1 1vdlij Wcpons of Spe m.maki kJv--uuc:sr ucusauuii ox me l ear Wo Have the Agency For It, It la the Many Richmond People in cial interest i t If - ! ! ? i i ! f ; I i ! IfVfeCant hr.TOp I For TUe Wife TAKE A Gift for Climax Readers stop Your The Climax has arranged with one of the largest Magazine and Newspaper Agencies of New York to get at reduced rates any newspaper, magazine or periodical that is published Political, Scientific, Lit erary, Musical, Farm Papers, in fact anything. We get everything (with possibly a few exceptions) at less than publishers prices. In connection with The Climax we propose to give them at actual cost to us to subscribers OF The Climax ' only. This saves you some money from 10 to 50 per cent-besides the trouble and expense of ordering. Consult us by mail, or telephone 69, or we prefer you should come to our office and talk it over before you place your order. This is a reading age. Madi son county people are a reading people.. Everybody reads. Not a family in the county but what should take advantage of our proposition. Try it one year. Remember if one member of the family is a subscriber to The Climax every member of the fam ily is entitled to the benefits of our offer. This offer is good at any time so if your subscrip tion to any paper or magazine you are now taking has not expired, come and see us when it does ex pire before you renew. Climax Printing Company The Richmond Climax. PaMibe4 I very e4M4r IHECLIMAX PRIMING CO (Incorporated.) A. ft. Miller, Pre. W. 6. Sec TreM. PRICE $1.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE DECEMBER 10. 1913 Frank M. TnosiASOJi, editor of the Georgetown News, was nominated by a majority of the Democratic councilmen elect as mayor of Georgetown. Mr. Thomason is one of the best known news paper men in Kentucky and with his ex cellent paper has always stood for the enforcement of law, even to the point of jeopardising his own life. His selec tion to this important office will be to the credit of the city of Georgetown, as those acquainted with the mayor-elect realize the duties imposed will be fear lessly and conscienciously discharged. The lure of the Thanksgiving turkey made the first break in the Democratic Senate program devised to rush the Ad ministration Currency Bill through that body before the holidays. After work ine all tiav on the measure, with but a slim attendance., the conference of Sen ate Democrats flatly declined to bold a night scheduled session. Now honest, Mr. Senator, wasn't there something else besides turkey that made the Senators disinclined to hold a night session? Secretary McAduo issued a state ment Friday declarsng that banks thro' out the country reported to be restrict ing credits in order to meet the provis ions of the expected currency law, are making a mUtake. He announced that the resources of the treasury will be at the disposal of the br.nks to aid them in complying with the new law when it is put on the statute books. Dr. J. N. McCobm ack, the member of the Legislature from Bowling Green, bas made some very splendid sueestions to facilitate and expedite legislation. The doctor will make a most uceful member of the Legislature if he doesn't try to run it Elizabethtown News. Uave you noticed that the Constitu tional amendment carried in every county where the local newspapers fa vored them and lost where the local press opposed them? This is a striking illustration of the influence of the press. Elizabethtown News. IIabrt Gio vis roll, formerly of the Danville Advocate, will assume editorial charge of the Lexington Leader Janu'y 1. Mr. Giovannoli is a gifted writer and an experienced newspaper man and will keep the Leader up to its present high standard. Ir the next Legislature will abolish a lot of the unnecessary offices created at the last session and do away with half of the appropriations usually made by thai body, deliberations will not havs been in vain. Prohibition forces in Chicago will launch immediately a campaign to vote out the city's saloons in April. 1915, the plans including the election of a "dry" mayor at that time. As is characteristic of the family, Chapman Grant, grandson of Gen Ulys ess S. Grant, bas resigned a position to become a Second Lieutenant in the U. S. army. Croup and Couh Remedy. Croup is a terrible disease, 'ft attacks children so suddenly they are very apt to choke unless given the proper remedy at once. There is nothing better in the world than Dr. King s New Discovery. Lewis Chamberlain, of Manchester, O., writes about his cbilrdreni. "Sometimes in severe attacks we were afraid they would die, but since proved what a cer tain remedy Dr. King's New Discovery is, we have no fear. We rely on it for croup, coughs and colds." So can you. 50o and II. A bottle should be in every home. At all druggists. H. . Bucklen fc Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis. Mistakes. The editor of a newspaper is not infal lible and makes mistakes the name as any other human being, but no one knows this better than the editor him self. The nature of an editor's work makes his mistakes more conspicuous. After pondering over this subject re cently, an editor delivers himself of the following, on the errors of editors and others: e have noticed a number of squibs in our exchanges regarding mis takes. These items lead us to believe that other duffers besides editors are subject to this malady. The editor's mistakes stand out more conspicuously than other professional men's, because every issue of his paper is an open letter to the public. A fellow may happen along and inform his neighbor that there is a new set of twins at Jones' house, and if later it developed that the twins were a boy, no one pays any attention to the originator of the false rumor. But should it appear in the paper as origin ally reported, the father will in all prob ability be down and exchange bullet courtesies with the editor. Again when the village belle chauces to get tied up to some worthless cuss, whose only qual ification are that he can chew tobacco and relate suggestive stories, the whole town may with impunity review the past history of the two and its cuts very little ice. But if the editor happens to spell the groom's name with an "o" in stead of an "a" and overlooks to record the fact that the bride's a member in good standing of the Ladies' Aid Society, they both would be insulted and mercilessly flay the editor and his Gimlet. What is strange about the mistakes of a newspaper man is the fact that no matter how many errors he makes in lieing about another man's qualities, he never lays himself liable to be punctur ed with a forty-five or lynched. Indeed, it is a funny' old world. Everybody makes mistakes. The only ones who never make them are slumbering in the cemeteries and it is not unlikely that some of them are there because the doc tors also made mistakes. A man often makes a mistake by marrying when be should have taken a post graduate course in how to support himself. A fine wo man often is in error when she wanton ly throws herself away on some fool who aan sing coon songs, like Caruso, bjt couldn't make. a noise like a loaf of bread to save his life. A boy makes a mistake when he thinks he knows more than the entire staff of teachers, includ ing the principatof the school The world is chock full of mistakes and mistake-makers. If the newspapers man should take the pains to record them all, he'd make the mistake of his life and die on the bed of the press with his shirt sleeves rolled up and his boots on. Public Sale I will sell at auction to the highest bidder on Tuesday, December 16th, at 1 o'clock, p. m., on the premises, the following property: My farm of 290 acres, situated five miles from Danville, on the Stanford pike, the same distance from Stanford. The farm will first be sold in separate tracts and then as a whole. There are 140 acres in one tract, on which are located two never failing springs, and a tenant house. On this farm is one of the finest tobacco birns in Central Kentucky. This plao has on it.75 acres of tobacco lane'; balance in ryefend barley and has been sown in grass. The second tract contains 150 acre, has on it a modern 9 room reiidence, equipped with light, furnace and water works. There is on it one large stock barn, tobacco barn and five never-failing springs, two tenant houses. Every acre hemp and tobacco land. Possession giv en March 4th, 1914. Terms on farm one-third cash and balance in two, three and four years, notes bearing 0 per cent, interest: stock and crop equal to cash. Sale begins at 1 o'clock p m., promptly. W. . Lank, ' Danville, Ky. n o IqJ With Our New Remedy SjaxtfSdJue We will pay back to you the cost of the remedy. On these terms will you try it for any skin disorder, itching, chafing, eczema,humorseruptionsetc? We take' all the risk bear all the expense if Saxo Salve fails. Com and Ask us about It. B. L. MIDDELTON Druggist Richmond, Ky. DOGS HAVE GOOD MEMORIES Though Long Periods May Elapse, They Do Not Forget Their Former Owners. Some remarkable instances of dogs' memories are given by a writer in the Scotsman. The late Major Fair of Wells he, says, received a Dandie Din- mont terrier puppy from a well known breeder, and kept her until nine months old, when she was sent back. She came into my possession five years later. One day, upon meeting Major Fair on the road, she ran forward, rec ognizing him and, showing great de light in her happy doggy way, al though ehe had not seen him for over three years. Some years later (when the dog was nine years of age) I went into a locai barber's shop and was surprised to see and hear her excitedly showing sins of meeting a friend which she did by yelping and jumping upon the man's knee and trying to lick his face. This man turned out to be Major Fair's coachman, who had brought her up, and had not seen her for over six years. Dogs have a mode of concealing rec ognition if it suits their purpose. A friend of mine sold a terrier to the late Bailie Morrison of Hawick. Upon calling upon the Bailie some three months later my friend was surprised t the dog taking no notice of him, but on his way home at night, when about four miles from Hawick, he happened to look back, and saw the dog follow lng him in a etealthy manner, which it persisted in doing until it reached Jed burgh. It was sent back by carrier next day and never on any future oc casion recognized its old master. Sure ly this was not lapse of memory so much as offended dignity. REASON IN THE ARGUMENT When You Come to Think of It, Child Seemed to Have the Right of the Controversy. . At certain seasons a little Sunday school class in New York is visited by a vestryman In the church, who is af flicted with a terrible air ofepiscc pomposlty. He came one day and quizzed the scholars upon their les sons, and at the end of every question he paused as if to say, "Ah-ha! You don't know that!" "And now," he demanded, "what is the sixth commandment?" No one answered. The episcopom pous vestryman turned to the teacher and convicted her with a ponderous "Aha!" "Come," he said, "what command ment did Cain break? What command ment was it that he broke when he killed Abel? Can't anyone tell me?" One scholar beckoned the teacher to her. The teacher listened to the whis pered confidence. ' "What does the child say?" demand ed the vestryman. 'If one child knows the answer to that simple question, let me hear it" "The child says, sir," answered the teacher, not without some trepidation, "that there ' weren't any command menu when Cain killed AbeL" New York Evening Post. Georgetown, Texas. J. A. Kimbro, says: "For several years past Foley's Honey and Tar Compound has been my household remedy for all coughs, colds, and lung troubles. It bas given perma nent relief in a number of cases of obsti nate conghs and colds." Contains no opiates. Refuse substitutes. M. M. Hamilton Says Something. Mack Hamilton, the East Main street ineat and groceryman, wants you to try bis meat market He i an old veteran in the meat business and knows "what is what." To avoid delay phone your orders early. lie pays the highest price for produce, eggs, butter, dressed poul- ry, eta Phone 614. 13 tf Constipation Poisons You If you are constipated, your entire sys tem is poisoned by the waste matter kept in the body serious results often follow Use Dr. King's New Life Pills and you will soon get rid of constipation, head ache and other troubles. 25c at drug gists or bv mail. II. E Bucklen & Co., Philadelphia and St. Louis. When in need' ot rSlacksmilhlng in my of its branches, Farming Imple ments, Buggies, Carriages, Wagons, Rubber tires Ac, get prices from R. Miller, Union City, Ey. t. ill marketing of lamb crop Particular Attention Should Be De voted to Task of Getting Ani mals In Proper Condition. Every flock owner should devote particular attention to the handling of his flock In such manner that his crop of lambs will be In proper con dition to market when the price Is right to selL The increasing demand for fancy mutton at tiaes during the year has given flock owners a much better op portunity to sell their lambs when prices are on a higher level than dur ing the ordinary season. The man with a flock of high-class mutton sheep has a field of operation all his own. Today there Is a steady demand for all the lambs he can pro duce at any season of the year and at prices that Insure a fair margin of profit. It is simply a matter of having his lambs in good condition when the markets are not overloaded with the products from the large feed lots. In Prize Dorset. close proximity to he large cities In the eastern states there Is a profitable fleld for the winter lamb business. This is a branch of the sheep busi ness that can never suffer because of competition with tho large feed lots. The consumers of this class of fancy mutton are the rich people who have money to pay for any article that Dleases their palates and who will never accept the feed lot lamb as substitute for the tender, Juicy and palatable lamb that possesses supe rior qualities. Another branch of mutton growing that perhaps is better adapted to the average farmer is that of maturing spring lambs for the market Such lambs are ready for market shortly after the winter lambs are sold. As a general rule such lamsb bring more money than those that are held back and finished along toward autumn. MAKING PROFIT IN TANKAGE Article Is Becoming More and More Popular as Nitrogenous Suppl ment to Corn In Feeding. Tankage is becoming more and more popular as a nitrogenous sup plement to corn in pork -making, says the National Stockman. This is espe cially true in the middle west, where the packers have pushed Its sale. No doubt exists as to its value. As the Ohio experiment station Professor Carmichael placed one 100-pound pig with each two steers being fed corn. The pigs found a full feed of corn In the droppings from the steers. One- half of the pigs were fed In addition to the corn one-third pound each of tankage per day. The increased gains over the pigs fed no tankage amount ed to 162 pounds for each 100 pounds of tankage fed. At present prices of hogs this means a big profit on tank age fed. Tankage contains about 60 per cent crude protein and should be bought now for about $40 per ton. Clover Is the best all-round hay for sheep. There is no profit In killing a pig before it is fit Overfleshy sheep are not the best for breeding purposes. Bring the hogs in from the yards, save on warm, sunshiny days. Many horses are permanently In jured by having all the hay they can eat Some one has very properly called the sheep the animal with the golden hoof. see Give the ram about one pound of bran dally with all the green food he can eat "" It la cruel to compel active farm horses to go for weeks In the winter without exercise. - It never pays to breed a poor sheep, no matter how good a sire yon have. Breed up, not down. ' Keep the brood sows and the young pigs selected for breeders . separate from the fattening stock. Not Beyond Help At 87. Sleep-disturbing bladder weakness, stiffness in joints, weak, inactive kidney action and rbeumatio pains, are all evi dence of kidney trouble. Mrs. Mary A. Dean. 47 E. Walnut St, Taunton, Mass., writes: "I have passed my 88th birth day, and thought I was beyond the reach of medicine, but Foley's Kidney Pills have proved most beneficial in my case." We handle a full line of staple and fancy groceries, queensware, feeds, salt, etc D. B. McKtnney. 19-tf i Live . sroctf Kentucky Utilities Company NEW IDEA IN MUSICAL PROGRAMS f. . sA mi LOT W Wfl THE FAMOUS SCHUMANN QUINTET. LAMPERT EDUCATES PEOPLE Hi AUDIENCE Makes Them Prefer Classical Selections la Rag-Time. The company that has been the greatest musical success and the sen sation of the Chautauqua season will give a concert here this season when Karl A. Lampert and his Schumann Quintet of players appear tor their engagement This company presents "symphonic concerts" with a company Of only five musicians each a fine artist How they do it is too long a Story to print here. A part of the sympnomc effect is secured with a specially constructed reed organ that the company carries. Karl Lampert, the organizer and originator of this company and style of program, is several kinds of a genius. He is neither pretty nor graceful, but far more Important be Is sympathetic and sincere. He and his players play with their souls; they play reverently. And Lampert loves his audience as well as his music. As Ralph Parlette says: "He treats his audience as though it were a few close friends he had invited into his room to share his Christmas candy, For nine years he played first violin in the Theodore Thomas Orchestra of Chicago. He was born near Dussel dorf, Germany, and studied under Jacobson and Ruchy. His assistants are all genuine artists, most of them Theodore Thomas Orchestra players To give a detailed description of their program would, to a certain ex tent take away the element of sur prise and destroy its unique features. It is said by those who have heard At Normal Chapel, Friday, Dec. 12 aimta B. E. Belue & Co Corner Main and Collins The Climaxl year $1 This popular time saver will be furnish ed any of our custom ers for a free trial Our Special Low the program that one surprise follows another in rapid succession, and that this company can "put across" a pro gram of all classical music, no matter what the audience may know about such music. Last summer after play ing one of the most difficult and tech nical selections before a Chautauqua audience in the northern woods of Wisconsin, Mr. Lampert said pleas antly: "There, you liked that better than rag-time, didn't you? And a KARL A. LAMPERT. Organizer and Manager of Schumann Quintet big-booted "lumber-Jack" on the front row shouted, "You betcher life we did!" And at Winona Lake, Ind., where the most cultured Chautauqua audience in America assembles, the result was just the same. It is saf to say that no more popular program has ever been given here than that to I be given by the Schumanna. (Claims is coming with new Coats Suits Dresses and Fancy Novel ties. See our Hats at reduced prices. We make special low prices on Cor sets, Hosiery and Underwear - Telephone 768 1 jsoaefe.; ;.. ' J Price is 3.00 Wall Paper and - Interior Decorating We take pleasure in announc;: .' to our patrors and friends t':,v we are better prepared to sup ply their wants in this line ti.a i ever before. We have a - -y complete line of new W'.i.l Papers consisting of the Latest Patterns and Designs which we are offering' at verv low prices. We do our own work and guarantee same Paints and Varnishes We also carry a complete the best Floor Paints. K!,t,r Varnishes, Brushes, Piett-r.-. Picture Frames and MouM. Call 446 and we will be ei, : talk with yon about yoi r or.-i. B.Juett and Son A Good Thing to Remember is that MISS tVA R0BLRIS carries a full line of Km' r liery Materials and special aHeiii n :s paid to Stamping Patterns new and attractive Prices reasonable 1NTE.RURBAN SCHEDULE -BETWKBS- LEXISGTON and XICHOl.AVILLS LKAVB LKXISGTOS a. m 6:40 " 7:55 " 9:10 " 10:25 " 11:40 p. m 12:55 " 2:10 " 3:25 " 4:40 " 6:00 " 7:20 " 9:10 " 11:00 LKAVE SIinoLA-MU-S . m '- ' 7:15 " ' " p. m. .12.15 . l.: is 4 "J 5.15 610 .:M 11.25 CONNECTIONS AT NICHOLAS V I LLE TO A3D FROM RICHMOND Car Lv. Lexington 10:25 a. m , conr.wi with the L. A A. for Richmond H 11:11a. m. Car Lv. Lexington 4:40 p.m . cenrects with theL.&A. for KicLmoDdtf 5:43 p. m. Car Lv. Nicholasville at S.3-" a. m.. cos- nectswith theL.&A. from K:ctr mond 8:22 a, m. Car Lv. Nicholasville at 2:45 p m.. con nects with the L. A A. from U.c mond 2:33 p. m. Le & N. Time Table South Bound. No. 31. Cincinnati to Atlanta. Arrive and Departs 12:10 a. m. Mld-aigto. No. 71. Richmond to Stanford. De parts 6:45 a. m. No. 1. Louisville to Beattyviile Arrives 12:10 p. m. Departs 1-u No. 37. Cincinnati to Knoxvilie. Ar rives 11:20 a. m. Departs 12.1-p. No, 33. Cincinnati to JacUsonvUlt. Arrives and Departs 1131 a No. 27. Richmond to Louisville Rowland. Departs 1:00 p. m. No. 3. Louisville to Beattyvil'e Arrives 6:45 p. m. Departs ..-At-" No. 9. Cincinnati Maysville to Stan ford. Arrives 7:27 p. m. Depart 7:32 p. m. North Bound No. 34. Atlanta to Cincinnati Arrive and Departs 4:11 a. m. No. JO. Stanford to Cincinnati Mavvill. Arrives 6:W I ai a ! Depart 6 10 a. m. No. 2. Beattyviile to Louisville Arrives 7:15 a. m. Departs T 0. SO. LlOUlSVUl W Rowland. Arrives 12:05 p. " vT -a -cn..;ii t Cincinnati. A- rives 1:35 p. m. Departs 2 No. 7a Stanford to Richmond. Arrn 2:30 p. m. No. 4. Beattyviile to Louisville No. 32. Jacksonville to Cincinnati. rives and Depart 5:07 p- No's 2. 3. 31. 37, 33. 27, 34, 23, 38, 32 Daily trains. ao s u, i. daily Except Sunday. iaY i&aACHi aiomr Aa is