Newspaper Page Text
jr- 2 -. T . JZ." r 1K " "k f- l, "V , y e ' -. ip PAGE EIGHT THE BOURBON NEWS, PARIS,. KENTUCKY FRIDAY, JANUARY 23. 120: - "J3 1 ' il TO I i JULES TALK The Distinguished VIOLINIST Assisted By MALVINA EHRLICH PIANIST ESTELLE WENTWORTH SOPRANO Will appear at the HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Monday Night, January 26th AT 8:1 5 Under the Auspices of the Bourbon County War Mothers ADMISSION m ADULTS $1.00 CHILDREN 50c Tickets on Sale at Paris Book Store BSSSSSSSSSHaVBSSSSSSSSaakl w . BBaaaaaaaflSSanaaaaaaaaaaaaakv- ?. .p" -V--i BaaaaaaaSt -;$BBaBaBaBaBaBaB&.s,' S!-Ctv v ? sssssWasssssssssssMrlwl BrSSSSMra&arABSSlSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSai0 ssssKlHKIaHRssssssVii H59flE snflBSBSSSSjcBSSSSSSy '''''I BSSSSSSflnHHa fltsHlr Bt amJasBBBflaBl "SwdHfims SaBSvSBSSalBYSl aaK -saaaaaaaaaaav HM Hx -jBTaYaTaBSBlY4atflaKk- BBBlViSBSSBBBSBSr MkllliB& SIX -atBBBf- 'Brs BSxSflBBSSSa bf-SF i. daV. v avBaYSSSSSSaYJ BaKsaar'- ,. SsBj ;. r BBSSSSSSSSSS. His "" - saBB? ?&- ' . BSBaVBBaYBBaa BwV''' K' JBBBBBBBBBBBBavi VCcv Btw-X vww9BsBSKiflMfiBBBBBSBBvBBVBBBBBBBBBBSBSBSBBSHfe --- aba kA irfe am a amia 4Bffc A kll II a 1 Adults 27c plus 3c war tax 3tc m jm. nrHHM sm ikj mm jm .wh'm hhkv m ru is wvwmmwr-w ! -iArav Ainr ptabf wiv n.uimaiuii Children and Gallery 18c plus 2c war tax 2tc TODAY, PRIDAY Kitty Gordon IN 66 Adele 99 Also PEARL WHITE in 'The Black Secret' and Mutt and Jeff Comedy "Sweet Papa" Tomorrow, Saturday Dustin Farnum IN 'The Man in the Open" also JAMES J. CORBETT in "The Midnight Man" and Comedy, "Giving the Bride Away" Monday, Jan. 26th Will Rodgers iSJ "Jubilo" MR. AND. MRS. CARTER DE HAVEN in "Moving Day" ' and Burton Holmes Travel Picture. Gregg's Orchestra Playing Afternoon and Evening Basket Ball Games! Cynthiana High School vs. Paris High School Double Header Games on Friday Night, January 23rd 7:30 O'CLOCK. Y. M. C. A. GYMNASIUM Admission 50 Cent-:- Come out and help us make first pay ment on the P. H. S. Athletic Field. MILLERSBURG . . Mr. D. P. Jones has installed a jnpeless furnace in his hqtne. Mrs. S. C. Carpenter continues Very low. Miss Laura C. Jefferson remains about the same. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Cochran, of Blizavillet parents of Mrs. S. C. Car penter, and sister, Mrs. It. J. Hin ton, o Flemingsburg. Mr. Zed Layson, who was ope rated on a few days ago at St. Joseph Hospital, Lexington, for ap pendicitis, is improving nicely. DEATHS. BARNES. The funeral of Henry Barnes, aged forty-eight, who died at the Massie Memorial Hospital, in this city, Tuesday morning at live o'closk, of pneumonia, was held in Cynthiana, yesterday jmorning at eleven o'clock, -with service1:; con ducted at the graveside in Battle Grove Cemetery by Rev. John R. Jones Mr. Barnes was hrouerht to the j Massie Hospital, Sunday morning. j j j win 11 10 nwiii jio-i tjuavvuau, wucic Ttfv ToniBc Mnrlin has sold J113 . v. -i,j u :n i-.a.. farm recently purchased from Mr. , erai daySf which finally developed Shrout for $400 per acre, to C. C. into pneumonia. He is survived by Uhansior ana Mr. uarr. iir. iiar-jilis wife wn0 was formerlv Miss tin realized about $10,000 on the sipples, of Harrison county, and sale. Mrs. E. S. Barton entertained a number of her lady friends with a party at her country home Wednes day aiternoon. Notwithstanding the four children BARR. The funeral of Robert Barr, for merly a prominent Nicholas county fnrmAr wlin rtiprf n hi hrnno in ifTifs-o-nrnhip wpather most of the in- ! Blackwell. Oklahoma. sp.vpral dav.c vited guests were present. A tempt-j ago, was held at the Carlisle Chris- ing lunch was served. lian church, Tuesday. The services . . were conducted by Rev. Frank W. Tne xoung reopiut, iUiiuuij- Tinder, pastor of the North Middle- Society of the Methodist church will meet Tuesday afternoon at z:6V o'clock at the hqme of Mrs. D. P. Jones. This will be a very impor tant meeting, and all the members are urged to be present. The Missionary Society of the Methodist church held an-all-day meeting Wednesday at the home of Tsfrs. A- S. Best. Notwithstanding the exceedingly inclepient weather most of the members were present. Many of the ladies were drh en to I -ho. linmp nf Mrs. Rest from their I town Tiomes in cars of friends. The morning session was devoted to bus town Christian church. The sei vices at the grave in the Carlisle Cemetery were conducted by Daugh trty Lodge -No. 65, F. & A. M., of, w-hich he. was a member. Mr. Barr is survived by three sons, William Barr, of Paris; Ed ward Barr, an attorney, of West Virginia; Charles Barr, .of Missis sippi, and six daughters, Mrs. Clif ton Dalzell, of Paris; Mrs. Clay Crouch, Mrs. James Ilajmilton, Mrs. John George, all of Nicholas coun ty, and t-no residing in Oklahoma. ELLIOTT. -Mrs. Elizabeth Elliott, aged iness. A sumptuous lunch was serv- j about forty-five, wife of James El- Pott, died at her heme on the Clin tonville pike, near Paris, yesterday morning, after a short illness of a complication of diseases. Mrs. Elliott was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Aker, pio neer residents of Bourbon county, and a sister of Jacob Aker and Mrs. Geo. Ashurst, both of Paris. She Near Centerville, to the wife of j . p rf wimam. xxuixcidix u r..& T-he funeral will be held at the ed at noon, and an interesting pro gram rendered in the afternoon. o : . - BIRTHS. hristened Aenes Lorine Holleran. Near Ewalfs Cross Roads, to the wife of John Cluinp, a daughter, their-fifth child. o , , , .MATKLMONIAL. u IRELAND KERN. Andrew Kern, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Kern, of near Paris, and Miss Margaret Ireland, of Harrison. county, eloped Tuesday to Louis viller and" were married in that city. They returned to Paris, Wednesday, and will reside at the tome of the groom's parents, near Paris. o As a general thing, when you ear , man praising" the good ' old days he is talking about the time when $40 a month was considered a good salary. family residence at two o'clock to morrow (Saturday) afternoon, with services conducted by Rev. W. E. fcllis, of the Paris Christian church. The burial will follow on the fam ily lot in the Paris Cemetery. The ball-bearers will be: Geo. K. Jones, G. K. Pepper, J. T. Ingels, B. C. Wheat, R. C. Elliott and Marion Fall. HELBURN Mrs. Lea'.h K. Helburn, aged forty-one, one of the most widely known women in Central Kentucky, died at her home in Eminence, Tuesday afternoon, after an illness? of one month's duration. Mrs. Helburn was the widow of I. B. Helburn, who preceded her to the grave four years ago, and was a sister-in-law of Col. J. C. Helburn. She was a partner in the store .of Helburn Bros., and prominent in club and social work of Eminence. She is survived by four children. Mrs Lawrence Price, of Paris. I. B.4 Helburn, 3, Jack Helburn and phinniek, -Jr. N Miss Betsey Helburn, of Emi nence. The funeral was held, in the fam ily home at Eminence yesterday morning, with services conducted by Dr. Joseph Rauch, of Louisville. The body was taken to Louisville for interment in the Adaph Ceme tery. THRELKELD. James E. Threlkeld, aged sixty-two, prominent banker of Mays ville, died suddenly in that city, Sunday, after an illness of but a short time, due to an attack of apo plexy, as he was en route to his home. Mr. Threlkeld was born in Bourbon county in 1857, but at an early age moved to Mason county, where he taught school for several years, and then became identified with the business interest of Mays ville. He was a man of the high est type of character, and by his integrity and honesty of purpose enjoyed the esteem of all who knew hi(m. He is survived by his widow, who was formerly Miss Ella Power, sis ter of H. A. Power, president of the Power Grocery Co., of Paris; one daughter, Miss Hilda Threlkeld, a frequent visitor in Paris; two sons, James E. Threlkeld, Jr., of Cleve land, O., and Lisle Threlkeld, of Louisville; his aged mother, Mrs. Anna Threlkeld, and one brother, Richard Threlkeld, both of Mays ville. The funeral was held in Mays ville, Wednesday afternoon, the bur ial following on the family lot in the Maysville Cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Power, and Mr. 'and Mrs. Ed aid Prichard, of Paris, at tended the funeral and burial. WHEELER George Monroe Wheeler, an aged and well-known Harrison coun ty farmer, died at his residence near Oddville, Wednesday morning, of the infirmities of age, after an ill ness of over a year. " Mr. Wheeler was a son of the late Ozias and Mary Foots Wheeler, and was born in Harrison county in March, 1837, making him at the fimc of his death eighty-two years old. He was married to Miss Mary Johns on August 27, 1867, who, with the following sons and daugh ters, survive him: John T. Wheeler, Louisville; E. M. Wheeler, Paris; Mrs. N. H. Eckler, Paris; A. F. Wheeler, Lexington; Mrs. J. L. Arnold, Mrs. Martin Clough. Mrs. G. H. Whitaker, Misses Mattie and Carrie Wheeler, of Harrison county. He is also survived by one brothei and one sister, Lewis Wheeler, and Mrs. Mary Humphreys, of Cynthi ana. Mr. Wheeler's four sons are business men, extensively engaged in the furniture business. All his life was spent in Harrison county, where he was numbered among its best citizens. He was a Federal sol dier during the Ciyil War, and was afterward a member of the G. A. R. For ,man years he was a member of the Mt. Pleasant Methodist church. The funeral was held in the Mt. Pleasant church yesterday after noon at two o'clock, with services conducted by Rev. A. S. Godbey. The interment took place in the Mt. Pleasant church yard. The nail bearers were Thos. Batson, Virgil Colvin, L. D. Stewart, W. T. Kearns, Elbert Dunn and Godfrey Turner ' SHINNICK. Friends and newspaper associ ates all over Kentucky will learn with deep regret of the death of Edward D. Shinnick, veteran editor of the Shelbyville Record, which oc curred at his country home, five miles west of Shelbyville, Ky., Mon day night at 6 o'clock, after an ill ness of four months. Death was due to heart troubfe, with which he had been a sufferer for several months. Mr. Shinnick was 65 years old, was one of the best-known editors in the State and for years his paper has been a power for progress and uplift. He" was at one time presi djnt of the Kentucky Press Associa tion and Aas well known to the nrnnnnCr frntprnitv nf TGxillSton. il hovo hp frenfipntlv came for con ferences with his fellow jgditors while a mcpiDer oi wie ca.i.uuih, committee and president of that or ganization. He was also one of the leaders in the organization of the Eighth District Publishers' Associa tion and for several years was sec letary o! the JState Board of Con hoi. He had been in the newspaper business at Shelbyville since r886, becoming owner of the Record rfiortlv after it was founded. He was prominent in Decomxatic poli tics and was appointed by Governor Stanley as secretary of lhe State Board of Control, from which office he retired when Governor Morrow was inaugurated. Mr. Shinnick's death is a distinct loss to Kentucky journalism and the community in which he was so long a potential fisrure. "Besides his widow, formerly Miss 'Mollie Sullivan, he is survived by four sons, Lieutenant William C Shinnick, formerly student at the University of Kentucky and a well known" ;yQung .newspaper man, yhe was for some time on 'the staff- of a Lexington paper; Frank ShmnicK, Charles L. Shinnick and Ed. D. GRAND OPERA HOUSE WEDNESDAY, JAN. 28 THIS IS THE ERA OF CELEBRATI0NS-S0 GET READY FOR THIS ONE The Fox Comedy Go. Announce the Wonderful Combination of Nyra Brown and John Getz in the Greatest New York Musical Comedy Success As sprklin and as fresh as the dew of Jana mornings as spicy as the breezes of Far Cathay the creation of Geo. E. Wintx hiawelf. hi Y Grrni! With Untold Riches in Song and Melody PerseosJ Direction of Geo. 8. Wtetz Staged by Qta. Ts Sckacfer rcr' NEW YORK CAST Nyra Brown, John G. Getz, Betty Earl, Tom Denton, Leah Lehmon, Joe Coyle, Vale Gregory, Ace Wingfield, Geane D wight, Jimmy Floral, Dorthy St. Clair, Bill Barbee. CLEAN-CUT MOVIE VAMP CAPERING CHORISTERS Prices-$1 .50, $1.00, 75c, 50c, 35c, 25c. To-morrow, Saturday Begins the Second Week of Our Famous Money Saving FACTORY CLEARING SALE Great was the saving to the crowds of eager buyers first to attend this great bargain event, and savings just as great will be made in the coming days of the big sale Be sure-to get your share of the great shoe values tomorrow, Saturday. Thousands of pairs of this season's style footwear go in this sale at cut prices. Every pair marked down at a MgjT I. , . .) IRAK fMMVSmVf Saving of 20, 30 and 40 , II Ladies' Shoes at Sales Prices $7.50 and $8.00 grades ladies' beautiful brown and bladk Kid Boots, English style, high heel, all leather tops ttm ac Reduced to $5.49 7.50 and $8.00 grades ladies' new style Boots, high heels, Twotone stvles, glazed k d English and high heel boots - Reduced to $4.95 Big lot of Ladies9 Kid Shoes, warm lined, low heels. g tip and plain toe, $3.00 grades, reduced to Jpl 9 Big lot Ladies' $6.00 brown English high heel eo ota Boots reduced to . . 2oJ5J Big lot Ladies' $4. 50 and $5.00 Lace Boots, cloth tfo tops, reduced to $2.99 Big lot Ladies' $5 and G high grade Lace Boots, in gray, at $3.45 Men's Shoes at Sale Pries Men's Tan English Shoes;, wide toe, tan and gun metal, values to $8.50. v Reduced to , $599 Men's High Grade Shoes, values M m to $7.50, reduced to . . .$4.95 Men's Work Shoes, tan and black, $4.50 grades, reduced to $Zr99 Misses' Shoes $4.00 Gun Metal Boots, now $2.99 $3.50 Misses' Gun Metal Shoes at.. $2,254 Children's $1.50 Kid Shoes now. . .$ 1 ;QO Ladies9 Cloth Buckle Arctic aa Overshoes, $1.50 values now...$I "" DAN COHEN ?J2&. Paris' Greatest Shoe Store vjicre Beauty and Economy Rcija t r; If L N. Stt?.. j-.. . N f - i. - , 3f - ". ,