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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1922 THE BOURBON NEWS, PARIS, KENTUCKT ! !'! I PAGESlYaW 1 AFGHAN BORDER SCENE OF RAIDS Anachronistic Struggle Between .Bandit Hillmen and Peace ful' Plainsmen Persists. 0ICE SHE.WAS-BALD 4 i yn FINEST CANDIES IN ATTRACTIVE BOXES ' AN APPROPRIATE GIFT MISS HOLLADAY CASCARETS" TOCLEAN BOWELS When Sick, Bilious, Headachy, Constipated, for Sour Stomach, Gases, Bad Breath, Colds y TRIBES ARE WILDEST OF WILD O 7- ) - '.BBKjBwriBSSSSKc.S BSSr atP-Sr BL?f' 'TBBliBPtBBSSji ualsSS3BS& i Clean your bowels then feel fine! When you feel sick, dizzy, 'upset, Trilious, when your head is dull or aching, or your stomach is sour or sassy, just take one or two Cascar- ets. As soon as the bowels begin acting and bowel poison ana oowei gases TOOR PEED CUTS DOWN WINTER CROP OF EGGS Three-fourths of the hens on Ken tucky farms would lay more eggs in the winter if they were fed right, according to J. R. Smyth, poultry specialists of College of Agriculture This has an important bearing on the profits that farmers make from their flocks because eggs are higher in price in the winter than they are at other times of the year. The flock that produces a large number of eggs during the coming four or five months will pay -far more profit on a yearly basis than one that yields the largest number of eggs in the spring and summer months. "Experiments that have been car ried out on the college farm and tests that have been made by farm ers of the State show that some form of animal protein, such as milk, meat scraps or tankage, is necessary if hens are to lay the most eggs in winter. If as much milk as a gallon a day for every 30 hens can be had, it is not necessary to feed a dry mash containing this protein. A grain mixture made of 70 parts of corn and 30 parts of oats or meat should be given along with the milk. It probably will be best for farmers to use wheat along with the corn this winter as Kentucky oats this year turned out to be poor quality. Ground limestone also should be IceDt before the hens at all times as this is needed for making egg shells. ses flatulence, heartburn sour ,, . . ... . , ness, fermentation or stomach dis- "On farms where milk cannot be -, . .,. A - . . , tn , i tress caused by acidity. A few tab- had, a dry mash made of 40 pounds lets give almost immediate st0mach of corn meal, 20 pounds of bran, 30relieL Correct your stomach and pounds of shorts and 20 pounds of j digestion now for a few cents. tankage that contains at least 60 Druggists sell millions of packages. per cent protein should be used at all times and a pound of the grain mixture fed for every pound of mash that the hens eat. It is best to feed one-third of the grain, in the morn ing and the other two-thirds at night in a litter of straw of ten to 12 inches deep. When milk is being i used to supply the protein, an aver-1 ,M f fr. 19 m ic e f ..,,., ,, rIar lines. The negroes continued to gram should be fed each day for fQrm part Qf bmds untu yeap eacn iuu nens in me nocK. o "Old Colony." The expression "Old Colony" was originally applied to that part of Massachusetts included within the lim its of the Plymouth colony, but after wards used to designate the entire state. In 1692, the Plymouth and Mas sachusetts Bay colonies, which, for many years, had been independent of ?ach other, were united In one pro vince ,bearing the name of Massa chusetts. n "Sympathetic Magic" The idea of "sympathetic mafic many centuries ago, .made one of Ks appearances in the form of a Jewel or -charm. The beetle was the symbol of Immortality and must -not be harmed. But some genius conceived the Idea of carving a beetle out of J ."?, "U l, ! hTi V , "um " U;.T beetle and a claim to Its protection. People for Whom the Best Is None Too Good Are always the most enthusiastic concerning the excellence of our Dry Cleaning and Dyeing We have one of the most efficient Remodeling Departments, m the country. Furs transformed into the mode very quickly. Men's and women's garments altered" in any way desired. ' We dye fur skins and remodel them in any way. We tailor make men's or ladies' suits, $50.00 up. latest styles. We pay $2.50 railroad fare on every custom-made suit ordered from us. Send goods parcel post. We have no agents. THE TEASDALE CO. 625-627 Walnut Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. nov3-10-17-24) PILES! PILES! PILES WILLIAMS' PILE OINTMENT For Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. For sale by all druggists, mail 50c and $1.00. -ymilAMS MFC CO., Tim.. CtovUad. Ohim Tt Salt Bjr PBOLDOMUL III MTOODfl are cleared away, you will feel like a new person. Cascarets never sicken or cramp you. Also splendid for constipated children. 10 cents a box, also 25 and 50 cent sizes. Any druggist. (adv-F) Action Out of an Old Rug. An old rug too worn for use may be placed on the porch or kitchen floor and painted on the wrong side. Give the rug two coats of paint and one of weather-proof varnish. You will find you have a firm, serviceable rug, easily cleaned and suitable for kitchen or sun porch. By varnishing occasionally the rug will last several years. Delineator. - o It Scatters Yellow Fever. The frightful disease, yellow fever, is carried and spread exclusively by a species of mosquito, the Stegraoyia, which is the common house skeet of the tropics. It is very tiny so small, Indeed, that ordinary wire screens will not keep It out and strikingly marked a silvery white lyre-shaped pattern on the thorax, white stripes on the abdomen and legs banded black and white. STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION 'Tape's Diapepsin" Corrects Sour, Upset Stomachs at Once I MHtiiit nm "Pape's Diapepsin" is the quick est surest relief for indigestion, (adv-F) First English Military Bands. The first military band was heard in England in 1785. The duke of York, son of George HI, imported a band of twelve German musicians with three negroes, and established them as the band of the Coldstream Guards. Other regiments then formed bands on sinn- 1838 Prunes. Sixty-four years ago Louis Pellier, French Immigrant, took with him to California from his native country two prune cuttings. These he planted on his brother's ranch near San Jose, thus beginning the prune industry in Cali fornia. Today California produces an annual prune crop of 225,000,000 pounds. o How to Open a New Book. To the lover of books there is noth ing so exasperating as to- see a new book ruined by careless opening. To open a new book correctly let It rest on its bound edges then put one -back carefully down and then the other. Put down a portion of the leares, alter nating back and front' until all the leaves are down. A new book opened tW way a few times will not be ruined iby the leaves coming loose, Great Writer's Work Analyzed. , Turgenev's novels are nearer to poetry than any others, because his J??'"!. ? " .TUT. UUUU.1. J-lK.e OU" UUCll, lie ixiurwco "J songs cut of sorrow; all his exquisite I precision of detail, all his skill of con I struction, are means of expressing that His very characters aremouth ! pieces of it, and subdued to the minor key. So his books have the unity or 'music. A. Clutton-Brock. Worth Remembering. . An ant Is a wise creature for Itself, but It Is a shrewd thing In an or chard or garden. And certainly men that are great lovers of themselves waste the public. Divide with reason between self-love and society; and be so true to thyself, as thou be not false to others, especially to thy king and country. It Is a poor center of a man's actions, himself. Francis Bacon. o They Guessed It A few weeks after I was married I went to a department store and pur chased a rug which I wanted deliv ered. I gave the clerk my money and she asked me my name. It completely .slipped my mind, and I stood in front of her and numeroul inquisitive customers for two endless minutes, when the clerk remarked: t must bt a new one.H-CnIcit I Tribune: r " - ' India's Ntrthwest Borderland Is a Racial Crazy Quilt Mountaineers Never Completely Subdued by Afghan er Briton. Washington, D. C. Dispatches atom India, detailing the havoc wrought by raids along the Afghan kerder, may indicate to those who have traveled in the Bast merely that India's "annual frontier war" is on. But, as pointed out in a bulletin from the Washington (D. O.) headquarters of the National Geographic society dealing with the northwest Indian frontier, troubles in the East might easily mean a great deal more this year. "With the Near East, central Asia and India seething with unrest," says the bulletin, "any mud-walled Afghan village, with its battlemented towers might become another Serajevo. Hillman vs. Plainsman. "From Armenia, to Wazlrlstan, where ever-'wlld mountains, destitute of crops, frown down on rich valleys and wide, fertile plains, there persists the anachronistic struggle between the freedom-loving bandolero of the mountain fastnesses and the peace loving plainsman. Steadfast stand the frontiers which separate the re gions where law and order are a help from those where they are a hin drance. ' "The tribes which Inhabit the jumble of land between the Indus and the Afghan boundary are a wild lot Malaria has left its mark on many, but the fittest have survived. Climate and famine, knife and jezail have dis posed of the weaklings. Neither Af ghan nor Briton has ever been able completely to subdue the freedom loving mountaineers who inhabit this rabbit-hiAclr of warlike clans which have been used pro and con according to where the best fighting was prom ised and the best pay offered. "These are the independent tribes, each with its own William Tell. And If their independence is noticeable from beyond the breastworks of their beloved hills, their local independence is just as marked. For every man who has fallen before, the invader many another has fallen in the inter minable inter-tribal blood-feuds. "One might call the region the land of Pushto and postin, for Pushto is the language which binds most of the tribes together even more closely than their Mohammedan religion. "The Pathans claim descent from the lost tribes of Israel, who were car ried captive into Media by Nebuchad nezzar. That makes them close rela tives of the Durani Afghans, whose dy nasty still Ailes Afghanistan. Bui there are Pathans and Pathans, and locally at least they are called bj other names. Ghilzai Makes Fine Figure1. "The man who wins deepest admi ration is the Ghilzai, upon whose car avans the frontier trade depends Once their dynasty ruled Persia. Nov they weave the shuttle of trade back and forth between central Asia and the Indian plains, bringing the rich rugs of Bokhara and Persian pussy cats past the stern walls of Fort Jam rod to the Kabul! bazaar in Peshawar Tricky as a gipsy in horse-trading, full of contempt for the Hindu and of fel low feeling fer the Sikh, warriors b courajfe; Vobbeip'by nature,' Iraders bj profession! the Ghllzals are a manh lot whose early forbears of Turkiil' origin lived in the central Aslas lands whence they bring down th dried fruits of Murghab and th Zerafshan. Tramping along with hit .heavy-necked camels, his powerful chest bared to sun and wind, the Ghll zal is a fine figure of a mart, one who dropped among the flat-faced peoplei of the South, could well be thought a- god. "Call an Afghan 'Wazlr' and he will show gratitude. Call him 'Wazirl and he may kill without warning, foi the Waziris, the largest of Panthau tribes, are considered as dregs of th earth by their fellow Afghans. Theli women are free and often unfaithful their? men hot-headed and vain. Theii environment has given them fin bodies, but their souls are unredeemed Nowhere is there a better exampl of a region where every prospect pleases, and only man Is vile. "Manhood is the first requisite ol him who hopes to. join an Afghan tribe. He must win his spurs before he is given a wife and his share it the tribal lands. "Behind the coat of dirt which if the right of every tribesman except oi durbar days both men and women ar more than' ordinarily good looking. In most tribes the women are jealous ly guarded and the reward' for dult ery 'Is death to the woman ani thi loss of his right foot to her para mour. "Warrior, freebooter, marauder thief, the true Afghan will not keep s shop or learn a trade. The hills an his brothers, his knife his boKois friend, his matchlock his protector He may lend himself to this faction o that, to empire or democracy, to prog res or destruction. But above everj other interest is his desire for lade- pendence. Bald-headed men, here's news for you. At five Helen was bald, and re cently at eleven, she appeared before the Illinois Free Homeopathic clinic with the beautiful head of hair which you see in the picture, and at that it has been bobbed three times. Doctors C. D. Collins and A. H. Gordon, who cured Helen, told how it was done. They fed the child on endocrine gland tablets and subjected her to violet ray treatments. Within seven months after the treatment began Helen had a full head of hair. BULGAR WAR TRIAL IS SLOW Cabinet Men in Jail Three Years Wait Turn to Address Court Trial Enters Second Year. 4 Sofia, Bulgaria. Trial of the mem bers of the Radislavor cabinet, which brought Bulgaria into the war on the side of Germany, will soon enter its second year. Two hundred and fifty witnesses gave testimony during the first six months. Then it took one month to read the indictment. The crown prosecutor spoke for 17 days, and then D. Tonchef, former minister of finances and one of the accused, spoke for 20 days to explain his part, and has not yet completed his intro duction. Ten more of the accused cabinet ministers and about twenty barristers are yet to speak. The defendants already have been three years in prison, where they have been preparing their speeches and oth er features of their defense. Tho judges are mostly peasants and some of them have remarked that if they listen another year or two they will be able to pass their first exami nation to the bar without attending the university. WOMEN WILL FILL PULPITS New South Wales Synod May License Church Deaconesses in Angli can Church. Sydney, N. S. W. The prospect of woman preachers occupying pulpits in many New South Wales churches has arisen as the result of a proposal, which Is to come before - the next Anglican provincial synod, that women be permitted to conduct services under certain conditions. The proposed ordinance suggests that the archbishop or bishop of a diocese may issue a license to a deaconess to perform any of the following duties: To prepare candidates for baptism and confirmation ; In church, In the absence of the pastor, to read morning and evening prayer and the litany, except such portions as are assigned to the priest only, and to instruct and to ex hort the congregation and to conduct services 'for women and children. RECLAIMS 500,000 ACRES Preject Fostered by ' Government and Private Aaojoiatiens Extends Agriculture. Home. Pursuing a policy of land reclamation, the government, working with private associations, has brought under cultivation 500,000 acres of land which otherwise, would be virtually worthless. v . In the Ferrara and Modena districts a drainage basin covering 200,000 acres has been completed and 150,000 miles of ditches have been built. This work already has cost 30,000,000 lire, and further drainage and irrigation proj ects will cost as much again. In the Polesine-San Giorgio district 125,000 acres of swampy, malarious land has been converted into some of the most fertile grain fields of Italy. $333 Makes Miliionarre. Berlin. The sum of $333 in United States coin makes a man a million aire In Germany In German marks. .One can purchase 2,005 marks for $1 now. They used to be worth 24 cents. i i i i i i i i i i i a i i i i i i i i i "Pesky" Crows Saved Jersey Potato Crop F. E. Harris and Henry Shaw, two farmers near Cape May, N. .T., are thanking a flock of about 300 crows for what they now believe will prove to be a bump er potato crop. They had about given up hope of saving the plants from a horde of big green worms when the crows alighted in the fields and in a few min utes had picked the plants clean of worms. ft W will you when you need our assistance. We will serve you courteously and faithfully, we are trained id the most modern methods of our scientific profession. B DOWN forcC THE TTNLMERSAL CAR - Lowest F. O. B. . Prices in the History of the Company Chassis $235.00 Runabout, regular $269.00 Touring, regular $298.00 Truck Chassis $360.00 Coupe $530.00 Two-Door Sedan.. v $595.00 P. O. B. Detroit Starter remains $70.00; Demoun tables $25.00, when sup plied on open types. Closed Jsyjjes are priced with Starter arid Demoiintables. t, : ' . ' RUGGLES IXHXaXBKSX 1 X Bourbon Laundry DAVIS & FUNK, Proprietors Telephone No. 4 West Fifh Street SRI 1 I I The Bourbon Laundry Paris, Kentucky X XHXIiXHXBXHXHXXBIXHXI vv Bourbon 'News Advertisers Get Results counsel AGAIN ;::asxi 1X1 SATISFACTION OUR WATCHW0RD1 With all the latest improve- u ments in laundry appliances I and expert helpers we are Jf f prepared to do work infe- nor to none, ana solicit your patronage. If j .i.vt h i ;- 3 . . "v - ,1 5? 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