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H ' 5 4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1918, THE BQUW NEWPAKHL JClt yji tasA vrerawr p ABE YOU "GBIPFY," THIH, EUK nmmr f 5 Acid Iron Mineral Will Put New life Into You BuM Up Your m Weakened System Caused By Influenza, Etc. - Thousands of men. and women, some who are young in years, but old in actions and feelings, just drag themselves around because their sys tem is run down, from lack of enough iron, the one great body building mineral necessary for a healthy, growing man or woman. Acid Iron. Mineral contains just the right amount of iron needed, to make the system do its work rightly and efficiently it is a compound made from iron ore highly concen trated, and those who are unable to get relief from vegetable compounds should try this famous remedy for run-down systems influenza, kidney troubles, catarrh of the stomach, in digestion, and countless other diseas es that are sapping their life away. It is absolutely free from alcohol and other injurious drugs, and is guar anteed to give satisfaction or your money will be refunded. Thousands of testimonials now on file in our offices, telling in an emphatic "way how Acid Iron Mineral has helped sick and suffering men and women. For sale by Brooks & Snapp. Don't delay, call for it to-day. Ferrodine Chemical Corp., Roanoke, Va. - t , (adv) 1G& fe Es BEE KAISEEIN.ISS ON DEE, SICK HST. AMSTERDAM, October 25. So serious is the condition of the Ger man Kaiserine, who is ill, that all of her children have bee-n called to her bedside in the Potsdam palace, it was learned from Berlin to-day. The kaiserin was .60 years old on Tues day. , fe Bs CAN NOW EAT AND COMFORT. SLEEP IN U!MnMMffj)i Mir!.--'ff t .- mmi-r t . . t . , . . m- un... iui i- . . .rfissKsiBi rr nu iwbl w avra as mrm iaBBiai BBOUTad grtiflrjllT uu.ytri, mkr TBMwla . " VSlNsA uS " 9& li . oHt 1tnarddi of mtr ntmiy k4JHl wh wn UM J wm - r Tnr mi fjjiiUi 1 C m . fat'tttfe'l w,(tr aot w rs -J Mb Private Elgin Dalzell, Little Rock; died in Naval Hospital, Philadelphia Navy Yard; pneumonia; buried in North Middletown. Sergt. Bishop Batterton, Paris; died in Base Hospital, France; wounded in battle; buried in France. Cctep. Allen Huddleston, Paris; died at Base Hospital, Camp Zach ary Taylor; pneumonia; buried in Paris. Private HarryH. Chinn, Jr., Jack sonville; died in Base Hospital, Camp Zachary Taylor; influenza; buried. at Jacksonville. Private Samuel Robertson, Millers burg; died at.sea,on route to France; pneumonia; buried in France. Private Grover Butler, Baris; died in Base Hospital, Camp Meade, Maryland; influenza; buried at Paris. Private Ray Link? Hutchison; died in Naval Hospital, Great Lakes Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, 111.; influenza; buried at Paris. Sergt. Joseph G. Holt Paris; died in Covington, Ky., Hospital; uraemic poisoning; buried at Paris. Private Charles E. Adair, Paris; died in Base Hospital, Camp Zach ary Taylor, Ky.;- influenza; buried at Paris. . Private John W. Sergeant, North Middletown; killed in battle in France; buried in France. Private Robert Rice, North Mid dletown; died in Base Hospital, Camp Meade, Md.; influenza; buried in North Middletown. . " Private John Blythe, Paris; died in Base Hospital, Camp Meade, Md.; injluenza; buried in Paris. AMERICAN PACKERS HELPING I IN THE WAR WORK. SENATOR JAMES'-LAST APPEAL. In the course of his last speech de livered in the Senate by oir beloved Ollie James, in answer to capious criticisms of the President, defended his every act and deed with great power and burning eloquence and American pacxers are doing far more than merely furnishing meat foods to the soldiers and sailors of the United States and4ier allies, accord ing to C. S. Churchill, Advisory Su- i used these words, which are as ap perintendent for Swift & Company, plicable now as when delivered and Who addressed the American Meat ', should mark the action of , every Packers' convention reflAnt.lv. i oyai man "Thi $rsnarnl rmHIin roaliVoa littlti I "President Wilson walks the tight ... ...... . . . . trope, it stretcnes across tne sea wiin of the work that the packer is doing LBF' v; ntl ttp hnirts in hi If troubled with indigestion or sleeplessness you should read what Miss Agnes Turner, Chicago, 111., has to say: "Overwork, irregular meals and carelsness regarding the ordinary rules of health, gradually under minded it -until last fall I became a wreck of my forjmer self. I suffered from continual headache, was unable to digest my food, which seemed to lay as a dead weight on my stomach. I was very constipated and my com plexion became dark, yellow and muddy as I felt. Sleeplessness was added to my misery, and I would awake as tired as when I went to sleep. I heard of Chamberlain's Tab lets and found such relief after tak ing tnem tnat 1 Kepi up tne ireatmeui for nearly two months. They cleans ed my stomach, invigorated my sys tem, and since that time I can eat and sleep" in comfort. I am to-day entire ly well" (adv-oct) PS TS E2 . The difference between the fifth day after marriage and the fifth year after marriage is that during the fifth day a man is a god and during' the fifth year he is a door mat. to win the war," said Mr. Churchill. "We are furnishing a great deal of material for the manufacture of mu nitions, including glycerine, potash and sulphuric acid. Our sheep skins are used to manufacture cold-proof coats. "Every pound of wool that we have is taken by the Government as fast as we produce it, and the price is fix ed by the Government. hands the richest treasure ever lodg ed in the keeping of one man since God said let there be light. The treasure is our very life, our liberty, our institutions, our homes, our fire sides, our all. Gentlemen, let me plead with you plead with all Amer icans do not shake the rope. Do not badger him. Do not heckle him. Do not annoy him. He. will make the journey safely over this ocean of blood and peril. Keep silent! Hold There isn't a pound of stock food iyour tongues! manufactured to-dav that is not be- Can any Democrat or other admiier . ing used to help win the war, because it goes to put weight on live stock that is badly needed by our soldiers and sailors. "The tons of fertilizer which we manufacture aid in growing more .crops that will be used later to feed more soldiers to fight the Hun. Glue has its use. Soap certainly is a big item. Albumen is another highly im portant product of the war. - "We, of Swift & Company, believe in giving credit where credit is due and I want to say that our labor has performed cheerfully the giant tasks set for us by the -Food Administra tion. No order has been too big, no job too overwhelming for them Do You Need Glasses? of the eloquent utterer of these words do less than help send a man to succeed him, who is in the fullest sympathy and who in life was one of his closest friends? It would.be a calamity for other than Governor Stanley to succeed the lamented James, which fortunately is not likely to be done. HIGHER PRICES ALLOWED POR NEWSPRINT PAPER. Because of increased cost of labor and transportation, the Federal Trade Commission, in afinding, granted In creases in prices for standard'news- ! print paper, establishing as fair max imum prices for the period from July -Rpflnjrnition of this willingness 1 the following: $3.75 per hun- -w---0 - ( Let us make a thorough, scientific examination of your eyes, based on ethical grounds, not to rerommend glasses unless you need them. Ask yourself these questions: "Do I have headaches, nervous spells, drawn, tired eyes? Does type sometimes blur? Do I see spots before my eyes?" Answer .fairly and squarely, for your own good, for over-strain repeatedly day by day will break down the del icate nerves and muscles of the eyes and irreparable injury may result. Our years of experience insures acj curate results. Dr. Wm. Riley Franklin Suite 205-6 First National Bank, Both Phones, Paris, Ky.. to serve has resulted in an increase for male labor totanfc more than 100 since' February, 1916. In the case of our female Ifelp the increase has been even greater, this help now receiving 165 more, than in 1916." To take care of thewar business, Mr. Churchill said that all the pack ers in the country had been forced o . dred pounds f. o. b. mills or roll news in carlots; ?3.87 for roll news in less than carlots; $4.15 for sheet news in carlots, and $4.2,734' for sheet news in small quantities. The new prices, it is estimated, will allow manufacturers an average profit of $19.75 a ton, but. do not in- ! elude the-increases asked because of a cost two to than pre-war Margolen's SANITAR 1 Meat , Market build new freezer and buildings of every description at three times greater cost. He paid tribute to the government inspectors of the Bureau of Animal Industry and of the army -who select the meat, and said: ' "In addition to the safeguard that this is to the soldier and sailor, it is a safeguard to us. (t safeguards us from attack from those who for their own personal aggrandizement or for other reasons may seek to criticize unjustly one of the few industries that in the early days of the war, and up to the present time, has continued to supply our Government with what it wanted, as it wanted it, when it was needed, without quibble as to price. "That is a record of whiph we should be proud, gentlemen. It dem onstrates that we are doing not our bit, but our full share toward win ning .this war, doing it cheerfully, willingly and because .we are in this war to win, and to win, our soldiers must be fed and fed with good food." Specials for Friday and Saturday 5, 10, 45 nd 20-pound buckets pur honM-rtmtertd LARD 27c per pound LEAN COUNTRY - BACON 35c per pound MflRGOLENi .Sanitary Meat Market Aetna-Auto Combination Policies Protect Against" Fire Theft Collision Properly Damage r liability And jOAcr. Casualties higher cost for wood used as pulp. Three' rates were fixed 'as bases for adjustments for paper already deliv ered on contracts. VICTORY IN THE AIR. With the election buta few days away, the' Democratic situation is most gratifying to every one who would uphold the President and give him that unflagging assistance for which he has asked, by sending the real friends of the administration to his aid. The factions of the party emulating the example of TJeckham and Stanley are getting logemer in a way that means victory and the putting of the enemy to r6ut. The Republicans make claims not sustain ed by the facts, as they always co, but if they believe the stories they tell there is going to be a sad awak ening: the morning after. Brag is a good dog, but Hold Fast is better. Baseless claims fool nobody, but fools. The voters have decided that they -will elect Stanley and the renominat ed Congressmen and by the eternal they are going to do it. It is all over but the shouting. ' GETTING RAPIDLY .TOGETHER. From the visitors and from the re ports that come to Democratic Head quarters in Louisville from all over the State the gratifying statements are made that Democrats are getting together with enthusiastic unanimity that means unity and strength and insures the election of Governor Stanley to the Senate and4, the Con gressional nominees to succeed them selves. The people everywhere are awakening to the great importance of the election and giving the President the support of his real friends and the indications are that 'the November election will' tell a tale' that will fire. his heart with renewed.determination to bring the war to a speedy and vic torious end. ' ? BOLSHEVIKI ASSASSINATE SIZTY- EIGHT HOSTAGES. AC'Jr Jee; ' w t -.-VtVj. VJ5u. srSt n ,gs3BNfD,s AMSTERDAM, Oct. 28.-rFjr.om the time that Moses Uritzky, commission er for elections of the constituent as sembly tofJRussia; was assassinated latcfinAugusl;, 68 nosfeges, including five priests, were shot by the Bol shevik!, according ta-Petrbgrcid dis patches quoting- the neWspaper Parvda.- r , c . - HR IBB HfcV ' The Union Pacific- railroad will shortly try aiu experiment by using women to load f jeigllt,' cars. SOMrrANB;.EBRTO Comings and, Goingi of Oar 'Ptople Here, There and -Elsewhere. Mr. Charles E. Butler has re turned from a husiness trip to Boone county. Mrs. R. S. Starks has returned to her home in Midway after a visit to relatives in this city. Mr. Alex T. Rice, Jr., has return ed from a visit to his uncle, Mr. Z. T. Rice, and fajmily, in Richmond. Mr. Terrence Mackey, of Colum bus, Ohio, was a guest of Paris rela tives and friends several days last week. Mrs. Charles J. Clark left Friday evening for a visit to her daughter, Mrs. J. Scott Meredith, at Norfolk, Virginia. Mrs. S. E. McCIanahan returned Friday from a visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Farris, in Flem ingsburg. Misses Louise Connell, Virginia Dundon and Margaret Lavin have xe turned from a visit to Miss Margaret Collins; in Helena. " Miss Sallie Ashbrook has return ed to her home in Cynthiana, after a visit toiler sister, Mrs. R. B. Hutch craft, and family, kon Second street. Mrs. C. H. Estes, of Cincinnati, is a guest of Mr.' and Mrs. George W. Estes, on Seventh street. Mr., Estes, who has been quite ill for some time, is improving. Mrs. George Richard Huffman, of Ft. Sill, Okla., formerly Miss Louise Myall, of Paris and Millersburg, is a feuest of-friends and relatives in this city and county. Mrs. E. L. Stone, a member of the Paris High School faculty, has gone to Eastern Kentucky, where she has volunteered to 'assist in .nursing the cases of influenza in some parts of the district. ' Revt. Dr. B. F. Orr and daugh ters, Misses Olivia and Ruth Orr, hate returned 'from an automobile trip to Louisville, Brandensburg, So nora and Bardstown, where they were guests of friends and relatives. Rev. and Mrs. M. T. Chandler, formerly of Paris, have returned to Richmond from a visit to relatives in Asheville, North Carolina. Since their return Rev. Chandler contract ed the influenza,, but is somewhat better. Mrs. L. H. Reynolds, widow of the late Rev. L. H. Reynold?, for (many years the beloved pastor of the North Middletown Christian church, is seriously ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. M. M. Hughes, in Winchester. Mr. Thornton Gorhapn, a former resident of Paris, who was enroute to his home in Pittsburg, Pa., from Lou isville, where he had been to, attend the funeral and burial ot his brother, Mr. Fred -Gorham, was a guest of friends in this city Friday and Sat urday. Misses Mildred and Marie Col lins, who are at their home near North Middletown while the influen za ban is on the schools and colleges, have' as guests Misses Elizabeth-Marshall, of Lexington, and Helen Tay lor, of Bowling Green. Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Goodman, of Cairo, Egypt, who are guests of Judge and Mrs. W. R. Shackleford, in Rih jmond, are both ill of the influenza. Mrs. Goo'dman is a daughter of the late Hon. C. M. Clay, of near Paris, and a sister of Mrs. Shackleford. Mr. Jos. D. Crosthwaite, former ly of Paris, now residing in Rirming ham, Ala., was a visitor in this city last week. Mr. Crosthwaite came to Paris to attend the funeral and bur ial of his brother, Mr. C B. Crosth waite, who died in Chester, Pa., last week. Mr. Frank Collins and Mrs. J. T. Collins attended the funeral and bur ial of their uncle, Mr. W. H. Collins, in Louisville. They were joined at Paris by Mr. John Collins, qf Cleve land, Ohio, and Mrs. R. 111. Hopkins, of Covington, who accompanied them to Louisville. Mr. Louis Margolen returned Saturay from Hughton, Saskatche wan, Canada, where he had spent the summer oji the big wheat and flax ranche of E. F. Speais & Sons, of 'Paris. Mr. Margolen will return in February to the ranche. Several otherBourbon county boys who are employed on the big ranche will re turn to Paris later on. Mrs. Carl Crawford left Saturday for Louisville, where she reported for duty at the Y. W. CL A. roopns. Mrs. Crawford will be House Director of the Y. W. C. A. in the War Work ac tivities. Before leaving Paris Mrs. Crawford directed THE NEWS to be sent to herat her new abode, so that she could keep in touch with the eld town happenings. ' Cynthiana Log Cabin: "Miss Louise Cromwell spent the week-end in Paris with friends .... Mrs. Jas. Lail,.of Paris, spent several days here with Mrs. Gano Ammerman. . . .Miss Bessie Desha has returned to Paris after a week's stay here nursing her nephew, Desha Wells, who was re cently operated orf-for removal of ton sils and adenoids." Mrs. Edward. C. Keller and daughter; Miss Edna Keller, left Sat urday for Louisville, wheife they will reside in the future. They will be greatly missed by a host of warm friends here, who view their depart ure from Paris ith genuine regret. Mrs. Keller ordered THE NEWS to be' sent to her at her new home, 2902 South Third street, Louisville, Her, son, Leo Keller," is at the Great Lakes Nayal Training Station. New additions to the long list of grippe or influenza sufferers-are Mis.' J. Brutus Clay, Albert Stewart, Mrs? Stella Bridwell, Miss Pinkie" Bridwell, Tilford Burnett, Jr., Mrs. Wm. Tal bott, Mr. William Talbott, Elmer Boardman. and daughter, Miss Mid nerva 5oaraman, juiian janies, ivirs. Cloyde, Rowland, two children of Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Chandler, Harry. Clark (convalescent). Mr. Ossian Sprake, who has been seriously .ill at Corbin, of influenza, was 'brought to the home 'of his "brother, Mr. Clarence Sprake,in: .this city, Friday-nights HeisT improvinjt-slowly: - ' N rv (Otfcer.'Persona3s on- Page 5:) V i jv---. v-l IB M The Autumn Welworths Are J Hereand the Price is j Still Unchanged ; y r f Here's an announcement of which we are justly proudf . g for it evidences many things about which a real service m giving. store has a right' to feel proud. V v ' First, it stresses the point that-we will keep pricesvas low as we can-as long as we can. -i PC Second, it proves the benefit to ths consumer of our intimate co-operation? with worthy manufacturers. Thirdly it exemplifies a style service, which brings ns the new styles first, the same styles on the same day as they first appear in the recognized style centers of .'the k country. These Welworths are still priced at $2.00. They now and for many months past have represented values that would warrant a much higher price. Before the end of the pres ent year the price must inevitably be increased to $2.50. x i' y X. I I x I 1 WE ARE SOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR THIS CITY.OF . THE WELWORTH AND WIRTHMOR THE THRIFT BLOUSES OF AN ENTIRE NATION. - - i X WOLF , WILE CO. i LEXINGTON, KY. TO THE FARMERS of Bourbon County ' a We Invite All Farmers of. Bourbon County to Se the Wonderful GLEVELA1ND TRACTOR ) If you are interested in better aiici more economical farming, come in and see what this little wonder is doing for others. . -r;' -- &v r "sr vyeean OcmonstraCggK? . .- it to You Any DaFt 3&r?H - f G, 4 BALL GAIASE - j - rL-T . tj4v Cor.-Fourth and Pleasant St 4T. - ' t 31 - v :r , -" " i (. .?r ,