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THE BOTOBON NEWS, PABIS, KEjlCTCKT FRIDAY, FEBRUAHY 21f lilt. )T EASE TWO m BOURBON NEWS EMUisked 188137 Years of Con tinuous Publication Ntiiihed Every Tuesday and Friday Pc Year.. ?2.00 6 Months. .$1.00 Payable in Adavance. IWQT CHAMP, Editor and Owner. Mred at the Paris, Kentucky, Portoffioe as Mall Hatter of the Second. Claw.) Amj erroneous reflection upon the fribaracter, standing or reputation of Iwy iersoa, firm or corporation which pm.7 'appear In the columns of THE JMUEBON NEWS will be gladly cor- retted If brought to attention of the eEer. ter everything that will contribute toward Imaking a better Paris and better Parisians. The person or town that can see no room for improvement falls in with the animal that always has and always will be, just an animal. Curiosity and dissatisfaction are the motive powers that push us out of the hole of content. So let us all keep alive within our being dissatisfac tion with ourselves and with Paris unless there is progress all along the line. ADVERTISING RATES Display Advertisements, $1.00 per tech or first time; 50 cents per inch ftaoh subsequent Insertion. Reading Notices, 10 cents per line achUsue; reading notices In blade $ypeifttcent8 per line, each issue. CarrfiT of thanks, calls on candl 4tee, obituaries and resolutions, and similar matter, 10 cents per line. Special rates for- large advertise g&efcts and yearly contracts. The right of publisher is reserved to decline any advertisement or other saatUr for publication. Announcements for political offices most invariably be accompanied by the cash. EDETORT AT, MUSINGS. "Provide Work, Not Charity." It is almost tragic to note the lone hand being played by men like Sec retary of the Interior Franklin K. Lane, who recognizes the importance of providing industrial employment. When war and destruction were in the air there were untold billions of public money ready to meet every call; whereas the country is going headlong toward industrial depres sion, and the Democracy of Peace is cut short in appropriation bills. Sec retary Lane declares that in the transition from war to peace there may be an interval of hard times. To meet emergencies that may arise the nation could afford to expend the billion dollars in profitable ways. o BREAKS A COLD IN JUST A PEW HOURS DR. M. E. KING, M. D. And CHI-RO-PRAC-TOR Announces The Removal Of His Office From 1809 WEST BROADWAY 510 STARKS BUILDING Louisville, Ky. Office Hours 10 to 1 and 4 to 7. Office Phone City 262. (14-3t) Farms For Sale. For quick sale two mall farms, well located, one containing ten acres, the other twenty-six acres; also some nice town property. WALTER CLARK REAL ESTATE AGENCY. (18-tf) A Glorious Dissatisfaction. Are you satisfied with Paris as it is to-day? Do you think it has pro gressed sufficiently and that we cari now afford to rest and let it go at that? If we all think that way the old town would not only stop, but it would surely sink into decay. 'Let well enough alone" never "built a new dam or took -Over an elec tric light or a water plant or induced new enterprises, giving employment to hundreds of workers, to come into our territory.. Strict adherence to that sort of doctrine would have kept you: and one and all who would fol low us, in a cave with a never-ending1 struggle with beasts of prey and eneiny tribes. But dissatisfaction of ouf ancestors with existing order, gave us all the advantages we atre now able to enjoy. And in your desire and my desire for a better town and a better world there is all the? future progress and accomplish ment of our city and of the world. The man of the stone age said: "I want to do better than this; I am sot satisfied." And dissatisfaction pushed hipn on and up.. It changed hia spear, that he could hurl but a few yards, to the rifled cannon that shoots distance of many miles. It changed that canoe of bark to the floating palaces and the modern drekdnaught. la gave us the means of going to the ocean's bottom and far up into the frigid heights of the air It has given us all that we enjoy ana" 'appreciate to-day. The human mind0 is incapable of comprehending the' heights to which we may ascend at 4he- thousands of years to come. jKeayen help the country, the town, or the individual in which Kkbit is stronger than dissatisfac tioa, for there we see all kinds of improvements ccpne to an end. If there were no such thing as dissatis faction and unrest we still would eai'bui vanquished enemies and our coaquerers would eat us. If the col esitti had "accepted the oppression of klogs as just, America would still be onlfr a "possession." So with Paris ajuourselves. "We must move, -but always forward and never back ward. "We must revive the Com mercial M21ub and other organiza tions that have sunk into rest be cause of the war activities. Bless tbjfe agitators, call them kickers, if you wih, for they have built the city of Paris and have helped to keep it going. Let us long and work for better Paris, better streets, bet- 'Tape's Cold Compound" Ends Grippe Misery Don't Stay Stuffed-np! You can end grippe and break up a severe cold either in head, chest, body or limbs, by taking a dose of "Pape's Cold Compound" every two hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens clogged-'up nos trils and air passages in the head, stops -nasty discharge or nose run ning, relieves sick headache, dull ness, feverishness, sore throat, sneez ing, soreness ond stiffness. Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blow ing and sniffling! East your throb bing head nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold Compound," which costs only a few cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no inconvenience. Be sure you get the genuine. a (adv) WANTED Wanted at once, a good farm hand, by the month. CHARLTON ALEXANDER. Cumberland Phone 135. Paris, Ky. (4-tf) For Sale 7 One 6-foot glass counter case, and two interchangeable shelves, plate glass top. Will sell at a bargain. (14-3t) DR. W. R. FRANKLIN. For Sale. I offer at private sale the gentlest and best family mare in Bourbon county; good driver; splendid chance for anyone wishing to buy a gentle mare. MRS. NELLIE S. HIGHLAND. (14-tf) For Sale Furs and Hides We pay highest prices for iron, hides, junk and wool. MUNICH & WIDES & CO., Eighth St., Paris, Ky'., Cumb. Phone 374. (23-tf) Announcement SALE OF HIGH-CLASS Duroc Jersey Sows and Gilts to be held MARCH 7th, 1919 -by HILDABRAND BROS. RUSSELLVILLE, KY. This offering reprMents some of the greatest Wood that belongs to the breed. Interested parties write for catalogue. Having leased my farm and moved to town, I offer at private sale a solid mahogany set, consisting of large sideboard, serving table, din ing table, one-half dozen chairs, and china closet. MRS. NELLIE S. HIGHLAND. (14-tf) Attention, Farmers! If you need anything in the way of Saddles, Collars,-Bridles, Etc., I have the best money can buy and make, at reasonable prices. If you want a watch, don't go to a blacksmith shop to buy it, and don't take your horse to a jeweler to get hi shod; always go to a mechanic and you will get the best goods and it won't cost any more than cheap goods. ,(28-lmo H. KBEENER. Wanted. To buy 5 room cottage, electricity, bath. State best price, location, etc. CAPT." HUGH CAMPBELL, 115 Clark Street, Jeffersonville, Ind. (ll-4t) WANTED Three experienced paste boysU work with paper hangers. Apply to the "J. T. Hinton Co., corner Main and Sixth Streets, Paris, Ky. (14-4t) FOR RENT. Main Store room, fronting on street in Masonic Temple. Single room, second floor, running water, elevator acommodations, for office use or living apartment. o. t. hinton; Agt., Masonic Temple. Public Sale Forty Draft Mares I will sell at public sale at the Thos. G. Morris stable, on Main street, in Paris, on Monday, March 3, '19, forty head of good draft mares, weighing between 200 and 1,400 pounds. Each animal will be sold with a written guarantee. Sale will begin promptly at one o'clock. This will be a rare chance to get good work mares. (18-3t) RENAKER PARKS. Public Renting OF Bluegrass Pasture and Timothy Grazing Land. If not rented privately before, I will, on Saturday, March 1, '19, at 2:00 p. m. in front of the court house, in Paris, Ky., rent publicly 5156 acres of bluegrass and timo thy land. Said land is the John Harris Clay farm, on the Spears Mill pike, in Bourbon County, Ky., about six miles from Paris, Ky. Possession will be given on day of renting, and will continue until January 1, 120. Also at the some time and place I will sell publicly 72 shocks of corn in the field. For further information, apply to MRS. C. M. CLAY, Cum. Phone 118. Paris, Ky. (18-tf) I PUBLIC SALE Live Stock, Cro) and Farming IrnhJemenl s In order to give possession of the farm we now occupy, and having failed to secure another, we will sell at public auction on the premises, knofirn as the Hugh McGrady farm one mile from Muir Station, seven or eight miles from Lexington, and four miles from Hutchison on the Bryant Station pike the following crop, live stock, crop, etc., on Wednesday, f ebruarij 26, 1919 j One One One One pair eight-year-old taules, 16 hands high, splendid workers; One pair good big three-year-old mules; One pair yearling mules; One pair weanling mules; One weanling horse mule; One young Perchero. horse; One gray horse, good worker; gray mare, even-years-ol(L sound and a good worker; six-year-old combined gelding; eight-year-old work and driv ing horse; n gray jma.re, nine-years old, a good slave; n bay mule, a good worker, and knodding walker; One brown mare, coming eight years old and in foal to. jack; One mare, seven-years-old, in foal to jack; n white face mare, nine-years-old, sound and a good worker; One weanliug colt by Golden Mack; Six good calves; na black cow with calf by side; Bred cow to be fresh March 1; Pat cow; One fat dry cow, 1,000 poundg; Two good heifers; me Jersey cow, freshen to last March; 20 tons of baled mixed hay in barn: Four or five tons clover hay, baled and never had rain on it; Several tons of sheaf oats; Some baled straw; Corn In crib; Two sows and pigs; Five 90 -pound shoats; 23 fat hogs will weigh 250 pounds; 125 good black-faced ewes to lamb last half of March; One Deering binder, bought new last season; Two riding cultivators, good as new; Five new cutting harrows, never been hitched to; Two blue grass seed strippers; One fertilizer drill; One good tobacco setter; One good corn planter; One good corn planter; One land roller; One hay baler; One road wagon; Two bull rakes; One hejmp cutting machine; 24 hemp breakB; 'Two mowing machines, bought new last season; Two good farm wagons and frames; One feed slide and lots of other . things. ? PUBLIC AUCTION Sale will begin promptly at 10 o'clock a, m. TERMS Made known on day o f sale. SARA M. DANIEL, G. C. ODER. JOHN BAIN, Auctioneer. (18-3t) Of Two Desirable Snail Fame! Having purchased a larger farm, I will sell at public auction, at the Court House door in Paris, Ky., at eleven o'clock a. m., on Saturday, Feb. 1919 two desirable suburban small farms, lying adjacent to the city of Paris, either of which will make a moat desirable money maker for persons looking for small farms. No. 1 Contains 7 Acres of Land located on Howard's Lane, just off Second Street, beyond the limits of Paris. Five acres of this land will grow tobacco, the remaining two acres is improved with a new tobacco barn and three good rent houses. The land is well watered and will make an ideal little- home. No, 2 Contains 14.94 Acres of Good, Deep Soil located on the Georgetown pike, in the edge of Paris, and adjoining the land of Mr. Lee Cox. This small farm is unimproved, but has some good tobacco land, and the remainder will raise most anything it is planted in. There is a large frontage on the pike to this small tract of land, making it most desirable either as a cultivat ing farm or for the purpose of sub-dividing and selling off in smaller tracts. Terms. One-third cash upon delivery of the deed, the balance in one and two years, deferred notes to bear 6 per cent interest. ( DR. J. A. GILKEY M. F. KEN NEY, Auctioneer. PARIS, KENTUCKY Ud) Public Sale Fine Tobacco Land Saturday, February 22, 1919, at 2 O'clock As agents for one of the heirs of the late Amos Turney, we will sell on the above date on the premises on the Paris and Maysville pike, one and one-half miles from the city limits 140 ACRES OF OLD HEAVY BLUE GRASS SOD LAND This tract is one of the best opportunities "for tobacco growers so far placed before the public. No tobacco or hemp was ever grown on this land and not a foot of it has been plowed in twenty-five years. There is no waste land on the place. It lays wejl, is well watered and fenced and has. five-room tenant house. It is opposite New Forest Station on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad and is ripe and ready for tobacco culture. It-is the cream of Bourbon county soil fertility. Prospective buyers will be shown the farm. The farm will be aold'in two tracts of about equal parts, both of which face on the Maysville pike and both with beautiful building sites. The farm will then be sold as a whole and the highest bid accepted. The terms of the sale will be announced on the day of the sale. Sale positive rain or shine. N COL. GEO. D. SPEAKES, Auctioneer. HARRIS & SPEAKES Real Estate Dealers, Paris, Ky. L7 D. HARRIS, General Business Manager. ,. -. H4 llt'Wtlt T& ' . v1 -vfr - jp. r ; :