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The melancholy days have come, Tne most peuui . mo j ci. Altogether too hot for calamity water. And a little to shaky for beer. . o Cbaft still has faith that he won't he hanged. . Eveky good man should agitate the free turnpike system. -& Free turnpikes will give us a livelier town and a better stock market. Canned goods of all kinds will be higher this winter, owing to early frosts. Give us free turnpikes, and the poor people can get out from home occasionally. ,. Carter county is without a sheriff, and nobody wants the office until after Craft is hanged. . The residence and household goods of Xorman Cox, of Harrison county, burned last week. the State Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows meets at Stanford on the fourth Tuesday in -4 next month. . Free turnpikes will permit a poor man to come to town without bringing a sack of corn to mill. It's about time for the goose bone and corn shuck to say something about a hard winter coming. Thos. EiLiOTT, who kiljed Robert Barnes, was released at his exa'mining trial at Har- rodsburg Tuesday. w The barn of A. T. Ware, of Fayette county, burned Wednesday night. Loss, 2,500; fully covered by insurance. Yesterday was Arkansas day at the Louisville Exposition, and to-day is Kentucky day at Cincinnati. . - The Carlisle Colored Fair is going on this week. That's the reason there are no watermelons on the market here. Arrival at the Frankfort 'penitentiary are of almost daily occurrence, and that institution is filling up rapidly. The Lexington papers are dying for waterworks. Somebody please go up there with a squirt gun and drown 'em out. . Free turnpikes will enable poor people to get their vegetables to market that otherwise lie in their gardens and rot. . Found A bunch of keys and a shoe-but-toner, on a leather string. Call at this office and pay for this notice, and get them. Pat Punch, marshal of Mt. Sterling, arrested Dominick Flarety, in Covington, for grand larceny committed in Mt. Sterling. The Western Union Telegraph company T' lias issued an order making the hours for night work eight instead of seven and a half. There are several "best" crops of tobacco in the county, which we will brag on at our regular advertising rates ten cents per line. A free turnpike system would give the Turnpike Commissioner something to do; in fact, it would make him earn a good salary. ' There are twelve toll-gates within 1 miles of Paris every avenue being strictly guarded. &o wonder our city is as dead as a mackerel. Monday will be Court day here. Don't forget to come in and solidify yourselves by having the dates changed on the margin of your paper. Thomas Elliott, charged with the murder of Robert C. Barnes, a cousin of the evangelist, was tried at Harrodsburg Tuesday and discharged. 4 There are forty-five turn-pikes in this' county, with about seventy-five toll-gates. Throw all of the gates open free, and you'll see an influx into the county. Vennor predicts that the weather will be warm, open and wet, with little or no snow before the close of the year. The winter will be an exceptional one, with severe storms. The corporation of Richmond has "no music in its soul." It recently fined some of the college students of that place $5 and costs each for serenading their sweethearts. The woods are said to be full of squirrels the bushes full of rabbits, the fields full of partridges, the pawpaw patches full of 'possums, and the men are full of promises to .Pay. p . Billy Goodloe has invented and patented a frame for holding Kensington work, that will fill a peculiarly felt want. He is selling them as fast as he can make them, at S3.50 each. Mason & Co., of Frankfort, secured the contract for grading the first six miles of the Kentucky Union Railroad, from Hedges' Station. On October 8th, seven more miles will be let. t A villian attempted to wreck Capt. Green's passenger train North of Carlisle Tuesday night, by fixing a locust post in the center of the track. He should be promptly hanged if found out. . W. H. Cobd, of Flemingsburg, had his right eye removed at the Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, last week. He lost the sight of it by being thrown from a carriage during a recent tour through Europe. . & The coroner's jury decided that whiskey killed G. W. Denny, the tailor, at Flemings- f burg. Although a confirmed toper most of Ills life, he had not drank any for four years, until the spree which resulted in his death. - The railroad election of Paris, Georgetown & Frankfort ;road voted oni a Newtownf Georgetown and Payne's Depot precincts, was defeated by a large majority in all three precincts. Theltax got but one vote at Payne's Depot. C. P. Huntington, President of the C. & 0., has bought a lot for the erection of a de-rot the terminus of the K. C, on Front street, Cincinnati, between John and Smith streets. The river will be bridged in a year or two, perhaps. .-,.. - -..-., ..J,. -i M- - -' wwnrrtaaas a? ki .1 .-.. t y9ia(M4iHrwaw .. ., - f semi- w eekiy BOUTDOn JNews "'KaBwawiMBBgBBHeggl3Bamiw Jk n njirnBAiuimjiaMJ m. ".mm jwj.ij.jMCgsmnrcjrjwvnrawr Independent and Democratic-Published from the Happy Side of Life-for the Benefit of Those Now Having Breath in Their Bodies. Priced $2, 00 for $2000 for 1,000 Years - CASH ! vol. n. PARIS, BOURBON COUNTY, KENTUCKY: FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1883. NO. J 67. FATRICIDAL! Fatal Shooting at the Blue Licks. Capt. Sam Bogers Shot and Fatally Wounded his Two Brothers, Thomas and William. The news was telephoned over from 'the Blue Lick Springs yesterday afternoon, stating that Captain Sam Rogers had shot and mortally wounded his two brothers William and Thomas one being shot in the head and the other in the bowels. It will be remembered that in Tuesday's issue of tho News. last week, ourMillersburg correspondent stated that the four brothers were taking depositions a.t that place, regarding the settlement of the old man's estate, and that a row appeared imminent all day long. The fight was over some property about 85,000 worth, left by another brother, Granville, whom a man by the name of Griffin killed a few years ago. It being alleged by William and Thomas that Samuel and Robert appropriated it to their own use. William and Thomas had frequently threatened to kill Samuel and Robert, and William even rode beside them in a buggy from Carlisle to the Licks one day with a pistol in hand, saying that he would be willing to serve, 15 years in the penitentiary to get to kill one of them. The two former had even laid in wait for the two latter at night. William is a lawyer of St. Louis and an ex- colonel of the Federal army, and Sam is an ex-captain of Col. Leonidas Metcalf's 7th Ky Federal cavalry regiment. Bob and Tom were both privates in the Confederate service. Mrs. Isaac Clay, a teacher of classic music with high renown, of this city, has purchased a new Webber piano, and through urgent solicitation of Smith & Nixon, of Cincinnati, has consented to receive orders for that celebrated instrument. Persons desiring new instruments should not fail to call at Mrs. Clay's and examine hers. It is on the newest improved plan, and is rich and loud in melody. Several weeks ago, a solicitor for the Lexington Transcript took a large list of subscribers here at 25 cents each, giving them the-paper from Sept. 1st until Jan. 1st and throw in a local notice to those in business. So far as we are able to learn, only one copy has been sent, and that had to be written for by Jo Z. Croxton. What's tho matter, Mr. Transcript? We venture the assertion that four-fifths of the people in the county are in favor of free turnpikes. We propose that some steps be taken at once to find the true sense of the people on that subject, and if favorable, take immediate steps toward the county buying all private stocks and throwing the gates open. Let each progressive man in the county lend his influence. Free pikes will improve the county more than anything else. The Carlisle Mercury has published the following list of matrimonial appointments: J. D. Burnaw, Presiding Elder. Carlisle John M. Brown. Flemingsburg Dunlap Howe. Millersburg -Hanson Kennedy. . Florence Sam M. Waugh. North Middletown Gaither Smith. Mt. Sterling Elder Garrett. Sharpsburg H. C. Klmbrough. Bourbon and Mason counties and a small portion of Boone Judge Lytle. Cal. Darnall transferred to the Iowa Con-X crcncB Wm. Kenney Superanuated. Henry Fritts and P. S. Adair To be supplied. Mrs. Charlie Foote, the milliner, desires to inform the citizens of Bourbon, that she has just returned from Cincinnati, where she purchased one of the handsomest stocks of millinery goods ever brought to this city. She specially invites the attention of the fastidious portion of the Millersburg trade who cannot be suited at home, to call and examine her goods she guarantees to suit them both in goods and prices. Miss Ella Thlebaud Kabo,) a French artiste, Is presiding over the trimming department, and probably has no superior as a trimmer in Kentucky. Be Prepared to Bellero Anything. Bob Cassidy, of Lexington, learned that an old pistol was loaded, by picking up the middle finger of his left hand from the floor and sticking it on his hand again. Since men and boys will tinker with pistols from day to day and year to year and get shot under the impression that they are not loaded, we are half inclined now to believe that heretofore doubtful fitory of the Bible, to the effect that 70,000 persons were smitten dead by touching, the Ark of the Covenant, in trying to save it from a river in which a pair of thirsty oxen had dumped it from a cart. A Peculiar Paper. This paper is said to bo peculiar, by old fogies, because it is progressive. Yes, it is peculiar. It does not belive in endangering the living for the supposed benefit of the dead. It is opposed to breathing the noxious eases from the dead in celebrating fu neral customs either private or public particularly when people die of typhoid, scarlet, or malarial fevers, dlptharia or small-pox. Dead people ought to be locked In rooms alone for a few hours until burial can be completed, and then hastily and quietly buried. Afterwards, if their good or evil deeds must be told to the public after the ancient heathen custom, let it be done in a church, where the dear little innocent children and older people who know no better, will be free from the poison touch of a contaminated, diseased air. This paper also opposes.the widow taking the bread out of the mouths of their hungry children and putting tho same on their backs in mourning goods, and condemns it idiotic which should as a heathen, custom be abolished by law. Itbhouldbe the man or woman that mourns not the clothes. Even mourning should be curbed so far as possible; It does the dead no good, but Injures the living. If you believe the Bible is true, have unbounded confidence in it and take the bright side of it's teachings that "To" die is but to Live again," SCINTILLATIONS. W. R. Hopkins, of Moorefield, has fever. Tom Paul has been down to Cincinnati, consulting the Drs. K. & K. The man who leaves the door open has arrived here to stay all winter. Mrs. O, J. Wiggins, of Covington, Is the guest of her father's family at this place. A woman is dying in Owen county from the effects of a calf-bite on the hand. 'Twixt a fall poem and a fall 'possoms, give this child the 'possom every time. Wm. Swope, of Estill county, has four sons named Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Tom Ochiltree, Eli Perkins, and Joe are the three most accomplished liars in the Union. A fashion note says that bustles are coming to the front again. Better let 'em stay where they are. Man born of woman ought to have been born some other way, if it would have lessened his tribulations. A New York woman has been sentenced to one month's imprisonment for attempting to commit suicide. Snell Shawhan and Percy Adair, of Shawhan, have arrived home from San Francisco, California. Give us Ada Gray, East Lynne and a lot of mop rags. Paris wants to be sad we're having too much fun. Charley Royce, of Nicholas, sold to Ed. Rice, of Little Rock, six steers that averaged 1,250 pounds, at 5 cents. Bishop, the mind-reader, whose feats have so astonished the world, has had his pocket picked in London. Hon. Thos. L. Jones, the great disappointed, sailed from New York Wednesday, in the Servia, for Europe. Some of those beefy, round-shouldered girls who wear Jerseys, look like full sacks of wheat hanging awkardly across a fence. Happy is the man who hath no geraniums, dogweed and huckleberry blooms to move in and out every night and morning. Boyd has rented Wm. Hinton's new brick cottage on Main street, and Father Barry the one fronting on Pleasant street. Miss Mary Whittington, one of the teachers of Daughters College, Hrirrodsburg, is visiting friends here and recuperating hel' lost health. L. M. Longshaw, a banker of Princeton, whom Governor Knott loaded down with title of "Colonel," burstcd the other day, to the tune of $25,000. She stood on the top seat at the Maysville fair, and remarked that she ''was not poor as in former days." "Ah," quoth the News "it's all on account of your leg-I-see." Sixteen disappointed mothers wanted to scratch Joe Blackburn's eyes out, when he made the prettiest speech of his life, when he presented the premium to Dave Conway 's baby. These despisable Jersey jackets which make the ladies look like birds with the feathers picked off, can be very conveniently utilized for under-garments. Even then, they would need pulling down. Otis W. Snyder, the diamond fiend of Lexington, was in town one day this week on the hot trail of selling a S1,000 diamond. If Otis had only sought that man through the columns of this paper he wouldn't have missed his man. A mesmerist got in his work at Louisville last week. He persuaded a Miss Nourse to go to the opera with him, and after having mesmerized her, took her to a magistrate and married her in that condition. The girl says she will leave him at the first opportunity. A dude all dress, a thing of limited capacity, very much like a young crow, all gab and no brains, spoiling a good place in society, with a heavy estimate upon himself that the better portion of good company have no feather weights by which they could poise him. Who Is looking at me ? There's a woman In this city who says that she'll never let the Bourbon News or the Cincinnati Enquirer come into her house. She has a good reason so far as the News is concerned her great bear of a husband can't get it without paying for it in advance! But the old lady manages to read a borrowed copy after she counts her children in to roost. A large petition will be presented to Governor Knott, asking the stay of Craft's execution until after Neal's trial, as startling revelations will be made known then by different witnesses. a Dave Miller, the barber, desires to announce to the fastidious public, that he will henceforth run three chairs, so there will be no more waiting and fretting for turns to get shaved. Dave's shop is first-class, and well patronized. o Xotico to the Tax-Payers of Bourbon County. Your State and County taxes for tho year 1883 are now In our hands for collection. Please come forward and settle, and oblige J. B. HOLLADAY, S. B. C. F. R. ARMSTRONG, D. S. P. S. Those who are in arrears for their taxes for 1882 must settle at once. While the entire population of Vance-burg were attending the Carrie Stanley Dramatic Troupe's International show, last week, three prisoners got out of jail and made their escape. The jailor should have punished them by taking them to the show with him. The flouring mills of Wm. Shaw made their last run on the old plan Tuesday, and the mill is now being torn away preparatory to the erection of a new on6 on the patent roller process. Mr. Shaw says, that when his new mill shall have been completed, he will then be able to compete with any mill in America. D. R. Forman, insurance agent and bank clerk at Cynthiana, one of the cleverest and most pushing young men in the State, was In our city Wednesday, talking up the enterprise of a laundry which he proposes to establish in his town within the next two weeks. This is something that is sadly needed in the Bluegrass region, and Mr. Forman can rest assured that he will receive a liberal patronage from this place as soon as he puts the thing in motion. In the will of the late John McKee of Harrison, just probated, his three sons are made executors without bond, and are made equal; the two eldest having been given 200 acres of land and 58,000. His widow gets 85 acres of the Klmbrough farm and 75 near Broadwell church, In lieu of a dowery. His niece, Mary Hill, gets a piano and a note of hand-amount not stated, t Suit has been entered against Hon. T. J, Megibben by the City National Bank of Covington, for So,0(M). This was the amount of a bill of exchange drawn by J. & J. "M, Pfau, a liquor firm of Cincinnati, and pay able to and indorsed by Megibben. The Messrs. Pfau allowed the note to go to protest when It became due, and the bank now falls back on the indorser. Joe Norvell, of Carlisle, has sued J. G. Cecil, Register of the Land Office, for S5.000 damages for being ousted from the promised position as clerk. Norvell testified under oath that Cecil promised to appoint him to a clerkship, and Cecil testified under oath that he had neither directly nor Indirectly promised to appoint either Norvell or Sheldon or any one else to a clerkship in the office in the event of his nomination, or had authorized any one of his friends to promise them a clerkship. The friends of Norvell and Sheldon sayihat they will esta lbh the fact by some of the most respectab e and substantial men in the State that Cecil had promised them clerkships In the office. Potatoes are selling at 25 cents per bushel In Lexington. " 5ck o3b p?vSfc 5'pflw ci r&$m -" - - r i i i The. Trader, Turfman, farmer and Sportsman. Fat shoats are selling at -1 cents per lb. in Nicholas county. Harry Hulchcraft is very ill with typhoid-malarial fever. J. Aug. Bucklerwili leave Monday, for his home in El Paso, Texas. A Jersey calf 10 inches hJgh and 11 inches long, is the chief attraction of Brooksville. One hundred and seventy mules changed hands at Cynthiana, Monday, at fir price?. The famous stallion Prince Charlie, recently purchased in England by Daniel has arrived in Lexington. Low grades of tobacco are bringing from 52 lo C6 per hundred more in the Richmond' Virginia market than in Cincinnati and Louisville. A green horse owned by a Mr. Campbell trotted a mile at Beacon Park a few clays since in 2:26. The horse is 17 hands high and comes from Novia Scotia. The fall meeting of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders' Association commences at Lexington October 9, and continues four days. Over S2,300 are offered in stakes and pur.ses. Adair, Allen & Spencer, of this city, sold 15 hogsheads of tobacco at Louisville, last Friday at prices ranging from $7 to $29.50, and have since purchased 25 hogsheads from Wm. Kennedy, of this county. Carlisle Mercury. In the Cincinnati tobacco market last week, Blue Grass District sold at ?25; Boone county S2G; Pendleton S26.75; Owen county, S29.75; Mason county 31.75; and Brown county, Ohio, at $31.75 for the best grades. The market still excite'd. Tuesday, Col. E. F. Clay bought of N. H. Bayles, his premium pair of bay coach horses, for F. J. Kimball, President of the Norfolk & Western railroad, with headquarters at Philadelphia. Price, 52,000. They were shipped East Tuesday night, in care of "Budge" Hukill. This is probably the finest pair of coachers that has left the State for many years. They were shown five times at the recent Kentucky fairs, and were successful each exhibit. The Scott County Tobacco Association will meet in Georgetown, Dec. 1st, and will give outS425 in premiums. The Fairbanks Scales Co., give a premium of a pair of scales valued at 8150, for the best 5 pounds of white cutting leaf raised in the United States. The association gives S75 for a second, and $25 as a third premium on same. Tn Class B filling leaf, S50 for first, $25 second, and $10 third; Class C, 2 lbs. raised in Scott county, $25 for first, $15 given by the Enterprise Warehouse, of Louisville.. The association adds $25 for first, $15 second, and $10 for third on same. Only members of the association can exhibit. Fee, SI, and no entrance fee charged for exhibiting. To the wife of Conductor Smiley, of Maysville, a girl, second born. On Thursday, September 20, to the wife "of R. E. Mann, of Carlisle, a daughter Third born. The long-looked-for has come at last. It is a son; yes, a dear boy baby son, and it's name is Herbert Dills. It Has a father Dr Malcom Dills, of Carlisle, who once half-way aspired for State Senatorial honors; but now since he is a known father, after fifteen years' parental toyings with pet parrots, jaybirds and squirrels, has awakened to the sense of "daddy" importance and steps like a country rooster in high rye. May he never tumble down a cellar door, or knock the corner oir the moon in his pride at having added one to the neumerical strength of his Senatorial constituency. j W. A. "Wilson, and Miss Maggie Bosworth, of Mt. Sterling, will get married next "Wednesday morning. Mrs. Lizzie Wilson, widowed daughter of Edward Taylor of Midway," married last week, to a Mr. Bedford, of Franklin county. I W, H, B, JOHHSON, Prop'r, W, B. (MAY, Clerk JOHSSOH HOUSE BULLERSBUKG, KY 6ne square from the detiot. Good Livery Stable Attached. The kindest attention givfii and guests made comfortable. Good Sample Rooms. A table filled with all all tlie delicades of the season. RATES REASONABLE. WM. KENNEY, M. D., PRACTITIONKR OK MEDICINE & SURGERY, May be found during the day, when not professionally engaged, at Brooks & Lyman's Drug Store, at night, at the residence of Prof. E. Amende, on High st. CHRIS. GROSCHE, m mom DEALER IN Fruits, Cakes, Fancy Goods, Cigars anci Tobacco, &c. FRESH BREAD EVERY DAY. JEaT'One door above the Thurston House. NEW DRUG STORE. X2?. jE3E. IB- I3AVIS, formerly with Davis & Lyle, respectfully jrms tho public that he can be found one door above the where he has a new and complete stock of drugs In fact, everything in the drug line us new, bright and shining as a silver dollar. Prescriptions carefully compounded at all hours, from the purest drugs. The purest and oldest liquors for medicinal purposes only, and the fluest cigars and tobacco on the market, kept constantly on hand. A liberal share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited. JOHN B. NORTECOTT, AGENT FOR TUB ft W ? Pi Mi&nrmaara. OFFICE: DEl'OSIT BAXK, PARIS, KY. GE0. W. DAYIST" Dealer In FURNITURE, Window Shades, Carpets, Oil Cloths, Mattresses, &c., B&" Special Attention Given to Undertaking and Repairing. Main Street, Paris, Ky. R. M. KENNEY, STJjELTTIESrOIO., Paris, Ky., Will attend to all calls in his line, in Bombon and surrounding counties, with promptness. Charges Reasonable. tf S. B. EWALT l LIVERY SALE AND COMMISSION STABLE, High Street, Paris Kentucky. Will break colts to best advantage. Horses bought and sold on a small margin, also boarded on as good terms as any other stables in Paris. Paris Omnibus Line. Two first-class busses will connect with all passenger trains at the Paris depot, fare, 25 cents to the hotels or any part of he city or suburbs. Trunks, 15 cents extra. No charge for valises. L. F. Mann, Prop'r. Immediate Relief in all Cases by Blood ROOT OIL. Cured of Rheumatism in Two Hours. Buffalo, N. Y., May 2, 1882. Dr. Rush's Medical Association: Gentlemen. I have heen troubled with rheumatism for two years. I tried all the best advertised oils and linaments, and many first-class physicians without relief. The last Dr. I visited recommended Dr. Rush's "Blood Root Oil." I nurchased a large bottle for fifty cents, and applied it. In two hours I was relieved and now I am entirely well. Its eflects are wonderful, and I believe it the only thing in the world which will cure rheumatism. Truly Yours, JOHN HUTCHISON. 89 Erie St., Buffalo, N. Y. DR. RUSH'S BLOOD ROOT OIL has no equal in the world as a Liniment or Oil. It is a Cheap, Simple, Safe and Sure remedy for man or beast. It never fails to cure RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily PainsTooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. It is put up in two sizes. Price 25 and 50 cents. Sold by Druggists everywhere, or sent direct upon receipt of price by Dr. Rush's Medical Nufcfca, Hi. Y., U. S. A, JOHN J. LONG, Prop'r. JIH J, UK tat PUEHELL house, MILLERSBURG, KY. liates, 1'tvo Dollars Per Bay. Nice Sample Koorus for Commercial meil, Livery and Sale Stable Crmvertrd FIRE INSURANCE ! 3"- 3VE. tTOIKTIESS, AGENT FOR fj . LARGEST COMPANIES IJf ' IN THE WORLD!. I iST Losses Promptly Paid. a ti Rates a Low as The Lowest. -a "BLUE CRASS RODTE" K . CENTRAL RAIL ROAD. Is the shortest and auickest route to MISSOURI, KANSAS and " TEXAS. Tickets to all points Noafch, East and West. Time Card ill Effect July 29th, '83: TRAINS SOUTH. Li veLovmgton . . . . . 8:00 am 3:0v: live Falmouth . . . 0:35 i2i am i:lQ Uynthlana . . . . KMO am o'At) pin pin Arr iJ;ui!5 . Ji:lo am 0':lo pin Arr Wi!ii'luti. . Live "WinnliAcf up 1l:Ii; pin 7:1." pin l.ve Richmond . I '. I-':'.S inn 8:10 7:.j0 pm J,10pm Lve Lancaster ... K:0S j m Arr Stamford Juno H:.V5 pm pin TRAINS NORTH. Le Stanford June. . . . 4:Kam wtr jy.inca.sier 3:i0 am Live Richmond . . ' (i:;;o am 1:C0 Arr inchej,ler . . . 7:. am 2:0,5 pm live Winchester . . . . 7::ii am 2:L0 pm pm Arr Paris Lvel'uris 8:-'K) am 3:10 pm 8:30 am 3:i5 pm LveOyntiana 9:05 am 3:52 iivel'almouth . . . . 10:(H am 4:oo pm Arr Covington . . . 11:43 am ti:lA) pm pm MAYSVILLE Jk LEXINGTON DIVISION TRAILS SOUTH. i SrWV110 :10am 1:00 pur tZZ& 1lei 7:.i5aixx 2:16 pm Millersburg 7:.78am 2:48 pm Lye Pans 8:30 am 3:15 pm Arr Lexington W:20am 4:00 pm TltAIXS KOKTII. Lve Lexington eao am 5:25 pm JjVCir,,s . 0:50 am 6:15 pm Millersburg 7:15 am 0:10 pin Lve Carlisle 7:35 am 7.-00 i in Arr Maysville 9:00 am 8:3t pm LEXINGTON ACCOMMODATION Lve Paris 11:30 am Arr Lexington 12:05 pm Lve Lexington 7:40 am 2rj.i .in ArrParls 8-30 am 3:15 pi.t SUNDAY TRAINS Arrive at Paris going Northward at 3:15 pm, arriving at Covington at C:30 pm. Trains going Southward leaves Covlngten at 3:C0 pm, arriving at 0:15 pm. t Special Rates to EMIGRANTS STFor tickets, rates and information pertaining to time, connections, &c, call on or address JOHN STUART, Agent, Pabis, ky. G. "W. Bender, C. L. Brown, Supt. G. P. & F. A. JAMES McAEDLI, IE I T Grand. Opera Build's-,. CINCINNATI, O. LAMAR HOUSE, (GEEEN CHEATHAM, Prop'k.) CARLISLE, KY. o One Square from Eailroad Depot .Oi Baggage transferred to and fro, free r charge I LIVERY STABTJ3 ATTACKED novl4y T. W. POTTS, LiYery, Sale & Feed Stable J CARLISLE, KY. Horses boarded, trained and sold on commission. Livery rigs always kept for public hire. Terms reasonable. DR. YAHSAHL Broadway, Pabis t. 8 to 9 A. M. 1 4 P. M, 7 " 8 P. M. PHARES T. THROOP, CARLISLE, - - KY. Office oyer B. Ft Atiairgroctry?5 -V -