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N. THE ADAIR COUNTY NEWS 3; v nunt. Home Cify 2 U4I 2291 "SAFETY FIRST" Hotel Watkins "In fhe Heart TELEPHONES IN ROOMS-RUNNING EUROPEAN PLAN Chestnut Bet. 4th and 5th EVERYTHING IN ROOFING Asphalt,. Gravel, Rubber, Galvanized and Painted. Also Ellwood and (American Fence. 5teel Fence Posts DEHLEP BROS. CO- Incorporated -116 Eaat Mattel StreeiJ Between First and Brook Louisville, Ky. WILLARD HOTEL Center & Jefferson Streets Louisville, - Kentucky. AMERICAN PLAN Rares$2.00 and $2.50 with $3.00 and$3.50 per day hot and cold vafer, Privi- with Private Bath, lege of Bath. European Plan SI. 00 and Up .AXiXi TvrraATR soc Local and Long Distance Telephones in all R,ooms. A Bloekand a half from both Wholesale and Retail Districts. D. R. LINDSAY, Mgr. A. A. WEBB, Asst.lYIgr. Here is a Good Place to Stop for Little Money LOUISVILLE HOTEL XIaitx Street Beetween 6 & 7tH L-ouisville, Kentucky. The Only Hotel in Louisville Operated on the American and European Plan AMERICAN PLAN. Rooms Without Bath but with Hot and Cold Running Water. (With Meals) 75'RoOms Single. S2 00 per day; 2 people, f 2 OOeach 50 " " 2 50 " " 2people, 2 25 " 50 Front Rooms Single 3 CO " " 2people, 2 EO " Rooms With Private Bath: 50Rooms Single 3 00 per day; 2 people, 2 75 " 50Rooms Single 3 50 per day; 2 people. 3 00 " EUROPEAN .PLAN. Rooms Without Batw but with Hot and Cold Running Water. (Without Meals) 75Rooms Single, St 00 per day; 2 people ?0 75 each 50Rooms Single, 1 25 per day; 2 people 1 OOeach 50FrontRooms Single, 1 50 per day; 2 peopH 125 each Rooms with Private Bath: 50 Rooms Single, 1 50 per day; 2 people 125 each 50 Rooms Single, 2 00 per day; 2 people 160each THE OLD INN, Louisville, Ky., Cor. 6fh and Main Sts. Rooms Without Bath, si. 00 and up. Rooms With Private Bath, $1.50 up. The Louisville Hotel and the Old Jnn are Located in the Wholesale District and only a three-Block's walk to the retail district and theaters. Louisville Hotel and Old Inn Company, Props. Rugby. Miss Zada Murphey, who has been at work in Louisville in a clothing factory, has returned home. Brother Chatman, pastor of M. E. Church North, of Antioch circuit, returned last Friday from Conference. Mr. Taylor Garmon and daughter, of Highland Park, were here on a short visit. They report plenty of work there but cheap. The Teacher's Association at Antioch went off without a hitch, the teachers saying it was the best they ever attended. We all join in saying the hospitality of Rates 50-75-1.00 of Louisville" WATER-MODERN CONVENIENCES Louisville, Ky. the people at Antioch cannot be surpassed. Your scribe transacted business last Saturday at Columbia. Rev. Purdue is holding a se ries of meetings here this week. Jack Bragg and wife, of Price's Creek, are visiting T. 6. Thomp son this week. Wyatt Akin sold his farm near Antioch to Alva Harvey and has given possession. He is now on the lookout for a home. Hope you will not go far, Wyatt, as we could not get along well with out you. Your scribe sold a nice mule colt to Lucien Burdin for fifty dollars. We had a big f rost here Sat urday, September 16. Program. The following is the program for the Teachers' Association to he held at Neatsburg for Educational Division No. 4, the last Friday in September, beginning at 10 a. m.: 1. Opening address by Superintend ent Huffaker. 2. Educational value in Arithme tic, Miss Hattie Williams. 3. Comparative value of Language study, Miss Beatrice Breeding. 4. Best ways and means of pro moting interest in education., Kobert Bailey. 5. Play and play grounds, Joe Jones, Miss Myrtle Huddleston. 6. -Kecitatlonf Miss Bessie Cabbell. 7. Ethics in public school, D. E. Sanders, Ernest Workman. 8. The inportance of agriculture in the common school, G. W. Parson. 9. How much value should be placed in method, Miss Lottie Knifley. 10. How and when to teach Ken tucky'Geography, MissMinnie Knifley. 11. The personality of the teacher, Emmit Biggins. NOON. 12. The object of studying Physiol ogy, Miss Julia Loy. 13. The teaching of nature study , in the common school, Miss Floy Walker. School punishment, Miss Bettie Knifley. How secure good attendance, Miss Stella Garnett. How teach primary pupils, Miss Flora Hovious. How secure community co-op 14. 15. 16. 17. eration, Miss Mary Gabbert, Arthur Wolford. 48. Proper and improper incentives to study, Oscar Sinclair. 19. Means of securing good order, Milburn Wolford. 20. The highest function of the school is character building, O. L. Ellis. W-. S. Sinclair, Pres. D. E, Sanders, Sect. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Thisjis a medicine that every fam ily should .be provided with. Colic anddiarrhoea often come on suddenly and ifc is.of the greatest importance that they be treated -promptly. Con sider the suffering that must be en dured until a physician arrives or medicine can be obtained. Chamber lain'slColic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Hemedy has a reputation second to none for the" quick relief which it af fords. Obtainabl at Paull Drug Co. Adv. Smith's Chapel. Alvin Page is better at this writing. Josh Montgomery aud family, of Ozark, visited T. F. Corbin and family Saturday. Ike Dickerson is busy sawing lumber. There are lots of logs on the yard. Charlie Walker and wife vis ited relatives at Greensburg last Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Mary Corbin. is visiting her son' and family, at Plum Point. Sunday School at this place is getting along very well, but the members should take more inter est in the work for the Lord. Mrs. Young and daughter and Prof. Cabbell visited friends at this place last week. Jim Garnett andfamily yisited at Owen Stone's Sunday. Mr. S. A. Hatcher sold to Will Todd 16 acre3 of land, unimprov ed, for $1,300. A nice crowd attended the social at Lucian Turner's Saturday night. doesit pa to be Sick? Let's forget about all the disagreeable and painful part of sickness, and ask our eelves if it PAYS to be sick. Perhaps you are only HALF sick maybe you are dragging yourself around, with a "dead tired'Teeling. Perhaps you wake up in the morning with a heavily coated tongue, a bad taste in your mouth, and hardly any appetite. Quite likely you are bilious. Maybe you have dull aches and pains, CONSTIPATION, head aches. You go about your daily duties. You tell yourself you 'will feel better to-morrow but when to-morrow, comes you feel just about the same. You try this and that remedy, without getting real relief. Or if you get some relief, it doesn't LAST! You soon feel just-as bad as you did before. ODOES IT PAY to let yourself stay in this half-sick condition? Think of all the ENJOYMENT of life you are missing! You can't'enioy your food, or the society of your family and friends. You can't enjoy anything as you should, because your senses are dulled and your brain oppressed by the effects of a SLUGGISH LIVER. .- & Say, friend, does it PAY you to lug around that sluggish liver when you can promptly make it ACTIVE and so get rid of all those depressing, disagreeable symp toms by letting ,. DR. THACHER'S Liver and Blood Syrup take hold and give your Liver the help it needs? . - -- Don't delay. Don't procrastinate. Don't say "I'll do it to-morrow." Get a bottle of this time-tried and PROVEN- remedy right "now. The four bits you pay for it will be one of the BEST INVESTMENTS YOU EVER MADE. ITHACHER MEDICINE COMPANY, - Chattanooga, Tennessee. - For Sale By Page & Hamilton. Our Weakly Pome. I long to hear the school bell ring and gather up my books, and daily trudge o'er wooded hills and cross the babling brooks on wobbly logs or slippery stones as in the days . of yore, when mother pulled my stockings on and smoothed my pinafore. I lone: to take the teacher dear an apple red and juicy; and some times, too, a big sweetcake baked for me by "Aunt Lucy." I long to win her pretty smile and hear he cry, "Oh my! when her pear ly teeth assault the fruit and juice squirts in her eye; I long to cipher on a slate and take two feet from four, and earn the teacher's frown of hate when I scrape 'em on the floor. I long to add naught into naught by process pained and slow, and spit on the slate and wipe it out by a swipe of my good elbow. Alas! they say by school butters slates can not be had, but all must cipher, write, and so forth, on a paper pad. That seems a measley thing to do. Where has all manhood gone to? Give boys a slate, say I, and let the girls pad if they want to. Oh, how I long for the good old days when the world was not askew; when teachers thumped you on the head or "paddled your frail canoe. For now a boy's on his p's and q's through all the bloomin' term through fear his precious life he'll lose by eating poisonous germs! Cynthiana Democrat. Forget your Aches. . Stiff knees,. aching limbs, lame back make life a burden If you suffer from rheumatism, gout, lumbago, neuralgia, get a bottle of Sloan's Lin iment, the universal remedy for pain. Easy to apply; it penetrates without rubbing and soothes the tender flesh. Cleaner and more effective than mus sy ointments or poultices. Tor strains or sprains, sore muscles of wrenched ligaments resulting from strenuous exercise. Sloan's Liniment gives quick relief. Keep it on hand for emergencies. At Paull Drug Co. 25c. Adv. Half the Battle Befell Planting.. ? With wheat as with many sEk er crops, - the proper treatanoSz: of the seedbed and- the sapjr ing of plantfood to carry aksjr the crop wirfc n p, vt . g a steady growths r. , &e cosHLs' ed half the beitle. As wheat he; not cultivated after seeding whatever cultivation is necessary must be done before the sead ts put into the grounch Stop the First Cold. A cold does not get well of ItssSL The process of wearing out a cb2E wears you out, and your congi 2 comes serious if neglected. Baeiigr coughs drain the energy and sap 45s6? the vitality. For 47 years tha 20.335? combination of soothing antfeepSfe balsams in Dr. King's New Djsra-rwy lias healed coughs and relieved stec gestion. Young and old can testify to the effectiveness of Dr. King's Kb-sp Discovery for coughs and colds. Birjr a bottle today at Paull Drug Ca, 50s Weekly Reading Class Several women in a small i?2& have been made happier aassigr the past few years by a simple method. One of them Iwjziesr: We formed a weekly afieiasOTfc reading class, which meets ir turn with the different membsra. These members are all wornec of similar tastes, but with diSer ent interests. When we invite a guest to our meeting, as is& often do we are careful to ask only some one who is congenial as a false note will spoil a whole afternoon. The hostess pro'rafife the literature, but if any gee? else has anything particnajr clever, amusing, or interesSsgr. she brings it, and it is read. We have no formal prograzik Sometimes we read a book, w2ik3s lasts through several meetings Often it is only a magazine ar ticle or a short story or a poe3 We read whatever we like. At4:30 tea is served. " Some times it is really tea, often Si 5s coffee or chocolate or whatever- -the hostess chooses to pro-sids-(in summer we were inclined to--. prefer lemonade or fruit psnafc- -or an ice), with sandwiches ox cake. Don't Neglect your CoFdl Neglected colds get worse, icsteaa' of better. A stuffed head, a tjglfe chest must be relieved at once- 33r. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey is JSaSsisrfe. remedy. Honey and glycerins- Saa the irritated membrane, antisep5e tar loosens the phlegm, you breiii&B. easierand your cold is broksa? 35U Pleasant to take, Dr. Bell's PineTax Honey is an ideal remedy for chiliteBJs-.-as well as grown-ups. At Paull Drag. ; Co., 25c. Ar2r Samuel Franklin, aged IT ssT Scottsville, was killed whes Ms automobile turned over. Sis mother and two other members: of the family, were badly Frarfc, A FEW DROPS 10URB0N POULT S&SS In the drinking wirer Cures Roup, Colds, C&a2crseL. Ltabemck Prevents SJa- Csess. One 50c bottle vurc tS gallons of medicine. At eVr-. gtstsorbymrlpostpatt. Vakt- ablepcral:ry,bQc!:frco. i if A lys mm IEME9T C9.Lutift1te I v a "sr