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u Vtx iUrsvou tiSiaiiiiiiMiis tfeii The money made Will help us buy NEW UNIFORMS and look sweet. HORSESHOE BOYS BAND light trip cn Wis elfiiant & Steinfdr Hoiitar Smith J in -i- :- nniL weonesoay, April zoin At 7:30 P. M. Round Trip Only 50c Good music and Dancing OUR MOTTO o li T) 'j. ' l 1 " V Lit iI i by LuaJeaijnePrice New York. Whether Greenwich Village, that seml-mystlcal region (round Washington Sguaro. it to stand F forth and insist upon beiug considered respectable" U a conventional, sub stantially coiiiiiiircliil souse of the ierm, or 'Ahcthcr It U to romuln tinged with Ilohenilanin mof art, tempera ment, and Instability is being fought out rlht there upon the local field pf battle. I ptownera have scorned or adorned thirt district of meandering ktrcetH, studiog-iniide-out-of barns, and boblied halrcd maidens, and have dls puted ltn Morth union themselves and with die "Vlllaiiors." Uut now the dis pute If racing between the Villagers thcnmclves. First there came the Greenwich Village Chamber Com merce, with announced intention of "making' better busineHB and raising the commercial standard of the Vil lage" and of niaklnq uptownerj realise that the wild stories of New York's 1-atin Qtiartlcr wcer fUments o ftha luiajilnutlnn They even Invited Fifth avenue business men ilow nto address ihelr meetings. The 100 per cent Vil lagers revolted. Led by Harvey P. vaughr. litterateur, they fornifd a sec ond organization ,the Greenwich Vil lage Poardi of Trade, "to protect us ' Wall Paper Wall Paper t Back to tlfc good old days. Pre-War Prices Prevailing on Wall Paper 1 PAINTS, Varnishes, GLASS 'RYDER PAINT STORE J.. F FANSLER, Proprietor. oooooooooocfooob6b6odoobooocJoooo Extraordinary o 8 2 IDA Don o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 10 CENTS BUYS APON GINGHAMS. 40 CENTS BUYS 9-4 43 CENTS BUYS 9-4 50 CENTS BUYS UNION SUITS for LADIES, regular 75 cent Kinds. q 75 CENTS BUYS PINK CREPE BLOOMERS. Jf $1.25 BUYS PINK CREPE GOWNS, never before so cheap. W $2.50 BUYS PUMPS AND OXPORDS with French Heels, worth up to $10.00 pair. O WE ARE SHOWING THE LARGEST LINE OP NEO KWEAR IN TOWN. Q $3.98 BUYS LOVELY ROMAN SCARFS, the regular $6.00 kind. JZ We are offering the best $200 Silk Hose in town, new Shades and Black. W $7.50 BUYS CHOICE OF 20 DRESSES, half price. O $7.50 BUYS choice of a lot of SPRING COATS and OA PES, worth up to $12.50. Q THE MILLINERY Wonderful prices, see the manys filled with Newest Novelties at n Styles. villG o o o ooooooooooocooooooooooooooooooooooo 'Sewer MM I fro mthe machinations of the over-respectable and commercialized cham ber of commerce and to make the Vil lage more Interesting;." NY It was without any tears at all that we saw 68 men and women sail out of Vew York Harbor the other day on their way to loin "Big Bill" Haywood In Russia and become miners In one of the soviet mining enterprises In the ''nil Mountains. It was said aboard ship that the trusting travelers had riven over all their possessions to the Soviet Central sovcniment and kept only 15 each for Incidentals on the long Journey to Big Bill. There were ( i men and four energetic women. VORTY 1RIEJS HOJiOBARY PALLREIRERS FOR MILLER. Owensboro. Hundreds of friends :ind business associates attended the .'uneral of Elmer Miller who died In tiilsvllle following an operation. For ty friends and business associates acted as honorary pallbearers. Mr. Miller was the largest stockholder of i he Owensboro Banking Company, Lead of the City Transfer Company. :!u MlllerContract Company. He was i 7 years of age. PHONE No. 185 m inn w DROWN SHEETING. BLEACHED SHEETING. Years Suit & Dry UuD .(Incorporated) MANAGED BY MR, L SOZFUOA. 24 West Second Street Pipe, WILD OJiIOXS CAUSIXG ' TROUBLE FOB DAIRYMEN. Lexington, Ky. Wild onions again are causlngf many Kentucky walry- men trouble inthe form o ftalnted milk, according to Inquiries being re ceived at the College of Agriculture. The only known way to handle the problem Is to take cows out of the pastures Infested with the weed sever al hours before milking time, J. J. llooper, head of the college dfclry de partment says. '"We have found that much of the trouble can be eliminated by turning the cows into tho infested pastures Im mediately after they have been milked and then taking them out in three or four hours and placing them In a barn lot or clean pasture until they are milked. It is well also to pour the milk over a cooler as this helps to get rid of some o fthe onion odor and flavor." A MERCILESS JUDGE One Who Shows Sa Favor. A mericlesa Judge Is Father Time. Before him the weak and the wanting go to the wall. Only the truth can stand. For years the following state ment from Maysvllle resident has withstood this sternest of all tests. Mrs. M. Holllday, 221 Eaat Second street, Maysvllle, says: "I have been greatly benefited by Doan's Kidney Pills and I have reason to recommend them. At times my back has become lame and ached Just over my kidneys, My kidneys were Irregular In action and I was dizzy. When ever I have UBed Doan'a Kidney Pills I always get relief from these complaints. I cer tainly think them a good reliable rem edy. I always get Doan's at wood & Son's Drue Store." The above statement was given No vember 16, 1916, and on November 22, 1920, Mrs. Holllday said: "l am gtaa to say my kidneys have given me no trouble alnce using Doan's Kidney Pills four years ago. My general health haa been good. I gladly renew the statement I gave recommending Doan's at that time." Price 60 cents, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan'a Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Holllday had. Foster-Mtlburn Co.. Mfrs.. Buffalo. N. Y. Public Utility Preferred Stocks Public utility securities de servedly take high rank In the Investment field. Preferred stocks of good companies espe cially affording many advan tages of investment Interest to a discriminating purchaser. We call attention to a Public Utility Preferred stock which has back of It large equities, progressively Increasing earning power and has paid regular cash dividends since original Issue. Requirements for payment of these dividends earned more than fifteen times In 1921. Ask for Circular X 14. Henry L. Doherty & Co. 306 Mercantile Library Bids. Cincinnati, Ohle. FAIR I - .-.o SATIMDAV OiI.ii. g since this price. Q Goods Go.il a o o o o 9. me Pastime Today Afternoon at 2, Children Under 14 will be admitted for 25c today. Admission 45c, War Tax 5c DOST INFECT MOSl'ITOES. Commenting on printed reports on mosquito control in such diverse coun tries as Spain and the Dutch East In :lie9 ,the V. S. Public Health Service calls attention to the fact that the gov eminent authorities who are trying to free a certain region in Spain of ma' laria refuse to allow sufferers from (hat disease to remain in the region ever night lest they Infect the malarlt hearing mosquitoes, which feed only at night. Fe wwhlte people live in the region; and most of the sufferers. come from considerable distances and s-eem to have contracted malaria while working there in previous ears Their blood is eamined and they ar j provid ed with sufficient quinine to last them for two weeks and are told to so home at once and to report hack at the end o fthat period for another two weeks supply. ' . The theory is of course, that I fmos- (ultoes cannot find a malaria pattern to bite they cannot acquire malnrla serms an dtherefore cannot pass them on to well persons. In other words, if men do not Infect mosquitoes, mosqui toes will not Infect men. Incidentally, the Service notes that the American minnows, Gambusia af- iinis, are being Impored Into Spain and Italy to heb in mosquito eradica tion. HOMESICK FOIt SOrTH, LAP FLEES BENEFACTOR'S HOME. . Louisville. With the coning of :ipring wanderlust yot the best of John llogan, 13, who had been taken Into ihe home of Dr. E. G. Garr, of La grange, when his mother was rent to prison several years ago. The boy dis appeared from the home o fhls bene factor hut was picked tip by police at .he Union Station, where he had pur chased a ticket to Montgomery, Ala. The boy aald he had gotten homesick and wished to return to Lethohapchle, Ala. He was held until the arrival of Dr. Garr. CAR REARING THItVES BREAKS INTO BANK. Louisville. A Hudson car stolen from Donald McDonald, Jr., crashed into the window of the German Secur ity bank, at Preston and Market streets after colliding with a car driv en by Ed Asher. The driver ind pas sengers of the HudBon car abandoned it and fled from the crene of the crash oefore the arrival of police who towed the car into the station. I'l'RCHASERS OPEN MINES OF OLD COAL COMPANY'. WhiteBburgJ At Lott s creek the organization o fthe new Duano Coal 'ompany Is the result of the purchase f the old plant of the Dunne Coal t omnany by A 8. Petry and others of i lazard The ne company has a capi tal of $50,000, urd It Is stated that a number of additions are to be made in 'ho plant Resumption o fthe mines !ave been announced. U'.ltCEK STORE IS SOLD j AT BANKRUPT AI CTION. i Harrodsburg. At tho bankrupt ( .-ale of Wheeler and Carey, at Cornish. ' vllle, the Uouhlo tsoreroom and stock wpre purchased by L. C. Jenkins, ol l.uwrencoburg, who also bought the truck and the pottage or W. H. Wheel t. The touring car of W. H. Whoelor wan purchased by T. O, Tayne at $390. It iy In Mawllla. It pa CEMENT Evening at 7:30 HcCREARY BEAN ACREAGE TO BEtlNCKEASED 300 PER CENT. Whitley City, Ky. Following the good results obtained by farmers In this section o fthe State in growing soybeans, the acreage of this crop is expected to be increased at least three hundred per pent In McCreary county i his year,' County Agent W. B. Wood ward says. Only 30 acres of beans were grown In the county last year, according to Mr. Woodward. Already this year 53 bushels of certified seed have been .purchased by farmers In tho county, he added. I.EGUJIES GAIN FATOR AMONG LARUE FARMERS. Hodgensville, Ky. Legume crops are coming to occupy a more impor tant place In th9 crop rotations of La- AILING WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Mrs. Linton Tells How Helpful Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is at This Period Denver. Colorado. "I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- poundiorsevenyears and I cannot tell you the good it has done me. It is good for young and old and I always keep a bottle of it in the house, for I am at that time of life when it calls for Lydia E. Pink ham's help. My hus band saw your ad. in tne papers ana said 'You nave taken everything you can think of, now I want you to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound! ' So I let him get it, and I soon felt better and he told me 'I want you to take about six bottles.' So I did and I keep house and do ail my own work and work out by the day and feel fine now. I tell every one about the Vegetable Compound, for so many of my friends thought I would not get well. ''-Mrs. R. J. Linton, 1850 West 83d Avenue, Denver, Colorado. After reading letters like the above, and we are constantly publishing them, why should any woman hesitate to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound if she is in need of help? It brings relief whore otlior medicines fail. if You Want a At a Great Bargain See Lee Williams The Home Builder and Seller ff.o4 ast Tfclrs gtnmt. Hlxtk Warl and. m OME PLASTER. rue county farmers, County Agen J. '.V. Jones says. In one community more than 208 acres of sweet clover already have been seeded and plana are under way for seeding 30 acres of alfalfa. The community also will have more than 75 acres of soybeans and cowpeas for hay tills summer, Mr. Jones added. JAMES 8. BROWN TO BE BURIED AT SltELBITILLE. Shelbyville. James S. Brown, .who moved from this county to Knox- vllle, in September, 1920 .died there tit the home of his sou, T. J. R. Brown He was born in Owen county and was t4 years old. He is survived by five children, O. P. Brown, of this county; S. H. Drown, of Oklahoma City; Mrs Pelecia Hurlbert. of Brownwood, Te as; T. J. R. Brown, of Knoxvllle, and Mrs. A. M. Vallandlngham, of Wheat iey, Owen county. The body will be brought here. V ) i 7 : Don't Forget PEMiM If! SPELLS Perm's is packed air-tight in the patented new container the quality i is sealed in. Penn's is always fresh. II Buy Penn's Uie' next time. Clean fresh sweet. AIR-TIGHT ' 1 . MADE IN MAYS VILLE Afer visiting our groceries and inspecting the Bread sent in from our Sister City I am more convinced than ever that MILTONIA BREAD is the very best for the housewife to buy, if she wauts to serve her family the kind of Bread that Mother Makes. Be sure to ask your grocer for MILTONIA Eating is believing. Headquarters for all kinds of Home Made Cooking. Please 'phone your order. If your 'phone is near you, it's near us. Our famous rolls are always ready for you. COME TO SEE US. Russell $ Russell Bakery . MARKET STREET. jpoooooooooooooaeocoog f Ready to Hang I O It is no longer necessary to experience a long delay when or- Q O tiering WINDOW and FOECH AWNINGS and SHADES. If O O you live in the city just 'phone and your awning will be hung O O the same day. They are made of heavy duck in either white O O or tan with green stripes. . O Cloth and fixtures are fully guaranteed for TWO years O against wear, f ading and rust. The cost is much less than that J QOf custom Ti'nde Awnings and it includes hanging, q R. 6. KNOX & CO. i q Funeral Director q QSO-23 EA8T 8EC0.ND STBEKT. 11 AYSVILLL', KV.Q IOOOOOOOOOOO J. C EVERETT & CO. OCOOGOGQO O OOOOOOOOO O HISTORICAL CALENDAR o o o o o April 20. Resolution of Senate and House of Represn tatlves to terminate joint oc-' o o cupany of Oregon. 1846. OOOOOOOOO O OOOOOOOOO M'ATTERSON MEMORIAL BOARD CALLED TO MEET APRIL 28. Frankfort, Ky., April 19. Gov. 2d win P. Morrow today called a meet ing of the Henry Watterson memorial commissiLn for April 28 at the Seol bach hotel in Louisville. Before fixing the date for the meeting Governor Morrow conferred with Edward Flex ner of Louisville. The meeting is called for the purpose of organizing and making plans for raising funs for the Watterson memorial. Buy In Maysvllle. It nav to Patronize OOOOO OOOOOOO