1
f F F r NEWS PA t l c x r n w NTUCX JULY 21 THE BOU > = GEO DAVIS FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND LICENSED EMBALMER BOTH PUXNEg 137N1GHT 299 New Management Having Purchased the New Fordham Bar endeavor in the future to conduct classand up todate saloon I will cater especi ally to the business men of Paris and the farmers County Gold Beer always on draught Van Hook Sam Clay Peacock Chicken Cock IWhiskies andthe very FinesWines and Cigars 1 S God man 1t jf W j i I- f 1 t f fk t 1 iF 71 I J t J 4 I t IA ff IJ J tw I i Ir i i I t I c DAY r irLt 1 1J1 first Twill a y Y cfB urban z i 7 k i r a ¬ = < + = J2sm fe COAL Good Service coal is the best coal to buyThe only place to buy is at July is the month to buy I I t 9 beet W C DODSON PASIS KY J T MARTIN Solicitor South Main St For Your 3 ck S Back if it 5 ores Cuts Fistula Nail iri Foot Dog Bites on Sheep c The following wellknown Bourbon County men give it testimonial J E Clay W A Bacon John Wiggins Martin Bros j Bros J Speaks Bros Joe Houston Ed Bedford and many others For Sale by CLARKE CO Paris Kentucky CASSITY BROS CHAS CASSITY AARON OASSITY Main Street Over Bowling Alley Paris l y UDIES GARMENTS DRY CLEANER Anything from a of gloves to bailor opera gowns to JUST cleaned by our exclusive FRENCH BENZOL PROCESS We are the ONLY house in the the method for cleaning This exclusive process other processes Neither odor shrinkage fading nor in jury to cleaned fabrics M FreiiGii Benzol Dry Gleaning Go Hats Cleaned and Blocked while you wait Phone No 43r o it 1 7 4tR f eo e y y t- lt ISIIN ZOo NE jr ii n Y Ii Try It Your 110 p I Cllre I at jj I For 9 i F 1 tit J A f il stem f J tit Ik I f 1 1 J j A r c tl y Ii Jf 2 oriental rugs win b made I r t NE W ft i i rr Benz 01 t4W 1jI clean tImes as as cleaned all 1 f y IIr i w i t e E e c e e S L t i J 1 t 1M 7 I i t a t i Q and L i f 1 jqS Z I 1s TL 1 II draperies l t countr usin I l g a garments lon T 0 r Y r K 3 5 > > = = = < < > < > + MriiK he I Nebraskans Rise In Politics and His Home life ALWAYS HARD WORKER Once a Poor Boy Working on a Farm j He Has Risen to Eminence and Leadership by His Own Efforts Life In His Home Ideal Few men out of office have been so constantly in the public eye for a stretch of years as the presidential nominee of the Denver convention The originator of two whirlwind that ended in defeat his mul titude of enthusiastic followers now believe he is about to start another that will carry him to the White House To them New York Herald he is an intellectual giant the great American destined tp be president elected by the plain people William Jennings Bryan was born in Salem Marion county ill bu March 19 I860 He was educated in the schools and Whipple academy II linois college graduated him in 1881 he being tae valedictorian of his class receiving the of from that institution in l t aa well as from Union ColleKf of Law at Chicago j the previous As a tick v Mr Bryan took to He 4s a member of con gross from the 1 lacoln Neb district in 1S911SS In 1893 he received the Democratic vote fr the United States scnniorsiiip Tin Nebraska state convention nominated him for Uniicd States ntor a year later but he was dofottvl y John Mf hurston i For the not two years Mr Bryan was editor of tin Omaha ald He as a delegate to the na tional convention iif Chica go in 189G where his the cross of gold and crown of thorns carried the convention off its j feet and he was nominated for the presidency on the free silver issue on which he made his canvass It was a stirring campaign The candidate trav eled more than 18000 miles making speeches at every stopping place The vote in the electoral college was 170 for Bryan and 271 for McKinley A continued campaign for free silver breaking out of the SpanishAmerican war when he raised and organized the Third regiment Nebraska volunteers and was made colonel of the regiment j When the time rolled round again for a national convention Mr Bryan had strengthened his hold on the party organization 1900 saw him once more in the field as the ccived th rn olsouiout f the jjct Iud the silver Republicans ihe issue however was imperia sm Mr Bryan declaring that of colonies or outlying possessions like Porto Rico and the Philippines was not contemplated by the founders of the republic nor allowable under its constitution The result was luu votes for Mr Bryan in the electoral cpllege and 293 for Mr 5lcKInley j These two defeats not dampen i the ardor of Mr Bryan nor blunt his ambition Soon after the 1900 election i he established the Commoner a week ly political journal published in his home town of Lincoln Neb bywhich he has kept alive the fires of and hearts of those whosejiolitical ideas coincide with his own In addition to editing his paper Mr Bryan has been a familiar figure on the lecture platform and he has issued two widely circulated books The First Battle and Under Other j Flags by all of which with special j articles written for magazines and newspapers he is said to have a considerable fortune He has been something of a farmer But is suspected this has been for Jind not for revenue only On the occasion of a tour around the world made by Mr Bryan within the last two years he was treated with marked respect in the many countries which he visited Japan China England and continental Europe rendered him distinguished honor He had an audience with King Edward The lord chancellor of England cm mended him before the interparlia mentary conference which cheered his speech in favor of his international peace resolution and promptly it This resolution did much to change the opinions of those who had gogue In fact the idea spread that he was no longer the radical Bryan of the convention of 1890 His views advocating federal control of expounded on his return from Europe were thus a great surprise to the Democrats of the east with whom hs was becoming extremely popularMany reasons are advanced for Mr Bryans continuation in the public eye after two crushing defeats Those lic his intellectual gifts his fire force in all that he say that his prominence Is not due these things alone They laud urn us a type of the self made Amen eau of good moral principles definite mid h lieve jn him as he exponent of AimViCHi vitjQtrlne ol equality to U oiaO Tayor to J loreoveiii j t two A r i J says the In- corruptible pub- lic deg te A the to poi icy I speech- on I Bryant Democratic ° po the jloidiug I respectin the I I i I lit pleas- ure Rus- sia I I political philosopherthat I t who a his great ability as a pub any to I will the t a ll1arke l dft5i1Eof s US Y T r k jhsi f31 1 w RAN cam- paigns com- moner M stet Dem- ocratic Wotatl Her went Democratic notable and t i1 oa b1 r did admira- tion ac- quired adopt- ed rail- roads speaker under- takes aims determined They nine Bi 4tu liar < > ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ° Of in ti of i l j t f j j t j j j t eaia strongly woman of tb west who have n t a little to ward making him and keen ing him at the Hiii wife was liis classmate in college In the of 1896 she accompanied him much confidence in tier judgment In the political movements which to most women would be a maze and as incomprehensible as a plan of bhttle Mr Bryan starred life as a poor boy and while in the public school he worked on a farm All through life he has been a hard worker and conscientious man During his law studies he was connected with thi office df Senator Lymnn TruinbUll and on completing his studies returned to Jacksonville to practice Here his struggles have been likened to those Lincoln under the same conditions the same state At first his prac did not amount to much Much his time was given to speechmak lug In the districts The of every camp meeting and country fair wanted young Bryan to talk to the crowd He was fond too of frequenting a certain village store to exchange witticisms with the sages of the town Here the fate of the nation was nightly settled to be decided again when the debater gathered next night around the box or whittled the out was in 1887 that Mr Bryan to go west He arrived in Lincoln j Neb in October of that year and be a member of the law firm of bot Bryan He had known Talbot j in Illinois and it was he who Lad in duced him to go to Nebraska Bryan at once attracted attention as an ora j tor but for a long time his fame did not extend beyond the district In 1889 Bryan wrote to J Sterling i the Democratic nominee for con gress afterward President Clevelands j secretary of agriculture asking per j mission to take the stump for him Morton had heard Bryan and he the offer Morton was defeated in the political revolution of that year and OConucll the Republican elected by more than 3010 majority But defeat of Morton caused the birth of Bryan as a political power He had interested the people in himself by his oratory and the politicians were forced to take him up He made a fight for the Democratic nomination j the next year and captured That was the year of the Republican slump The district repudiated OConnell and the McKinley tariff and gave Bryan its old time Democratic plurality of 7000 It is said the cross of gold and crown of thorns speech made Bryan a national figure It is an unusual of luck and the seizing of an opportunity Mr Bryan had seen his chance when the Democrats began to tinker in the house with the tariff The wave of Populism then at its height had filled the house with men of mediocre Among the new members of of his intellectuality and power in j debate He became a leader and be iiig precise in his words graceful in manner master oL sarcasm and irony he soon had a large following The Chicago convention full of men of Populistic tendency was as guupow to the fire of earnestness supplied i by Bryan in his famous speech He carried them off their Feet and he awoke to find himself famous His genial disposition and kindly na ture are as often spokeirof by Bryans friends as his ability and uprightness of character His home life is declar cd ideal The family lives at Fairview a beautiful country home which Mr Bryan insists one shall regard as a farm There is no pomp there The family is astir at 7 oclock every morning and at half past 7 sits down to breakfast This breakfast is a hearty one Aft er that the farmereditor plunges into his work of the day by opening the mail received by free delivery When Mrs Bryan has finished her household duties She becomes a i and takes down the to her husbands letters He then dictates to her most of his j The Brjaus have three children Bryan LcttVitt wife of an artist now in Paris William Jennings Jr and Miss Grace Bryan who attends school in Virginia Mrs j Leavitt has two little children one Ruth named after her mother who is four and Bryan who is nearly three years old These two are the two real rulers of the household So life at Fairview Is very The family has a great many friends in Lincoln and there is much visiting to and fro The farm abounds with attractions both bucolic and urban There are plenty of horses and dogs and barns and crops and shady nooks a library filled with well selected books and a porch where all visitors are cordially received mid made to feel that they are welcome to a well appointed thoroughly Amer lean Home Up to Date Pay Car A new pay car has recently been put into commission on the Monouga Conemaugh divisions Of the Pennsylvania railroad It has a tine shower bath the first to be installed in any car of its kind in the United States There are six sleeping cots of gleaming brass and the interior of the car looks like an arsenal for it has a complete set of the latest shooting arms calculated to the pilfering ambitions of the nerviest individual There js a proof safe which only time can unlock when set The banking end of the cotlctr caii he converted at sup rlntendentfi n to d6n can- vass wherever he went and he reposed country gro- cery crack- er bench s sideIt Tal- i I t th it I fcombination f I rzLnryan son edi- torials Ruth I I r I I cia 1 I I hela and dis- courage win Ifft rlol aDftfieIfi4 fi the Popular front man- agers decid- ed came Mor- ton ac- cepted Intelli- gent abil- ity SfQ tLIliGewluVl by t rn tier every rural ste- nographer an- swers Bry- an demo- cratic bur- glar into uuuuLet appointed fkL y stir > = IMPERFECT IN ORIGINAL 2 t = i r S j rjB fi j 4 C fe 44 Hjf p H gj pj p f j jj r X Compang General Plumbers I and Heating Engineers I xv gases caused by i Defective is Very Injuri ous to the Health s i We Are Doing a general Repair Work of All 7 Kinds of Machinery 1 arid Gasoline Engines Hand or Steam Pumps A All Kinds Patched rtfB We Will also repair any Blectrical Apparatus or make g allY Electrical Device required v- I We Will Do Af Kinds of Electric Light Wiring 3 Install Door Bells Burglar Alarms of all kinds and m Automatic Fire Alarms fi We will protect any building from the approach by persons with our Electric Signal Apparatus M All kinds of Gas Gasoline or Oil Stoves Re II paired In pact we will repair anything P repaired M All work guaranteed represented bj g Call and see us or call by phone and we will gj see you Both Phones Livery Firm New Vehicles Good Horses I and Prompt Service Horses Boarded by Day Week or Mentfe at Reasonable Rates f Transfer Service the Best to be Had 0 East Tenn Phone 131 Home Phone 200 T e MORRIS HowelPs Old Stand opp Fees l I Bourbon Laundry Jj DAVIS FUNK Props V Telephone No 4 Office Opp 0 PHILLIP SPI1r y 1 ok n should be befre not as the I escapIng Plumbing I 1 1 I L I 11 j calland I k rJ J r1t eeeee8eeee8 O 1 New o I I fa I it I e e 0 1 fa Paris tit I tit I e e 1 I I eeMeeeelleeCII 4 t l Postoffice Plumb done weather begins 5 J p0 a team Boilers of f r you wan t s y I r R s n < < = = < = = < A MAN is to please when it comes to laundrying he knows how his shirts collars and cuffb should be done up We have no thought of dc ing anything but the best laundry work possible none of returning it except a promised It will take many a Jong days search to find a better Jaundry than this I hard nl 0 7 f1 1 fJ f s = Laundry Kentuck I Bourb P E4 iEEE Y i- ritvii t r Y

Having the Of I Plumb - University of Kentuckynyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7b2r3nws85/data/0049.pdf · men give it testimonial ... Porto Rico and the Philippines was not contemplated by the

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f FF r

NEWS PA t l c xr nw

NTUCX JULY 21THE BOU

>

=

GEO DAVISFUNERAL DIRECTOR AND LICENSED EMBALMER

BOTH PUXNEg 137N1GHT 299

New ManagementHaving Purchased the New

Fordham Barendeavor in the future to conduct

classand up todate saloon I will cater especi

ally to the business men of Paris and the farmers

County

Gold Beer always on draughtVan Hook Sam Clay Peacock Chicken Cock

IWhiskies andthe very FinesWinesand Cigars

1 S Godman

1t

jf Wji

I-

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COALGood Service coal

is the best coal to

buyTheonly place to

buy is at

July is themonth to buy

IIt9

beet

W C DODSONPASIS KY

J T MARTIN Solicitor South Main St

For Your 3 ck SBack if it 5

ores Cuts Fistula Nail iri FootDog Bites on Sheep c

The following wellknown Bourbon Countymen give it testimonial

J E Clay W A Bacon John Wiggins MartinBros j Bros J SpeaksBros Joe Houston Ed Bedford and many others

For Sale by

CLARKE COParis Kentucky

CASSITY BROSCHAS CASSITY AARON OASSITY

Main Street Over Bowling Alley Paris l y

UDIES GARMENTS DRY CLEANERAnything from a of gloves to bailor opera gowns

toJUST cleaned by our exclusive

FRENCH BENZOL PROCESSWe are the ONLY house in the themethod for cleaning This exclusive process

other processes Neither odor shrinkage fading nor injury to cleaned fabrics

M FreiiGii Benzol Dry Gleaning Go

Hats Cleaned and Blocked while you wait

Phone No 43r o

it 17

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f

eo

e y y

t- ltISIIN ZOo NEjr

iin

YIi Try It Your 110p I Cllre

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MriiK heI

Nebraskans Rise In Politics andHis Home life

ALWAYS HARD WORKER

Once a Poor Boy Working on a Farm j

He Has Risen to Eminence andLeadership by His Own Efforts

Life In His Home Ideal

Few men out of office have been so

constantly in the public eye for a

stretch of years as the presidentialnominee of the Denver conventionThe originator of two whirlwind

that ended in defeat his mul

titude of enthusiastic followers now

believe he is about to start anotherthat will carry him to the WhiteHouse To them New York

Herald he is an intellectual giantthe great American

destined tp be president electedby the plain people

William Jennings Bryan was born inSalem Marion county ill bu March19 I860 He was educated in the

schools and Whipple academy II

linois college graduated him in 1881

he being tae valedictorian of his classreceiving the of from thatinstitution in l t aa well as from

Union ColleKf of Law at Chicagoj the previous

As a tick v Mr Bryan tookto He 4s a member of congross from the 1 lacoln Neb districtin 1S911SS In 1893 he received theDemocratic vote fr the United Statesscnniorsiiip Tin Nebraska state

convention nominated him forUniicd States ntor a year later buthe was dofottvl y John Mf hurston

i For the not two years Mr Bryanwas editor of tin Omahaald He as a delegate to the national convention iif Chicago in 189G where his

the cross of gold and crown ofthorns carried the convention off its

j feet and he was nominated for thepresidency on the free silver issue onwhich he made his canvass It was astirring campaign The candidate traveled more than 18000 miles makingspeeches at every stopping place Thevote in the electoral college was 170

for Bryan and 271 for McKinleyA continued campaign for free silver

breaking out of the SpanishAmericanwar when he raised and organized theThird regiment Nebraska volunteersand was made colonel of the regiment

j When the time rolled round againfor a national convention Mr Bryanhad strengthened his hold on the partyorganization 1900 saw him oncemore in the field as the

ccived th rn olsouiout f thejjct Iud the silver Republicans iheissue however was imperia smMr Bryan declaring thatof colonies or outlying possessions likePorto Rico and the Philippines wasnot contemplated by the founders ofthe republic nor allowable under itsconstitution The result was luuvotes for Mr Bryan in the electoralcpllege and 293 for Mr 5lcKInley

j These two defeats not dampeni the ardor of Mr Bryan nor blunt hisambition Soon after the 1900 election

i he established the Commoner a weekly political journal published in hishome town of Lincoln Neb bywhichhe has kept alive the fires of

and hearts of thosewhosejiolitical ideas coincide with hisown In addition to editing his paperMr Bryan has been a familiar figureon the lecture platform and he hasissued two widely circulated booksThe First Battle and Under Other

j Flags by all of which with specialj articles written for magazines andnewspapers he is said to have

a considerable fortune He hasbeen something of a farmer But

is suspected this has been forJind not for revenue only

On the occasion of a tour around theworld made by Mr Bryan within thelast two years he was treated withmarked respect in the many countrieswhich he visited Japan China

England and continental Europerendered him distinguished honor Hehad an audience with King EdwardThe lord chancellor of England cmmended him before the interparliamentary conference which cheered hisspeech in favor of his internationalpeace resolution and promptly

it This resolution did much tochange the opinions of those who had

gogue In fact the idea spread that

he was no longer the radical Bryanof the convention of 1890 His viewsadvocating federal control of

expounded on his return fromEurope were thus a great surprise tothe Democrats of the east withwhom hs was becoming extremelypopularMany

reasons are advanced for MrBryans continuation in the public eyeafter two crushing defeats Those

lic his intellectual gifts hisfire force in all that he

say that his prominence Is notdue these things alone They laudurn us a type of the self made Ameneau of good moral principles definite

mid hlieve jn him as he exponent ofAimViCHi vitjQtrlne ol equality to UoiaO Tayor to Jloreoveiii

j

t

two

Ar

i

J

says theIn-

corruptible

pub-

lic

deg te A

the

topoi icy

I

speech-

on

IBryant

Democratic° po

the jloidiug

I respectin the

I

I

i

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lit pleas-ure

Rus-sia

I

I

politicalphilosopherthat

I

t

who a his great ability as a pub

any

to

I willthe

ta ll1arkel dft5i1Eof s U SY T r k jhsif31 1 w

RAN

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Dem-

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Wotatl Herwent

Democraticnotable

and

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eaia strongly woman of tbwest who have n t a little to

ward making him and keening him at the Hiii wife wasliis classmate in college In the

of 1896 she accompanied him

much confidence in tier judgment Inthe political movements which to

most women would be a maze and asincomprehensible as a plan of bhttle

Mr Bryan starred life as a poorboy and while in the public schoolhe worked on a farm All throughlife he has been a hard worker andconscientious man During his lawstudies he was connected with thioffice df Senator Lymnn TruinbUll andon completing his studies returned toJacksonville to practice Here hisstruggles have been likened to those

Lincoln under the same conditionsthe same state At first his prac

did not amount to much Muchhis time was given to speechmak

lug In the districts Theof every camp meeting and

country fair wanted young Bryan to

talk to the crowd He was fond too

of frequenting a certain villagestore to exchange witticisms with

the sages of the town Here the fateof the nation was nightly settled tobe decided again when the debatergathered next night around the

box or whittled the out

was in 1887 that Mr Bryanto go west He arrived in Lincoln

j Neb in October of that year and bea member of the law firm of

bot Bryan He had known Talbotj in Illinois and it was he who Lad in

duced him to go to Nebraska Bryanat once attracted attention as an ora

j tor but for a long time his fame didnot extend beyond the district In1889 Bryan wrote to J Sterling

i the Democratic nominee for congress afterward President Clevelands

j secretary of agriculture asking perj mission to take the stump for him

Morton had heard Bryan and hethe offer Morton was defeated

in the political revolution of that yearand OConucll the Republican electedby more than 3010 majority Butdefeat of Morton caused the birth ofBryan as a political power He hadinterested the people in himself byhis oratory and the politicians wereforced to take him up He made afight for the Democratic nomination

j the next year and captured Thatwas the year of the Republican slumpThe district repudiated OConnell andthe McKinley tariff and gave Bryanits old time Democratic plurality of7000

It is said the cross of gold andcrown of thorns speech made Bryana national figure It is an unusual

of luck and theseizing of an opportunity Mr

Bryan had seen his chance when theDemocrats began to tinker in thehouse with the tariff The wave ofPopulism then at its height had filledthe house with men of mediocre

Among the new members of

of his intellectuality and power inj debate He became a leader and beiiig precise in his words graceful inmanner master oL sarcasm and ironyhe soon had a large following TheChicago convention full of men ofPopulistic tendency was as guupow

to the fire of earnestness suppliedi by Bryan in his famous speech He

carried them off their Feet and heawoke to find himself famous

His genial disposition and kindly nature are as often spokeirof by Bryansfriends as his ability and uprightnessof character His home life is declarcd ideal The family lives at Fairviewa beautiful country home which MrBryan insists one shall regardas a farm There is no pomp thereThe family is astir at 7 oclock everymorning and at half past 7 sits downto breakfast

This breakfast is a hearty one After that the farmereditor plunges intohis work of the day by opening themail received by free deliveryWhen Mrs Bryan has finished herhousehold duties She becomes a

i and takes down theto her husbands letters He

then dictates to her most of his

j The Brjaus have three childrenBryan LcttVitt wife of an artist

now in Paris William JenningsJr and Miss Grace Bryan who

attends school in Virginia Mrsj Leavitt has two little children one

Ruth named after her mother whois four and Bryan who is nearlythree years old These two are thetwo real rulers of the household So

life at Fairview Is veryThe family has a great many

friends in Lincoln and there is muchvisiting to and fro The farmabounds with attractions both bucolicand urban There are plenty of horsesand dogs and barns and crops andshady nooks a library filled with wellselected books and a porch where allvisitors are cordially received midmade to feel that they are welcometo a well appointed thoroughly Amerlean Home

Up to Date Pay CarA new pay car has recently been

put into commission on the MonougaConemaugh divisions Of the

Pennsylvania railroad It has a tineshower bath the first to be installedin any car of its kind in the UnitedStates There are six sleeping cots ofgleaming brass and the interior ofthe car looks like an arsenal for ithas a complete set of the latestshooting arms calculated to

the pilfering ambitions of thenerviest individual There js a

proof safe which only time canunlock when set The banking endof the cotlctr caii he converted at

sup rlntendentfi

n

tod6n

can-

vasswherever he went and he reposed

country

gro-

cery

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sideIt

Tal-i

I

t

th

it

I

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f

I rzLnryanson

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winIfft rlol aDftfieIfi4

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Mor-

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Intelli-gent

abil-ity

SfQ tLIliGewluVl by t rn

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every

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ste-nographer an-swers

Bry-an

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General PlumbersI

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xv

gases caused byi

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We Are Doing a general Repair Work of All

7 Kinds of Machinery 1

arid Gasoline Engines Hand or Steam PumpsA

All Kinds Patched

rtfB

We Will also repair any Blectrical Apparatus or makeg allY Electrical Device required v-

I We Will Do Af Kinds of Electric Light Wiring

3 Install Door Bells Burglar Alarms of all kinds andm Automatic Fire Alarmsfi We will protect any building from the approach

by persons with our Electric Signal ApparatusM All kinds of Gas Gasoline or Oil Stoves ReII paired In pact we will repair anythingP repaired

M All work guaranteed representedbj

g Call and see us or call by phone and we willgj see you Both Phones

LiveryFirm

New Vehicles Good Horses Iand Prompt Service

Horses Boarded by Day Week or Mentfeat Reasonable Rates f

Transfer Service the Best to be Had 0

East Tenn Phone 131 Home Phone 200

T e MORRISHowelPs Old Stand opp Fees

lI Bourbon Laundry Jj

DAVIS FUNK PropsV Telephone No 4 Office Opp 0

PHILLIPSPI1ry

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ok n

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A MAN

is to please when itcomes to laundrying heknows how his shirts collarsand cuffb should be done upWe have no thought of dc

ing anything but the bestlaundry work possible none

of returning it except a

promised It will take many

a Jong days search to find a

better Jaundry than this

I

hard nl

07

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LaundryKentuck

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