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THE EOURBCJN NEWS, PARIS, KY., MAY 27 1913 f- Instant Relief Tou can stop that awful itch from eczema and other skin troubles in two seconds. Seems too good to be true-but it is .true, and we vouch for it. Just a few drops of the simple, cool ing wash, the D.D.D. Prescription for eczema, and the itch stops instantly. "We give you enough to prove it for 50 scents. Now, if you have tried a great many cures for eczema and have been disap DANIEL Made in Kentucky by CHAS. C. "WE A We're Now Showing Our FuHJLine of SPRING MODELS! In the Celebrated Schloss Bros. & High-Class Men's Suits. They Represent the New NorfoIks,the New English Cut and the Conservative Models, all Beautifully Tailored. Prices'ranging'from $15 to $35 JUST I3NT Our complete line of Emerson Shoes,Hawes Van Gal Hats, Stetson Hats, Lion Shirts TWIN BROS., CLOTHING DEPT. L. WoIIstein, Propri or. JfiMi Special Rates & Excursions. Eucursion to Cincinnati, Ohio, ;and return Sunday, may 2$tft $1.50 ROUND TRIP This train leaves Paris at 7:50 a. in., arriving Cincinnati 10:30 a. m., returning leaves Fourth St. tstation, Cincinnati, at 7 p. m. Tickets good on special train only. Low round-trip Summer Tour- ist tickets to all Summer resorts in the North and Northwest on sale May 15 to Sept. 30. Final limit date 31, 1913, with liberal! top-over privileges. For further information, call on or address. W. H. HARRIS, Agent, J. K. SMITH, T. A. W. N. Barkley Mrs. W. N. Barkley Woman's Exchange & Cafe 112 N. Upper Street, Lexington, Kentucky Home-made Cakes, Breads, Pies, Cau dies, Croquetts, Salads, Pickles, Chow Chow, Ftc, received fresh daily. We serve Breakfast, Dinner and Sup tper; also lunches and short orders at all Siours with the best the market affords. 28mar6mo) per FI ii G6Hl $1,000 to $100,000 W. KING & SON, 125; Chcapsidc, Lexington, Ky. ti Roxie" Davis ! the Insurant Agent .Life, Accident, Health, Liability, Fire, Wind, Lightning ::::::::: JHgest and Best Paying Companies. GivcOld "Nub" a Call. - . 2Hello137-' - - - from Eczema pointed, do not make the mistake of refusing to try this soothing: wash. All other druggists keep this D.D.D. Pre scription go to them if you can't come to us but if you come to our store we will give you the first dollar bottle on our positive no pay guaran tee, that D.D.D. will stop the itch at once. D.D.D. Soap keeps the pores healthy ask us about it. Ohas. E. Butler & Son, Paris, Ky. BOONE AXLE GREASE And don't have to grease but once a week. STOLL OIL CO. Lexington, Ky. Co Schange's Candy Kitchen, 119 S. Upper, LEXINGTON, KY. If You Want to Pot in Water Works in Your House Or Barn, or Bathroom Fixtures or Furnace, or Tin, Shingles or Metal Roofing, and all kinds of Tin Work, Guttering, Pipss, Filters, Water Tanks, Dipping Tanks, Sewerage Pipe and Clay Flues. Concrete Work a Spe cialty. Give us a call. We also handle the American I i d Wite !2fttL b?J, j on the market, and all kinds of Had- j WVi KTVWJt " - V V SO U11U J-LUUIO ware, Inarming Toois, Grates and Mantels, Screen Doors, Poultry Sup plies, Harness of all kinds, the W. J. i Oliver Plow, the best Plow on the ! market. Horse Clippers, Cement, Lime, ramt and Oils. We buy the very best goods obtain able, and our prices are right. BEST & HAWKINS, . 4mar3mo Millersburg, Ky. FOR SALE Residence Property on Walker Avenue. Adjoining Bourbon College. Splendid Neighbor" hood. gBeautiful two story 'frame house of eight rooms, four halls, bath, pantrv, etc Large corner lot, 60x212 feet Good stable and all necessary outbuild ings. Some fruit. Will be sold worth the money. Pos session at once. Look this over. S. E. BORLAND, 11 tf Paris, Ky. typewriters Rebuilt Cike new; Remington 6, $23 SmithlPremier 2, $23 Remington 10, $40 (Latest Model) Smith Premier 10, $40 (Latest Model) Monarch, $40 Underwood 4, $40 Underwood 5,J$45 ' Oliver 3, $40 Oliver 5, $50 LC. Smith & Bro., $35 We Handle Carbon Paper Ribbons for all Makes. We Repair T5-pe writers. We have the Largest Stock in the U. S. The, Joseph Candioto Co. 149-151 N. Broadway Lexinston, Kentucky CHAUTAUQUA GALLS US Southern People by the Thousand Drawn Every Year for Rest, Sport, Intellectual Entertainment or For mal Study to Famous Resort in Western New York. At this season of the year the heads of households begin to think of vaca tion for the whole j family, and places line Vjuo.uiu.uquo,, New York, con tend with other quite unlike places for our va cation choice. About 50,000 peo ple vvisit Chautau qua each year for periods ranging from an hour to several months. Perhaps 10,000 is the average sum mer population, in which every state in the Union and a number Nof for eign countries are represented. The Southern contin gent is particular Chautauqua Lake Steamboat. ly strong. "Chautauqua" is the name of five towns in the states of Illinois, Kansas, New York, Texas and Washington. In two instances the county bears the same name. About five hundred com munities in cottages or tents are called "Chautauqua," besides the alto gether improper use of the word as applied to series of Indoor meetings. The name is derived from an Indian phrase, the latest interpretation of which' is that it refers to the mus callonge, for which the lake to the southwest of Buffalo, New York, is still famous, and that it means "the place where the fish was taken out." However that may be, the name would have been as local as Mankato had it not been for the activities set going in 1874 by Lewis Miller and Bishop John H. Vincent. But the fame of this place has encircled the world. Two Southern states, Kentucky and Texas, send more than a thousand per sons each to Chautauqua every sum mer. Six Southern states contribute more than 500 persons each to the summer population of this unique com munity in western New York. Bar ring one-day .visitors, there are as many Southerners as New Yorkers at Chautauqua every year. What is the force that draws so large a number from this distance to a single locality? The cosmopolitan character of the attendance may have some influence.. There are about as many Canadians q,s Virginians at Chautauqua, and always a sprinkling of foreigners from abroad, some of them distinguished per sons. Southerners are not insen sible of the mutual advantages of such association. 'The tendency of birds of a feather to "flock together," also, may be effective to some degree. Many Southerners doubtless go be cause so many others go. Another at traction is the delightful climate and scenic charm of the Chautauqua re- j gion, with its lake over 20 miles in length, at an altitude of 1,400 feet above sea level, its exemption from heat, malaria, mosquitoes, and other things that do annoy, and its compar atively easy access from Southern points. After all, however, these ad vantages might conceivably unite elsewhere and the Chautauqua enthu siast will tell you that any other place where they should all be found would still not be Chautauqua. Chautauqua is not merely a community, it is an in stitution, and pervading the institu tion is a moral and intellectual force. A kindly trickster who diverts you with chaff and then when you aren't looking slips good things into your pockets, is the figure by which a well known speaker at Chautauqua illus trated the character of that institu tion. Then, if you don't appreciate the good things after all, in any case they need not detract from your enjoyment of the trifles by which you were first allured. Many go on enjoying these for a whole summer and never giye a great deal of thought to other mat ters. Some are content with harmless nothings for themselves, yet take sat isfaction in seeing the treasures of knowledge or moral benefit quietly in troduced into the possession of their wives and young people. This is as one's mind and circumstances may de termine. There is, after all, nothing occult' or even obscure in the working of the Chautauqua influence. It is what you take it to be. If you see in Chautau qua merely a pretty, pleasant and healthful place for outdoor life, where sailing, launching, boating, fishing, bathing, baseball, tennis and roque are popular and "Where those of seden tary inclination read, smoke, or play checkers at the hotel or the club, then you have seen rightly as far as you have gone. As a compromise midway between Newport and the north woods, you will find Chautauqua satis factory. Hundreds do. If along with an innocent and wholesome outdoor life in a delight ful climate you expect musical, liter ary and dramatic entertainers of a clean, unobjectionable and more than usually talented order for the relaxa tion of evening hours; if you seek variety of amusement for the children at all times under proper safeguards of direction and restraint, you will not be disappointed. Perhaps you crave, together with the ase of do nothing days, oppor tunity for not too serious attention to th discussion of present matters of national or world-wide interest. A more direct, vivid impression ,of the man and women who are grappling August 2 Mrs. Percy V. Penny backer Federation Day address. July 28 to- August 2 Foreign Mis sions Institute. August 3 to 9 Bishop Charles D. WUliams, Protestant Episcopal Bish op of Michigan. August 4 to 9 Mr. Earl Barnes of Philadelphia, head of the Department of Psychology and Pedagogy of the Chautauqua Summer Schools lecture series on "The Development of the Moral Nature." August 4 Mr. Leland T. Powers Evening recital, "David, Garrick." August 8 and 9 Mr. Edmund Vance Cooke Evening recitals. August 6 President Benjamin I Wheeler of the University of Califor nia, "The Old World in the New." August 6 Mr. Henry Turner Bailey. August 7 and 8 Mr. Ng Poon Chew, editor of the Chung Sai Yat Po, San Francisco "Problems Before the Chi nese Republic." August 9 President George E. Vin cent Grange Day address. August 10 to 16 Bishop John H. Vincent, Chancellor of Chautauqua In stitution Devotional hour addresses and baccalaureate sermon. August 11 to 16 Prof. I. B. Stough ton Holborn of New York Lecture series: "Greece the Great Factor in Civilization." August 11 to 16 Prof. Samuel D. Schmucker, West Chester Normal School, West Chester, Pa. Series of lectures, "Race Improvement." August 11 to 15 Mr. Richard T. Wyche, President National Story Tell ers' League of America Story hours. August 13 Prof. Samuel C. Schmucker Recognition Day address. August 13 and 16 Prof. C. Edmund Neil of West Virginia University Evening recitals. August 17 to 23 Dr. John Timothy Stone, pastor of the Fourth Presbyte rian Church of Chicago. August 18 and 19 Rev. Charles Stelzle of New York "The Church and Labor." August 19 and 20 Dr. G. Campbell Morgan of London "Evangelism." August 21 and 22 Prof. Graham Taylor of the Chicago Commons So cial Settlement "Attitude of the Church Toward Social Evils. August 19 and 20 Prof. William MacDonald of Brown University "Dr. Grenfell and His Labrador Mission." August 21 Col. George W. Bain of Lexington, Ky. "The Safe Side of Life for Young Men." . August 23 Governor Adolph O. Eb erhart of Minnesota. August 24 Prof. Graham Taylor Closing sermon. Health a Factor in Success. The largest factor contributing to a man's success is undoubtedly health It has been observed that a man is sel dom sick when his bowels are regular. He is never welf when he is consti pated. For constipation will find nothing quite so god as Chamberlain's Tablets. They not only move the bowels but improve the appetite and strengthen the digestion. They are sold by all dealers. Unique 'Symbol on Gravestone. The gravestone between Kennebun- i isport and Cape Porpoise of one Tris: tram Tapley exhibits an uncommon and yet most sensible idea. Affixed to the stone in a silver case js in closed an old-fashioned daguerreotype of the young man, portected from the elements by a cover. One with such a name ought certainly to have been a lover of books. Historic Relic in English Church. The church of the little village of ken, Suffolk, England, possesses what 1b probably the rarest alms dish to be found in England. Inlaid in the cen ter of the woodwork is a piece of the bell metal which was saved from the great fire at York Minster, when the famous bell there was entirely de stroyed some years ago. Practical Boy. Little Harold, aged five years, was visiting his aunt. While at dinner the grown-ups were talking and paying little or no attention to little Harold. He was ready and waiting .for his des sert, and to attract the others' atten tion he said "Please, Aunt Mame, is that pie an ornament?" Genius. Something immortal happens, when man brings love to a thirsting woman. The children of women who hunger after spiritual things these are the children of genius and dreams. These who go out alone and full of yearning to find "the white presences among the hills." Will Levington Comfort. High School Honor Roll. The' honor roll for the month of May of the ParisHigh School is as follows: FRESHMAN Julian James 90, Eve lyn Friedman 97, Emmett Curtis 92, Elizabeth Kenney;92, Charlotte Cram 90, Lona McCord 91, Minnie Kiser 91, Arlena Kuster 91, John T. Redmon 96, Thomas Burns 91. Reed Davis 94. I Horace M. Clay 91, Charlena Ball 93. ourja.uM.ujK,JEj ivianon uougiass vz, Thornton Connell 95, Robert Mitchell 91, Lawrence Lavin 90, Stuart Walling ford 96, Dennis V. Snapp 91, Sarah Thompson 91, Amelia Kuster 94, Ger trude Slicer 93, Raymond Link 93, Ellen Henry 91, Urace McCord 95, Joseph Lynch 95, Barnett Winters 95, Marian Cram 93. JUNIOR Melvina Sharon 95, Ruth Chambers 93, Joseph Letcher 93, Eli Friedman 99, Seilo Wollsjein 91, Wayne Cottingham 94, Edward Myall 99, Ruth Lair 93. SENIOR-Maude Fitzpatrich 95, Duke Brown 100. Earl Dickerson 98. Clarence Harney 97, Clara Chambers' v, rmneu uauoway i7, ttthel Wood 92, Thomas Link 94. Union Meat Market I F. W. SOPER, Manager 1 85 IN. Limestone, Lexington, Ky. Telephone 1 852 "Good Meats," "Right Prices" Why eat poor Meat when it injures your health and costs you more good money than good meat? Buy the best, eat te best, have the best of health, andlthenfyou live' the best. The best may be had by calling Union Meat Mar ket, Phone 1852. I POPULAR HIGH BRIDGE KENTUCKY SUNDAY. 75c Round Trip SCENIC BEAUTY Tickets sold at GEORGETOWN Kood only on Special Train leaving at 10.50 an. Apply to nearest Ticket Agent, Queen &. Crescent Route, for further information. H. C. KING, Passenger and Ticket Agent, 101 E. Main St. Phone 49 LEXINGTON, KY. I Notice! Poultry Raisers m WK Cholera. Gapes, Limberneck, Roup, Canker,, ;s?,n0o0: Diarrhoea and all Diseases of Poultry Mia Katie Bryant. Bardstown. Ky.. ayi: "I havs uid Reape 4-11-44 for yean aad ttakit tte be poultry remedy made. It cures gapes and limberneck without fad. ..... ., , , . - Will Coomes. Bardrtown. Ky.. says: "One drop of Recipe 4-1 1 -44 dropped down the bfll of a gipias chicken killsthewormandrelieTesthechickinJtantly. Itisthebestpreventivelhaveeyetused. Mfg. and Guaranteed by J. Robu Crume, Bardstown, Ky. Price 50c at a!! rists. SOLO BY Chas. E. Butler & Co. Woodland Stock Farm Headquarters For Draft Horses Dark Bay Horse, Weight 1,7000. Sired by Imported Gitter 58803 Dam by Imparted Queen 41490 $15.00 To Insure BUSTER B. is a coming three year old and a young stallion of marked size and condition. He is the kind thatw.ill appeal to your fancy and you will make no mistake in breeding to him. The. Above Horses Will Make The Season of 1913 At Woodland Stock Farm. About 7 miles north of Paris on the Cynthiana pikh. Money due when colfr is foaled, mare transferred or brec to other stock without my consent. Lien retained on all colts until shason money is paid. Care taken to prevent ac cidents but no responsibility assumed should any occur. STERLING HINKSOM,1 Lair, Ky. The Sanitary Shop! With all the latest devices installed in my shop to make it absolutely sanitary and clean, including a Patent Towel Sterlizer, Individual Cups, Soap, etc., believe we have the most modern shop in Paris. We have just in stalled a new Porcelain Tub and an up-to-date Bathroom. Hot water at all times. Three Barbers, all experts. We would like to have your trade. I take this method of soliciting it. Is there a rea son why we should not re ceive it? Respectfully, Russ Corbin. Flagged Train With Shirt. Tearing his shirt from his back an Ohio man flagged a train and saved it from a wreck, hut H. T. Alston, Ra leigh, N. C, once prevented a wreck with Electric Biters. " was in a ter rible plight when I began to use them and my stomach, head, back and kid neys," he writes, "were all badly af fected and my liver was in bad condi tion but four bottles Electric Bitters made me, feel like a new man." A trial will convince you of its matchless merit for the stomach, liver or kid ney trouble. Price 50 cents at Ober- f HliMHMMI EXCURSION 1 75c Round Trip OUTDOOR ENJOYMENT MUSIC 11-44 CURES BURLEY Black Percheron. Weight 1760 $15.00 To Insure BURLEY is a splendid specimen of the draft horse and his get have prov ed to be of the very best. There is a steadily growing demand for the class of horses produced by Burley, "both upon the farm and in the cities. They can stand more work than the aveage horse. He is 7 years old,, a beautiful black, well formed and of the clas that catches the eye. In selecting a horse to breed to pick one whose pro duce commands the best price. ONE R0P down the throat of. a "gapey" chicken destroys the -worms and saves the chicle's life. A few drops In the drinkla? water CURES and PREVENTS GAPES white diarrhoea, roup, cholerx and other chick diseases. One 50c Bottle of BourbonPoultryCiire Makes 12 Galloms of Mediciae.' Every poultry raiser should keep a bottle of this medicine on hand. Write for free sample and Booklet on "Diseases of Fowls." Addrew. BQUBEOH REMEDY MUMMY, LtxfegtM, ly. BForSale'by W. T. Brooks. Windsor Hotel. Modern Equipment, Polite Service. i Evervthinp; Sanitary. Children's Work & Special tjC-"l t i9MjRjdr NEW BARBER SHOP CARL CRAWFORD aorrers. -jfft-i4Ajat s S. C