I rosedTill cAU Rs1luUd for yourself a stromt box Fiishlon uuuh part with euro When its strong us your hand can raahu It Put your troubles hart Hide thuro all thoughts of your failures And each bitter cup that you quail Lock nil your hewrtachos within it Tlton sit on the ltd nod laugh Tell no ODU oho its contents lover Its socrots share When youve dropped in your were and worry Keep them forever there Hide them from sight so completely That the world will never dreum halt Fusion the strongbox securely Then sit on the lid and laugh Herthu Adams Ruckus In Munsevs Twice Grandmother at the Age of TwentyNine Atlanta GarA grandmother of two children at the age of 2D and three at 30 years is the record of Mrs Eo 1V Bender of this city It is claimed that Mrs Bender is the youngest grandmother on record and her case one of the most remarkable outside of tropical countircs Mrs Bender who is 31 years oldwas horn in 1880 in South Carolina She was married to 1E W Moore at Columbia S C inIi 1802 She was only 13 years and 3J months old when her first child i daughiJ ter was ward Sinclair and in January 1910 gave birth to twins the mother being barely 1C and 11I grandmother not yet 30 In January of this year Mrs Benders daughter gave birth to another child the third of Mrs Benders grandchildrenMr died when Mrs Sin clair was an infant Later his widow married Eo W Bender and that union has been blessed by several children Physicians claim it is rare in this part of the world that a woman becomes a grandmother in the early thirtie- even And Then What It is expected that the United States Supreme Court will take upII several antitrust cases soon after the opening of its session next I month and impress upon the com bines how the court proposes the law shouldbe enforced II Society VoterHow Brown has finally married the girl he called a peach He tried to break the engagement several times but found that she was a clingstone When a man reads aboututhe pace that kills he thinks abou champagne and automobile rae ing and cUorus girls he forget- all about filing too much too fast 1 The Moving Electric Sign A great many of the electric signs now being installed are of the moving type Walk down most any city street after dark and you will see many illuminated sign of very novel and interesting design Here a long red and blue snake seems to be wriggling from the street to the top of a building On the other side a wheel is rapid ly revolving below it yellow smoke is issuing in clouds from a huge brown cigar There is also a large theater sign which sudden ly hushes into view only to disap pear after an interval long enough to read it A large sign on a de partment store comes into view in sections the blue border first the words to the ad in white and last the firms name in bright red let ters In front of a moving pic ture theater the bill is announced in a big sign which spells the words letter by letter It is quite puzzling to the ordi nary pedestrain to explain theI wonderful light effects It is apparent that the light is obtained from electricity but this is about all that is understood In such signs where a snake seems to bell wriggling along a cat chases a ratswords that spell themselves letterII by letter and in all other similar f signs the effect is produced btmechanical device called a Basher 1 which lights the tiny electric sign lamps in the order required to produce the effect This flash er is driven by a tiny motorCThe flasher is made up of a num ber of fingers and each linger drops in its turn upon a metal plate that is electrically connected witha certain letters or in thet case or the snake or rat chasers with certain bulbs Tho flasher is- riven rapidly and in this way the can be speeded around its course very swiftly Where the only effect desired is a sign in whichone letter is illuminated at I n time the flasher becomes a much simpler device but in all cases the underlying principle is the same 1 For Rent t First floor of my residence on Antwerp avenue Four nice I rooms gas electric lights hot andcold water Phone 204 8tf Mrs Mary Schlegeljj BACK jIVES OUTII Plenty of Mt Sterling Readers Have This Experience You tax the kidneys overwork themI They cant keep up the continual strainThe back gives outit aches and painf Urinary troubles set in Dont wait longertake Doaus Kidney Pills Mt Sterling people tell you how they act Join W Forman S Montgom ely street Mt Sterling Ky saysI think my kidney trouble was the result of overexertion 1 was obliged to give up all work that requiredstooping on account of a weak and lame back I was often laid up for several days at a time and finally I began to lookaround for a cure I did not find anything of benefit until I procured Doans Kidney Pills at F Cr Du ersons drug store I was soon well and strong and now am entirely free from kidney trouble I am pleased to give Doans Kidney endorsementsFor sale ball dealers Price 50 cents FosterMilburn Co I Buffalc New York sole agents for the United States- Kemember the name Doans and take no other 1121 A young man who had prolong ed his call on his sweetheart a few nights ago was surprized when a window in an upper story was raised as he left the house and the voice of the mistress called out Leave an extra quart this morn ing please Billious Feel heavy after din ner Tongue coated Bitte- t taste Complexion sallow Lire- need waking up Doans Regu centsS at any drug store lm- erg a i 1Ii6fV f4 r Room Chock Full of Furniture iji it ijfJV I UPTODATE ARITHMETIC I IJy Thomas L Mnsson Three women buy puffs One buys four puffs for ten dollars the buys eight for eighteen dol lars and the third one buys ten for twentyseven dollars Then all three go to a play and put their heads together What is the net resultThree young ladies are smoking ciearettes In two hours two of theta can smoke three times as I I many as one cnn in one hour and the first one of the two smokes half again as many as the second In three days they consume four hundred cigarettes How many does each one smoke Ten jibes make twenty people mad but of the ten jibes en hone delights ice out of the ten who do not agree with it What is the proportion of the madness to theu gladness 1 A society woman is reducing her weight One rollon the floor takes off two ounces while four ficocktailsand two quarts of champagne add fourteen ounces How many hours must she roll between meals to keep even A woman beginning at twelve oclock midnight can deliver wordsf t to her husband at the rate of on hundred and seventyfive a minute and for every half hour later sh can increase her speed at the rats I of three words a minute lIowtt many words will she deliver to himII tt between two and two fortvfivet A father spends ten thousand I dollars on his sons education ten thousandon his clothes two thous and on his cigarettes two thousand t on his drinks ten thousand On histt gambling and sixteen thousand on 4 his automobiles What is the totali capacity of the boy at the age of I twentyIrur Sale Double Standard Polled Durii ham Bulls which are hornless Shorthorns Shropshire Bucks by an imported prize winning sire + Pure bred Poland China boars and gilts Thomas J Bigstaff 13tf Mt Sterling Ky Maybe wandering in his mind vI I isnt as had as it sounds some people couldnt get far Queerwhen a man takes affront 1 he usually gets his back upI Real Estate Real Estate TIlE WORLD IS MADE Of Real Estatep Let us sell you a piece of it List your farm with us now Any husiuess entrusted to us will receive our immediate and prompt attention EvansrOffice No 9 Court St Residence Antwerp Ave PhoneS au MT STERLING KY THE DRY FALL OUTING TO tf Mammoth have 1 For The Home Circle and Private Parties J 1565 AT t r This includes your board and admission to the several routes in the Cave One evening for a or dance A GRAND OUTING WRITE OR PIIONE L N TICKET jiIi- I9Jt i4 b I Rye as a Cover Crop Cover crops should be grown in Kentucky much more than thev re No matter Jn what section of the State one may travel he may see during the winter many corn and tobacco fields lying bare The writer has seen many such elds in the most fertile sections- of the State as well as in the poor est To leave cultivated fields in this condition means great loss The fields wash some very badlyI all of them some unless they arc absolutely level The cultivation of this may be lost be leaching A prevent washing It will use up the available plant food left by the preceding crop This will be returned to the soil whether the cover crop is turned under or pastured The roots of the cover crop greatly improve the physical condition of the soil especially iis this true of rye Fields of poor tilth are sometimes put in good condition by one rye cover crop Rye is the best i cheap Itwill grow on a wid variety of soils It may be sow as cndus September first or a sI late as November first It wil nuke a better growth on pOOl soils than any other winter cove crop yet it responds to the use 01 fertilizers and manures When to 6 inches high it is a most excellent pasture for pigs while 5 ir its later stages it is a splendid pas tore for all animals The remnant may be turned under in time to pre pare the ground for the next crop The Station makes practice of sowing rye in the COIl ground This is postured and th ground then prepared for cowpea or soy beans which are plantei about June first This crop come off in time to give the ground good for wheat Clover follows wheat Use tw bushels of rye per acre and pu it in well The cover crop not only pre vents washing saves fertility an provides pasture but it adds humus to the soil Try rye as cover crop if you have not done sc Dont think that piles cant cured Thousands of obstinalt cases have been cured by Doan Ointment 50 cents at any dru store 1m r I 1st =l ct l J TRIP FROM Andall way stations Regular Train 715a in If its a monument you are going to erect it should be of GEORGIA MAR BLE if its a vault GEOR GIA MARBLE is the proper material if its a building GEORGIA MAR- B L E should be used for both exterior and interior Because it will not absorb moisture which prevents it with stands heat to 1000 de grees Fah you can get any size shape or shade de sired it will remain beau tiful and unbroken as long as it lasts ipr Sept I J J fI ALL EXPENSES HOTEL ONLY 650 THREEDAYS AGENTj Muche ande nonleguminou isf Experiment preparation lHjf ROUND WINCHESTER promenade decomposition Hand IIW27tw In selecting a monument ti- tis with tho iidea of perpet uating tho memory of some loved onebut it is not a r thatr I away Avoid this by nskJing your dealer to show you samples of Cherokee Creole Etowahand Kcnnesaw Georgia Mar ble for monuments For Sale by I Markland Jackson MARBLE AND GRANI- IIMonuments Etc i Mt Sterling Ky JI jfcoffmans insurance Agency w I SIXTY FOUI YEARS UNDER ONE NAME For Insurance on rf tt obctcco and S3arns J See and 5 TALK WITH r HOFFMANJitnEither Fire Tornado a n c dS S Olympian Springs1 Of course you are going some time this season Make your room reservation o now September the capacjty of the hotel is generally taxedvt The table is unexcelled nights cool and bracing the waters unsurpassed the music dancing and amusements all that can be desired Reduced railroad rates Hotel rates 250 per day 1250 per week upwards writed for particulars a I WM M ONEAL Manager beStf OLYMPIA BATH COUNTY to KENTUCKYI s J LET US DO 1 1ltPRINTING f4 r t Jron 5 j I I q S t1t I Am Well writes Mrs L R Barker of Bud Kyland can do all my housework For years I suffered with such t pains I could scarcely stand on my feet After three different doctors had f failed to help me I gave Cardui a trial Now T feel like a new woman E 58 keCARDUI JThe Womans Tonic A womans health de pends so much upon her 11 delicate organs that the rzf least trouble there affects her whole system It is 1 the little things that count in a womans life and health If you suffer from i anrof the aches and J I j pains due to womanly weakness take Cardui at y td= T once and avoid more seri f trous troubles We urge itYOllr to try iit Begin today I 7 e 0Rar Bradley and the Lobby One of the vexatious things that keeps Judge ORear awake at nights and wrecks his happiness is the corrupt lobby which is1 k t otherwise known as the Third I House He solemnly promise if elected Governor to destroy this iniquitous combination and I make it possible for the Legisla y ture to pass laws without beinu improperly influenced We arc al agreed on this subject Tin lobby is a scandalous invasion ol the Legislative department of the government and thoso who bribe and bully Legislators ought to be in the penitentiary instead of diG tating nominations or party poli cies Governor McCreary is com milted to destroy this excrescenceI and if he is elected Governoi there will be a housecleaning at Frankfort that will punish many old offenders and rid the Capitol of the gang that has enriched themselves four years at the public expense Farmers mechanics railroaders laborers rely on Dr Thomas Electric Oil Takes the sting out of cuts burns or bruises at once Pain cannot stay when it is used r lm The famous Transylvania Stake at Lexington On Thursday October 5th the t famous 5000 Transylvania Stake will be raced for the 23rd time Always a great race it promises to be better than ever this year J with such trotting stars as R T C 206i Stroller 205i Anvil 208i Argot Hal 2071 King Brook 207i Dorothy Hansboro 206J Chatty Direct Gordon Todd Redlac Jr Cheney and I several others likely to come to the post As the grooms say j1 this will be a race for your whiskers Dont miss it Re member the half fare rates on railroads and attend iu= Silver Plate thatrThose who seek pcrfec V tion in silverware in j variably choose forks i spoons and fancy serv- Ing pieces stamped with the renowned trade mark 1847 ROGERS BROSTE In quality and beauty of design this well known silver is unsur passed Its remark able durability has won it the popular title Silver Plate that Wears H Sold by leading iA dealers every SSI where Send for K S catalogue CL showing all J Jill designs I MERHKN Mlt BRITANNIA CO- lDItDOIIoaIIlU Co Bocotuor MERIIEH CONK c x L- F A SAD SEA TALE ny A W Cooke A Mermaid sat beside the sea Early she wept and late Ah mel she sighed Hard as Ive tried I cant be up to date For though I smoke and though I flirt I cannot wear a harem skirt COUNTY COURT DAYS Following is a list of days Couu ty Courts are held in counties near Ml Sterling Hath Owingsville 2d Monday Bourbon ParIs 1st Monday Clark Winchester 4th Monday Fayetle Lextigton 2d Monday Fleming Flenungsburg 4th MondayHarrison Cynthiana4th Mon day Madison Richmond 1st Mon dayMontgomery Mt Sterling 3rd Monday Nicholas Carlisle 2nd Monday Does a jag result when a dog whines r Would a dress that is ripped make a lasso To be wet or dry isjiot that ll e Maine thing 1 In the stone ago did they ever see a cradle rock If Maud Muller raked the luy what did Idaho Washington loved his country whom did Paul Revere If OToole should prove a goldbrick ought Barney Drey fuss Matches may be made in Heav enBut they are made light of on earth Hell disappeared rt long iwo x cept as members of the human family raise it A music teacher is always sur prised to find that anyone who has not taken lessons is fond of music I am tired of being coaxed into doing things I do not want to do no doubt you are but agents do not take the hint- Roofing for Sale Iwill save you money on all kinds of metal roofing or sheet metal Phone 674 Gtf Henry Judy When a man praises a woman by saying she makes her own dresses the other women sny Yes and they look it yourelfoftener jured you People are pretty goodabout letting you alone It is not enough for you to take care of yourself you must contribute to the support of actol 5 and politicians playing hero parts Employer and employe know each other almost as well as hus band and wife and are almost as much disposed to pickIlt each other FIGURE OF THE BRONZE AGE Giant of Cerne Abbas Deeply Cut In the Hard Turf of Dorset England On the side of a steep down in the old town of Cerne Abbas Dorset England a huge figure of a man ap pears cut deeply in the hard turf It is a creation of a period hidden in the mists of antiquity The body resem bles that of the simian the arms are unusually long and outstretched as are the legs The right hand grasps the handle of an enormous club and the general attitude sug gests pursuit of game The head seems sunk between the shoulders and the face which is uncannyleerleerStudents of types attributethe giant us the Dorset figure is called to the bronze age The figure has been cared for throughout the cen turies of its existence Originally it is supposed to hev been regarded as bringing good luck to the people dur ing the Celtic and curly English epochs It receives attention now on account of its quaintness and age The Dorset giant is incised in the turfafter the manner of the Long Man of Wilmington and the White Horses of Berkshire andelsewhere The turf is so hard that the outlines of the figure have been preserved in tact for many centuries 1It Xd fttCf I The Land of Beginning AgainB- Y LOUISA FrRTCHER TARKINGTON that there were some wonderful placeJ IIWISH00 the Land of Beginning Again Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches And all of our poor selfish grief ak Could be dropped like a shabby old coat at the door 1ISS And never put on again I wishwe could come on it all unaware Like the hunter who finds a lost trail t And I wish that the one whom our blindness had done The greatest injustice of all Could be at the gates like an old friend that waits Ci For the comrade hes gladdest to hail 9 We would find all the things we intended to do But forgot and remembered too late Little praise unspoken little promises broken And all of the thousand and one w Little duties neglected that might have perfected The day for one less fortunate r It wouldnt be possible not to be kind In the Land of Beginning Again ytAnd the ones we misjudged and the ones whom we grudged JlTheir moments of victory here i handclaspiy For what had been hardest wed know had been besti Andwhat had seemed loss would be For there isnt a sting that will not When weve faced it and laughed it gainIIAnd I think that the laughter is most In the Land of Beginning Again U 5So I wish that there were some wonderful place Called the Land of Beginning Again Il Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches And all of our poor selfish I Could be dropped like a gIiefij Andnever put on again M 50 all those Who tfavont Do It NowThe EXCHANGE is seeking YOUR business aml is prepared to care for it 3 Paid in Our Savings Department exchange Junk of Jfentucky MT STERLING KY 49lyr State formal j Graining School For tjoachars Courses leading to Elementary State Certllleato Intermediate State Certtilcate Advanced State Certlllcate this certlllcute be corms u life diplomaI All these certificates lire valid In till public schools In KentucUy Special courses He view Courses Tuition free to appointees Two splendid Dormitories New Modell School New Manual Training Hiilldlnir Practice School Department of Ag riculture u well equipped Gymnasium Full term begins September 12 1911 Students can enter to advantage any time Address 7lyrI J n CKAIlliK President Itlchmond Kentucky IrpheniX for PurSilkMen and Women 1 Sold only by W H BERRY CO FITTERS OF FEET The Home of Everything that is New and Upto the minute in Footwear Telephone 656a Shoe Repairing a S Cla LI r yI Dry Cleaning Pressing and Repairing Upto Date Style Ladies Work a Specialty Sanitary Steam Pressing Call Phone 225 E W STOCKTON 10 North Maysville Street Mt Sterling Kentucky aOG OSOLEE8Can be prevented for Only 5 Cents per Month for each hog hcrdlleIWlltcome In the Full and SPring and every year thousands of farm ers lose their hogs BOUKHON HOG CHOLKUA HKMKDY cures and prevents Cholera Couuhs Worms Jeers Scours clusesb01r11today anti save your hogs At your Driorlsts or sent upon receipt of Price Gallon fS 10 Quart 150 Miniifiictim ri and Guaranteed hv BOURBON REMEDY COMPANY Lexington Ky Sold by W 8 LLOYD I WHY UNCLE TOM HAD TO GO Submissive and Devoted Wife Found Pet Parrot Was Teaching Husband to Swear Tho suffragist community is in debted to Mrs 0 II P Belmont for n new story says the Cincinnati TimesStar Mrs Belmont as all know is one of the most ardent of suffragists The other women in the movement complain that sho wishes to be the whole show and just per mit the others to work for her but no one questions her devotion to the cause She refused the other day to appear on the same platform with another woman who was hopelessly in the thrall of the demon man and to explain her dislike told the fable- I used to know a married pair said she of whom the wife was a devotedand a charming woman and the man was a good for nothing But no matter what he did his wife al ways forgave him One day I was calling upon her when I saw her butler pass the door carrying a huge green parrot in a cage 0 said Iare you going to get rid of Uncle Tom Uncle Ton was the parrot Yes said the poor little wife with a sigh Im fond of him but I feel that it is my duty to send him away And why is it your duty I asked I just foundout the other day she said that naughty Uncle Tom is teaching my husband to swear LEEK A DELIGHTFUL PLANT St Davids Vegetable Wholesome If Homely and Not so Malodor ous as Pistol Maintained During the past few years some predatory Welshmen have tried to rob St David of the homely but wholesome vegetable with which he iis associated They assert that the real emblem of Wales is not the leek but the daffodil But the daf fodil outside the Scilly Isles seldom iblossoms so early as St Davids day while the wild leek grows pro fusely around the coast of South Wales From an esthetic point of vujw the leek iis 1 delightful plant vjeJL1 worthy of the vegetarian saint and by no means so malo dorous as Pistol calamitously main tained It vas largely uponi leeks that the Pharaohs fed the laborers who built the Pyramids Works of reference erroneously state that the emblem of the principality has received no recognition at court since the reign of George II Queen Alexandra when princess of Wales wore a leek at the drawing room which was held on St Davids day in 1SS2 London Chronicle FLUTES FOR NOSES The Sakais the little wild pcopl ofalayndo not reach a very high level in musical instruments hut with their nose flutes they often bring forth exceedingly sweet and melodious tones In every quarter of thet earth from the remotest times the familiar flute blown with the mouth is found but the Sakais are probably the only people who play flutes with their noses Occasionally 1 negro minstrel has been seen in this country who could play a flute vith his nose but it is a rare stunt tad not a habitual practise as it is vith the Sakais of Malaysia MANS NOSE THE LIMIT One of Judge Lindsays stories is ofa poor IrishmanI who was arrest id in Denver Colon the Fourth of July for punching another man in theI face Whon the judge asked him if he was guilty he said Sure thats what Im here to findout The jud o told him he was charged with striking a man But wasnt it the Fourth of Tuly sad couldnt T have a bit of fun he asked Yes said the judge but your right to have fun ended where this mans nose began- DRAWING THE LINE You are but a servant of your countryThats right replied Senator Sorghum I dont object to being classified as a servant if you dont get me mixed up with those fellows who stand around and get grouchy about tips DRAWING THE LINE Mistress Bridget I want you to go to market with me this afternoon New MaidIll resign mo job first mum Ill not walk down th street wid a lady thtB carryin a market basket TuttsPillsstimulate strengthen the digestive organs regulate the bowels and are un equaled as an- ANTIBILIOUS MEDICINE- In malarial districts their virtues are widely recognized as they pos sess peculiar properties in freeing the system from that poison Ele gantly sugar coated Take No Substitute The Big Lexington Trots The greatest trotting meeting in the world begins at Lexington on Tuesday October 3dand contin ues for two weeks Each day one or more of the historic stike races of Kentucky are contested andall the races are tilled with the pick of the countys best racers meet ing at Lexington for the first time this year The worlds richest trotting stake the great Kentucky Futurity the Transylvania an nual championship race of the world the Tennessee Stake the Walnut Hall Cup the Champion Stallion colt race the great Free For All trots and paces the ap pearance of Uhlan 1 581 the worlds champion trotter find every other champion from yearling up will make this the greatest racing carnival ever known Half fare on all Kentucky railroads Remember the dates October 3 to M read advertisement in this is sue and go- Generally debiliated for years Mad sick headache lacked ambi tion was wornout and all rundown Btu dock Blood Bitters made me a wellwomansirs Chits Freitoy Moosup Conn 1- mDonttOverlookw That subscliplionI If you arc in ar rears remember that we can always find good use for p 7thc MONEY A certain young cigar clerk is sore because his girls father persuaded vv her to stop going with him by buying her a Boston bull terrier A man said on the street the other day I know what Im talking about Hes a very unusual man if he does If requested by the Mikado to return home would Admiral Togc 1 PUBLIC C1osiE 1Out Sale At Horsemens Headquarters 151 East Main Street LEXINGTON KY September 27th 1911 Conufencing at 9 oclock a in Having leased my stable to Jell Harp who will continue the business at the same stand I willsell the entire stock of this stable to the highest bidder Ten head of Buggy Hcrses Three Carriage Teams Four Surrey Horses Four Iandans Four Depot Wagons CoupesOne One Barouche Two Traps Ten Top Buggies Five Buckboards One threeseated Wagonette One Jersey Wagon Four Sets Carriage Harness Five Sets Surrey Harness Twelve Sets Buggy Harness One large chestnut mare in foal good work mare Double Set Heavy Wagon Harness Poles Breast Yokes Carriage and Bug gy Robes Office Furniture etc etc I wish to say to the public that the Horses Carriages and Coupes IV and Buggies that I nun offering for sale are lirstclass TERMS OF SALEOn allsums under 50 will be cash Over this amount four months credit will be given on bankable notes bearing 0 per cent interest There are many other things that will be sold that are not mentioned in this advertisement Garret D Wilson Owner of Horsemens Headquarters I GEORGE A BAIN Auctioneer n2t a t t L i v I i i L r a pantORPORATtDti te M T d Y Q r e v i J tf HEDDIiS EDITORSGI Entered in the 1ostoffice at Mt Sterling as secondclass mail matter SUBSCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR Cash must accompany order No announcement inserted until paid for DEMOCRATIC TICKET I For United States Senator OLLIE M JAMES For Governor JAMES B llci REARM For LieutenantGovernor EDWARD J McDERMOTT For AttorneyGeneral u- JAMES S GARNETTt For Auditcr HENRY M BOSWORTH For State Treasurer THOMAS G RHEA Par Secretary of State I C F CRECELIUS f of Public Instruction I I IForSupt HAMLETT siontr of Agricultureii i J W NEWMAN I For Clerk of Court of Appeals ROBERT L GREENE I For Representative W L CRAIG I For County Court Clerk I KELLER GREE- NEANNOUNCEMENTS = C = h Ic CITY COUNCIL vr are authorized to announce the following as candidates for the Democratic no nination for members of the City Council subject to the action of the Democratic primary October 6 r91iwFirst WardJAMES MCDONALD G D SULLIVAN Second WardJ WILL CLAY H G ENOCH Fourth Ward W R McKEE C B STEPHENS EWING A FLYNN 1 CITY CLERK We are authorized to announce H M RIXGO as a candidate for Clerk of cty of Mt Sterling subject to the action of the Democratic primary Oct 6 thet1 CITY ATTORNEY We are authorized to announce W C HAMILTON as a candidate for City Attorney of the city of Mt Sterling subject to the action of the Democratic Pri 1 mary October 6 5911 CHIEF OF POLICE Police primaryOctorer j ofPoliceI October 6th 1911 ofPoliceprimaryOctober 1CITYASSESSOR j CityAssessorIJn j nary October 6 1911 forCityprimary October 6 1911 I I candidatefor 1 primary October 6 1911 To the Qualified Voters of the City Primary to be Held Oct 6 tgu DemocraticPrimrary j 1 willtenderI j wuicui ui uui uituAi until they will be our pride instead of our shame as in the past t I will very much appreciate your vote and influence Respectfully submittedRANDALL S STOKLEY REPUBLICAN DUPLICITY We have always known the Republicans in this campaign would endeavor to again fool the people but did not think one could bo frank enough to admit it Last week at Paducah Prof Thos W Vinson candidate for Superintendent of Public Instruction when asked if any Republican1 Campaign Books had been printed yet apologetically said No none have been printed yet and none will be printed You c see the Campaign Committee has decided to have a great number of pieces of printed platter pamphlets etc printed but they will all bin separate pieces You see there will be some pieces we want to place in the hands of certain classes andwe wouldnt like for them toiii get into the hands of certain other classes In other words they propose to findout the sentiment in each locality and alter their campaign literature to suit With a Republican it is a case of tell us what you are for and we are with you OampaignUonlluittecfall campaign All eyes lira upon us and it is very necessary that we shall do our full dutyl Many of us know Judge ORear personally and intimately but this iii a campaign involving principles and not individuals or sentiment No Democrat can assign any good reason for not giving Senator McCrcary and the entire Democratic State ticket loyal support N X f t rf11w I The Mt Sterling National jSairiK Capital 50000 Surplus 50MO Undivided Profits 12500r ur 0 B Cashier I To Prevent Lynching The Lexington Company of the Kentucky National Guard has been ordered to flays+ ille where they will guard W T Ham a white man under indictment in the Ma son Circuit Court on the charge of mistreating two little girls lust July whose trial was called at Muvsviilc Monday and Ham was given a sentence of 40 years in the penitentiary Hams crime aroused public in dignntion to suchn pitch that threats of lynching had been been heard frequently in Moion county and it was believe that if lie was brought from the jail without militarv protection he would be taken from the officers and lynched Ham is 02 years oldand a crimple He was taken to Cov ington after his indictment rind held there for safekeeping It seems that Ham was in the habit of giving a little outing par ties to the small girls of the neigh orhoodat which he excluded all boys Nothing was ever thought of these outings us Ham was con sidered a sober industrious man and apparently a devout church member attending church Arid Sunday School regularly every Sunday lIc was employed on the farm of Mrs E T Reese a idow living in the Shannon pre cinctOn Sunday July 9 1911 he took three little girls out for a walk and in his wanders he ant tempted to attack one of the little girls need 11 years The child came running to her mother and told her of Hams conduct The mother was horrified be yond belief but was convinced something was wrong so she corij fided the childs story to bell brother A quite investigation was started to verify the girls story and then came to light the crimes of which Ham had been guilty The still hunt developed the fact that Hum had been guilty of criminal conduct with one child aged 10 years for four years and another for three years Tile lat ter is now 11 years Toldhe girls themselves made the confession Thereupon Ham was con fronted with their story which he vigorously denied at first but finally confessed after being told that tho girls had told then story n Opening Announcement I will have my fall Millinery Opening Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd and 23rd I have thei very latest creations in ladies head gear A visit to my store will convince you Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson Vehicles at Cost Until October 1st I will close l out my stock at cost I03t lI W Senieur r New apples for cooking and eat ing at Vanarsdells Fall styles Stetson and Youman Hats Punch Graves J j EXPERIENCE WITH A d Bank Account shows that it is a great time as well as worry and money saver If you have an account at the Alt Sterling National Bank you count your money once when you make up your deposit and that curls it Men without bank accounts have to vlouiiV their cash over and over to make sure it is all there Open an account and save the time that others waste PATTERSON A v ada Q CORRESPONDENCE J HIGH TOP I J W Mee bought 10 acres of corn from Mr Holloday for 250 J HI Henry moldwife have re turned from a two weeks visit at tango Springs They reported a nice time r vPLUClark McClain solda bunch of shoats to Jumcs McDonald at oic Our school boys have been very busily emrayed in digging a well during the dry spell butowirjgto- the recent rains they have conclud d to stop until they can investi gate another water witch Rev Robert Reynolds of Mt Sterling is holding a protracted barn meeting at Bunkers Hill with much success and will continue till Sunday night There will be hap tixiny next Sunday afternoon at 330 oclock Bro Reynolds is an ehquent talker and the crowds arcs numbered by the thousand1 STOOPS JFarmers are progressing slowlyI housing tobacco Frank Byrdof Cincinnati is here visiting relatives Green pastures have createda slight demand for stock r Miss Ethel Reason of Lexing ton is here visiting relatives Jesse T fromMa visit to relatives at Covington i Seems strange that a small fry politician will make sucha big stew I Byrd Fnssett bought of moun = tain parties 100 lambs for 325 per head Harrison Conn wife and daughter Miss Leona went Saturday to visit relatives at Little Rock Mrs Roger Fasett and son 1 Lawrence will tro this week to join Mr Fassett in Central Amer licit Dwight Smathers of Spring lield has gone to Cincinnati to en ter the Cincinnati Veterinary Col loge The Sunday school at Springfield is progressing nicely and promises to be the best in two countiesMany pf the mountain jzounties are well represented in this section now Tobacco housing being the attraction u Bridges Bros twoyearold jack Kentucky Wonder won the blue ribbon in his class at the State Fair throughlston pike last week nnda bid smash up was narrowly missed The ice cream supper at Springfield J Saturday night was one of the nicest we have attended in years While the crowd was not f SiittonEastin Co funeral Directors and Smbalmors I7tmbulanco Servi Cornor 97ain and sank Streets lay Phono 43J WigAl Phones 295 and 23 X50 Seyllilrgeilt wasgodd uatured llnnd liberal The procepds oiniown ted toi39vhichwm go towards getting a new organ for the churchM i c GRASSY LICK Mrs Will Ramsey is improving nicely Mrs JjfdttieHoweil is visitiri I IIi Cincinnati ftlary D Mason left Monday to atftrrd schoolhtl Paris P i lfIhorn to tile wife of T H CUlT IJ September a daughter Mabel Lucile Chaser ChrtmifFaridrife of Carmile visiting the family of T J Carr I Walter Dunn visited his brother Rufus Dunn at Middletown this week Henry Fielder and wife of Winchester visited hero Saturday and Sunday fomIlumiltoll and sister Miss Ella of Stoops visited relatives here Thursday John Boaxe and wife of Owings iIlc visited tha family of Will Crayons Sunday Itand Mrs D Vienna of Cincinnati arc visiting Albert Orear this wcok Mrs Frances Hamilton of Owingsville visited relatives hero Thursday until Sunday Bruce Robbins who is attending school in Winchester visited his parents here Saturday until Mon daySpring lamb at Greenwades Confederate Soldiers Nearly All for McCreary for Governors II C Gillaspie was a pleasant callerI at ourI oilice last Mon dayi and informed us that he had just returned from Pewee Valley where had been spending several days He reported all the old soldiers from this county as getting along nicely He said there were two hundred and fifty sol diers at the Home and that he made a personal and thorough canvass of the Home anti out of the 250 men there 244 of theta were for McCreary for Governor Wobdmen Ire you a member in fact or in name only Which Do you at tend your Camp meetings If not make an effort to lendus your presenee now as you can be ofassistance in the great work be fore us You hays the power of becoming more efficient as Wood men stronger and better as men but to do sor we must work together for the improvement of Woodcraft Meet us at the hall next Thursday night and give evi den that you are alive to the in- tciest of Woodcraft A B CUUM Special Deputy Head Consul fnblicI SaleI 1 drill farm on the IIowards Mill pike atyout two miles east of Howards Mill on Wednesday Oct II 1911 at 10 oclock a m I will offer for sale to the highest and best bidder the following property towit 25 head of Yearling Steers 3 Milk Cows and Cajves 7 head of Fat Hogs 3 Sows and 24 Pigs i pair of good 4yearold Work Mules 2 Work Horses both gentle to drive i good Driving Mare about 10 years old gentle for woman I yearling Horse Colt 1by McDonald Chief O Ji Buggy and Harness About five tons of Hay and about ten acres of Corn in the shock with place to feed same 75 acres of grass to be ranted until1 Christmas And many other things not mentionedd aboveTERMSAll amounts under 10 cash on day of sale and amounts above same on a credit of six months with six percent pet annum from day of sale and evidenced by good negotiable notes John It Thomas R F D No 4 MT STERLING KY II3t- ft Har1jiflthjT j J 11 Fiineral Directors and Eiithaimers iii- r ZIr JdlJlI I Mt Sterling Ky tZon tZ Graser Humphreys florists f r 116 DESIGN WORK IUcurI WEDDING DECORATIONS LOUR SPECIALTY G JrStore Phone 547 MT STERLING KENTUCKX 9Clarks Weekly News of the Harness Worse lt tar Palmer T CJtuk Miss Katherine L Willis1 1 founder and sole ower of the7 Cruickston Stom Farm near Gait JOnt is the first woman to breed Ira futurity winner in harness horse history and Princess Todd winner Vf il1 of the twoyearold trotting di f vision of the American Horse Breeder futurity is the first CnnaFdian bred colt to win a futurity in the United States While Miss Wilks is to be congratulated on j 1Wthe double honors harness horse interests arc pondof the indispu = t table fact as proven by Miss Ui WilUs that nothing stands in the way of a lady owning breeding f tool successfully racing horses in the least detrimental to her social position among the first ladies of the laud i j I Visitors to the Lexington trots i l next monthwill see ninny changes and improvements at the famous it f race track of which perhaps the 1 most noticeable mind pleasing to T 4tttime eye is the centerHeld where the landscape gavdner has done fI much to beautify the natural con ditions An additional row of boxes the full length of the grand rr stand has been added concrete1 FtI curbing has boon put in to all th6vn driveways approaching the stand I New cooling paddocks with in creased space mil numbers are Jamong the most commendable magi provements so far undertaken Some new barns have been erected jwhile every needed repair huts hadST tattention anda general cleaning and fresh paint helps complete the f i effect From the new president Mr Ed A Tipton down the line 3 r and including all the residents of r that section arrangements are beni r ing made for the best meeting in the history of the association and i the largest attendance is confidently looked for V 1iJ At the present writing Mobelis 2 10i leads all sires with thirteen f now performers in standard time i to his credit The Exponent 2ll by Bingeu 206i is second and his showing is the more re markable when you take into con tJir sideration time fact that his oldest 17 J colts are but two years of ago L E Brown of Delavan Ill is111l to be congratulated owning the greatest young sire all points con sidered the world has ever seen while owners of mares booked and that will be mated with Tile Ex ponent in the future arc equally fortunate in having every possible advantage in tho way of pu licity worked to the limit by so good an advertiser as Mr Brown in their interest For once at least in the history of the breeding game it looks as though the greatest sire i had fallen into toe hands of the 1best hustler and advertiser known to the business and it will bo in teresting to watch the results of lthe combination J All aloes oxfords at greatly reo duced pricesI nt J H Brunnersr the Shoe Man 8tf For a nice homegrown water melon on ice call phone 100riXGreenwades y- a1 s 0 i- Y p r r1 i tt iry1 f yr f a j t j i 1 J- v t W YJ4- sx4 1rh J School BDok bl AND SdliooI Silpillies tA1 Duersons Drug Store Phone 129 No 10 Court St II AA MAAAWMA fl aew gyn teo PERSONAL e S L- ilrsv Foster Rogers visited her mibflierin Lexington last week 2N Mrs las Warren of Lexington er is visiting friends in the county tip vMr and Mrs Chas Scott of Lexington were in this city Sun 1tF Misstt Susan Fisher Woods is visiting leer sister Mrs Grover C t Anderson vSHoiK Alex Conner of Owings vijfe attended court here Monday andl Tuesday JnMr a Conner Ewing of Ow ingsville was in the city Tuesday iAprf business f 1 Rev W YoSpntes and wife JofFlemingsburg are visiting Mrs yKpvven Morris T Miss Josie Greene of Lexing v ton is visiting Miss Woodson Had c dcn thiswcekII i Mrs Mary Scott of Lexington i is the guest of Mrs L E Griggs I tI y i and Miss Lucy Smith iV jGMiss Nora Morris has returned from a two weeks visit to Yin chester and Lexington- Missr j Olivia Anderson has re turned from a visit to Mrs T J Barrow Winchester Ky I Dr W Homer Smithand wile of Louisville visited Dr and Mrs McClung last week Miss Helen Tash of Chicago IIltr arrived Tuesday night to visit heSfaunt Mrs T F Rogers Rodney Jenkins and brother Will Jenkins of Cynthiana Ky spent Sunday in Georgetown Ky Mr and Mrs John Stofer have returned from a visit to B F Chenault and family at Versailles Mr and Mrs J N Hadden of j Winchester spent Saturday and Sunday with his father Nicholas Hadden Sr Mr Geo A Peed wife and children of Owingsville were guests of O S Bro agem from Sunday until yesterday Mrs Annie Dallas who has been visiting her sister Mrs J W Burroughs returned to her lhdme at Carlisle Monday ME and Mrs J AY Chen lq It hauelreturned from a visit to B 1 If1 Chenault and family at Versaillqsi- JVH Wobdlj John S ETitter G H and Pilul Strother attended1 the Methodist Conference out Richmond Ky Sunday MisseS Anna Mary Triplet Ethel Glover and Florence Mc Namara have returned home after a visit to friends in Lexington Mrs Elvira Hull of CJarlisJc and daughter Mrs W H Hall of Staunton Va were the guests of Mrs W Hoffman Wood Mon day Chas Rainey left last weekjt forI LexingTon where he will enterl State University for a fouryears course in mechanical and electrical engineering Mr and Mrs 11 P Reid and little daughterElixabeth return I ed M6nday front Richmond where they visited relatives and attended I Conference Mrs Rufus Hadden and Mrs Asa Kidd and her three bright and attractive children of Winchester ares visiting Mrs Brashcar and her sister Woodson this week Miss Lucille Hidden of Lex ington the attractive little daugh ter of W 0 Madden was the guest of her grandfather Niqholas Hadden Sr first of the week Rev H D Clark Mr and Mrs B W Trimble Mrs Ameliat Young Mrs Alice Perry andI iiMrs W P Oldham are attending the State Convention of the Chris than Church in session at Frank fort this week- Nicholas Hadden Sr left Tues day for Bloomington Ill to visit his sons Forrest and Stanley Had den He will hunt and fish some while there and will also spend part of his time at Vandola Springs and enjoy the pleasures of that lovely place OUR LINE Of fresh and Cured Meats STAPLE and FA- NCYGirbcerles Cannot be Improved Upon Courteous Treatment Prompt Deliver Robinson Moore Court St Phone 251 v Mt Sterling Ky 1 JI r- Millinery r Opening Dont forget Mrs K 0 Clarkes milllinery opening Friday find Saturday September 22 arid 23 Latest designs in fashionable hats for Fall and Winter season will bo on display 1021 Opening AnnouncedII Roberts Mastin will have theirII fallopening September 26th and1 27th Tuesday and Wednesday The latest designs in millinery IO 2t Latest Designsi- n fall millinery Be suiaiibdht tendmy opening Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd and 23rd My styles are the very newest and my stock is themost complete I have ever shown Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson pg Listen- r m s 9r rnl BUY FLOURThe TinierNOW 5 The KIND J I Xerrs 9erfctionIml W4I 1 I 6 I The PlaceYour GROCER or E t r Tabb It- i L fgJL t L I ID6 i3JR JJd JbV cZt tWJ I I 1 wYy 1 ts j rlb 1ttT H Er18 I 1 K J Ior rR1 r Mr IHaiTy Hunt is still confinedlI to his room Miss Helen Porter is threatenedI with typhoid fever MrI I J W Burbcr is nt home threatened with fever Mr Roger He dens condition I itfjjiams about the same Mr W II Tipton has been 01 I the sick list for several days Miss Lila Mile Harper who hnig jjbeen very ill with typhoid fever is improving hilsIbeen sick for several days post iis somewhat improved Mr W L Wright who has been suffering with typhoid fever I is able to be out asrain Miss Nettie Wyatt who has been coniined to her room lot several days is improving Messrs Granyille and Chester and Miss Bertna Ehun who havi been sick with typhoid fever art gettinir along nicely Muster Frank Laughlin and lit tie sister Lucile who lure beenI sick for several days are still1I confined to their rooms Millinery Opening My Millinery Opening will be Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd cud 23 id My stock is larger I more complete and more upto date than ever Remember the dates Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson Narrow Escape John D Rockefeller Jr son offf the oil king narrowly escaped1 1II death when a lout of construction steel being hoisted to the roof of his fathers mansion at Tarry town IN Y dropped as he Was standing directly under it talking to the workmen Rockefeller leaped out of the way Five workmen were caught and one fatally hurt Seed Red Chaff Wheat for Sale lt2t R MI COONS Owingsville Ky R R No2 yBuys Bourbon County Farm Mr iI E Wilson owner off the Star Restaurant in this city purchased the 111 Vimont faro which was sold at public auction lust Thursday for 12000 pc1 acre The farm contained IOn I acres of land Mr Wilson bought the farm for an investment t and will rent iit out Latest Designs in hill millinery Besure andat tend my opening Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd and 23rd My styles lire the very newest and my stock is the most complete I have ever shown Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson 200 and 250 Hats 148 r Punch Graves For the nicest chickens on thei market phone No2I Public Sale or Desirable City Property ON Saturday Sept 30 i1911I ii- on the premises on Sycamore street at 2 oclock p 111 I will sell at Public Auc Lion the twostory frame residence occur mwl by Harry Stephenson and containing lightinglyilladjoiningNobeen offered for sale in Mt Sterling and considering location is very valuable The building lot is one of the few lots closedown in the city now on the mar ket while the residence is coufortable and will make a good home The prop erty adjoins the residence of Ed L William and will be sold on reasonable terms which will be announced on the dayof sale Dont forget the dateSat urday September 50 at 2 oclock p in Will take pleasure 111 showing the prop erty W Hoffman Wood Real Estate Broker- W Hv CRAVENS Auctioneer I ill W hw r la rr r Ir K b4 e tloy f 1 MARRIAGES I ww t hgo el AXTOXGIFFORD Mr Thos Anton of Sideview this county recently married Miss Eva Gifford daughter of Mrs Lytton Gifford of Plum Lick The marriage ceremony took place in Louisville Monday September 11 1911 Mr Anton is a denim in general merchandise at Sideview mostnprominent men F1ELDKU8KIDMOHK The marriage of Miss Lillie Skidmore of Winchester to Mr LexingtonIwas solemnized Wednesday afternoon at three thirty at the home of the brides parents Mr and Mrs Jerome Skidmore on Belmont avenue As the sweet strains of Mendlessohns wedding march played by Miss Ethel Tabor the happy couple entered where they were surrounded by their friends and relatives while Rev Mr Mc Neil spoke the low impressive words which united two loving hearts Immediately after the ceremony 11Ilnd Mrs Fielder took the train for Louisville and points in Indiana After n short 1bridal trip they will go to house keeping in Lexington They were showered with ninny beautiful presents The bride who is one of Winchesters statuesque bru nettes was charming in a stylish tailored suit of tan with hat and shoes to match MrI I Fielder is a prominent business man of Lex ington He is a young man of high social standing energetic and ambitious strictly honorable in all walks of life The attractive bride I j he has won possesses the love of numberless friends who extend j best wishes for a future of unal 1 Ired happiness A Card to the Citizens of Mt Sterling and Montgomery County In the name of one of the great est Fraternal Insurance Socie ties of America I wish to thank these good people for the kindly interest they are manifesting tow ards the growth in their midst and their seeming determination to make Mt Sterling tho Mecca of Eastern Kentucky for The Morn Woodmen of America It is wclll for this great order distributed Iten million eight hundred thong 1Ind dollars in 1910 to the widows and orphans and other beneficiaries of deceased members and their membership is one million two hundred and fifty thousand We trust you will continue to swell our members until we can bring oft our 200 class adoption in the near future A B CIJUMl V Special Deputy Held Consul ExSenator Carter Dies in Wash ington Former United Statos Senator Thomas Henry Carter of Montana for years a notable character in national politics Once chainmn of the Republican National Com mittee died nt Iris home in Wash ington Sunday of pulmonary dis ease He was 67 years of age Notice Several fire hydrants having been dttmaged recently all per sons other than members of the fire department or those slaving a legal right to do so under our contract withi the city are warned not to interfere in any way with any of said hydrants Any such person found doing so will be ar restedand vigorously prosecuted- Mt Sterling Water- S lt Light I8 Ice Co Millinery Opening My Millinery Opening will be Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd i and 23rd My stock is larger more complete and more upto date than eycr Remember the dates I Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson Fall styles Stetson and Youman Hats Punch Graves 1 a tL yv ORCYer4N e004 Oa- Rd Edrf Ii- coe t IIIoIIi1 0 C eC Get i Y W A of the Baptist church will meet with Miss Nannie Reed on Thursday evening at 730 to reorganize The sewing pockets will be opened at this meeting To Remain ffere Rev B C Horton who has been minister of the Methodist church in this city for several years has again been assigned to this church Mr Hortons many friends here will be glad iindeed toI know that he is to remain withus Rev W T Wyatt was again assigned the church at Camargo and Grass Lick where he has given such excellent service Mr J R Deering was elected Presiding Elder over the Lexington district Opeiing Announcement I will have my fall Millinery Opening Friday and Saturday Sept 22nd and 23rd I have the very latest creations in ladies head gear A visit to my store will convince you Mrs Fannie Wilson Stephenson For a nice pork veal lamb or beef roast call phone 85 or 100 Greenwadesi Vehicles at Cost Until October 1st 1 will close out my stock at cost 103t II W Senieur Fine country asat Vanars dells Millinery Opening Friday and Saturday September 22 and 23 are the dates for Mrs K 0 Clarkes fall millinery opening 102t for Sale 1 have for sale the place of R M1 Rose near the Levee this county Has on it a sixroom cottage ten acre barn stable cow shed some fruit etc Well fenced and watered Milk house and corn crib Close to schools and churches There is about three acres in the place Can be bought for 1250 On the place is a good blacksmith shop and tools and the best stand in the county See me nt once W HoiKMAN WOOD New StSgtntrleSt and cubbnqe at Vanarsdells f ff2ct AI 1Stt+ To Wm Brooks and wife of Oklahoma City a son Mr Brooks is a nephew of Mrs Fan nie Nesbitt of this city Bridge Party Miss Eliza Harris entertained delightfully Monday afternoon with a bridge party The affair J i was a thoroughly enjoyable one and all present had a most delightful afternoon Broken SiZes 20 Suits 1000 18 Suits 900 115 Suits 750 Punch = Graves Receives Appointment- Rev Lon Robinson was appoint ed to fill the pulpit at the Winchester Methodist Church Rev Robinson is a brother of Dr W v B Robinson of this city o 4 pumps and oxfords reduced to 315 r H Bruner Stf The Shoe Man For lamb veal pork or beef roast call phone 100 Greenwades Everything to eat when you want it Call up Vanarsdell 200 and 250 Hats 148 Punch Graves Nothing but the best home killed meats at Greenwades V Fall styles Stacy Adams and WalkOver ShoesPunch Graves 350 pumps and oxfords re duced to 298 J H Brunner Stf The Shoe Man vO Low RoundTrip Rates VIA Southern Railway from All Stations in Kentucky TO- lAWRENCE8URfiKENTUCKY Account Grand Barbecue and Speech by the Hon Champ Clark WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 20thI Ask any Southern Railway agent for 1 full information J C BEAM JR Assistant General Passenger Agent- S v I Louis Mo oJ s 11 Ut 1 I 9111tI kjjw Opening 11 WE BEG TO ANNOUNCE TO THE DISCRIMINATING CLOTH ING BUYERS OF THIS SECTION THE ARRIVAL OF ALL STOCKS FOR THE COMING SEASON A COMPLETE SHOWING WILL r BE MADE THE LAST OF THE WEEK IN ALL DEPARTMENTS AN EARLY LOOK WILL BE 1 APPRECIATED P atlI El I IS Respectfully 4 v fe i WaJsh Bros I House of Quality L t 9iTII y j J I 1 t 7 Ii Jk A 1 I L f WHICH WOULD YOU CHOOSE If you saw a row of apples everyone differing in size ripeness and color and all for sale at the same price wouldnt you choose the best Why not do the same thing when you buy fire insurance The cost of insurance is substantially the I in the all row agencies but what you get for your money varies as much as the sameII I pMtIp = raEenIll i HWi ill iiFHI iiPllinTM li r Do Not be a fretlcr iseveryheretoo often much overlooked in valuation of character It is the sin of fretting It is as common as air as speech so common that unless it raises above its usual monotone we do noteven observe it Watch any ordinary coming together of people and see how ninny minutes it will be before omebody frets that is makes more or less complaining statements of something or other which most probably every one in the 1 1room or in the care 01 on the street corner it may be knew be fore and which probably nobody can help Why say anything about it 1 It is cold it is hot it is dry somebody has broken an ap pointment illcooked a meal stupidity or bad faith has resulted Vai in discomfort There are plenty of things to fret about It is simply astonishing how muchan l jioyance may be found in the course of every days living even at the simplest if one onlyI keeps a sharp eye out on that side of things Even holwrit says we Baa are prone to trouble as sparks ily upward in the blackest smoke there is a blue sky above and the less time they waste on the road the sooner they will reach it Fretting is all time wasted on the Wf5t road Herald of Peace When the heart beats does the ear drum The goldenrod is yellow it al ways is I think It ought to bell more versatile and run to blue or Wn pink The aster now gets busy assumes its autumn dress and gets a hand throughout the land from poets of the press The catapillers ripen and one by one they fullon Sue or Prue or Geraldine and make those damsels small For this is sweet September that gay and golden time when every bard grinds out a yard of russet rune iimd rhyme Appalachian Exposition Knoxville Tennessee September IlCctober 1 1911 REDUCED RATES VIA f SOUTHERN RAILWAY w On sale daily September n to October rFinal limit ten days from date of saleThrough Electric Lighted Coaches and Sleeping Cars For reservations and complete information see Local Agent or write J CBEAM Jr 76t A G P A St Louis Mo R I tLs jir Choose then HOf MANS INSURANCE AGENCY For Nearly Three Quarters of a Century it has paid every loss big and little Its reputation is unexcelled It is the best fire insurance apple of them all and its policies cost no more than those in agencies of inferior quality Why not use the same judgment in buying insurance that you would in such a trivial matter as buying fruit at a fruit stand i L I Dont Set too CloseI IIto IaI one of our splendid carriages Look over those in our warerooms You will find them staunch strong and handsome They mean safety as well as pleasure in your driving L9rewitt cx JrowTetrJ III nsurance Heal estate J3otD- SLGREENE STROSSMAN HAZELRIGG n Lexington TROTS October 314 Greatest in the World UHLAN 1584 Worlds Champion Trotter Appears Three Tires 21000 Futurity Tuesday Oct 3 3000 Tennessee Stake Tuesday Oct 3 5000 Futurity Wednesday Oct 4 3000 McDowell Stake Wednesday Oct 4 5000 Transylvania Stake Thursday Oct 5 Great Free For All Pace Friday Oct 6 8000 Champ Stallion Stake Mondy Oct 9 3000 Walnut Hall Cup Monday Oct 9 2000 Free For AH Trot Tuesday Oct 10 l Every Worlds Champion from Yearling up Present Sensational Racing DailyIMUSIC BY WEBER HRLFFflRE ON RRILROflDS 1 r EAVESDROPPING By Marlon Drunot The widows formula for getting a husbandBe the right place at the right time and it doesnt matter whether you are the right girl or notThe debutantes decision- A woman and a lorgnette form a lookout committee for the for the discovery of social mi crobes The maidens dream of a per fect lover One who sends Orchids and kisses often and dies the duty be fore the wedding bells ring The storks wail The higher the fewer must be significant of society and race suicide The pouular girls query Whats the uie of running after a ruin when hes coming to ward you a 0 Tile cynics philosophy A mans morals mellow with money and maturity The lady killers joke A nation without women would be stagnation The baldheaded mans soliloquy Toupee or not toupee that is the questionNot Bad Reading The Trow Directory of Manhat tan and the Bronx issued recently is not dry reading In it there are 2 Drinkers 1 Drunke 13 Bunns 1 Boozer 1 Jaggie 7 Lushes 5 Lushers 4 Sobers what a chance they have in that company 1 I 34 Beers 5 Lagers 22 Ports 43 Sherrys 2 Brandies 4 Ginns 1 Rickey wait until they meet G Vui burgers 94 Glasses 14 Brannigans naturally 2 Tippls 4 Wines 2 Wine gardens Wineglasses G Bars 25 Seltzers 12 Schnapps 3 Sours 1 Straight 1 Mixer 5 Swallows 17 Heads and 1 Shaker Then you come upon 1 Saint 4 Devilles 10 Angels 33 Lords 9 Priests 1 Friar and 19 Monks There are 3 Nutzes 12 Mutts and 1 Nutty You also find one Vamp The boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx show an increase of 93281 in population since the latest Federal census The popu httion was placed at 2736572 ill 1910 by the census report The new directory makes the estimate 2822853 on the basis of the fact that the volume contains 825995 n tines N the Dairy Small leaks in dairying soon wreck the business If you want to succeed in dairy ing you must keep abreast of the timesDont let your dogs chase the cows many a case of aboration has resulted from this Three good articles for the dairy farmei cream separator silo and manure spreader Weigh the milk from eachcow and test for butter fat It pays to keep a record on eachanimal The prices for good dairy cows are always upscrubs are cheap as there is very little market for themGood pure water is absolutely necesary for cows put a plentiful supply where they can get at it all the time LO- WColonist Rates TO Destinations in the West North West and Southwest VI- ASouthern Railway Tickets on sale daily September m sto Oc tober 15 inclusive For further information ask any agent or write to E D STRATTON D PA Evansville Ind A It COOK D P A Louisville Ky J C BEAM Jm A GP A StLouIs Mo r fof c 61 DID YOU EVER FLAG DUCKS It Is Hard Work but It Also Affords the Keenest Sport Says Writer In Outing Did you ever flag ducks Percy M Cushing in Outing describes the keen pleasure to be derived from this sport In part he says Perhaps the best method for the average man to adopt in order that he may appear sufficiently curious is first the wearing of a cap with a red flannel lining second turning it inside out when in the act of acting eccentric third it is advisable that the remainder of ones person be kept strictly in seclusion preferably behind an ample tuft of beach grass or a tangle of sand cedars Allof which is a rather windy way of say ing that red cloth is the best thing to use when flagging ducks Flagging ducks I Does that sound a trifle unfamiliar It may if you live in the interior where the mallards grow in the rice sloughs and all you have to do to killa mess is to tramp across the pasture and shoo them out And on the other hand if you live along the open bays of the coast line you have probably taken a hand at this game yourself At anyrate its good sport for you have to work hard for the game and it requires patience perseverance and a willingness to grin in the teeth of southwest gales and face the long fingers of sleet that choke the northeast storms Andoftenest you are without success for the best flogger may fail on a dozen flocks before he gets one to shore I ArlfrOUUPS AND DOWNS Wifey Oh youre allwrong about her It takes a woman to size up another woman HubbyYes or to run her down CAPTURED POSSUM FAMILY Mr G Y Parlier was going to Rome N Y on the Black Bluff road when he saw running across the road in front of him an animal that looked like a possum He jumped out of his buggy and chased it The chase was successful and when he caught it found it was an old mother possum with ten little ones riding on its back They had a death grip too and would not turn loose Mr Parlier brought the curiosity to town about half determined to go in the possum raising business He proposes to try and raise this family if no more The little fel lows were somewhat larger than big rats VARIANT SPELLINGS Amongvariant spellings of names perhaps the most remarkable in stance occurs in a deedof the year 1578 relating to the property of the Raleigh family It bears the signa tures of Raleigh senior and his two sons of whom one has special inter est as being the earliest known sig nature of Sir Walter By the father the name is written Ralegh by the elder son Rawlegh and by Sir Walter it is written Rauleygh By Queen Elizabeth it was written Rawley as then pronounced It also appeared in his lifetime as Rawlye AN OBJECTION Happiness declaimed the phil osopher is in the pursuit of something not in the catching of itrI Have you ever interrupted the plain citizen chased an owl car on a rainy night ANOTHER SORT How came you to advertise that tenors barcarole as a howling success Y adogltown wvvvvvvvvvvvvwWff 11Paris GressJfAN- DParis y J GreenfJ1r4 BlowersL 1 J l ATi r i f J ItI Mt Sterling Drug Go vr1d91yr t c wwAMAWM iii fj 1 i TlIIle GarageJIS ON Bank Street Automobiles 1 FOR RENT At All Times f M ri i I WE WILL MEET A Any TraIn ON NOTICE Strother Frazer t Phono 268 Mt Sterlinn Kentucky AUNDR r FOR FIRSTCLASS LAUNDRY CF ALL KIND nd to theu u ML Sterling Laundry Co All work promptly delivered Neitfes- pecial attention to Family Washing jIve Us a Trial Phone 15 j MT STERLING Laundryi Bath Countys- CENTENNIAL i AND home= Coming Celebration ON Thursday Friday and Saturday Sept 28 29 30 1911 t AT Owingsville Ky Everybody is Cordially Invited to Attend A special invitation is extended to ev ery native of Bath county and to every i one who has ever resided in Bath countyff For these three days the citizens will en t deavor to provide legitimateevery amuse ment and attraction within their means Address t MARTINChairman i4 tteeforprivilegesV 1 41 iiits YIX Z A N Y H Jftiy are Wagons Painted fA cheap wagon is painted to hide defects in the wood andmake j attractive to the purchaser I yen the paint is of poor quality and wears off quickly leaving 1 od exposed to the weather t AStudebaker is painted to preserve the wood and protect it from the elementsvEven when the boxing is forced into the hub it is covered with pure lead in order to keep moisture out of the hub 1 You cannot see that but its there just the same I The paint used on a is chcari for its wear and weather resisting qualities It may not look much different from the cheap wagon when new butWrite for the book The Farmers Friend which shows just how the Studebaker is made For Sale by Ihenault Orear A 366mQuarooteeJ Otlat b9fdj 7 Its worth something to you to get the makers guarantee on shoes I there are very few makers who are willing to give such a guarantee as Selz puts II on all shoes bearing that name s These shoes are guaranteed to give the wearer satisfaction we- s w m make it good Look for I SelzIi J 1 t Royal iWd i 5ShoessLICK 2 South Maysville St Mt Sterling BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Mt Sterling Collegiate Institute IIWe must have 25 firstclass bookkeepers and Sten I raphers right away No matter what school you are a graduate- of f yotf Paju do the work come to the school office and cull for the manager lifthe finjployment Bureau Attend to this RIGHT AWAY we need you HE EADDOCK PrinJ JlilTSTERLING KENTUCKY 1Hlyr 1 L V I Jr JfC Si0 Qd l t t- II r RobinsonThe I The handsome store on the corner of Maysville and Court streets is the place to get High Grade Cut Glass jan the newest floral designs Siverware in the latest J patterns New laVallieresan excellent assortment Give us a call and see our extensive line 83 B H SPECIAL EXCURSIONi CINCINNATI AND RETURN Sunday Sept 10 and 24 t imSPECIAL TRAIN Leaves LEXINGTON 725 am- A TICKET AGENTS FOR PARTICULARS I 1 Jn e J1M L aMd + t iPptf A f 1QrA J 4 i JUST ANOTHER HERO Composed by Laurence B Finn with apolo tries to the author of Casey Jones Come nil you voters If you want to hear About the campaign of Judge ORear If hes elected youll be to blame At the Phoenix Hlll convention boys he won his fame ORear walked In nt the convention door Everybody hollered and began to roar Caleb Powers waved his hand the flags be iran to float Most everybody there was as full as u goat CHORUS Caleb Powers waved his hand Caleb Powers flags began to float Caleb Powers waved his hand Most everybody there was as full as a goat SECOND SPASM Ulll Bradley was there to hear every word What the Judge had said Bradley had heard At Lexington the judge at Bradley took n whack But Bradley said the judge would have to take It back The judge began to speak and as he spoke Everybody knew what he said was a joke Bradley was elected without a single sou Twas the purest election that I ever knew CHORUS Bradleys election without a single sou Brudleys election purest I ever knew Bradleys election without a single sou Great God said the woodcock and away he Hew THIRD SPASM Judge OReur said when McCreary had won There are two more races Id like to run Caleb said What might they bet Coroner and school trustee But the Judges fame will neer be forgot Hes almost like a forgetmenot His virtues will be sung In lasting tones Hes Just another hero like Casey Jones CHORUS Judge ORear Just another hero Judge ORear like Casey Jones Judge ORear Just another hero Hes Just another hero like Casey Jones Notice to Taxpayers The city tax books arc now in ray hands and the taxes are due Same can be settled by calling at my ofiice in the City Building B J MCDONALD 103t City Tax Collector Predicts Low Prices HUay and corn will be cheep next spring remarked promi nent farmer to a Danville Messenger reporter Asked his reason for this belief he replied Yell corn and hay are now as high as an old cats back and willclimb still higher This will make the farmers very economical and pains taking with feeding They will watch every leak and there will be no waste No surplus feed will be used Every fellow with a crib of corn or a stack of hay willwant to hold it consequently there will be a large nexlIspring and the price will of course fall Truth of the matter is we farmers waste to much provender and if we triedcould get along with far less Worlds Champions There will be a gathering of worlds champions at the Kentucky Trots October 3rd to 14th suchas was never seen before and patrons of the Association will have the opportunity of seeing more worlds champions ut one time than was ever before accorded ns each of the worlds champions will he here Uhlan the champion trotter Lou Dillon the champion mare The Harvester the cham pion stallion Joan the champion fouryearold Colorado E the ehaniDion threeyearold Native Belle the champion tvvovearold and Miss Stokes the champion yearling In addition there will also tae Justice Brooke the champion twoyearold colt Peter Thompson the champion three yearold gelding and practically all of tiie seasons champions It has been definitely decided to have Uhlan start on the opening day of the races as an additional attrac tion to the program which on that Iday will compose the 21000 KentuckyI Futurity and the Teno issee respectively the biggest hreeyearold trotting andall aged pacicg races of the year H Clay McKee Sons Buy Sell and Rent Real Estate Loan Money to or For You Vrite the Best Insurance Execute Bonds for you put you Next U best investments Sell The Best AutosTill WHITE MOTOR OAK Dont fail to see them 44tf j Answer to Correspondent The logicalcandidate is usually the- one you vant to see nominated I F N 1Y Coming Back Conditions in the automobile and light harness horse fields have brought about a state of affairs where there is no longer any disputing the fact that the pleasure horse is rapidly coming back into favor with the wealthy glasses The numerous entries in racing events polo Hones horse show classes and the appearance in the parkand on the driveway of our fashionable Eastern cities of many new turnouts are positive proof and it is most encouraging to the breeder and dealer in tine horses of all kinds From a racing stand point the demand for very young stockwith high class engagements and the easy victories in this sea sons futurity offerings will have ia great tendency to encourage the development of this class for sev eral years to come Equally great is the demand for the ma tured and finished race horse prices for which are higher than ever before The intermediate classes while not in such active demandafford chances for specu lation within reach of the average buyer that willundoubtedly maintain a fairly good market for the fall and winter Quite a number of stock farms are now preparing their yearlings and weanlings for the fall auctions To illustrate the Patchen Wilkes Stock Farm at Lexington Ky have in training 70 head of yearl ings by Peter the Great Crystal lion Mighty Odward Petl r Donna and other desirable sires that will be disposed of this fall and winter and among which will undoubtedlyI come many starters in the futurities of 1912 Horse men who campaign for pleasure and for profit are fast followim the footsteps of the thoroughbret owners and trainers who in the past have made up their training stables from the yearlings offered through the annual fall markets This gives them an opportunity to train develop and decide from personal results and observation what is best to campaign before the season is too far advanced This tendency to younger stock iis also noticeable in the efforts of the leading stock farms and Ileaown such sires as General Watts Peter the Great Kentucky Todd Ed Custer and Mobel to develop their yearlings and two catolds so as to reap the benefits in in creased patronage through the booking of choice mares another season If you see something no one else sees that is what it means to- go crazy WINCHESTER lfloiiunient Works WINCHESTER KY JUOST WORE LOWEST PRICKS ret mo know your wants and I will can ox you and srve you maney P H JACKSON Ir- eoAimillistratorsn r Sale of Farm and Stock AR utlmlnlstnitor of the estate of Thomas Butler deceased I gill sell at his late red leneetwo miles small of Ntchulasrlltu Ky m theDanville pike ou Tuesday Sept 26 1911 At 10 tJcl auk H m ttoe followjni property Vhvo clUe family mares two 2yearold Ill lies mule Colt tight milk cows three with calves ut skier two fat heifers springer heifer Jersey Iiel4er calf twojr nrold Jersey bull Jttity Tennessee ewes twur yearling South down ewes tour Soutllll0fI rams seven sows with plgsubutrendsto wean four dry sows Vilacd China boar If not sgld before day of sale u light vulnht fat hogsulso some fannlnt mtttements consisting of hinder sulky rake mil rake dlse harrow jietrtoth harrow Iron roller dLse plow three OIlervlowslrain drill two buggies two wagons 1rexer brake cart wheat fan cutting box tools etc Some lousehohl furniture Including square piano also Chambers Encyclopedia If not sold privately before date of sale the farm of 2a90 acres In high state of cultivation wlll be offered to the highest bidder Good elllht room frame house servants house good cistern lee house und all necessary outbuild- Ings Tenacre tobacco barn and threeloom tenant house Parr Is well watered haying everlasting water In stream In front und pond on rear About iv acres will be seeded to wheat of which purchaser of farm will get nehalf In sack at thresher other half to tro to tenant The farm is susceplble of division IInl- w111 consider offers on either of the two tracts or the wholeTERMS OF SALE On personal property all sums of 20 or under cash over that amount a credit of six months purchaser to give note with approved security bearing six percent Interest from date On real estate onethird cash balance In three equal annual payments bearing Interest at six per cent Per nnnum A lien will be retained on land to secure deferred payments T S ButlerAdministrator of Thomas ButlerII J B CHAMBERS Auctioneer I i BADGE OF PRINCE OF WALES Origin of Famous Crest Borne by Heir to Throne of Great Britain Is Somewhat Obscure When the Black Prince died he ordered the badge of three feathers withcertain words as motto to be placed upon his tomb at Canterbury The words were Ich dien Hou mont The origin of the badge is obscure says a writer in the West minster Gazette It is commonly supposed that the Black Prince took it from the helmet of King John of Bohemia his prisoner and thenceforth adopted it as his own cogni zance Even as the peculiar badge of the prince of Wales however the history of the feathers is uncertain From the evident pride taken in them by the Black Prince we may fairly assume them to have had ref erence to his personal achievements wrote the late Somerset herald but he adds it should not be ignored that this badge is to be found on seals of members of the houses of York and Lancaster who were not princes of Wales As to the meaning of the motto it was I believe first suggested by the wellknown antiquary J n Plnnchc another Somerset her aldthat it should be read Ich dicn houmont and translated I serve a higher power The late kings badge aa prince of Wales figures in UK arms of Gull to the emi nent physician Sir William Gull who held the prince in his arms for twelve hours during the crisis of his illness in 1871 was granted one of the prince of Wales feathers as an honorable augmentation to be borne on a canton that is to say in the same way as a baronet usually bears the bloody hand HER OBJECT l cripu0 DAK6L Mrs Tubt undestand that you are using your Influence to have your hus band appointed a census enumerator Mrs RubThats true Mrs TubWhat for Id like to know Mrs RubJust think how nice 1 It would be If one knew the ages of all the other women In town DOES AWAY WITH CODE The Berlin police department is 1providedwithan extensive typewri ting telegraph system There are about 200 receiving stations through out the city and suburbs The send ing instrument is provided witha keyboard and when the keys arc depressed they cause the message to be printed simultaneously at the sending station and atthe receiving station The object of this system is to do away with the confusion of the Morse code If the Morse code were used it would have to be tran scribed before a message could be put in the hands of the officer to whom it was sent- EDUCATION ALLIANCE Pennsylvania clubwomen have un dertaken as part of the educational work for the year the formation of an educational alliance the purpose- of which is to provide the simplest possible means through which represent thc organizations and institu tions an Pennsylvania can compare their attitude on state educational issues with a view to the greatest unityof action HIS DUSY MIND occupation house why dont you follow it Maam said TufTold Knutt with his mouth full I work 14 hours every day How At what uWitme mind maam same ez all de great inventors do Im tryin t think up a substoot for injy rub ber NONE THERE Say exclaimed littleboyat grandpasfann the countrys all well enough but Id be willing to keepoff the grass to get an ice cream sodnJudge I 2L OJ PRmiiitffillI iIDRMt Sterling Kentucky Successor to Dr Brawn All Work Guaranteed and Prices RighV- OlUce in Martin JJulldlng Phone 52t H R PREWITT ATTORNEYATLAW M t Sterling Kentucky Office Court St opposite Court- House Samuels Building front room up stairs DR G m HORTON Veterinarian Office at Peed Hortons Livery Stable Office Phone 498 Residence 24 Calls answered Promptly 3lvr DR W B ROBINSON Veterinarian Olllco at Andc on Boa daaunaeiLivery Stable Olllce Phone 135 Residence Ihonc S51 Calls answered promptly KxHiiiinatlona free Assistant State Veterinarian V THE Ollos811ollko Ohio Rally Company TIME OF TRAINS AT MT STERLING In Effect July 9 IOU1 Subject to change without notice LEAVE IFor and From ARRIVE x 719 a m Louisville x 1239 p nix 347 p m Louisville x 937 p 111 t 5503 in Lexington t 920 a in- jj 215 p in Lexington J 705 p in j 930 a in Rothwell J 205 pm f New York x1239 p IllWashgton x 719 a u1 x 937 m j NorfolkmRichmondx Pikeville J 215 p in t 920 n in Hiuton Sleeping Dining and Parlor Cars on Express Trusts Consut agents forparticulars x Daily t Weekdays ixiDirtoD EasternI flyT TIME TABLEIde- ctive May 38 1911 VVcstE3ourd STATIONS IDauyI 1111oM S 12LV tyuicsaml 0vII 0l K Junction B5o 157 Athol SoS 222 I 2jIBcntt3rTorrentI Campion Junction 643 330 II Clay City 7i9 405 I L E Junction 75 437 Winchester Stcs 450 5ArEastBoiaasc5 STATIONSNo 2 Daay Xo 4 11 A M Lv Lexillgtoll35 720 Winchester 17 SO L H Junction 235 SI Clay City 305 SSC Campion Junction 347 927 Torrent 44 944II Beattyville Junction 425 too4 Athol 452 1o3C 1057IIIIJackson 525 1105 Ar Quicksand 1125 CONNECTIONS LEXINGTONTrain No i will make connection at Lexington with the L F N for Louisville Ky NO3 will make connection with the L N at Lexing ton for Cincinnati O CAM PTON JUNCTIONTrains Nos I 2 3 and 4 will make connection with Mountain Central Ry to and from Camp ton Ky IlEA TTYVI LIE JUNCTION Trains Nos i 2 and 3 will make connection with the L A Railway for Beattyvillt 0C K JUNCTION Trains Nos i 1- and 4 will make connection with Ohio 3 Kentucky Ry for Cannel City Ky and O K stationsCHAS SCOTT Gen Passenger Agenf ighest Prices PAID FOR LIve Poultry Eggs Hides furs feathers Sheep Pelts and Wool GD Sullivan Cow Locust Street Mt Sterling Ky 13 lyr Phone 474 Ii M Ja I I r- I tS J f I n t i 1- cf El J j JUSTEjr4 vl- jw t f AnrclerltMemorlesThat Closer About 4 F Westminster Whero George J V Will be Crowned f rlf f Engllands old hall of the kings tLJustIce in which King Edwards re mains reposed in state prior to tho final ceremony at Windsor is one of the worlds notable historical shrines Built four centuries beforo Columbus sailed for America burnedre stored remodeled it has seen more history in the making than perhaps any other building west of Rome Here some of the early parlia ments met and where the bier of the seventh Edward rested tho sec r ond Edward was expelled from the throne nearly 600 years ago Here Kichard II was deposed Charles I fi condemned and Cromwell hailed as r lord protector whose headl if the le t gend is authentic was afterward ex l posed from one of the halls pin + nacles 4 4Wi c tminster hall was the scene of tho trial of Warren Hastings In I- tt sentence of death was pronounced ThomasIMore Somerset Essex Staffordand r Guy Eawkcs Its last use for coro nation ceremonies was on tho acces sion of George IV and the imaginative a may perhaps see a significance in tho royal obsequies there which precede the coronation of another King George after nearly a century 1 1OUTDOOR SLEEPING IS BEST People Are Beginning to Realize That Lungs as Well as Stomach Must be Fed Edwin Markham famous poet advocates and practises outdoor sleeping Ho snid It seems that people are just be ginning to discover that they have t lungs and that their lungs have to be fed as well as their stomachs No one who has thoroughly enjoyed his bedin the open night after night and summer and winter over willingly relinquishes itand is generally eager to get hack to it And here are some of the reasons Time sweet feeling of naturalness and bodily wellbeing Freedom from insomnia for which outdoor sleeping is an abso lute specific The wonderfully recuperative and vitalizing processes of which one quickly reaps the benefit even though at first badly run down in physique The1 consciousness of escape fromII conditions that hamper if they do not actually threaten humanlife Immunity from colds null the dis eases they engender Technical t World Magazine I WOMEN VOTERS IN AUSTRALIA The full figures of the commonwealth I general election are now to hand They show that tho enfran chised ladies presented themselves I1tjj tho polling booths in considerable 1 force In some places the female voters were more numerous than the males In Bondipo for example the figures wore FemalesI 12111 males I2317 Mis1 i Vide Goldstein the lady iondidule for tho common wealth coast polled close Jo rIOnOI an improvement on her previous at tempt but still n long way behind tho number requisite to place hOII I among the elected SUNSETIOne of the most remarkable l111djjt uuumial aspects of the sharp storm recently was the development of a brilliant rainbow after sunset Tho phenomenon was visible over the greater part of midSurrey and as tile storm was coming from the oast developed when the first drops of rain fell shortlyI before sunset at grnduallyfadedtIabout half of its arc was still visible nt 742 p in five minutes after thoI sun had dropped below the horizon I oiidon Evening Standard r WINGED REPARTEE Iho people in hero I am toldI hummed tho mosquito trying to find an opening1 put up this nutting Ii j to filter the atmosphere and make it more wholesome 0 como ofiMI exclaimed the other mosquito Thats too gauzy l NEAR AT HAND First Young DoctorWhen will you be able to got married I waitIingI j i I more I 4 1 IIr PLAY THAT WAS NOT PLAYEDI V Pot of rtallrotdt Mans Drama Sub- I mlttedjor Production In New York Theater The gallery god no less than the patron of the padded chair aspires to write for the stage I have a vivid remembrance of the first of all the plays submitted for production at the New theater It was from an employe in a local railroad station probably a baggage smasher and I shall betray no confidence in record ing that the authors name was Murphy Though Mr Murphy called his work a play it was in reality only a scenario Itwas entitled Tims Wife The plot was as fol lows In tho first act Jim hadno wife but he took his girl to a dance Action they danced In act sec ond came the great scene The scene was caused by the fact that Jims girl danced with another man Jim felt impelled to kill him but he refrained reflecting that such things did not occur in the best circles and would thus be socially unpleasing to his lady The curtain fell on his act of selfsacri fice in not killing the other dancer In act third there was still more ac tion Jim s girl rewarded him for his delicacy of instinct and his self abnegation by marrying him Final curtain Mr Murphy seemed weighed down by a fear that his play was too serious for the New theater In his letter ho said If you would rather have it a comedy I willsend you the jokes I have a few jokes tooWorlds Work THE WAY I Charity WorkerI visited an awfully povertystricken family to rr n hisJnek11ere they so very poor Fearful They are so poor thatI they kept ton dogs FULLY EXPLAINEDI Our colorful friends are never at n loss for a word or a reason Why is itsaid I to Undo John Henry at the fish market that these list have pink gills and those white Oh Missl answered ho wisely yo see its on count ob do caught niss ob do fishPes Miss it am sure do eaughtness dal makes de fish diffunt Some fish hex monh an sore fish Iwz Iless Yes indeed MiesI dats do onfiah an ohcrlastin reason of if Sonic ob do fish hex monk an some hex less Yes Miss dnt am so Yes indeed Miss SELFSACRIFICE I1 counI try said time gentle grandmother Whats tho trouble inquired her soniuhnv Aront we treating you right Yes But tho baseball season is here and 1 wont bo able to resist the temptation to see time games Voll thats easy Xo 1 If 1I am seen in the grand stand looking hole and hearty Ill bo almost sure to spoil somebodys excuse for boing away from the of fice NONE LIKE HIM LEFT Talking thq other night oJn coachmaii whog y locoflilo and stout had aceejornlod his death the stud groom remarkedf I Alm Sir Jic was a man take him for halfandhalf wo shall not look upon1 his like again THE BOYS Choc dummy I Iots do mat ter dat yor cant sit down Got blisters on me disiearly or did yer git a liekin Both DAY OF THE BOSS IS OVER Richard Croker Says His Fate Is Hard as That of the Writer In the Piano Story Richard Croker the day before he sailed for England said to a New Yorkreporter The day of the boss is over The American people will never again consent to trust its entire political future to one man This I think is a wise and good thing for the American people but for the boss it islike the piano story the height of misfortune- A nervous litterateur is the hero of the piano story He could neither sleepnor work if there was the least noiseWell the poor fellow secured one day a commission for a 75000word story from a magazine and rush ing home he tore off his coat and set to work But a sound that he had been scarcely conscious of at first became insistent and maddening in the silence of his study What he shouted to his wife is that infernnlnoise The people in the next flat was the reply have gone to the country for a week and left their electric piano turned on PLANTS GOOD FOR SALADS Queer Things Used In the Old Days When Nothing Was Wasted by Thrifty Housewife The experiment of the Royal Hor ticulturalsociety which is about to grow thousands of strange plants reputed to be good for salads re culls the past when few plants of the hedgerow were wasted There were cowslips and violet blossoms invaluable for coloring gimps and custards The elder top the burdock root the broom bud and the mash mallow were all used for pick ling And every plant or herb that grew for salads The young hop and the tender nettle shoot of course We know as vegetable for quite recent man but who today has tackled a pickled broom bud Richard Jef fries rather commends this weeding out policy How many years it took to make a good salad he wrote play be seen from ancient writings wherein half the plants about the hedges are recommcilddd as salad herbs dire indeed would be our consternation ifwe had to eat themLondon Chronicle CLERGYMEN AND TRADE 1 It has been noted that the itiner ant Methodist preacher isf rbi 1clen to engage in ttrade The clergyman of the Church of England docs not continence his ministry under the SBiiie disability As a deacon ho is not prevented from ano1- tttrade but onehe must not bo a lawyer It was this fact whichwas relied upon by the founders of the movementt initiated few years ago for reviving the permanent diacon ale by which moans a number of nymrn engaged in professionalor ommorcinl pursuits might be quali Vd to assiat in conducting the serv es of Ithe church London Chron icle COST OF CELEBRATING Col IT N Hcnouf at tho Old Guard banquet at Dclmonicbs told nn instructive story about summer vacations v I said to a man the other day ho began Yell oro you going to send your wife to the seashore again this summer Xo sir Im not sal he I cant afford it Hutl your wifes so economical I objected You told mo that she spout very little at thq shore last year t Yes I know said he butt homo alone I spent over a hundred a week SHOCKED THE CUSTOMER Why did the boss fire Hallroom lies an honest clerk He was but he was discharged for causing a customer to swoon Nonsense lies a gentleman Yes but when she said Isup pose those cheap goods are all wool he answered No madam theyre half cotton DOMESTIC DIFFERENCE My wife and myself hadan other foolish quarrell What about About where we would go if weI had money enough to travel 1 1 0 I THIEF OF TIME GREAT EVIL Much oMhe Urhapplness and tmprow Idence or LIfeDlmetto Habitsro J Procrastination Much of the unhappiness and Im providence in life is c JlsedIby early habits of procrastination habits contracted unconsciously perhaps when character iis in its forma five stage and at the very time when most attention should bo given to the untrained nature It is so easy to fall into a happygolucky way of living so easy to jog along unconcernedly doing the things which suit us best and perhaps which count for the least and leaving un done all the acts and unspoken all the words and unexpressed all the thoughts and unused all the advantages which are really so essential to a better understanding of ourselves and the wonderful life being lived about us What a bright world of promise fulfilled this would be if responsibility could only be made half as at tractive as some of the minor di versions which seem to furnish so much pleasure to their partakers If the hard places could be made soft the rocky roads smooth and difficult undertakings easy there would be small need for putting off from day to day tho fulfilling of any task whatever As ft is with the certainty that happiness unalloyed is not within the grasp of man and with the knowledge that sorrow and trouble must come at some time into each of our lives it seems strange that for all our weak human nature we cannot learn the lesson that procrastination teaches and benefit thereby b NO CHANGE HERE Mrs EasyW1faftnre you giving r up this Lent sweetheart Mr Easy IrivgiVingup about ninetenths of my salaryI toyouthe same as iiuaJf j f COURT OF LAW DEFINED Two or three instructors at n Cleveland law school have been laughing themselves sick over the answer made by a student in an ex amination not long ago time ques tion was to define a court of law Blackstoue who was a good deal of o legal authority in his day gives as his definition A place where jus tice is judicially dispensed The student may have had that definition in mind But hero is what he wrote A court is a place where justice is judicially dispensed with HE DJDNT KNOW HER The telephone call fa suite of apartments in a ladies boardinghouse is 190 One young IndJn recent comet answered the call and was astonished to hear a mans voice inquire hurriedly Is this one nine o When she could catch her breath the lady who was a very proper young lady indeed replied I think not hero vo over intro duced Brpokiyn Life r NO CRUDITIES FOR HER Did Mrs Comcup use tlnit crude oil on her furniture as I ad vised ji i No she didnt She tva Shocked at the more id lIShocked at it What for She said she wouldnt use Anything that wasnt refined t 4 A SYNONYM i Why do you call your pup Live Wire asked a friend of the sugar trust magnate as the two strolled along sugarjmanI Spitzt sir Ij I Ati 1 i t Jyra Crop Conditions The past week ws J e m a don on Mont tII hfco lAEv tpc io itr wchiiaiphq vin flvlen hard several days doing nucn damage andj injury to + the crops Some of the tobacco had been housed and as a matter of course this was materially damaged the damp weather causing it to house burn badly A large portion of the crop is ripe and waiting for the knife and the continued rains caused it to be given up take on second growth and causing leaves ffii rot off and drop to the ground entailing considerable loss while the waterfall takes off all gum and diminishes the weight flate corn llas been materially benefited both in ear and stalk and fodder will be better than thought forWheat and rye which have been early sown has begun to come up in good shape while grass is growing rapidly and has plenty ofspring sweetness and flavor With pastures in better shape and the water supply getting stronger farmers have begun to take a deeper interest in cattle arid have now begun searching the market for feeding cattle Other stock is getting better and improving es pecially hogs which seem to be coming rapidly Buttcr and eggs continue high while garden stuff is practically gone Milk and butter have both greatly increased in price but the people have to have theta eRepresentative Ben Josemjide his first speech tof the Cum pari n a JAnNle Monda Ho- arralgnedlthe Repyiblcait puny both in Stateat nationTie complimented the Democrats on their splendid State ticket i J All the new vegetables and fruits at Vanarsdells Complete official returns off the Maine election on the question of the repeal of the constitutional prohibitory amendmert ns canvassed by the Governor and Council show u majority of twentysix votes in favor of repeal e 4 Broken Sizes t 20 Suits A1000 18 Suits 900 Iw1ID Suits iSi50 Punch GrayyhU J Former Senator JB McGreaiy opened his campaign in tlSev enth congressional district at Georgetown Monday His answer to Judge ORears questions elicit ed great aoplause from his hearers STATUE TO A DOG rV S- At the entrance to tQrayfriars churchyard Edinburgh is a statue and drinking fountain combhicdatv which dogs may drink erected to tho memory of Greyfriars Bobbie ti Scotch terrier Bobbies muster died and was buriedat Greyfriars churchyard and the dog persisted in follpwing his late master and could not be persuaded to leave the graveyard ultimately being dead near the grave foundII NTI EI I Democratic r r Primary Eleeti nl Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Democratic CitjtjjCommittee of Mt Sterling ICy held in said city on the 23d day qf r August 1911 at which meeting a quorum Lens present it was unaniIIc II mously ordered by said Committee that a primary election be held intt sad city on V Friday October 6th 1911j HJ t For the purpose of nominating the following Democratic nominees Ii Iii for City Offices towit f i Two nominees for Councilmen for the First Ward Two nominees for Councilmen for the Second Ward A f Two nominees for Councilmen for the Fourth Yard T r A nominee for City Attorney X nominee for Chief of Police i N A nominee for City Assessor r V f A nominee for City Clerk JrThe polls in each of the precincts of said city will be opcnedat i theusulIlvoting places at G oclock a m ouch closed at 4 oclock u flff This August 23d 1911 J C B DUERSON1 1 1Illln B FRANK PERRY Stf- p Secyff il g1lif l p Ii Our SilverwareH is Purchased to a iioyease I t ISILVERARE conies in various qualities thelame as butler and shoes We still only good SILVERWARE SILVERWARE that answers the purpose for which it is intended f Our SILVERWARE is made by manufacturers who m have the reputation of making the best The SILVERWARE sell is guaranteed in every par J ticular and costs no more than the ordinary kind Every family is compelled to buy SILVERWARE either Jor th ijr own use or for a present Realizing this we sell our SILVERWARE at n close margin concluding that it is better to sell a great teal of SILVERWARE at a close margin rather i than a little at a big profit We ask you to visit us the next time you are thinkingI I+ m of SILVERWARE or of any other articles that are to be found in a good Jewelry Store 4 JW Jonesthe JewelerMT STERLING KENTUCKY lj 1 J j 1 ri Ih1trt n i ry r- lI r4 i 1 4i r