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THE BOURBON NEWS, PARIS, KENTUCKY, JANUARY 28, 1913 I r. m sartraTSrr????1 w s !. As v'H-w ;. -j v vis"- . ".. I ' ir"' ' & v. V -s.-. ") Marjorie Cortland, the "Zoie" in the Mayo Company, sBaby Mine,,' Which Comes to The Paris Grand, Wednesday, January 29th 8 Will &?mw if Q Vv5 ? lllf Tou who arc suffering the torturs cf Eczema. Itch. S'l ' "um or other skm diseases ou whose daya are nnoeratiic, who .... : .aale sleep less by the terrible itchinsr. burning iuins, ktir.esci.c cou .'riui of a sooth- W..,.ll O O lug. healing treatment which has cured Lundrecs. wfci.-v, ? . eve will cure c- ". K- jou I will send it free, postage pa-d,i7ithr'utr.r.7 0bl.Kztt n your part. Just fill the coupon below and mail it to me. cr -write me, giving your name, aire and address. I will send the treatment free of cost to 3 ou. n t mm am ac aea bs bob nCUT ANO MAIL TO D AY " " " " mm Btt J. C. HUTZELL, 123 West Main St., Fort Wayne, Inf!. Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. Name Post Office State .Street and No (Fri-tf) anna I III! Hill J.JU,JWgWMWBBMWBaBBMBBHHWBMrBMMIWMMa WE LOAN MONEY On approved Municipal, Railroad C& Corporation BONDS AND STOCKS THE THOMPSON - BROWN CO. INVESTMENT SECURITIES MERCANTILE LIBRARY BUILDING. CINCINNATI, O. (Fri-tf) SS0.00 TO $100.00 A MONTH 3Tw yeur spare time Experience not need 40. "Want an active man in this locality. ff introduce us to your friends. We pay tarceat cash benefits when sick, injured, ud at death, for smallest oost. Free-In-mranc and Cash-Bonus er to first ap plicant frem this place. Write quick for particulars. THE I-L-U 835. Covington. Ky. Curtis&Overby Business Men's Barber Shop, (Next to Bourbon Bank) 3 - CHAIRS - 3 Expert Barbers N Polite Attention Hot and CoW Baths at All Hours No Long Waits. A Share cf the Public Pat-ronagelSottdted. i: vm!- ;.v! v..av w - av5 s-... .., -'.," - . Age. Sheriffs Sale By virtue of Execution No. 1060 directed to me which issued from the Clerk's office of the Bourbon Circuit Court in favor of Eliza H. Johnson against Thomas C. Johnson, I will on Monday, Feb. 3, 1913, between the hours of 11 o'clock a. m., and 12 o'clock, noon, at the court house door in the city of Paris, Bour bon county, Kentucky, expose to pub lic sale, to the highest bidder the fol lowing property or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy plaintiff's debt, interests and costs, to wit: The undivided one-half interest of Thomas C. Johnson, in A certain house and lot of ground fronting 50 feet on Williams street in Paris, Ky., and extending back same width 145 feet to the line of Oliver Jackson and is the same property con veyed by M. A. Paton by deed record ed in deed book 84, page 110, Bourbon County Clerk's office, levied UDon as the property of Thomas C. Johnson and sold subject to a mortgage of T. P. Wood for $110 with interest from Dpcember 15. 1903, at the rate of 6 per cent per annum. TERMS Sale will be made on three months' time the purchaser to execute bond with approved surety payable to the undersigned. The amount to be raised on day of sale is 5328.79 and the cost of this action, $51.98. Witness my hand this 14th day of January, 1913. A. S. THOMPSON Sheriff of Bourbon County, 22Zi j23ZS3KR THEATRICAL Marjor'e Cortland, who plays the part ot the child-wife in the Margaret Mayo Comedy, "Baby Mine," which comes to tha opera house January 29tb, takes as much care to select handsome gowns as certain stars do to surround themselves with nobodies unlikely to eclipse them. "It's a safe venture that there is not a woman who goes to see 'Baby Mine' that isn't literally filled with envy of these dainty things. Of course some allowance must be made for Miss Cortland. She's such a small morsel of humanity that a paDer sack tied in with a blue ribbon would transform itself into a suggestion of daintiness and call forth xhe same ejaculations of Ohs' and 'Ahs. Still, these gowns that 1 speak of. although they have a pleasing sim plicity in common with a Daper sack, are very far from being in" the same class. More than one among the fashionable dressmakers, it is safe to venture, have taken points from the pretty neglige with its lace flounces, or from the beguiling little second act frock, a dream in the palest and soft estt:f blues, with lace flouncing at the foot and three deep tucks above. In the first act, the gown is white cloth with patch pockets, purely orna mental, a section of deep plaits being inserted at the sides of the skirt below the hips and fitted in with a large yoke. A like ornament continues down the full length of the front. Three bettpr suggestions for girls' frocks cuuld not be fourd in Tsearch of the best establishments. There are few models for girla' dresses which are at the same time smart and ap propriate, and Miss Cottland, although as Zoie she is a married woman, is nevertheless very much'a girl. STOCK, CROP AND FARM NOTES lhat Blue Grass land brings a good price was evidenced when Jefferson Davis Grover Daid about $250 per acre for the farm of Mrs Mai Kankins Roberts located in Scott county on the Lexington and Georgetown pike. The tract of land consists of 56 acres. It is said that Mr. Grover intend to convert the farm into a stock farm. He is the owner of Groverland Stock Farm and has raised some of thebest thor oughbreds in the country. We are receiving a carload of Per cheron mares every two weeks, from one to four years old.' Phone or write us. H. T. BROWN & CO., Lexington Ky. Union Stock Yards. A deal involving the sale of ten million pounds of tobacco was closed last week at Owenton when the sales committee of the American Society of Equity and the Home Warehouse Asso ciation sold that amount of the weed pooled with them to the American To bacco Company and the Imperial.- The price paid was the same as the Gieen River Association, and was $3 tu $9. This closes the sales of pooled tobacco in tnat district. The sale has to be ratified by a vote of the members of the organiaztinn. Cincinati Auto Show. On Monday, February 4 at the hour of eight p. m. the Cincinnati Automo biile Show will open doors for a con tinuous session covering full ten days, six of them devoted to the pleasure car section, the other four' to that of the commercial vehicle. i Though all the shows held here pre viously have been emphatic successes the present one gives honest promise of new records in the way of attrac tive, original displays, from the fact that Cincinnati is now a 'part of the ten city circuit formed by the Nation Association of Manufacturers for the purpose of expediting the transfer from point to point of all the special models and designs gracing the floors of the wide sweeping exhibits in New York, Chicago and other large cities ot the country. One of these novelties for example, is to be a chassis, pearl white in color ing, and so constructed as to reveal to the eyeevery inner detail of operation Decorative scheme of the show is again to be under charge of the Wil liam Beck and Sons Comnanv wViinh is to begin its work promptly on Feoru ary 1 and continue almost to the hour of opening Monday, February 24. ooior pian,nerein is to be of white and delicate green with particular atten tion to the cafe, which is to be done after the fashion of pergola and open space lawn. I Of exhibitors there are to be fifty two in the pleasure car department and sixteen in that devoled to motor trucks. Here is a remedy that will cure your cold. Why waste time and money ex perimenting when you can get a prep aration that has won a world wide rep utation by its cures of this disease and can always be depended upon. It is knon everywhere as Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and is a medicine of real merit. For saleby all dealers. Popular Sun Bath. The sun bath is said to be so popu lar at present in Germany that in several cities one can buy a ticket for a sun bath, just as in America one buys a ticket for a bath in the surf. The sun bath ticket entitles the hold er to a room for disrobing, a bathing suit and a "place in the sun." Mrs. A. R.,Tabor, of Crider, Mo., had been troubled with sick headache for about five years, when she began taking Chamberlain's Tablets. She has taken two bottles, of them and they have cured her. Sick headache is caused by a disordered stomach for which these tablets are especially in tended. Try them, get well and stay well. Sold by all dealers. Steering Committee. Registry Clerk "It is necessary for me to ask the mother of the bride if she has nothing to Bay before I pro ceed with the ceremony." Voice of Mother (in background) "All I have to say is that if I hadn't had a good deal to say already they never would have landed here." Honor Roll Paris City Schools. JANUARY REPORT. The holidays affected the schools to some extent, as is usual, but the two weeks following brought the attend ance up somewhat and gave an aver age daily attendance of 651 in the white school and 272 in the colored school. The enrollment increased in both schools, making the total in the white 748, and colored 350, grand total 1098. Everything started off with bright prospects last Monday, the beginning of the second semester and many new pupils are enrolling. Since the addition of a new High School teacher it is now possible to have the twice-a-year promotion pro vided for in the course of study and teachers are grading their pupils into "A" and "B" classes ready for pro motions at the close of the year's work. Good interest is everywhere manifest and a large honor roll is hereby sub- mi lusu. une otner ieature which is especially commendable is that 450 white and 188 colored pupils rendered satisfactory deportment and 574 white and 267 colored pupils were neither absent nor tardy during the month. HONOR ROLL. GRADE 1-C. Bourbon Roebuck 90, Mary Edna Rose 91. GRADE I-B. Lucile Chipley 90, Martha Collier 91, Allie Hubbard 92, Mary Louise Clen denin 90, William Cook 91. GRADE I-A. Corme Oliver 92, Carolyn Wilmoth 94, Edna Earle Burnes 91, Robert Moore' 90, Stanley Hardin 93, Charles Goodin 91, GRADE II-B. Carley Scott 91, Hamlet Collier 92, Thelma Payne 93, Ruth Wheeler 93, Bertha King 90, Edrie Cooke 93, Bessie Sharp 90, Leonard Fronk 93, Elizabeth Lilleston 93, Eddie Munich 93, Purnell Mastin 91, Katherine Woodard 92, Crutcher Chism 91. William Collier 92, Roy Fields 90. Christine Thomas 95, iviargaret 1111 ya. GRADE II-A. Kellar Larkm 92, Elizabeth Carter 91, M. Frances Burns 94, Minnie Himes 90, Hazel Shelton 91, Clara Himes 94, Nannette Arkle 91, Edward Paton 94, EfFie Barlow 91, Virginia Hancock 94, Anna Farrow 90, Hiatt Hubbard 91. GRADE III-B. Louella Chaney 94, Mamie Cooke 9S, Vanessa Lykins 92, Heller Turner 92, Geneva Fitemaster 91, Beulah Quinn 91, Etta Evans 91, Elmer Burnett 90, Carl Fields 90. GRADE III-A. Isabel Atlas 90, Irene Collins 90, Eva Chappell 93, Ann R. Duncan 94, Frances Harris 92, Elizabeth Johnson 93, Hazel Myers 94, Herbert Myers 94, Jack Lair 94, Frances McCarthy 95, Charles Padgett 94, James Smith 91, Hilda Taylor 90, Nancy Wilson 95, Katherine Wills 92. GRADE IV-B. Sydney Linville 92, Viola Ockman 90, GRADE IV-A. Alma Louise Goldstein 94, Rankin Mastin 93, James Arnsparger 93, Bessie Owens 92, Elizabeth Wheeler 92, Ger aldine Herrin 92, Tommy Hubbard 92, Elizabeth Stewart 91, Jim McClintock 91, Geneva Oliver 90, Collins Hall 90, Norbert Friedman 90. GRADE V-B. Darothy Tingle 92, Oliver McCor mick 90. GRADE V-A. Henry Brown 92, A. T. Rice 91, Bes sie Gifford 93, Elizabeth Snapp 91, Omar Denton 90, Eunice Gifford 92, IiUtie Crowe 91, Lane Lusk 91, Cletes Chipley 90, Edith Culbertson 91, Olive Snapp 92, Ann Meglone 93, Charlie Anderson 90, Blanche Hughes 91, Helen Rippetoe 91, Rene Clark 90, Bryant Doty 90, Clara Hartley 95, Christine McCord 94, Lena Cook 91, Helen Lynch 90, Charlie Grinnan 93, Hattie Neal 96, Aera Bishop 90, Albert Stewart 93. GRADE VI-A. Ida Mae Anderson 90, Preston Bales 90, Helen Cain 90, Amanda Davis 90, Lucille Gadman 91, Elmeta Hinton 90, Jesse Lowe 90, Palmer Myers 90, Martha Settle 95, Ora Smith 90, Madge Taylor 95, Sara Traylor 90. GRADE VI-B. Mary D. Everman 90. GRADE VII-A. Turney Clay 92, Vernita Baldwin 93, Harold Hufnagel 91, Ruby Elder 90, Fannie Heller 91, Clarence Buchanan 90, Eleanor Lytle 94, Bessie Newman 91, John C. Clay 91, Forrest Letton 92, C. B. McShane 92, Maude K. Taylor 96. ' GRADE VIII. Fithian Arkle 97, Edith Bobbitt 90, Sallie Crowe 93, Mayme Flanders 90, Hattie Hughes 90, Elizabeth Hall 93, Ethel Harper 93, Minnie Kiser 94, Frances Settle 95, Annie L. Wither spoon 90, Thomas Parker 92,. J. T. Red- mon 95, Bess O'Neill 90. HIGH SCHOOL. FRESHMAN. Edyth Hancock 90, Elizabeth Hedges 90, George Jones 91, Bessie Sweeney 91, Evelyn Friedman 94, Elizabeth Kenney 91. SOPHOMORE. r Landen Templin 90, Dennis Snapp 93, Raymond Link 94, Jerome Chapman 93, Barnett Winters 93, Robert Mitchell 91, Robert Adair 94, Gertrude Slicer 90, Joseph Lynch 93, Thornton Connell 93, Stuart Wallingford 95, Grace McCord 93, Amelia Kuster 92, Lina Crowe 94, Marion Cram 90. JUNIOR. Eli Friedman 99, Sello Wollstein 95, Wavne Cottingham 95, Joseph Letcher 94, Edward Myall 98, Gertrude Turpin 93, Ruth Lair 93, Beatrice Chapman 90, Ruth Chambers 93, Malvina Sharon 93, Mabel Arnold 90. SENIOR. Clara Chambers 95, Olive Taul 94, Earl Dickerson 98, Duke Brown 97, Finnell Galloway 92, G. C. Thompson 95, Woman. To think of a part one little woman can play in the life of a man, so that to renounce her may be a very good Imitation of heroism, and to win her may be a discipline! George Eliot. New Fall Suits Arriving v. " ..- .. ft. - 55 -N wjfr .'p i.'; f Ta JSCHL0SSBR0S6C0.1 ,, I lFie Oalies fillers f v. i S- Z ? j : : S jc i ' 'it '"' 'ill - l''? TWIN BROS., CLOTHING DEP'T. L. Wollstein, Proprietor. L. N. TIFIE-TABLE IN EFFECT DECEMBER 8, 1912 Trains jrrrve No. FROM 34 Atlanta, Ga., Daily 5.21 am 134 Lexington. Ky., Daily 5.18am 29 Cynthiana, Ky. , Daily Except Sunday 7.35 am 7 Maysville, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 7.38 am 10 Rowland, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 7.55 am 40 Lexington, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 8.12 am 37 Cincinnati, O., Dnily .9.50 am 3 Maysville, Ky. , Daily Except Sunday 10.20 am 12 Lexington, Ky,, Daily t 10.15 am 33 Cincinnati, O. , Daily 10.24 am 26 Lexington, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 12.00 am 25 Cynthiana, Ky. , Daily Except Sunday 3.10 Dm 9 Maysville, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 3.15 pm 138 Lexington, Ky.. Daily 3.33 pm 38 Knoxville.. Tenn.. Daily 3.25 pm 5 Maysville, Ky. , Daily 5.40 pm 39 Cincinnati, O., Daily Except Sunday 5.55 pm 30 Lexington, Ky., Daily 6,15 pm 8 Louisville & Frankfort, Daily Except Sunday 5.50 am 32 Jacksonville. Fla., Daily .6.18 pm 31 Cincinnati, O. , Daily 10 :50 pm Trains IDe-psirt No. TO 34 Cincinnati. O., Daily 5.28 am 4 Maysville, Ky., Daily Except Sunday ...5.35 am ' 29 Lexington, Ky., Daily Except Sunday .7.47 am 40 Cincinnati, O. , Daily Except Sunday 8.20 arc 10 Maysville, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 8.20 am, 137 Lexington, Ky., Daily 9.57 am 37 Knoxville, Tenn., Daily 9.55 am 33 Jacksonville, Fla. , Daily 10.24 am 133 Lexington, Ky., Daily 10.29 am 6 Maysville, K., Daily 12.05 pm 26 Cynthiana, Ky. , Daily Except Sunday 12.04 am 25 Lexington, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 3.33 pm 38 Cincinnati, O., Daily '. 3.4n pm 9 Rowland, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 5.52 pm 39 Lexington, Ky.. Dally Except Sunday 6.07 pm 32 Cincinnati, O., Daily 6.23 pm 8 Maysville, Ky., Daily Except Sunday : 6.20 pm 30 Cynthiana, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 6.35 pm 31 Lexington, K., Daily 10.55 pm 13 Atlanta, Ga., Daily 10.57 pm IN EFFECT OCTOBER. 3, 1911. Trains .A.rrrve No. FROM 2 Frankfort, Ky., Daily Except Sunda 8.13 ar 4 Frankfort, Ky., Daily Except Sunday 3.30, pm 8 Louisville & Frankfort, Daily Except Sunday 5.50 pm Trains 3De;part No. TO 7 Frankfort & Louisville, Daily Except Sunday 7.43am 1 F ankfort, Ky. Daily Except Sunday 9.53 am 131 Frankfort, Ky Daily Except Sunday 5.55 pm Kentucky Traction and Terminal Co. Winter Schedule Interurban Bi visions, in Effect Oct. 1. 1912. All cars run week days and Sundays except those marked with an ex (x), which run only on week dajTs. Lve. Lexington for Paris x6.00 a m 7.20 a m x8.00 a m 8.50 a m 10.20 a m 11.50 a m 1.20 p m 2.50 p m 3.30 p m 4.20 p m 5.00 p m 6.00 p m 7.20 p m 9.10 p m 11.00 p m Lve. Paris For Lexington. 6.45 a m 7.30 a m 8.15 a m 9.00 a m 9.45 a m 11.15 a m 12.45 p m 2.15 p m 3.45 p m 5.15 p m 6.00 p m 6.45 p m 8.15 p m 10.45 p m x7.30 a m x9.00 a m 6.00 p m Legacy to Have. His Health Drunk. Mr. John Dipple of Leytonstone, li censed victualler, who died on Sep temher 21, bequeathed 250 to the treasurer of the Leyspring lodge of Free Masons upon trust to apply the income in providing for a silent toast to be drunk to his memory, to he pro posed at the installation banquet of the lodge by the master. -London Times. Daily Schloss Bros., &Co., Baltimore, IVId., Hand Made Suits Are Mere Direct From The Tailors Hands. . . We are showing the new Plum, Carnation, Grey and Browns, the prices very reasonable, $15 to 25. All Wool Fall Suits, newest shades at $10, $12.50 and 15. Our Fall Line of Haws Von Gol Hats Douglass Shoes and Tiwn Bros., Special Shoes are ar riving daily. The showing we are making for Fall is in every way up to the highest class,, our prices are more reasonable than elsewhere. New Art Store! I have opened an Art Store next to Mrs. M. A. Paton. New and fresh stock of all kinds of fancy work Embroidery, Pillow Cases, Towels, Underwear, Waists, Etc. Novelties of all Kinds Stamping Done on Short Notice Everything guaranteed to be the best. ::::::: mr$,iD.k Board per IH IS! cent. $i, to $ih,owm W. KING & SON, 125 Cheapslde Lexington, Ky -