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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, February 8, 1911.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911020801 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, February 8, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. max sr t + 7Mrro x19Kf I fHEHARTFORD HERALDLa r All Kinds of Job Printing Neatly Eiecnted 1 Come the Herald of a Noisy World the News of All Nations Lumbering at mi Meek Subscription 100 per Year ID Advance I A vv37th YEAR HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 8 1911 O l SENATORS RACE ALSO INCLUDED In State Primary by Action of Committee IIMESSION AT LOUISVILLE Poplar Demand At Last Ac ceded TolineUp of Committeemen CANDIDATES ASSESSED COST Louisville Ky Feb 4Defore normal composure had been gained by the politicians and members of the Democatlc State Executive Com mittee gathered here today follow ing the announcement or the with drawal of Congressman Ben Johnson from the race for the gubernatorial nomination the unexpected twist of affairs which resulted In the com mittees action Including the United States Senatorial contest In the call for the State primary again upset the dopcsters and for a time al most anything especially the unex pected would have been believed No greater surprise could have happened In State politics than the l it9ouldgarding the Senatorial contest- It was after a deliberate and thor ough consideration of the conditions tier the State and the urgent ap peals of the voters that the commit tee finally voted nine to three fa voring the holding of the Senatorial race In conjunction with the primary for State offices Norton Fitch of Jessamine county was the first com mltteeman to change his vote on the questlon ind after the third ballot the plan to give the voters of the State the opportunity to choose their nominee was sucqessfully carried througha ivv Congressman Ollie James person ally pleaded for this action before the committee and he stated he In tends to remain In the race for the nomination Rumors that he would enter the Governors race were dis countenanced by Mr James friends The lineup on the Senatorial matter was as follows For Including In primmiryA 3 Rhea StateatLarge H R Law rence First District Dr Joe Good son Second Harry Lazarus Third W T Spalding Fourth W McDon ough Fifth Charles Thompson Sixth Norton Fitch Eighth J R Tuggle Eleventh Against M J Meagher Seventh District Will A Young Ninth F A Lyons Tenth The subcommittee reported to the general committee regarding the plans of the primary the expenses and conditions of same and upon this report It was arranged that the various candidates for Stato offices will bear the expense of the primary cost to be prorated according to the lmnortance of the office The candi dates for Governor willpaw 4000 maximum while the candidates for lieutenantGovernor will pay 600 c It Is estimated the cost of the primary will approximate 18000 The committee adjourned to meet again on Saturday February 18 at which tlmebesldes any business that intent be necessary to consider the rules for the primary will be decid ed uponCost of Primary to Candidates The following table shows the as sessment for each office the number of announced aspirants for the nom nations and the amounts each will mary provided nofurther candidates enter the races for the various nomi nations For Governor 4000 with three announced candidates assessment 13333 each For Lieutenant Governor 500 I with only one announced aspirant For Auditor 2000 with four can didates assessment 500 I For Treasurer 2000 with only one announced aspirant t For Clerk of the Court of Appeals 32000 with two announced candidates assessment 1000 For Attorney General 2000 with three announced aspirants assess ment G6GCG hi For Secretary of State 1500 ualiy divided twlth two announc dpan Ud ies 0 Fjjr Superintendent of Public In I ti tuc I fd + I struction 1000 with four announced aspirants assessment 260 For Commissioner of Agriculture 1000 with three announced candidates assessment 33333 For Indorsement for United States Senator probable assessment of 2 600 with two announced candidates assessment 1250 GRAY80X COUNTY NATIONAL BECOMES A STATE IJANI Frankfort Ky Feb 4Surrend erlng its charter as a bank operating under the federal laws the Graysoi County National Bank at Leltchfield Ky has taken out a license undo the Commonwealth supervision am changed its name to the Grayson County State Bank according to official Information today The states reason for the change In the govern Ing charter Is to make more Idea conditions for handling real estate notes and mortgages Under the now arrangement stockholders In the institution as IIt is operated under the national laws are to receive half as much stock In the State bank as they held in the national bank and are paid dollar for dollar for their original holdings- E R Bassett president of the old bank resigns In favor Df his broth er R J Bassett A P Stone 19 cashier Information from Lettch gold declares the officers and direr tors of the new bank are leadlrit business men of the community A S of F Tobacco Notice To all parties having tobacco to deliver at Hartford would say we are now prepared to receive tobacco at any time It may be brought in and will ask these parties to bring In their tobacco as early as possible that we may retire our grader and thus save expenses- D FORD Chmn Finance Com OHIO COUNTY FARMERS CLUB SUBMITS PROGRAM For Meeting in Hartford Next SaturdaySpeakers and Topics Outlined Tie Ohio County Farmers Chub will meet at the Hartford court house February 11 1911 at 10 oclock a m We the committee beg leave to submit the following prpgram t InvocationRev R D Bennett Should Agriculture be Taught In the Public Schools If so to What ExtentProf T H Smith Getting up Interest In the Farmers ClubProf Henry Leach and L B Tichenor Why Should Farmers Raise Sheep Melvin Stewart Some of Ohio Countys Most Val uable Resources and How to Develop ThemF W Pirtle and Edgar Boehm Live Stock and How to Prepare for MarketS L Stevens and L B TlchenorRural Telephones and How to Se cure ThemT F Tanner Questions Relating to Agriculture General Discussion EDGAR BOEHM T F TANNER SHELBY ROCK Committeei We wish to state that we will have two Interesting and valuable books for all who attend The books will be free and all who are Interested In growing good farm products es pecially nice fruit should not fall to secure one of these books HENRY M PIRTLE Secy WANTS TO KEEP JUDGE niRKIIEAD ON THE JUMP The Owensboro Messenger says Circuit Judge T F Blrkhead received a telegram from Governor Willson last night asking him to goo Fulton Hickman county to convene the Hickman Circuit Court next reek Because of the Ohjo Circuit jourt convening at Hartford next Monday Judge Blrkhead will be un able to preside over the Hickman Circuit Court and will so inform the Governor Governor Willson seems to have gotten his dates confused when he iskod Judge Blrkhead to convene the Ilckroan Circuit Court as Judge Irkhoad has just returned from Iran onburg Meade county whereto lieU Circuit Court and will 50 to lartford to oven the regular term lor court there Monday morning I to ii iiiI 5 i h 1 AVA WILLING ASTOR IS WILLING TO WED AGAI- NIF Mrs Ava Willing Astor once the wife of Colonel John Jacob Astor marries William Lehman Ashmead Bartlett BurdettCoutts some name there she will complicate the International marriage records for Mr BurdettCoutts Is an Englishman who was born In America He has been a member of parliament for about a quarter of a century His father was a Bartlett of Plymouth Muss and his mother was an Ashmead of Philadelphia He married the Baroness BurdettCoutts and assumed her name Just as he seems to have retained the names of both his parent The baroness left him a large fortune Mrs Astor who was Ava Willing of Philadelphia before the young Jack Astor of New York millions wonder divorced her first husband a few years ago She still Is a reIgning beauty and quite popular In society The rumor of her engagement to Mr BurdettCoutts who Is a writer and a philanthropist as well as njparllamentarlnn Is going the international rounds HEADS DISAPPEARANCEIS Left Hotel in Owensboro Twc Weeks AgoHas Not Been Seen Since Persistent efforts to find the whereabouts of B J Head the Fordsvllle merchant who disappear ed from home last Monday twc weeks ago have proved futile and np further progress has been made than Ascertaining that Head had spent Monday night in Owensboro It was found that Head arrived in Owensboro on the Illinois Central train Monday afternoon and went tc the Columbus hotel whore ho spent Monday night Before retiring he stated to the night clerk that ho de sired to go to Macro on the early L H and St L train On Tuesday morning when awakened he got up and after eating breakfast went to the depot In time to catch the early L H and St L train going west Heads brother at Maceo has heard nothing from him and states that ho did not come to Maceo It Is the general opinion that Head caught the westbound train While at the Columbus hotel on Monday night Head stated that ho Owensborohe was Incapaclated and unable to transact his business Ho is said to have acted peculiarly while around tho hotel lobby Monday night but when spoken to appeared to be In tho best of health The fact that Head had something like 300 on his person when he disappeared Is leading his Immer dlate family to believe that he has been foully dealt with by persona to relieve him of his money Further search for the man will be continued as his wife Is said to be a nervous wreck as the result of worrying about his disappearance Dr A B RIley who has lived on nearIIR D Walkers has moved Into the property recently vacated by Rev W B Wright 11 j NEW DEMOCRATIC SENATORI ABSENT AT COUNCIL TIMES Watson Leaves Chamber And Enables Ship Subsidy Bill to Pass Washington Feb 3The shli subsidy bill escaped defeat In the Senate Thursday throuch the nb senco of Senator C wAwatson of West Virginia The now Senator who was sworn In In the morning left the Senate chamber without pairing against tho bill Had ho been presont to vote against It or had he paired against It the Vice President would not have voted and the hill would have been beaten by ono vote the first tlmo In the history of I IFor the Vice President of the United States exercised his constitutional prerogative of casting a vote to break ties In connection with three successive rollcalls In the Senate By the first of those votes ho saved from Impending defeat the ship subsidy bill and by tho third forcedan adjournment of the Senate on a vote having direct bearing on the resolution looking to the elec tion of Senators by direct vote of tho people Tho vote on the passage of the subsidy bill both In Committee of the Whole and In the Senate proper stood thirtynine ayes and thirty nine noesand on adjournment thlr tysovoii ayes to thirtyseven noes On all three occasions the Vice Pres ident voted in the affirmative I raGROtNDIIOG SAW SHADOW DARK DAYS ARE YET DUE i According to tradition the bright warm days of tho sun on Thursday sealed the doom of the people of this section of the State for it foretold the continuance of winter for six more weeks according to the prediction of the groundhog whichI many claim Is an infallible signI I The day was decidedly springlike concordIed theIgroundhog which ventured forthI J from Its winter home for the firs time saw its shadow and was fright ened so that It hurried back to Its hole and will cause a month and ia half of winter weather to come before the spring opens with any de gree of certainty EDITORS SOX MARRIES ADOPT EIOPKMENT PLAI Concerning the son of the senior editor of The Herald and wife and young lady of Hamilton 0 the nmllton Evening Journal of laojt Wednesday says Victor Matthews 22 a linotype operator at the Journal and Mis Ethel Mario Leacock eloped to Cov Ington Ky Tuesday morning an were married by Rev Mr Carlisle The ceremony was performed at 11 oclock after which the couple left for a trip through the South Arriv Ing at Louisville they wrote a lotto home explaining what had takes place and stating they will bo horn Thursday to receive the parents blessing Miss Leacock Is only 11G years of age The father of the young man was given a hint of the affair by a trio gram requesting him to meet the at the L N depot In Loulsvllii last Wednesday morning and ho did so spending the day with the happy couple at the Wlllard The bride Is a beautiful girl of the blonde type well educated a fine musician and a most charming personnge She comes of one of Hamiltons very best fnmr lies There was no objection to the union only the tender age of the young lady The groom was born and reared In Hartford but for tho past two years has held a good position as linotype operator on the Hamilton Journal Ho Is a fine workman and a trusted employe They came tr Louisville and returned by boatthu City of Louisville- LIGHTNING DESTROYS MISSOURIS CAPITOL Bolt Strikes Cupola Fireme Unable to Check Flames Records Lost Jefferson City Mo Feb iThe Missouri Capitol was destroyed bj tire tonight Many of the records of tho Governors and other State offices are a complete loss The total loss Including the struc ture and many records and State pa pers In the offices of tho Governor Secretary of State and Treasurer if estimated at 1000000 with no In surance Lightning which struck the cup la of the dome shortly after 7 o clock spread the flames to the root of the Senate chamber on the cast the north side of the structure and In less than half an hour It was ap parent that the entire building was doomedThe fire soon spread to the roof of the Sonat chamber on the east Ildo whore the efforts of the dromon proved unavailing to check It The records of the Hour of Representatives were destroyed while hose of the Senate wore saved In he State Treasurers office more ban 20000 Is In the time vault supposedly fireproof and may bo saved when the debris Is cleared iway There Is no Insurance The Legislature will determine tomorrow whether to continue tho ses- sIon hero or elsewhere In tho State Some of the members favor contlnu ing tho session here where smaller buildings have been offoed by the justness men while others are for the removal of the Legislature to St Louis The less of the House records practically necessitates tho work of the session being done over KXAS IS TO VOTE UPON STATEWIDE PROHIBITION Austin Tex Feb 3Tho Texas tate Senate today adopted a pro oaal to submit an amendment to the State Constitution providing for Statewide prohibition by a vote of 22 to G Tho Lower House of the legislature lad already passed the measure wjfich was slightly amended by the Senate today For That Terrible Itching Eczema tetter and salt rheum keep their victims In perpetual torment The application of Chamber alna Salvo will Instantly allay this tchfng rind many cases have boon lured by Its user For sale by all eaters m fL GANTRILL WANTS FARMERS RIGHTS Fully Protected With In v formation Furnished BY THE TARRIFF COMMISSION Declares Kentucky Producers Entitled to Know Size of Trusts Stocks TOBACCO OHOUKItS AIE CITED Washington Feb 3ln advocat ing his bill to have the Tariff Com mission gather Information for the farmers of the nation as well as for the manufacturing Interests Repre sentative J C Cantrlll today de manded consideration from the Rules and Ways and Moans Commit tees Amid great applause Mr Can trill said In part- I simply want to give an Illustra tion as it shows the purpose of the bill In my own State of Kentucky we are making a determined cam a paign to cut out entirely the crop of tobacco for the year 1911 We made a campaign of that kind In 1908 and were successful and reduced by near ly 300000000 pounds of tobacco the stock of tobacco In the markets of the world We are told now that the Tobacco Trust knows exactly how many acres of tobacco were planted by the farmers of Kentucky and the other twentyfour States of this Union that plant tobacco They know exactly what the yield of the tobacco will be They know exactly how many pounds of tobaccoand this Information Is given to them at the nul lie expense that are In the hands of the farmors Rut we stand today ready to launch n crow of three or four hun dreds of millions of pounds and we are absolutely at a loss to know how many million pounds of tobacco are laid nwav In the warehouses of the Tobacco Trust and the tobacco deal ers of the country and the other countries of the world We are en titled to that Information The same Idea holds good as to every agricultural product In thisJcountry The wheat growers from the Northwest the corn growers the growers of all agricultural prod ucts when their nhads at the publl expense have been shown to the deal ers fl0 tQ tis Speculator of theI world have a right In return at tho public expense to know what stock are In the markets of the world and In this country The bill simply asks that they shall he placed upon an equal foot ing It simply risks that the Hous that has passed a bill creating a tar itt hoard shall enlarge the powers of that board to cover this subject There n ti more people dependent up ton the farm htnn any other Industry a amid I protestt pcnlUlt the unfnlrnm of taking millions of time public mon ey and spending It to lay bare th secrets of thp farmer so ho may bn r the prey of time speculators and In return deny him tho moans to do fend himself from the avarice and the jrreol of these great trusts that continually plunder him Notice to Co II Lieut Colonel Thomas W Wood yard will make a survey of the nron orty of Co H on February 11 1911 4 Every article of Oovernment property t belonging to the equipment of the company must he In the armory on that date All property in the hands of the mon will be turned over to J y Ney Foster who will receipt for y same before the above date The surveying officer will accept no excuse for failure to comply with this order JAMES M DoWEESE Cnpt Commanding the Co Dr S W Crowe of Beech Grove Ky has moved to Centertown where ho has located for the practice of his profession In the future Dr Crowe is a most excellent gentleman and we welcome him Into the county t Taste In Hurtling Plant Herts 4 Because of the Inclement weather that has been experienced during the past few weeks many farmers In this section of the State have been unable to burn plant beds and will likely not be able to burn them for several days yet- I 1 wa i i RUIN ANn DEATH QUICKLY SPREAD By Explosion Huge Mass of Dynamite ON PIER OPPOSITE NEW YORK I IHeads Were Blown From Vic tlmsPanic in Wall r t Street Follows POXT KXOAV TILE EXACT CAUS t New York Feb 1The cxploslo of 25 tons of dynamite at a pier end I close by the Central Ratlioad oC New Jerseys passenger ferry slip at Communlpaw at noon today killed at least a score of persons Injured more than 150 others anJ wrecked everything In the vicinity I Including the Centrals big terminal The authorities say that the number of dead will never be known The terrific force of the hlowui If underlyingIfI w but faraway points In Long Island and Connecticut rocking akyscrap ers smashing glass tearing away window frames and sending panic stricken tens of thousands of ml and women into the streets fearful i that an earthquake or some other t vast natural turmoil watt upon them As in all upheavals of tremendous force persons nearby escaped death buildings close at hand were not in jured persons far away were kill ed structures at great distances were almost torn apart For Instance Northport 40 miles down Long Island Sound trembled with the shock Bayonne only a Ii mile or two distant did not know rranything had happened until it read the evening newspapers Wall street for a time suspended business through fright and anxiety New Yorks fire engines and ambu lances clanged violently up and down the street searching for the scene of whatever had happened nobody for a long time knew There was a semipanic for nearly an hour In this city until It became known that the cause of the great roar the swaying of buildings and the tinkle of breaking glass that cut and bruised scores was a good miler tawayWhat happened briefly was this Two cars of dynamite containing a 25 tons each from the Du Pont Powder Works in Wilmington Del bad arrived on the tracks at the end of Pier No7 almost adjoining the P big Coral Station at Communi paw the explosive being consigned to Palisades on the Hudson for use in blasting out rock Two lighters the Katherine W and the Whistler had drawn up to the pier end to receive cargoes ol the dangerous stuff They were to have been towed up the river once It was stowed aboard On the former were Captain John Healy and eight men on the latter four men On the pier end Itself were 12 Po lisp laborers some starting to eat their dinners from their palls others engaged In transferring the dy namite from the freight cars to the lightersThere were at least 24 men there fore within handling distance of the dynamiteNext was an awful roar a great cloud of haze and dust a tremble of earth and structure above the earth within a radius of 30 miles apart an Immense wave from the r river that splashed high above every thing nearby even spattering mud upon the collars of persons on the New York side of the river And then a vision of death maiming and wreckageLater the railroad ofllfflclala in a formal statement said that possibly the steam or gasoline engines of one of the two lighters had exploded anti y set off the dynamite though they didnt state this positively The Jersey City police declared that one box of dynamite had be come stalled at the bottom of a chute ff down which big packages of the ex plosive were being shot and that an other had struck it and gone off Ex actly what happened was not known tonight except that certainly one r car load and perhaps two car loads f of dynamite had exploded r But this is known surely Of the f lighters Katherine W and Whistler there was not a trace at the pier end Of the first freight car which had held 25 tons of dynamite nothing could be seen either Of the second there was only a I a pair of rear trucks Far out In the river floated a mass of wreckage that t might have represented part of the f fa b+ f S S I CZARINA OF RUSSIA WOMAN OF SORROWS NCE more come rumors that the empress of Russia usually called I O tbo czarina Is broken down in health Truly the czarina la a woman of sorrows Though the wife of the czar of all the Bus Bias who Is said to be a model family man she Is reputed to be a very unhappy woman Upon her have pressed down for many years 1 the cares and burdens of the empire even more heavily than upon Nicho las II her husband Five children the czarina has borne to NlcbolasI and the empire First came four girls at each birth the nation of 100t000000 hoping for a boy who might become heir to the throne In Russia the female children of the czar cannot ascend the throne At last came little Alexis grand duke and heir apparent to the most trou blous throne In Europe Child bearing It is said has taken heavy toll t of the czarinas health Then beyond and over all has been the constant t fear of the mother for the safety of her children of the wife for the safety of her husband Always In the shadowy foreground of events I looms the dread specter of assassination Tho bomb the knife thetbullet poison all these In relation to Nicholas and little Alexis and even the princesses of the family have preyed upon the mother mind untilEaccording to latest reports the czarinas reason totters Uneasy lies the head that carries the domestic cares of a crown I woodwork of cars or boats but their III boilers wheels axles and metal parts had sunk with the receding of the great wave I Of the 24 men at the end of theC pier a moment before nothing wasC to be seen Not one survived Not ev en the pier end itself remained Fully 100 feet of the planking of It was blown away and what remained of the second dynamite car stood uponI bent twisted pilings The two dozen workers and seamen had completely vanishedIAt the south side of Pier No7 atI the end of which were the lighters was tied up the big fourmasted steelI schooner Ingred a Norwegian craft under command of Captain Eric DanI nell She was just in from Buenos Ayres with cattle bones to be ground up for fertilizer Her first mate was P Andersen her second mate T Andersen She had 12 seamen Two of these Arthur Rasmussen and John Ryan were In the top rigging of her foremast fixing her sails A bit inland from her along the same pier was the threemasted schooner E P Hardwlck of Nova Scotia with lumber from Port ClydeI to Jersey City Captain Halbert San ders and his crew of six were just sitting down to dinner rejoicing that their troubles were over at last Nosing about the Immediate vicin ity but closer still to the shore wore the lighters Oxford of the Southern Pacific Railway and No3 of the Jersey Central loading ce ment and lumber from tho same train of cars In which stood the boxes containing the dynamite- In the terry slip not more than 200 feet away was the passenger boat Lakewood which had just ta ken aboard about 200 persons beaded for New York and Brooklyn The terlblo force of the explosion seemed to strike all these craft alike although with the freakishness of all such affairs some suffered less than others Tho destruction on the Lakewood was fearful but the ac tual fatalities not many Rasmussen and Ryan the sailors aloft In tho rigging of the Ingred were almost torn away from their perches but they managed to hang on A ghastly thing was flung up close beside them on one of the other masts This was an arm and hand of one of tho men who had been work on the pier end far below It hung up thero for hours until a Jer soy City Coroner ordered It taken down The fragment was Identified later as part of the remains of Giovanni Moro of Brooklyn one of the dynamite handlers Both his arms and legs were torn off and his body hurled Into the Hudson Down below In the hold of the InII gred at the same moment another corpse landed This was the body of Mike Moro rlovajnls cousin III was shot against tu heavy iron scoot E used for unloading coal and every t bone In It was brokentt At the same Instantsuch wastt the freakishness of the explosion a torn bruised body of a man felt into a coal pocket in the coal yards of Burns Bros some 300 feet furthII er down the river This was without a head and so the horrified workers about that place could not tell whether the victim was one of their own men who had been at work on c the high scaffold of the coal structure c or whether the corpse was that of one of the dynamite handlers or seamen from Pier No7 j And then strangest of all a man was killed half a mile away from the I explosion to the north There tied up to the dock of a repair company at Sussex street Jersey City lay the tug John Twohey Aboard her were Captain Robert Burnett and five I I men Awaiting repairs they sat leis urely down to dinner as the noon whistles blew The shock came The tug lifted on her beam ends It was figured la ter she must have been just above the disturbed stratum of rock Then one whole side of her cabin was blown in and all the diners were strewn about the floor Captain Bur nett was hurled downward head first and his skull was fractured He died almost before he could be taken to a Jorsy City Hospital All five of his crew were bruised by the fall and cut and pierced by flying fragments of wood and glass ISnthctlatllls Knglc nye Salve Is the best eye remedy ever offered the public It Is a snow whlto ointment painless harmless and abso lutely guaranteed to tire At nil dealers 25c a tube m Selling Family norse James Radley the English aviator now at Los Angeles where be wit nessed tho death of Arch Hoxsey has disposed of his aeroplane and quit the game He is a sensible man Our idea of what to do with envertA Cough Is a danger signal and should not- e f neglected Take Dr Dells Pine Inaflammatlonheals the membranes m MASS MEETING OF 1JKCCITIZENS Of Providence Held The Building Packed THOMPSON MURDER MYSTER Is as Baffling as Ever Six Men Selected to See cretly Investigate WHAT AN ATTORNEY THINK The Providence Enterprise says Interest In the Thompson murder mystery Is as great as ever and the citizens will not rest easy It seems until the crime has been ferreted outMayor S E Montgomery called amass meeting of citizens at the city court room Friday night to discuss what steps should be taken to gel some light on the crime The build Ing was packed to Its utmost capaci ty and many could not got Inside The meeting was very quiet and or derly and the deliberations were op ened and closed with prayer by lo cal ministers Revs Benj Conno way and J L Price made sound and pointed talks In which they urged the people to be resolute and dili gent yet advised moderation and discretion at all times Several oth er good talks were made by foremost citizens who stated It as their belief that if honest diligent efforts were put forward the murderer could be apprehended- A motion was made that Mayor Montgomery should select six citizens to investigate the matter these to be chosen secretly and only the Mayor himself to know who they areThe motion carried unanimously Mr Montgomery agreeing to appoint the men at once and at this time there are six men whose Identity is unknown silently working in an effort to unravel one of the greatest murder mysteries that ever happen ed In Kentucky Whether any outside forces are at work on the case Is not known but It is believed that detectives are still at work Tho reward fund Is now about 850- Lawyer AVncWIHs Opinion The Madlsonville Hustler says Hon C J Waddlll one of the foremost lawyers in Western Kentucky who recently assisted the County Attorney of Webster county In the examining trials of the two suspects arrested on the charge of murdering Henry Thompson stated that he was of the opinion the mys tery that now so greatly baffles the offlclalls will some day be ferreted out I expect developments to take place In the near future he declared I do not believe the boys were guilty at all A few minutes delay in treating some cases of croup even the length of time it takes to go for a doctor often proves dangerous The safest way is to keep Chamberlains Cough Remedy in the house and at the first indication of croup give the child a dose Pleasant to take and always cures Sold by all deal ers tn Waterproofing For Boots Mix twenty parts of boiled linseed oil four ounces of powdered resin and four ounces of sliced or shaved beeswax and put in an earthen jar or tin can Set this In a vessel of boiling water on the stove but the water must not boll up Into the can let it heat gently until all the ingre dients are melted and thoroughly blended by stirring The result will resemble cart grease and must be rubbed into the shoes or boots when wet and the more rubbing the bet ter WANTED FOR U S ARMY Ablebodied unmarried men be tween ages of 18 and 35 citizens of United States of good character and temperate habits who can speak read and write tho English language For Information apply to Recruiting Officer Main street Bea ver Dam Ky 5t9 PARENTS HOME LEAGUE REWARD FOR MATERNITY The Parents Home League of America organized hero some months ago to tight race suicide and promote maternity announces that It has over 500 lodges in Georgia and that It is rapidly extending to other States The league numbers among Its members prominent men and wo men It provides a system of re wards and pensions for married peo pIe Those who desire membership must be between the ages of 1C and 40 yearsNothing Is paid to any member 1 unless there Is at least one living child born to the member after the date of the certificate If the husband lsa member and dies nftprthe birth of a living child by the wife named in the certificate then the wife receives a reward of 1000 for maternity The same rule applies if the wife is the member At the maturity of the certificate there Is a survivorship reward paid to the member of from 700 to 1200 ac cording to the number of living chil dren born since the date of the cer tificate The league also pays 100 cash whenever a child Is born to a mem ber Thee membership fee Is 750 The monthly dues are 250 The annual dues are 150 Directors of the league say that every couple wedded in Georgia in the last four I months are membersFt Valley Ga Cor New York Sun 00000000000000000O SPECIAL NOTICE 0 O in regard to 0 O OBITUARIES RESOLUTIONS 0 O OF RESPECT c O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO The Hartford Herald has adopted a new rule in regard to Obituaries Resolutions of Respect Cards of Thanks c whether written at the the behest of lodges churches nr In dividuals and that is we shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles except obit uary poetry which will be one cent per word stralghtThla is tae smallest rate we charge for anything and Is only onefifth of our regular rate The amount in cash or stamps must accompany each article or It will not be printed Six words average a line In ordi nary reading and every separate character or initial letter counts as- a word The heading and the sig nature both count one line each even if they are only a word or two Ml obituary poetry straight through one cent per word Our old rule in regard to Obituaries c was 150 words free balance a cent a word but this did not prove satisfactory because the bounds were almost always overstepped and we have been forced to adopt this new rule which Is In effect from now on Contributors will please remember A Reliable Cough Medicine It is a valuable family friend oleys Honey and Tar fulfils this condition exactly Mrs Charles nine N 8th St Easton Pa states Several members of my family lave ben cured of bad coughs and olds by the use Pofeyu Honey nil- Tar and I am never without a bottle in the house It soothes and elleves the irritation In the throat and loosens up the cold I have always found it a reliable cough cure and do not hesittte to recommend Itt highly For la grippe coughs and stuffy colds for children and grown persons and for delicate per ons use only Foleys Honey and Tar Contains no opiates For ale by all druggists m SCHOLARSHIPS FOR SALE The Herald has a scholarship for salo in each of the following well known business colleges viz Bryant Stratton Business College Louisville Ky Paducah Central Business College aducah Ky If you are contemplating taking a business course The Herald can save you money I THINK THIS OVER This Offer Should Gain the Confidence of the Most Skeptical We pay for all the medicine used I luring the trial If our remedy fails I to completely relieve you of consti p tution We take all the risk You ire not obligated to us in anyi way whatever if you accept our offer Thats a mighty broad statement but we mean every word oft Could anything be moro fair Cor you1A scientific commonsense reatment is Rexall Orderlies which ire eaten like candy Their active principle IB a recent scientific discovery that Is odorless colorless Intl tasteless very pronounced gentle and pleasant In action and particularly agreeable In every way title Ingredient does not cause diar hoea nausea flatulence griping or say inconvenience whatever Rexall Orderlies are particularly good for children aged and delicate persons If you suffer from chronic or hab- Itual constipation or the associate or dependent chronic ailments we irge you to try Rexall Orderlies at out risk Remember you can get hem In Hartford only at our store 12 tablets 10 cents 36 tablets 21- icentsThe Rexall Store James H Williams 214 Main street I U JIV + + + + 1 + + + + p t+ HARDWICK tests eyes HARDWtCK grinds lenses while + + you wait + HARDWICK has two Graduate t+ Opticians J1 HARDWICK has the only Lens + + Grinding Plant in Owensboro t+ HAltDWICK has the only uptc + + date Jewelry Store in Owens + + boro +HARDWICK has a fine Jewelry + Ik + Repairer + HARDWICK has an Expert En + v graverf+ HARDWICK has the Best Watch + Repairer + + HARDWICK is fine on Clock t Repairing B + + + You will never know what a t+ fine store Owensboro has until t+ you see HARDWICKS You will t- t never know what HARDWICK + can do till you try him BB r+ t + + + + + + + + + + + + + t RARE CHANCE Big Pay for Solicitors I 0THE CINCINNATI WEEKLY + ENQUIRER is offering Five Thou sand Dollars in cash premiums to solicitors in addition to a liberal commission that is more than ample to pay ones expenses besides aft fording a living profit while en gaged in the work of soliciting sub scriptions THE WEEKLY ENQUIRER is now atwentyfour page magazine style paper chuck full of reading most acceptable to any wellordered home Each issue contains a ser mon by Pastor Russell an essay by Dr Madison C Peters a serial and short stories natural history gen eral newsand special record of po litical and national affairs that are of interest to all people cut patterns for ladies and youths and miscella neos matter all of high moral in allXfuencealso market reports from commercial centers and veterinary columnsThe h aim being to present t the reader with an exceptionally good family journal of superior merit free from all matters that an tagonize morality justiceand truth To circulate such a paper all wellmeaning persons can benefit their community and add their mite in the uplifting of civic slid political thought and action Any person lady or gentleman With leisurehourfevdesirpusof doing a good turn for the community at- thesametimeearningfairpayment + should apply at once for particularsll by writing to THE ENQUIRER Cincinnati 0 AKi u u PARKERS I HAIR BALSAM Pimm and bwtUM U hate I g1rHate o anM- a SOLD B- YCARSON tI jI ItHATS tl j IFOR II r McCALL PATTERNS Celebrated lot style fitL ilmpllcltjr and reliability nearly 4 yearssold In nurly every city and town In the United States and Canada or by mall direct lore sold than any other make Send for tree catalogue McCALLS MAGAZINE More subscribers than any other fashion 4 magazine million a month Invaluable La- tet Iel pattern itressmaUni millinery pith n laney nccdleworkamtrdressing etiquette good stork etc Only CO cents a oaLlernoSubcrlbeWONDERFUL INDUCEMENTS catalogueananewCaahprize rm McCJUl CO S3 Co 23 W 37lh St NEW YOU i SAWSGood J 1r Wepiomptly obtain U Sand rclgu1 g Tf Y aIlJe I r 5i 1 ii I I THE WEED AND ITS PREPARATION I For MarketAlmost An I lEndless Task AN EPIC ON TOBACCO GROWING From the Pen of a Fellow Who Evidently Knows How It is Done t MPLANT BED TO WAREHOUSE The gray line of wagons that wend their way Into Paducah with P the faint touch of dawn 1 with their brown wealth of tobacc- to be delivered to the various warehouses is a picture representing the final consummation of hope on the part of the McCracken county far merThe start was made back In tho gray wintry days of early January perhaps or earlier when with 1 purpose In his heart the farmer went forth Into the wooded country and burned his tobacco bed This act represents the initt 1 move In the long and tedious labor of raising a tobacco crop Care must be exercised by the tobacco grower even in the early stage of the workHe needs must select the right spot for this nurturing of the seed germ that the plant may be sturdy and strong and that the seed of no weed may remain to spring up later l en to choke the life from the j tobacco plant Care must be taken as well to A protect the tender plants when they are In the beginning of life from the frosts of early spring that may swoop down In a single night an destroy the measure of labor already r pended Id The tobacco beds lying amid the V woodlands of a SOl thern hillside I j protected with their coverings of cotton cloth present the appearance of so many white tents against the dark background Thus the plants are permitted to remain until th time of their transplanting to the soil that is to be their abiding plac until they have reached their fullI stage of maturity In the latter day of May the farmer awaits the com- Ing of a good seasonthe period when the s downpour of the c ru summer raIn Is sufficient to insure a moist earth suitable for trans planting the tobacco plant from it abode of winter to Its summer k homeFollowing this transplanting come the weary months of toil beneath the burning sun of summer What with plowing and nurturing the ten der stalk through the severs months of Its growth until the early autumn when It stands forth a sturdy stalk of rich green the days of the tobacco grower are filled wit l unremitting toll Having brought his crop through Its critical period depending much upon the mercies of nature to bring about the best re- fults H he finds his field with the ar j of early falls ready for the ha- ra vest Care must again be taken to see that no early arrival of frosu r blights his summers labor for a sln lI + gle night of this would make of his field a withered hope The cutting and housing follows where the weed hangs in long tiers awaiting the time for the prepara tion for market Here too it Is fired a very nec r Scotts Emulsion beenZI y7 1 There are thousands of socalled just as good jmulsions but they are notthey are simply imitations t which are never as good as the original They are like thin milk SCOTTS is thick like a j heavycream rPIfyou want it thindo 4 4it myself t with water but dont buy it thin j r rove u mrUitDBDaciiBTB Ii r 1I410 mini of paper ud thU a4 fry our Jbfttctlftti Bitloti Da and ChUra BketihBook z c 1 blllIk contain Good Luck Poaal- DOS7VEfi409leu16t hlerYak- M 4 A Summons To Our LAW PRINTING Is done quickly cor cheaplyo weary as well as dangerous opera tlon For the leaf must have the proper color gained from the smoke tomake it desirable for the exacting buyer Many a tobacco grower who has seen his years work brought this near to Its completion has hr his entire crop destroyed from a spark at firing time This completed without danger althe final scene Is enacted This pe rlod falls amid the years last days when If the proper season puts an appearance the weed is loaded Into the wagons and the last labor done In the years work This sea eon Is now on In McCracken county and the other tobacco growing coo ties of Kentucky The long lines of wagons are filling the country thor oughfares bound cityward home ward some vitii their burdens yet to dispose of others having aoldin their crops are returning to thelratsmall kingdoms with the flnanct l returns from their years work their possession The disposal of U Iiold crop often Is retarded until a ter the work on the new has begun Thus is there no end of labor in to bacco growing It represents a year of toll yet about It there is anzn atmosphere of satisfaction which best known to the man who enters Into Its development and receives his reward In the endPaducah-e NewsDemocrat oooooo ooooooooooo 0 HA- IRe0000000000000000 O o Hair has an unquestioned Influ once uponour lives Let your whls keys run wild and you want a now form of Government Lose the hairs oft the top of your head and you begin to think Brigham Young cleanshaven would probably not have been anything more serious than a bachelor or a Shriner No body ever saw an Indian who dl not have a luxuriant head of hat 1nor did any one ever see an Indian who looked like the hope of his roc A redheaded man will fight a telephone a whiteheaded man will run 1and a curlyheaded man wont keep still One can easily mark an an archist No two hairs on his face or his head point In the same dlrec tlon To be bald In front and sort of mopheaded behind makes you a Socialist bald on top with a long hiding lock In front a Democrat- t nothing but a little hairhoop Ju i over the ears a Republican frowzy hair all over the head a single tax er long hair plain a Prohlbltlon 1st and short hair feminine a sufr fragette Is the young man Absalom safe asked David his father re calling with grab misgivings h beautiful hair It does make a differenceSt Louis PostDispatch Notice All persons having claims against the estate of Sirs S M Tucker de ceased are hereby notified to file the same properly proven with tho undersigned administrator lor with W H Barnes attorney at law of Hartford Kentucky on or before Monday February 27 1911 or tho same will be forever barred Witness my hand this the 16t day of January 1911L BARNES Administrator of the Estate of MrsJ S M Tucker deceased 3t4 A Critical Period And it finally came to pass that tho women got the suffrage What are you going to do with it naked an Innocent bystander Well explained the wom nothing of Importance can be done without disturbing business and of course wo dont want to do that And thus was another crisis in tho history of the world successfully averted t I Asthma l Is a distressing disease Dr Bells PlnoTa i Honer relieves almost In stantly We guarantee It to Jlvel satisfaction1 V m t CORPSES BURNED tINTHECASKETS I At Harbin in Effort to Check the Plague THE FROZEN EARTH PREVENTS IBurial of Bodies Chinese Bitterly Oppose Work of Cremation STRICKEN ONES DIE SUDDENLY Pekln Feb The Chinese Governments desire to stamp out the epidemic of plague was demonstrat ed today when the Foreign Office authorized Dr Wu in charge of the native city of Harbin to burn 2000 coffins containing corpses of plague victims Owing to the fact that the earth Is itdIs believed that they contributed to the spread of the disease Efforts were made to dig mammoth trenches with dynamite This plan however Is not feasible In theInChinese against cremationlt was not messto ure until the arrival of heavy mili tary reenforcements Reports from Mukden state that 11out of 151 cases 92 died within 24 hours after the first symptoms- Dr J Chabanolx an eminent French professor of the Imperial Medical College at TlenTsln who Is charge of the quarantine station ShanHalKwan telegraphs as fol allows InThe pneuIe vlof lence The baccllus is of the char acteristic dumbbell shape It Is not propagated by rats or fleas Its transmission is like that of Influen by direct contact with execrations isor Indirect through the air by wet particles R few yards around the patient There have been no authen ticated recoveries It is as yet Im possible to say what measure of Im munlty Is conferred by Haffklnes serumIt is estimated that the number of deaths from the epidemic In Northern Manchuria Is at least 1 000 dally Twentytwo physicians and 11 as sistants have succeeded in fairly checking the spread of the disease InI Russian Harbin but the Chinese city Fuchlatlan is practically a city of the dead There have been upward of 4000 victims Of the 30000 In alllrI I done so cordonearound Fuchlatlan The spirit of resistance of the remaining inhabi tants Is completely crushed They Rle stolidly awaiting their fate Preparations are being made to burn one thousand coffins which remain unburied Many of them have burst open and dogs are feeding on the protruding bodies Sol dogsiTonight It is believed that practical Iy the whole city must be destroyed In the Russian and Chinese cities bodies are still carried surreptitious ly from the houses and cast Into the streets or vacant lots the inmates Isconcealing the deaths from theI plaguo through fear of the removal of the suspects to Isolation camps which is regarded as certain death The suddenness of the disease is an appalling feature A number of Instances aro cited in which mere 1who came to the Isolation camps In the morning for Inspection as suspects and showed absolutely no pvmntoran were seen to bo lagging behind the line one moment am then dropped dead before medical I assistance could reach them l Dr Jncfrnon who died at Much den arrived In China four months fan from Liverpool where he had a brilliant college career He ohm Leered to superintend the segregation of Chinese coolies arrlvlne on the three railways for he realized that they could not be safely left to Chinese nhyoiclans He died 30 hours after his first chill Haffklnop syriin has provedfo be realizednthat the oily possible safeguard is masking From Mukden northward all whites Japanese and Chinese sta flan guards and police and many of the Chinese resemble shrouded foot ball players with their white ghost- lIke robes and medicated gauze masks covering the nose and mouth Sometimes their costumes resemble those of sea divers consisting of rubber boots white trousers and CALL US UP Whenever you want Business Cards Letter Heads Circulars or anything else in the printing line We give PROMPT SERVICE arid GUARANTEE SATISFACTION jackets and hoods the only holes be ing those for the eyes Gauze masks are worn always The unmasked masses view these precautions with derision as semi- dress fad They do not realize ye the danger menacing them I a BANDIT LIONIZED BY- HABITANTS OF ROME Saolomone Has a Dozen Murders to His Credit Yet Relig iously Inclined Hero worshippers in Italy have singled out Salomone the notorious Sicilian bandit as a recipient of ver bal bouquets of admiration and won der says a Rome cable This extraordinary brigand who has now served nve years of his life sentence for murder has at least n dozen assassinations to his discred it Owing to a remarkable obliquity of vision he is proud of his exploits and has hypnotized a good manyf people in all parts of the country into taking pride in his native abil ityFor Salomone although barelyf literate possesses an amazing vigor of intellect and mental versatility People who were present at this bandits trial still talk of the speech he made in his own defense for 1 it was characterized by rare eloquence and beauty of expression Salomone refused to be called a murderer styled himself a lynch law judge and executioner and developed an elaborate argument based on ethical and sociological grounds in defense of the system of private justice known as the vendetta Salomone is passing his time in prison In various Intellectual pur suits He has recently turned his attention to the field of theology and is now closely examining the question of the authenticity of the Gospels This strange murderer Is full of religious enthusiasm and de sires his liberty not for more stll letto exercise but in order to foun a new religion As a relief from critical examina tions of the New Testament Salom one writes verses which though defective In grammar and limping iIn metre are wonderful his host pier being an autobiographical poem nut even this does not exhaust his vigor of Intellect for he has become a draughtsman and caricaturist of no mean ability Salomone as a type of the modern criminal Is a standing wonder to criminologists and mental special ists No doubt there will be consid erable competition for his brain when It Is available In due course for anatomical study Human Life for February With Its February Issue Human Life enters the fiction field with one short story by George Ade and The Chief a serial by Alfred Henry Lewis Mr Lewis The Boss was the novel of Its year but The Chief with Its amazing revelations concerning tho New York City po lice bids fair to eclipse anything he has ever written But the Introduction of fiction will in no wise change the policy of Human Life as preeminently The Magazine About People While it Is often impossible to prevent an accident It Is never Im possible to be preparedIt Is not beyond any ones purse Invest 2 cents In1 a bottle of Chamberlainr Liniment and you are prepared for sprains bruises and like injuries Sold by all dealers m PasHnrrcst TelcterNow Earlie tell us when Is the harvest season Earlle From November to MarchTeacherwhy Earlie I am sur prised that you should name such barren months Who told you they vYera the harvest season 1 EarlleTPa Hes a plumber W In Bad Fix badfixI GaIafter that I sickheadachefeelingsI oflifeconcludedtoI Since taking Cardul I am so much better and can do all my housework JW Take CARDUII at The Womans Tonic mightgetBetter take Cardui while there is time while you are still in moderately good health just to conserve your strength and keep you in tip top condition Iv i gradually willtGet a bottle at your druggists today J1f GILLESPIE BROS I I a via and J F GIIiIiESPIE pro rieto- rsBLACKSMITHINGt t v V iniAND REPAIR WORK HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY k Hartford Kentucky itThe Continental Fire Insurance CoMlf CONTINENTAL offers the policyholder absolute safetyIIIIThe l t the agent proven 10altyltij Net surplus exclusively protecting American Pollcj holders lfit- I InsurancedI 1 l CompanyJJ I A C YEISER AGENT R =Jq y t to o Cf110 sor7hcrruilrPLENTIFII A Tclc rtfh Nl L Ti HurIrruz izrirlr1 nnransJipHEAF usnessJrfilm 1 TraTn BOARi I ota Gccizl3u ud12mtJ Jrff- E fE Yq 4 Hoon rJ d OrcefJ I4 c1 CrAIY 141 HARTFORD HERALDS t Clubbing RatesFOR YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS THE HERALD and WeeKiy Courier journal 150 Weekly Louisville Herald 135 II II Daily Owensboro Messenger 360 II I II Twiceaweek Owensboro Messenger 175 II I fwice week Owensboro Inquirer 175 11 Daily Owensboro Inquirer 325 I 1 Kentucky Farmer Louisville 125 II I 4 Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer 150 I I at Bryans Commoner150 t I Thriceniveek New York World 165 II Twiceaweek St Louis Republic 100 i I II II National Magazine Monthly 150 II II McCalls Magazine Fashion 130 Address THE HERALD Hartford Ky 4 IIThe Hartjoyd Herat HEBER MATTHEWS FRANK L FELIX EDITORS FRANK L FELIX Pub and Propr I AVIiDJ ESDAY FEBRUARY 8I 1 A statesman of tho first magnitude has appeared on the political horn zon and the nation Is looking towards New Jersey Let us now hope that the liquor I interests will have nothing whatever to do with our next election for U S Senator in Kentucky f J That was a brave fight Ollie James made for the cause of a prime Democratic principle and Incidentally f his own behalf when ho finally brought the State Democratic Execu tive Committee around to Include the Senatorial race In the State Primary Mr James Is not only a valiant fight er but a simonpure Democrat A dispatch from Frankfort says newspaper men are going to play prominent part In the next Legislature of Kentucky as there has been a strong tendency to put up newspaper men for places on the ticket for the Lower House Undoubtedly the newspaper fraternity has furnished many good men for responsible positions outside the editorial craft The Ohio County Farmers Club meets again In Hartford next Satur day and should have a large attendance t These meetings are essentially for the purpose of farmers ex changing Ideas and becoming bettor acquainted with their work That they are profitable to all who attend cogs without saying Every farmer should make It his atm to be there The Democratic State Executive Committee did the proper thingnp parently under pressure however when It Included the Senatorial nom ination In the State primary called for May 27 This should have been ddne In the first place and thus prevented much unfavorable comment I If there be any difference a Senatorial l primary Is a more definite Dom ocratic asset than a primary for nom- Ination for State offices It was well Louisville would certainly be an Ideal place for the next Democratic National Convention and it should be a matter of pride for all people regardless of party to speak a word in her behalf The Falls City Is well equipped in every way for such an event and Kentucky hospitality would find no greater outburst than upon such an occasion No better place than Louisville could be found if In which to nominate our next Pres ident I The Hartford Republican essays to parallel The Herald In quoting what we said two years ago anent Mr Tafts religious views and ourI assertion last week that the rellgI ious views or affiliations of a man should have no direct bearing upon his race for political office During the Presidential campaign we said Few persons condemn Mr Taft on account of his religious views and added But the public has a perfect right to know whether Mr Tafts views along this lineas along other lines conform to the ponular and dominant American spirit It was pretty well known that Mr Taft belongs to a sect the Unitarian whichii f does not believe In the divinity of Christ which Is foreign to the American spirit We did not say Mr i Taft should be condemned for his religious views but Intimated thntI he should not dodge them Our la ter assertion does not conflict with these views A mans rellklous views should not disqualify him for office but the public has a right to know about them It was truly an unfortunate clr 1ethat Mr Johnson should feel impelled to quit the race for Governor on account of the religious prejudice that had been engendered ecalnst him Ever since ho entered the race for sonic unaccountable reason ho had borne the opposition and evident hatred of a clique of his own party men who seized upon his re ligious affiliation as the most vulnerable point of attack and magnified it to suit the purpose at hand If I his retirement from the race was accomplishedIparty of the State They do not tho name of leaders but pal if ifIcI destroyers whether with In or not Mr Johnson has done a r manly act purely for the sake of his party and to save It from further disruption but it Is a shame that tho cause which impelled him to retire I should have existed In this day of iI Iboasted politicalI and religious liber t ty His manly announcement speaks for Itself and will bo found else Jwhere In this Issue of The Herald An Agricultural Train The College of Agriculture atI Stato University Lexington has de r rq coded to run In cooperation with the Southern Railway an ngrlcultur al train over the lines of that road In Kentucky beginning March 6 and continuing for one week The train will be equipped with lecturers and demonstration apparatus and talks of one hours duration at each stop will be given tothe farmers of the State on agricultural subjects dairy Ing and poultry raising in accord once with the most advanced and profitable Ideas along these lInos METHODIST CHURCH I 0 v The protracted meeting which ih In progress at the Methodist Church Is being well attended and good In terest Is given to the services Rev S J Thompson presiding elder ol 1the district arrived Monday and fIE doing the preaching He Is a tine nrcacher Services each day at 230 Pm and 715 p m All both Christians and unconverted Invited to attend and derive all the benefit rsslblo from tho services Rev Thompson Is a forceful talker evi hisatheme and presents his subjects with converting and convincing pow er He Is being ably assisted by the local preacher In charge Rev Virgil ElginRev Virgil Elgin who began a series of meetings at the Methodist Church here last week preachedtwo able sermons Sunday and Sunday evening to large and appreciative audiences at both services Public Sale We will on Wednesday the 22d day of February 1911 at the late residence of Ed Davison deceased offer for sale by public auction sev eral head of mules all farming Im plements 500 or COO bushels of corn all household and kitchen furniture Terms of SoleAll sums of 500 and under cash In hand All sums over 500 on twelve months time with approved security Sale will begin at 10 oclock a m SAMUEL DAVISON VIRGIL DAVISON Ct2 Administrators PRKNTIS Feb Gh Joe A Barnes who has been sick for the past two weeks Is slowly Improving Dr J W Tay lor of Hartford was called to see him last Thursday Mr E Johnson has bought Mr M Millers farm In the Little Bend and moved to It and Mr Miller has moved to the tarn near here where Mr Johnson formerly lived Mrs Sinda Wilson and son Rob ert went to Beaver Dam last Fri dayMr Wm French attended the re eptlon of his brother Mr Forrest French who was married to Miss Lena Fulton last Sundayweek- Mr Mitchell Reid moved from near here to a farm near Mining City recently Messrs V B Patterson and Gro ver Burgess went to McHenry last TuesdayMr Gentry went to Crom well last Tuesday to see his broth er Mr John Gentry who Is sick Messrs Ira Plummer Clifton Tay- or and Henry Bratcher left recently or Bowling Green where they are attending school Mr and Mrs Noel TIchenor who bave been visiting Mr TIchenors parents Mr and Mrs Terry Tlch nor near here will return to their home in Arkansas this week Mr Morgan Penley of Butler ounty and Mrs Lillie Gentry llv ng near here were married at the baptist Church here last Sunday af ernoon by Rev Gardner after he lad filled his regular appointment hereMiss Lillie Patterson went to Tocloster last Saturday Mr Robert Swain returned to his ome hero train Central City last week Mr and Mrs Masco Taylor and nether Mrs Taylor and Mrs Allen ientrv went to Beaver Dam last aturdayIButler county Is visiting Miss Gusta Cooper living near here Whittlers Safeguard When an overtlmld visitor from tho city once commented to the poet Whit Her upon the Insecurity that seemed inseparable from so many doors open ing out from all sides of tho large old country homo the master of the houHO strove gently to restore confidence by pleading that most of them were lock ed at night Financial Worries So your debts are bothering you YesWalking the floor because you cant pay em No because I cant make em any larger Exchange What Old She Mean Shop Assistant Ito purchaser of wid oWa bonnet Would you like to try It on before the glass madam Cus tomer No thank you miss It aint for me I wish it WI18StmyStorlesI 1 h BEN JOHNSON IS QUJfpftCE ForGovernorWithdrawin g RELIGIOUS PREJUDICE CAUS E Is Too Loyal a Party Man To Allow Himself to Cause Trouble A MANIA STATEMENT OP PACTS The Hon Ben Johnsons statement In which he withdraws fro the race for the Democratic nomina tion for Governor is as follows To the Democrats of Kentucky At least a year ago It seemed to be understood over the State that I con templated making the race for the Democratic nomination for Governor Of course there was opposition tome from the first time my name was mentioned This was not unexpected to me and my friends as such posi tions of honor and trust are sought by many I did not however sus pect that there would be those who would day after day week after week and month after month print and circulate statements the au thors thereof knew were not true These deliberate misrepresenta tions did not In the least disturb me for I believe that time and Inquiry would disclose their falsity and that at least truth would triumph As falsehood after falsehood had gone to pieces leaving me each time In a- more advantageous position the op position resorted to means of de feating me even though It pulled down the temple upon the head of Kentuckys Democracy This last desperate resort was to Inflame the religious bigot against me A man was taken from newspaper work at Frankfort and sent to the 11aI 11 mand to raise religious prejudice I against me There this unAmerican t and unDemocratic work commenced I having been Inspired at Frankfort Then this method of warfare I Jumped from the Eighth Congressional district and was taken up by several subsidized newspapers In various sections of Kentucky the same Inspiring hand at Frankfort being plainly traceable all the while In plain English the word was sent out that I must be opposed be cause I nm a Catholic- In this State there are a number of people who seek Catholic votes but who themselves will not vote for a Catholic At first I did not believe there was a sufficient number of J these to defeat me In the final elec tion If I should be nominated As to this I have recently changed my opinion Three judges upon the bench of one of the highest courts in Mie State have been heard to say that they would not vote for a Catholic for Governor One of these has but recently been elected in t district where the Catholic vote Is so heavy that he would have been defeated J even If that vote had done nothing more than remain at home on elec tion day Others In high position in the State have expressed themselves with I equal emphasis until a great num b erof those In the rank and file ofII the party have followed this leadership and have declared thAt they too would not vote for a Catholic At first the mutterings were half concealed But during the Inst thlr tv days they have with encouragement from high places become boldI or and louder Upon my return to Kentucky from Washington Thursday night I had reports fom mv friends In many parts of the State that there are In all probability enough of these misguided religious bigots to defeat me In November IfI 1 should be nominated Notwith ntandlng the obstacles that are now In my way I confidently believe I would receive the greatest number of votes in tho primary if counted as cast should I continue in the race yet I am too loyal a party man too good a Democrat to further ask my party for this nomination 1f1t carried with it the possibility that I would lose any vote of consequence which another Democrat could got in the final election Therefore I now say that I will not further be a candidate for tho Democratic nomination for Governor- I feel however that the Demo crats of Kentucky will hear me when I recall to their minds that this na tion now tho most powerful on earth has grown to be such upon the foundation laid 135 years ago when tho one overshadowing principle was Liberty of Conscience For this principle the fathers of the Catholics of today shed their blood and fought JH o fathers of the nonCatholics of to day many of whom are now saying that the Catholic may pay taxes and bear the other burdens of Govern ment that he may go to war In defense of the stars and stripes but that ho shall not share in the honors and emoluments of the country which he has helped to build and which upon all occasions he has helped to defend Only a few weeks ago a proms nent member of the school board of Louisville said publicly In the Seel bach hotel that he would not vote for a Catholic That man has been put in position where he can employ teachers who may Impart that dis rupting spirit to the youth of our land We hear upon every side that the Catholics want union of church nnd State I feel that I can answer for every American Catholic that we want no such thing that we would tomprevent the accomplishment of any such condition even if any element of Catholics were to undertake It It is true that the Catholic church in the United States furnished twice as many soldiers during the late SpanishAmerican war to set Cuba free from a Catholic ruler as did any other religious denomination The Ignorant are made to believe that the Pope tells the Catholics how to fight in times of war and how to vote during times of peace and that Catholics obey If this were true all the Catholics would have been upon one side or the oilier dur ing the Civil War of 186165 The nonCatholic soldier who wore the blue will testify to the fact that his Catholic comrade fought as bravely as did he to preserve the Union while the nonCatholic soldier who wore the gray will bear witness that his Catholic comrade faced shot and shell with as little concern as did he In defense of the South No man in Kentucky is freer from the charge that ICatholicever anywhere anyway discriminated in the least against any man because of his re ligionIn the Fourth Congressional dis trict last fall when I was a candle date for Congress thousands of circulars were distributed to Injure me accordI liberty to worship a Supreme Delng that I claimed for myself and the people of the district resented that attack upon me and gave me the largest majority ever given in that districtFor rICo more than thirty years I have given not a tenth but a fourth = of every dollar I have made during that time toward the erection of schoolhouses and churches and that without regard to creed I have not yet thrust donations of this kind up on anybody but have given only when I was asked to It is said by some people that we Catholics seek control of the Legislative bodies and of the schools I live Ina county more than half Catholic In the history of the of county there have been but two Catholic members of the Legislature from that countymyself and Sylvester Johnson During the existence I of the common school law jt the State the Catholic countv of Nel pon hair never had a Catholic super In intendent of schools That position In Nelson county Is now held by a Baptist and I am surety on his offl clnl bond Tlev also say that we Catholics want to get control of the armv and navy Since I have been a member of Congress I have appointed two cadets to the naval school at Annanolls and two to the armv school at West Point In due course of time all four of these young men will be of flcers two In the navy and two In thed army All four of them are non Catholics Eighteen States of the Union are according to the last census more than half Catholic Only one of these has P Catholic GoverU nor Without the Catholic vote there could be no Democratic party In of Kentucky capable of making a cond test with the Remihllcans Only one congressional district In Kentucky which Is now represented bv a Demo cratic congressman could send a Democrat to Congress without the Catholic vote There are in Ken tucky sixtyfive thousand Catholic voters fifty thousand of these are Democrats they are anxious to redeem Kentucky this fall from Republican j misrule notwithstanding theC fact that those who care but little Whether the State bo Democratic or Republican demand that a Catholic shall not be Governor I out of loyalty to the Democrat- Ic party now relieve the party of that alleged menace Now let the governing authority of the party in the State which is all powerful give us a ticket which willlj not be opposed by either the rellg ious bigot or by the Catholic who may resent unjust discrimination Gentlemen of the Democratic Executive Committee I Call ort the primary in which the peoplo aro fully warranted In having no confidence 1l 1 CARSON COS0 1I BIG COME DOWN SALE Kum down on February 8 and attend a sale that shall stand as a recordbreaker for time to come Watch for the big Double Header Ad which will be brought right to your door by one of our representatives aI Remember the Time February 8 to 15 CARSON COINCORPORATED HARTFORD KENTUCKY order an oldtime convention where the Democrats of the State can meet consult one another discuss candl daets and give us a ticket against which neither tho bigot nor the Catholic can complain and let us all help elect It I have now done what hardly any other man would do under similar circumstances This sacrifice of my own ambition Is made for tho good the party which has been good tome and which I love and through which In the nation relief must come to the oppressed For myself will support the nominee of the people whoever he may be I sincerely trust that all Catholic Democrats the State will do likewise Respectfully yours BEN JOHNSON Louisville Ky Feb 3 1911 SMALLHOUS Fob G1Ir Mitchell of Bremen was In our midst Sunday Mr r D Fulkerson and wife are visiting at Central City Rev Brown of near Broadway filled his regular appointment at Smallhous church Saturday and Sun Mlllord France Is on the sick list Mr L B Overhults and wife were guests of Mr Clark Igleheart and family of Muhlenberg county Sat rday night Mr J C Hill and family living near South Carrollton were guests Mr M P Maddox and wife Satur night and Sunday Miss Ethel Hunter has returned from Utica Bessie Balls is visiting Mrs IMiss Stearman near Matanzas LITTLE CLIFTON Feb GMessrs Ray Baugh Bur chell Baker and Jim Paxton went to Deaver Dam Saturday Mr Gordon Chinn of visited his parents Mr and Mrs C C Friday Saturday and Sunday MrRayBaugh and wife spent Sunday with Mrs Baughs parents Mr and Mrs Thomas Phelps at Mr and Mrs Gordon Reid of visited Mr Reids parents Mr and Mrs D B Reid Sunday Mr Jack Bracken went to Hartford Monday Misses Joo Reid and George Will ama are attending school at Beaver Dam If you wjsh for anything which be Songs to another you lose that which fIn your own Bplcterns Subscribe for The Hartford Herald Oi AVVSOX Feb 6Mrs Louisa Rock visited her sister Mrs W R Shull at Hope well last week Messrs Rupert Taylor of Green River and Will Fox of White Plains visited Mr HE Hill last Wednes dayMr Hi O Hill who got his back severely hurt last Wednesday while plowing Is improving slowly Mrs Will Campfield is very sick of beart trouble Miss Leva Fulton and Mr Forrest French were married at the home of tho bride here Sunday January 29 Carl Rains son of Mr Luther Rains who got one of his fingers cut off and another badly cut while ho and his little brother were hunting Is getting along nicely Miss Susan Elliott of Taylortown was the guest of Miss Carrie Hill SundayMiss tEfilo Berryman Is attending j school at Hartford t- J OLATON Feb GThe roads hero are so bad that It Is almost Impossible for anyone to travel them Mrs W H Lyons who has pneu monia Is Improving Mr Lyons Is also Improving Mr G W Daniel of this place went to Owensboro this morning Mrs Mary Ann Felix of near this place was the guest of her son and daughter Mr and Mrs J T Felix last Saturday Mr T W Daniel met with a se vere accident last Wednesday morn ing While out on his farm at work he stuck a stick In his eye which has given him a great deal of trou ble Mr C B Lyons tho rural route carrier of Olaton went to Owens boro last Friday and returned Sat urday night Mrs Roy Crawford of near Fried aland was the guest of her parents Mr and Mrs C N McDaniel here recentlyMessrs McDaniel White of this ipairedr Look For the Beo Hive buyFoleys 1 uinb without the Bee Hive Ro- membe iJhe name Foleys Ionoy usul8tltuteFoleY8coug Band colds quickly and Is opiatesSold 1 r 4 TxTO7A9 T Tw a S I fI i = = 0 111 i TODAY I I r THE rr EVENIFULDAhi yy- J r rITYyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyY yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyof 4 FAIRS IKUMi s DOWNSALE irui-I I I DONT l HISS ITI YOU CANT AFFORDTO The Store that Saves you I Money + + + + + + + + + 4 + iiTHE FAIR DEALERS Illinois Central RailroadTime Table l at Beaver Dam Ky- Nortb Bound South Bound No 132405 am No 121 1135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm ll No 102248 pm No 131855 pm J E Williams Agt 1- I U S Carson wants your Furs When you come down to the Sale kum up to U S Carsons grocery No other sale like the one at Bar nard Cos Dont fall to comedown Ladles Suits and Cloaks at halt price during our ComeDown Sale Carson Co Dont fall to come to our Come Down Sale February 8 to 15th 14 Carson Co Buy Furniture at a ComeDownr I price during our sale Carson Co Exclusive sale of Beaver Dam Flour at our meat shop- SANDERFUR CO Join the crowd and chase the bal loons secure the order for merchan dise free Carson Co Mens and Boys Suits at a big ComeDown price February 8 to 15 Carson Co See the special ComeDown price on Embroideries and Insertions 1J Carson Co If you fall to come to U S Car sons It will be a big KumDown for yOu Messrs Alex Bell Robert Lee and J L Lee Olaton route 1 called to see us while In town yesterday Mr and Mrs Geo W Feagan and son Lawrence of Hopklnsvllle are guests at the Foster House city Capt John G Keown of Hender son spent Sunday with his wife here returning Monday morning Special lots of Odds and Ends at less than cost during the Come Down Sale Carson Co Mr Raymond Phillips and family have moved into Judge J E Fogles property on Center street Miss Nella E Smith SouthiCar rollton was the guest of Judge R R Weddings family last week 1Mr and Mrs John X Taylor left last week for Greenville Ky where i Mr Taylor and Mr D U Poole of- tQreenvllle have purchased the drug f y- w 4 NWYYIrA store of Mr G E Countzler Mr an Mrs Taylor made many friends dur- Ing the short time they resided In Hartford who regret to see them leave ComeDown Prices will be on every thing at Ilers Grocery for one week only February 8 to 15 6t 2 See the balloon ascend Saturda j February 11th from the top of our building at 11 oclockCarson Co Remember that Clove Ilers Grocery Is going to have a great Come Down Sale from February 8th to 15th 5t2 Scores of remarkable values iIn our new 5 10 and 25 cent Depart ment 5t4 HARTFORD GROCERY CO Dry Goods Groceries and Furni1 ture at great ComeDown price- during the ComeDown Sale- Carson Co We have for sale strictly pure New Orleans Molasses right from the plantation 5t4 HARTFORD GROCERY COt Nickels Dimes and Quarters do double duty spent at our 5 10 and 25 cent counter 514 HARTFORD GROCERY C- Leave O your Laundry at my Grocery Domestic finish Work Guaranteed Called for and prompt delivery Phone 140 llers Gropery When you come to the Come Down Sale Come UP to U S Car sons grocery and you will find what you want A big boy arrived at the home o Mr and Mrs BrodIe Payne at Tay lor Mines Ky on tho 30th of Jan diary Alls well MessrSj F M Allen Centertown W F Newcomb Hartford route 5 and Geo W White city wore among our callers Wednesday Mr J A Bllbro of Taylor Mines is quite 111 at the home of his wife s parents Mr and Mrs S A Bratcher Mrs Bllbro and baby are also here All kinds of Feed Stuff Chicken Grit and Shells and Seed Oats for sale by W E ELLIS Tho Produce Man 4t4 Hartford KytMaster Powell Tlchenor son of Mr and Mrs Alney Tlchenor living about six miles West of Hartford iIs very liilof something like appendici is i J- c x Rev O J Dean who has bee very ill for several days was thought to be some better yesterday evening Mr 0 B Likens Ohio county candidate for Secretary of State attended the meeting of the Democratic Committee at Louisville last Saturday Bring your wagon to Ilers Grocery any time from February 8th to 15th and get the biggest bargains you ever saw at the ComeDown Sale 5t2 Mr O T OBannon managing agent for the L N Railroad In the crosstle business at Burksvllle Ky spent a few days recently with his family here ComeDown Prices on every arti cle of merchandise Remember the dates8th to 15th of February No time extendedjust those dates only BARNARD CO Try for 500 In Merchandise FREE Largest load of women Fri day February 10th at Barnard c Cos MillEnd and ComeDown Sale Hon A B Tichenor Matanzas F M Porter city R B Render Beaver Dam route 2 and W H French Prentls were among ou callers Saturday Mr Paul Hanson of Bowling Green State Sanitary Engineer spent a few hours In Hartford yesterday He said our new sewerage system is all right Mr Frank Foreman of Hartfor- passed the recent examination at the naval academy at Annapolis Md with high honors which Is much ap- precIated by his many friends here Mr George Barokat formerly In the dry goods business In this city but now of Louisville Is In Hartford this week Mrs Barakat Is visiting relatives at Central City and Mc Henry Mr Sam F Riley has purchased a residence of Mr John C Riley adjoining Mr R D Walker on CIa s street and moved from the Collin- property on Liberty street to the new home Wednesday Messrs W E Johnson ParadIse- J H Helton and J W Muffett Fordsvllle route 1 Joe Snider Dun dee Thos H Williams Hartford route 4 and E D Oldham Beaver Dam were among our callers yesterday 5 Miss Lyda Morton left recently for Cincinnati where she will spend a few weeks getting the spring styles Aldai bama where she will trim this year This Is Miss Mortons second year 1 the South Mr S Bennett who had been a work near Falrburry III since las September returned home Saturday morning Mr Bennett will leave for Tolono 111 about the first of March MrYNathan Bennett Mr B J Flgg agent of the Citi zens National Life Insurance Co who has been living In Hartford for the past several months will move I with his wife to Leltchfield KYI whore he will reside In the futurei We regret to lose Mr and Mrs Flgg from our midst John Stevens has sold his farm t the Goshen neighborhood to Ben Ad kins Mr Stevens bought the T Jahn farm in the same neighborhoods I and Mr Jahn has purchased a 600 acre farm In Tood county near Elk ton Mr Jahn and family are goodI citizens whom we regret to see leave the county The following young men have en listed In the army at the recruiting station at Beaver Dam NapoleonI Elms of Morganfleld Charles Simp son of Caneyvllle Palestine Raymer of Threlkel They were sent fromI Beaver Dam to Columbus 0 where they will pass their final examIna- tions in the Infantry branch Messrs M J Reid Rockport A Ross J E Goff S M Dexter J T Rone Centertown E T Williams city J C Bennett Smallhous R S Jackson and R Wx Barnes Benver Dam Brice HeflIn Hartford route- f 7 E C Tnckfon Centertown route 1 J A Caldwell anti L A Stevens Beaver Dam route 2 E D Tatum Hartford route 2 and M F McDow ell Dundee were among our caller- htgnday HartfordCollege basket ball teams have reorganized and begun practice Several challenges have been received in the last month andI J In order to be able to accept a chal lenge they are putting In good time practicing On account of the weather I and not having an indoor place to play they have been hindered to a great extent However they expectt I to be ready to play In a few weeks The teams do not organize and prac ice In order to play every team that might send In a challenge but they would like to play any team In tho county or close abo- utSuscribefor The Herald 1 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 CIRCUIT COURT NOTES 0 OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOO ItThe Ohio Circuit Court convened In court hall In Hartford last Mon day morning with Judge T F Blrk head presiding and Commonwealths Attorney Ben D RIngo and County Attorney C E Smith present to look after the evil doers Official stenog rapher Marvin Miller was also pres ent to report such cases as deemed of sufficient Importance After preliminary motions had been heard the following named gen tlemen were empanelled as grand Jurors for the February term viz W E Johnson M D Ashby P S Coloman W B Taylor D L Maddox A Ross W V Renfrew H N Pate W F Stevens James P Bennett J A Wcatenleld area Peter Shown W E Johnson was selected us foreman W B Taylor clorK anti P S Coleman she ft After being Instructed by the Commonwealths Attorney Mr Ringo supplemented by some pointed suggestions upon the part of the Court Judge Blrk head and hearing the report of the officers the grand Jury repaired to Its room for consideration of the routine business- r Those empanelled as petit Ju rors for the present term follow E E Rhoads Joe F Hill J P Shrum F M Reynolds J Y Hager man H T Porter Harrison Austin J L Mason J M Smiley Jno D Bruner J W Copnage ti T Ren TdShultz L A Stevens S H Riley G W Campfleld Solan ChInn J E Mll ler H B Bean Walter Knott J W Wilson and Frank Lyons The Comth cases on Monday were disposed of as follows Filed away with leave to reinstate on motion of Commonwealth Attorney or County Attorney Roy Elder Joe Elder Sherman Kirk et al Charles Con dot Lee Fulkerson etalir Pll= lows Cornelius L Williams Rufus Bartlett offsClevo or Clint Smith and Dud Tay lorThose continued for process Comth vs Grover Morris et aI Er nest James et al Paul Cooper Clar ence Rowe Luther Bruce Warren Kelly Carl alias Crowder Fox An derson Young 2 cases Lusty Rogers 2 cases and Herman Hatcher Comth vs Gilbert Tatum et al plea of guilty law and facts to court and fined 20 and costs in one case sari the other dismissed on mo tlon of Commonwealth Attorney Tho Comth docket set for second daYTuesdaywas disposed of as follows Comth vs Chester Fen continuedt 2tcases tiled away with leave to state relnI Comth vs Joe Snider guilty law and facts to court and fined 20 and costs Comth vs same defendant under another Indictment plea of guilty entered law and facts to court sari fined 25 and ten days In Jail Jail sentence suspended Comth vs Joe Snider plea In bar and dismissed Comth vs John Jones 3 cases stricken off defendant being dead andnfacts to court and fined 5i and costs Comth vs Baswell Lawrence 3 cases fined 20 and costs In one and plea In bar and statement as to other two and stricken off Those continued for process Comth vs Gilbert Wright Jesse CasebIer Arthur Wnfford Mattle Boswell Herman Decker Comth vs Ernest White 2 cases Comth bond vs forfeitedIcases continued Comth vs Herman Young con tinned omth vs Will McKcy verdict of Jury guilty punishment 2 to 7 years In the penitentiary Comth vs Joe Wilson on trial The following Comth cases were passed and will likely be called for trial today Comth vs Hubert Mufford Jeff Burden Flelden Turner Hubert Balls Visiting Attorneys Messrs John A Logan Browns vllle E B Anderson Owonsboro JsM Porter and D J Rhoads Beaver Dam and John T Rone Centertown OrdlmNy Docket February Term 1ST DAY 506C Thomas Decker vs Rockport Saw Mill Co- 2ND DAY 5992R B Martin Admr vs L 8 N R R Co 3RD DAY 5991John M Graham vs M H E R R Co et al 6029Ephralm Brown et al vs I C R R Co 6000S P McDowell vs M H E R R Co 4TH DAY 6007J W Condor vsM H E R RCo Ji J 59880 W Powers vs M H E R R Co et a- lC028R S Taylor et al vs J P Taylor 5TH DAY 981S I Boseley vs 1L H E R R C- oCOllSherldan Rusher vs L H St L Ry Co Trail vs I C R R Co 6TH DAY 5993Leroy Condor vs J W Con dor 6035 Charlie Colburn vs Larkin Purdue 6041 Robert Robinson vs Broad way Coal Mining Co 7TH DAY Ivan H Arnold vs I C R R Co E R Ashby vs 1L D Ashby Comth of Ky vs W H Blackburn The civil cases on first and second days docket were disposed of as fol lows Thomas Decker vs Rockport Saw Mill Co verdict of Jury 50 for plaintiff R B Martin vs L N R R Co passed RUN OVER BY A TRAIN AND NEVER RECOVERED Martin Woodburn son of Henry Woodburn a liveryman of Rockport Ky was found on the Illinois Cen tral tracks near the depot late Thursday night He had evidently been run over by an Illinois Central train He was carried to the office of Dr F B DeWitt where four physicians Including Dr Pendleton of Hartford worked with him all night in an effort to save his life Both feet anti one hand had been fearfully crushed and were am putated but he never recovered from the shock and his Injuries and died a few hours afterward No one witnessed the accident but from the evidence It was apparent that the young man had run down a steep embankment aiming to cross tune track In front of a moving train His foot caught on an upturned crosstle and he fell In the middle of the track his stead striking a steel rail and knocking him senseless Hail the young man recovered sensibility In time he would no doubt have escaped It was a most deplor able accident and cast much gloom over the community HASIV KERRY Feb 6Mr T H Maple and family recently moved to McLern county and are living on what 1 is known as the Gorman farm A good deal of the tobacco of this community has been prepared and put on the market Mr L D Bennett of Beda visit HAS NO SUBSTITUTE Q4l h r I Ih KIHu- POWDER Absolutely Pure Tito only baking powder I made from Royal Grapo Cream of Tartar NO AlUMUD PHDSPHATE ed Mr T H Maple rind family re centlyThe roads of this community arc very bad 0 A Hcautlfiil Woman Must have a beautiful skin Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve removes pIm- ples black heads chaps and rough ness leaving the skin smooth Try It on our guarantee m sSPECIALS AT SCHROADERS CASH GROCERY HAIITKOIII Extra fine eating Potatoes per bushel 7 c Arbuckles Coffee per Iti JMc Good Roasted Coffee per lb 20e Brooms 4 string extra good Mlc ISlbs Standard Granulated Su gar 9i0Bes-tLeaf Lard per lb Me Compound Lard per Ib lie tC Bars Laundry 80all2l3 cans Polks Best Tomatoes IWc 3 cans Polks Best Corn tic 3 boxes Capital Parlor Matchesfoe 3 packages Oatmeal tWc large packages RubNoMoro 13 Washing Powder lOc We sell for cash Have no expensive clerk hire and sell the best quality for less money than credit houses possibly can TELEPHONE NO 52 COUNTRY PRODUCE WANTED u ii iiCOIiiii- = r MJr r TXr 4 fAndf CosLMiuEndJ H REMNANT and 1 Come Down Salern IT owItIITI 1i c REALeC1LbctflolY1S Ii H Reductions DiI8 COME DOWN n AND n The Hartford Herald VEDXKSDAY FKUUUAUY 8I M H E RAILHOAD TIME TA iJLK AT HAUTFOKD KV Time table effective Sunday Dec Itli contains the following schedule No 1J2 North Round duo 720 a m Dally except Sunday No 114 Xortll Hound duo 340 p m Dally except Sunday Xo 115 South Hound due 835 a in Dally except Sunday No 113 South Hound due 140 p m Dally except Sunday H E MISCHKE Agt WOMAN AS A DESTROYER AT BEHEST OF FASHION Now Millions of Useful Birds Slaughtered Yearly for AreIIIII I c Plumage c Insects cost a loss to our forests of 100000000 a year The Bio logical Survey of the United States has shown thnt the stomach of a sin gle cedar bird contained 100 canker worms of a conkoo 250 tent caterpillars of a chickadee 454 plant lice of a flicker 1000 chinch bugs and ol a scarlet tanager 630 gypsy caterpillars A tanager eats moth caterpillars at tho rate of 2100 an hour A Maryland yellowthroat ate 3500 plant lice In 40 minutes Yet chief among the enemies of the birds and therefore of the forests Is wqman In shopping districts where I have made ornithological l studies of womens hats I found woodpeckers flycatchers orioles A bobolinks meadow larks tree and whitethroated sparrows snow bunt Ings waxwings swallows tanagers warblers thrashers robins and blue birds by scores and hundreds The destructive power of fashion is shown In the case of the ptarmigan grouse In winter It Is snowy white and Its plumage may be dyed any color The flesh of the birds Is good food but the food demand did not drain the supply When the feathers became fashionable however 2 000000 were killed in four years one shipment contained ten tons of wings Twenty thousand paradise birds are shipped annually Of the thousands of herons which glorified our marshes only a few remain since the egret plumes became the fashion In one year Venezuela exported 1538000 plumes of herons and these figures do not take Into account possibly double that number of young herons which starved In their nests for lack of care American Museum Journal a If troubled with indigestion con stipation no appetite or feel bilious i a give Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tablets a trial and you will be pleased with the result These tablets invigorate the stomach and liver and strengthen the digestion Sold by all dealers m fiOVEKXMEXT MADHOUSES COXTA1X SANE MEN Washington Jan 30Many sane persons arc being received In tho Government Hospital for the Insane according to members of the commit tee appointed recently by Secretary of the Interior Dalllnger to investigate conditions at the Institution AC radical change In the method of handling insanity cases it is said will bo recommended to Congress the present system of examining al leged Insane persons In the United States Courts being characterized by the committees as archaolc and l unjust rails Victim to Tlilovcs S W Bends of Coal City Ala has a justifiable grievance Two thieves stole his health for twelve years They wore a liver and kid nay trouble Then Dr Kings New Lifo Pills throttled them Hes well now Unrivaled for constipation malaria headache dyspepsia 25c at James H Williams m 1 MARK TWAIX IX A HUIWV PETITION TO CONGRESS It was one December that Mr Clemens went to Washington clad all In white from his hat to his pat entleather shoes In tho interest of a bill to give authors greater copy right privileges i Mr Clemens presented a letter to I the Speaker asking for the thanks of Congress which would entitle him to the floor privilege and enable him to lobby for tho bill Hero Is tho letter which is in tho humorists own handwriting and has been treasured by Undo Joo ever since Now Wlllard Hotel Dec 1 1908 Dear Uncle Joe Pleaso get me the thanks of Congressnot next III week but right away It Ila very I tia I necessary Do accomplish this for your affectionate old friend and right away Dy persuasion If you can By violence If you must Fa- it r Is imperatively necessary that I get on the floor for two or three hours and talk to tbo members man by man in behalf of the support en couragement and protection of ono of the nations most valuable assets and Industriesits literature I have arguments with mealso aI barrel with liquid In It Get me a chance Get me the thanks of Congress Dont walt for the othersthere Is not time Fur nish them to mo yourself and le Congress ratify later I have stale away and let Congress alone for sev entyone years and am entitled to their thanks Congress knows thisI perfectly well and I have long felt hurt that this quite proper and earn ed expression of gratitude has been merely felt by the House and never publicly uttered Send me an order on the ser genntatarms Quick 0000000000000000O THE WIDOW O- ooooooooooooooo That most fascinating womanthe widow of some other manCaro- lus Ager The widow Is the fairest bird In all the bloomln nation shes a magnet to the men and a Sunday Sheet sensation A man will stand upon tiptoe or eat out of her digits while ome talc dome who never weds IB having jealous fidgets A man will bust a rib or two In spending time and sheckels to woo a femme whos half completea widowed skirt withI freckles Hell leave hit cot and darling kids to rip oft rhymed devotion and chase a dame who saves her face with Jars of beauty lotion widow need but crook her hook or smile the knowing smiles and ov erything that wears the jeans will trek for her for miles and bring bouquets or sweet June peas done up in lovely fashion and thrust them at his ladys face the while heI breathes his passion Tall lank young men butt In the ring and wop off many summers the widow keeps all kinds in stockshes cousin to the drummers Its funny that the sweet young things who never buck ed the altar must sit around with folded wings while widows slip the halter Full few the man who has not wooed and with a widow tarried and thought he was the one large Mice until she loftand married Yes yes she Is a charming bird the symbol of the nation and men who never fell for her have missed an education Chicago Tribune Sight Is Too atllahleII To be neglected Sutherlands Eagle Eye Salve will cure any case of sore eyes granulated lids opthalmla or any inflamed condition of the eyes Painless and harmless 25c tube at all dealers m TWANTS KENTUCKY WWI WRITES LETTER ABOUT IT A Lexington dispatch to the press saysPostmaster Thomas L Walker of this city has received the following letter accompanied bv an advertise ment describing In detail the kind of wife which the writer desired to secureChicago 111 Jan 24Post master Lexington Ky Dear Sir Will you please hand this ad to your Editor of your Best paper of your Ifgood results come from your favor you will be rewarded with a- very line present I am looking Cora wife and I have often heard that Ky turned out some verry noble ones and true wlfcs Now I am not looking for a rich woman and sho must bo under 32 yrs of age a good cook kind loving Weight not over 130 Ibs tall and fair looking Wid ows and old maids not bard If chcar ful I must say good womln are verr scarce In largo cltys Danes the ators has the best of them they are lost In a kitchen picas give this your attention and I will be ever so mutch oblldged till better paid Yours very truly- F A B Young Gen Delivery Chicago Ill- Firing 500llulMs a Minute The recently Invented BenetMer clcr gun combines the rapidity of Ore and effectiveness of a machine gun with the lightness and ease of action of a magazine rifle The gun Is fired from a rest and is held against the shoulder of Its operator who can either fine from a sitting position or lying prone Tho regu lation cartridge Is used in clips that hold fifty A good rifleman can dis charge from 300 to 500 shots per minute if assisted In feeding by a man to fill the clips The gun Is at present undergoing a series of testsI by army officers with a view to ItsI adoption by the Government Pop ular Mechanics i t j tIt r Wlln1l k9 lln lQflfr If 1CC Between stationery and sta tionary IA difference of one letter But if your stationery is well printed up to date and businesslike supplytwilldnot be stationary Good Stationery LetterHeads Billheads Statements Circulars Etc Keep Business ON THE MOVE Thats the kind we printIl oooooooooooooooI O POEMS YOULL ENJOY OJ o n O The Heralds Special Selections O 00 00 TilE VAMPIRE Apologies to Kipling A fool was there and he lost his hair Even as you and I On top was a spot that was almost bare We called him the fellow who did not care But the fool he knew that his locksI were rare Even as you and IIOh the years we waste and the tears we waste And the hair tonics that we find Belong to the hair that would not grow I And now we know that it never could grow Either In front or behind A fool there was and his life he i spent Even as you and IcPraying for hair like a regular entjj And the more he prayed the more It wentjj But the fool must follow his natural 1 benttt Even as you and I Oh the toll we lost and the spoil we lost And the excellent cures we plan ned- Belong to the barber that did not know And now we know that he flover could know And never could understand- So the fool was stripped of his fool t ish hair Even as you and TI He caught a cold when he hit the t air And now a toupee is resting there But nobody seems to know or care j Even as you and I J And it Is not the blame and It la not the shomett That stings like a whitehot brandII Its coming to know that It couldI not growtSeeing at last that It never could growhBut It fell out to beat the band Life Slang Tabooed Slang Is tabooed ill the home of a West Philadelphia family princi pally because there is a bright little girl who displays a persistent apti tude In retaining expressive but uncultured phrases Tho other evening at dinner the mother father and daughter drifted Into the vernacular and a fresh start was necessary The little girl start ed It Im not stuck on this bread she remnrkpd Margie said her mother you want to cut that slang out Thats a pouch of a way of cor theYfather I know replied tho mother but I just wanted to put her wise IIXCOI XS FAVORITE CHURCH IS SOOX TO liE TORX DOWN i Springfield Ill Jan 31StJ- ohns Lutheran Church located at Third and Washington streets tin which Abraham Lincoln worshiped and In which the emancipator main tamed a pew for many years is toI be torn down During Lincolns residence In Springfield the church was known as the First Presbyterian The pew occupied by Lincoln will be preserved and made a part of the furnishings of the church which Is toI replace the one to be razed The pew Is marked with an appropriate tablet No services will be held on- Lincolns birthday In the historic edifice IChlldn T Cry FOR FLETC- HERSCASTORIA a ot r J OLD THREECENT PIECE ISSUED IN YEAR 1852 Still Kept for Sake of Memories A Last Request Was Complied With In the year 1862 the United States mint issued a 3cent silver coin which was said at that time to have been done for the convenience of paying postage on letters upon which the charge is now but two cents One of the prominent enterprises of Eli shaM Ford at that time was a dry goods and general assortment store at Hartford and In the summer or early fall of1862 while In Louis rifle laying in a stock of goods the new 3cent piece was all the rage In sevl HartfordMrs gave each of my three sisters one of these coins The two youngest being children soon lost theirs but my oldlest sister Mary being at that time a young woman took better care of the present of Mrs Ford and for years had it secur ed to a button by a string that it might not be easily lost She died at Hartford May 3 1856 at the age of 18 years and this coin her diamond ring and some other mementoes were sent to me after the family re turned to Cincinnati Ohio The button attached to the coin Is a relic of the Mexican War and Is from the cap of an Ohio county sol dier In that war who on his return to Hartford left the cap In town and it was swept out of the store with other old rubbish and only the two military buttons on it were saved aa relicsBefore my sister died she request ed to be burled In the Morton graveyard In sight of what had been her homo for years and near a large tree where she and her schoolmates had often sat beneath its shade This coin with the Mexican War relic found In the castoff rubbish of the store of W W PhIpps I have sent to Jas W Ford son of Ellsha M Ford of Hartford thinking that these relics of our deceased relatives whose remains were laid to rest in Oakwood cemetery and the Morton graveyard may be more a memorial- to them at Hartford than In this part of the county EDWIN FORBES Fordsvllle Ky Life Raved at DeathsDoor- I never felt so near my gave writes W R Patterson of WelllnR ton Tex as when a frightful cough and lung trouble pulled me down to 100 pounds In spite of doctors treatment for two years My lath er mother and two sisters died of consumption and that I am alive today Is due to Dr Kings New DIe covery which completely cured me Now I weigh 187 pounds and have been well and strong for years Quick safe sure Its the best reme dy on earth for coughs colds la grippe asthma croup and all throat and lung troubles 60c and 100 Trial bottle free Guaranteed by James H Williams m Xolsc Rivers had just got homo and was stumbling over the things in the hallwayWhat you growling about dear called out Mrs Rivera from the floor above- I am growling ho answered in his deepest bass voice to drown the barking of my shins Are You Like This Tired all the time not much good for anything hardly able to drag around just all run down If you are we guarantee our VI NOL will help you It has helped many people around here who were in this condition Now look here just try one bottle of VINOL and if you are not satisfied that it did you good come back and get your money It will be returned without question That is a fair proposition and shows our faith in VINOL and that we do not want your money unless you receive benefit IWe know what we are talking about because we have sold VI howImuch good has done among our customersVINOL is not a patent secret andItrue body builder and strength crea tor of worldwide fame delicious and easy to take Come in today and start your cure at once You take no risk For Sale by Hartford Drug Co Incorporated c The Tenderfoot Farmer It was one of these experimental farmers who put green spectacles on bis cow and fed her shavings His theory was that it didnt matter what tho cow ate so long as she was fed The questions of digestion and nourishment hail not entered into Sis calculations Its only a tenderfoot farmer that wouldtry such Sanexperiment with a cow But many a farmer feeds himself regardless of digestion and nutrition UK might almost as well eat shav- Ings for all the good he gets out of his food The result is that the stomach grows weak the action of the organs of digestion and nutrition ore impaired j and the man suffers tho miseries of dyspepsia and the agonies ofnervousness i To strengthen tho stomach restore the activity of the or fans at digestion and nutrition and brace up the nerves 11talllwell as tho praise ot thousands healed by Its usejj In the strictest sense Golden Medical Discovery is a temperance medi l cine It contains neither Intoxicants nor narcotics and is as free from alcohol as from opium cocaine and other dangerous drugs All ingredients printed on Its wrapperDont delude you for his own profit There Iis no medicine for stomach liver and blood just as good as Golden Medical Discovery J rBli l8IN fEvery kind of business needs advertising nowadays to make It succeed There are two kinds of advertIsingthe good and the bad the kind that brings results and the kind which does no good Of course you want the first men Honed In order to be sure of the result WB aflB DRliB To serve you in the right way Advertising in a good live paper with large circulation like THE HERALD brings sure results Tell us what you want and let us figure you an estimate The figuring is free and the advertising wont cost you much It will help you Try it THE HERALD Hartford Ky t i 4 a lowest k For Good Get Issue Complete contents i of such a compelling nature to cause the reader to buy number and want t y the next LJPPINCOTTS now covers a wide j field of discriminating readers who seek only that which belt in Fiction Foci and Fun ONE YEARS SUBSCRIPTION WILL BRING YOU 12 GREAT COMPLETE NOVELSone each issue 50 TIMELY ARTICLES by competent writers 75 SHORT STORIES clever cleancut and vital 50 PLEASING POEMS that need no interpreter 200 PAGES OF NEW AMERICAN HUMOR in Walnuts and Wine the most widely quoted humor in America 2000 pages yearly of exhilarating reading 25 cub per cops 1Wu Is Ie lIPPIrYCOTTS MAGAZINE 4 dPidlUJ 4- t SEND FOR ova SKOAL MAGAZINE OFFERS Llpplncotts alone 250 LIpplncotts and Hartford Herald both one y f1 year for only 2MA great bargain HAVE PLACED IN YOUR RESI DENCE OR PLACE OF BUS INESS AND PUT YOURSELF IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR THE COMPANYS SPECIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRES- SJ W Hartford Ky W C SEXTON Local Manager incorporated Beaver Dam KII I ISTIti8HEDo186i dimond watch Jewelry or silver ware ou eta get the best quality at the prices thefOLDESTMAlL ORDER HOUSE IN THE SOUTH Reading LIPPINCOTTSMONTHLY Each In Itself Its is as one is TO in section jrtarSend t A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE OBANONLocal I For almost half a century we have served ex cluslvely the Southern trade Write today 4r for our free Illustrated catalogue Address C P Dame t CoJ Box 28 loobvUleKr I SrarArticle aoaraatMd If you find it in THE HERALD it will be worth reading It costs only 100 year v r- Dr Bells RineTarHoney For Coughs and Colds l 1 h Froieaalonol Card J H PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAY KY Will practice bit prolesiloa In Ohio and ad olnlng counties Special attention given to aJ business entrusted to his care FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY Will prsctlce bis profession la Ohio and afli AppcallrlmlnalOmce In the Herald building I C K DAXHBTT BARNETT it SMITHlItlll 1 Attorneys at Law BYwill the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In the Conr o f Appeals Collections a specialty DR BELLS ANTIPAIN For Internal and External Pa1ns uumLLT1HE1KIAND CURE THE LUNCS kiWITH IDg saINew Discovery IOR COUCHS PRICE oo Trial SoW Free AND ALL THROAT AND LUNQTROUBLES GUARANTEED BATISFAOTOR- OR MON V UEFTTNDE I leraUnadtAnORCtirxrleslsteted oejasa j DooBU onHOw TOiTAINOinA lnTaloable + PATgn D SWIFT CO ATNT LAWYERS 808 5evelth st Was iggtsul C SalveI11I 1 a a r o PRESIDENT TAFT c GRANTS FREEDO To Socialist Editor Who Offered a Reward for Kidnaping I TaylorIWashington Feb 1 President Taft today commuted the sentence of Fred D Warren Socialist editor recently sentenced to six months Imprisonment and fined 1500 by striking out the Imprisonment and reducing the fine to 100 to be col lected by civil process only The President said that while a violation of the law Is clear the seni tence seemed excessive Warren was sentenced for a vlolai t IJ tlon of the postal laws In sending matter through the mall on which cprintedcr to Reason will pay 1000 In gold to the person or per 4Bons who will kidnap oxGovernor Taylor and return him to the State officials of Kentucky whore he Is wanted on a charge of murdering GoebelIt during the time that Moyer Haywood and other members of the Western Federation of Miners were arrested in Colorado and hustled to the State of Idaho where they were charged with murder Warren the j editor of the Appeal to Reason protested against the kidnapping of these union mine officers declarf that it was against State and Federal laws Then he had printed on the back of envelopes the offer of a reward for the arrest of Taylor a Republican who was charged with complicity in the murder of Goebel1 r He was arrested tried and convict t ed and was sentenced to enter prIs- on j on next Tuesday J Tortured for 15 Years By a curedefying stomach trouble that barred doctors and resisted all remedies ho tried John W Mod 4 ders of Moddersville Mich seemed doomed He had to sell his farm and give up work His neighbors said ho cant live much longer Whatever I ate distressed me Ihe wrote till I tried Electric Bitters which worked such wonders for me that I can now eat things I could not take for years Its surely a grand remedy for stomach trouble Just as good for the liver and kidneys Every bottle guaranteed Only 50c at James H Williams 214 Main street m GI l nprFOR FLETCHERS 1 CASTORIAt4 POSSE KILLS FATHER AND SON AFTER MURDER I El Paso Tex Feb 3 Surround ed by a posse after a chase Robert Howe and his son were killed In a pitched battle of several hours duration early today ne Sierra Blanca about 100 miles southwest of here A second son Guy Howe 27 years old was wounded and captured yes terday afternoon when the posse ov ertook the Howes The elder How- L shot and killed Customs Guard t Thomas L OConnor yesterday J morning at Ft Hancock about 75 t miles east of here when OConnor A COMMON ERROR w ii 1The Same Mistake Is Made byI I Many Hartford PeopleI Its a common errortt To plaster the aching back t To rub with liniments rheumatic 1 r JointsWhen the trouble comes from th- llKidneys I Loans Kidney Pills cure all kidney 1119Here I proofI Seminary street JIadlsonvllle Ky says have no hesitation in recommending Doans Kidney Pillsaa they are without doult the best kidney medicine on the jiinrket When they cured mo of kidney trouble in the summer of 1903 iallowed my experience to be published in our local papers so that other persons who were suffering an J did might know how to get relief 1 was afflicted for years with acute pains through my kidneys andI r loins and often I had to give up an- Ile dl down The kidney secretions wareI l atlter remedy rubbing my back with liniments and wore plasters but ro Solved little or no relief Deans Kid ty iiey Pills effected a po manent cur end It required the contents of only two boxes to bring about this result For sale by alt dealers Price 60I ants FoBterJIllburn Co Buffalo w York sole agents for the United t tea 1t1I emember the namoDOan8Inj tnct take no other attempted to arrest him for the kill ing of I K McClure a special agent SantMJustice of the Peace Hemley o Ft Hancock was also shot when Howe made his escape with his sons ooooooooooooooo O HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS O 000000000000000 To make biscuit light drench with gasoline and Ignite before sore Ing To keep servantschloroform andI lock in the cellar To get rid of peddlersbuy all they have To remove fruit stains from linen use the scissors To keep rats out of the pantry put all the toad In the cellar To entertain women visitors lett them read all your private papers To entertain men visitors feed the brutes To keep children at homo lock em In the garret To keep hubby at homelock upi all his clothes To prevent accidents In the kltch enfill the kerosene can with water To stop leaks In pipessend hurryup call the nearest plumber To economize on coalget a gasi range To test freshness of eggs drop on hard surface To propitiate the janitoryouI cant do ItLlpplncotts ngA limn TREATMENT FOR LUNG TROUBLE It Is a recognized tact that freshI air plenty of nourishing food and a correct constitutional treatment have done more to euro lung troubleI and that weakened rundown feel Ing than all other forms of treat ment combined- A I constitutional treatment to meet all the necessary requirements must not only kill and remove all the disease germs from the system but at the same time It must In crease the appetite aid in digestion and assimilation of food renovate and build up the nervous system and all parts of the body Germinal Remedy meets all those requirements and Is producing someI marvelous results If you have consumption In any form blood disease if you areI troubled with ulcers or chronicI sores coughs pains in the chest Iif you have weak lungs and feel gen orally run down and weak write theI Ohl9 Medical Co Box 95 Columbus Ohio and they will send you a full1I sized bottle of this medicine abso lutely free as a trial If you will1 mention the name of Hartford Her ald 5t5 CASTOR IIA toFarIatr4ats and Children till KID You Haw Always Bought arDoare the Signature of m 0IHis AlibiII Rastus had been caught redhand Il ode Poaching again Rastus said the Colonel gravely I am afraid Rastus that youre a bad egg Yassuh dats what I is fo shoII Gunnel said the old man Ts jest a plain bad alg Gunnel So you admit It do you de manded the Colonel Yassuh I admits It Cunnel be cuz ye know Cunnel dom bad alga nebbah poaches suh said the olds manWhereupon the Colonel let him off with no other punishment than a tolerably swift Impact between the toe of his own boot and the tails of Uncle Rastuss frock costHnr pers Weekly I eAn attack of thegripfsoften fol lowed by a persistent cough which to many proves a great annoyance Chamberlains Cough Remedy hastbeen extensively used and with good success for the relief and cure of 1this cough Many cases have beenII cured after all other remedies had tailed Sold by all dealers m What the Jut Contained Not long ago two parties of this county after drinking liquor from aC Jug got so sick that they were past going for a while In fact eVery- one who touched It felt anything but good afterward When tho conh tents of tho jug got pretty low It had such a muddy cast that an InF vestlgatlon was made and It was 2 found that a dirtdauber had built a neat In the jug during the summer months and stored away a big vane of spiders which failed to set stomachseDahlonega Ga N Croup S S uggetIIIIII Causes uneasy nights but if you will Dr Bells P IneTa Honey it will hi afew minutes Thoro Is better Guaranteed by all dealers m BOY WITH BIG KNIFE BAITtAn Incident of the Civil War Before and After Meeting the Enemy Rockport Ky Feb 3 1911 Whpn the boys of 1860 started the Confederate Army they thought- I It was Incumbent on them to arm themselves as best they could and as a part of the many Implements secured was the Big Knife These knives were made by the local blacksmiths out of mill saw flies any where from 10 to 20 Inches long and were usually worn In a belt sometimes with and sometimes wit out a scabbard They proved use ful In camp but as a weapon of of fense or defence they were a failure We had with us a very lively boy with a very long knife and he made- i a dally practice of getting out on the parade grounds and exercising w1 thso his knife and voice He would wave the knife In all the maneuvers thruatlan parrlng high cart and low cart talk ling all the while and saying that ho I would show the Yankee a trick or two when he had an opportunity I He would lop off arms and legs ga lore and make two out of every Yank he met Time rolled on and the spring of 1862 opened up Rumors of bat began to be noised about camp a an undercurrent of excitement w felt by every one Our friend of t Rig Knife became more enthusiast- to his exercises and attracted IIto large share of attention from ernes and men Finally the order came to break camp with three days rations pre pared and one morning we began to move to what proved to be the be tle field of Shiloh On arriving near the ground we were ordered to stack surplus baggage and fall In line of battle Soon the cannon balls began to whistle over our heads coming closer with each vollev Then the final order Forward I guide ce Iter march I rang out clear and loud and the fight was on Then we looked for our friend with the big knife for Inspiration but lo and be hold he was not In sight The bat tie raged we mixed It up with the Yanks In fine style but our friend was not In It and from that hour to this good time he of the Big Knife was never seen In the Sunny South JACK Deafness Cannot beCured by local applications as they can reach the diseased portion of the ear There is only one way to cure deaf ness and that is by constitutional remedies Deafness Is caused by inflamed condition of the raucous lin ling of the Eustachian Tube When this tube is Inflamed you have a rum bling sound or imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed Deafcvss the result and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition hear- Ing will be destroyed forever nine cones out of ten are caused by catarrh which Is nothing but an inflamed condition of the raucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars or any case of Deafness caused catarrh that cannot be cured byHalls Catarrh Cure Send for efrcula free F J Cheney Co ToledoO Sold by Druggists 75c Take Halls Family Pills for constipation m KENTUCKY MAYOR IS BEING HIM Ul SUED Catlettsburg Ky Feb 2 Twentyeight damage suits ing 140000 were entered against Mayor A H Moore of Ashland in the Circuit Court of Boyd county The plaintiffs in the cases are 28 men of Ashland who were indicted 1 he in Circuit Court charged with violations of the local option law and In each case they ask 5000 Wife Got TipTop AdvicefMy wife wanted me to take ou rofboy to the doctor to euro an ugly boll writes D Frankel of Stroud I said put Bucklens Arnica Salve on It She did so and It curd dfive the boll In a short time Quickest healer of Burnes Scalds Cetaoln of burns scalds cuts corns bruises sprains swellings Best cure on earth Try It Only Be at James H Williams m SS CROSSES TIm SEA TO SEE HER POOR SICK DOfiOIK Informed by cable of the serious heIYorkshtroa T lI known in Paris Berlin and St PoII i tersburg is speeding to Liverpool o nand board tho Campania of the Goner- Line I j which left New York on Wed I1 nesday Miss De Felico had been n dwOGa visiting relatives In Syracuse and thiscityYankee withLEshe telephoned a friend on Tuesday and I shall lelave tomojjrow aboard the Campania to bo with the dear little fellow Miss De Felice carried with her to England two Yorkshire terriers each of which has crossed the Atlan tic with her four UmesNew York Herald toISUPPOSED DEAD WOMAN RISES PROM HER COFFIN Glasgow Ky Feb 1After the funeral sermon had been preached over the body of Mrs Jane Pitcock an aged woman of Gamaliel Monroe county last Saturday the underta ken removed the lid of the coffin to hallow the friends to take a farewell look at the dead woman The crowd were horrified to see the supposed corpse raise both hands above her head and sit upright In the coffin The room was crowded with friends all of whom were frightened badly they made a rush for tho exit and In a few seconds the house ofwas empty 0- Ig Physicians were called and she was removed from the coffin to her bed where she was given medical at tendon However on the evening after the strange occurrence she passed away The body will not be Interred until relatives know beyond a doubt that she Is dead tieJosephines Compliments ndHow Is It that Miss Josephine complll1ements lcI guess it Is because she listens her callers stories with bated rsbreath Help Ynnte l For that cough Get a bottle of Dr Bells IlneTarHoney It is the- t best m ImPCS and llrnlns It Is sported that prunes make good brain food We muht even go further than that and sly that prunes would- n make a good substitute for the brains some people hav- eCKlldron Cry FOR FLETC- HERSGASTORIA What Job Had The superintendent was talking to tbolIttJo ones about tho plagues of ElfpiXojv said she can you tell me what the plagues were allnbut one of the plague were named Thp last one was too much for the school Thinking to help out the chil dren by BUKKCHtlon the superintendent ansold Dont you remember the other Of cours v you know what Job bad A little hand went up Well Tommy what was ItT IsPutfenreHe was given a reward of merit New York Press TuttsPilis bystimulate the TORPID LIVER strengthen the digestive organs raregulate the bowels and are un equaled at an- ANTIBILIOUS MEDICINE- In malarial districts their virtues are widely recognized as they PO- Ise peculiar properties In freeing from that poison Elc gent sugar coated Take No Substitute- D mnn THRIOEAWEEK WORLD ffllhontaRlwlinltsFieldTlieLarg est Cheapest and Best Newspaper Published at the Price 0 Readin Every Englishspeak ing Country It has invariably been the great ef ort of the ThrlceaWeek edition = the Now York World to publish the news impartially in order that it may be an accurate reporter of what has happened It tells the truth irrespec of party sari for that reason it has achieved a position with the pub lie unique among papers of its class The subscription season is now at hand aii l this is the best offer that will be made to you It you want the news as it really is subscribe for the Thriceaweek edition of the New York World which comes to you every other day except Sunday and is thus practically a dally at the price of aweekly THE THRICEAWEEK WORLDS regular subscription price is only 100 per year and this pays for 15C papers jWe offer this unequalled newspaper THE HARTFORD HERALD to = for one year for 165 11gethr regular subscription price of th two papers Is 200 I CASTORIA i For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the- Signature of In- Use For Over Thirty Years GASTORIAI I II Ii aiII I February Y Bargains it H DAILY Courier J0 urn al IiOneHalf Price If you will bring or send us your subscription dur U ing the month of February we will send you flTho Hartford Herald I Ii ONE YEAR I ANDrHIr DAILY COURIERJOURNALFour 1 U FOR ONLY 175 Or this paper ONE YEAR and the DAILY COUR IERJOURNAL Eight Months for 8250 Subscriptions received at this priqe only during y the month of February 1 The State and National Campaigns are opening and yon want to keep posted on political events I mtcrsonsinterestingW GPm I II- It KENTUCKY Lih1 and Power Company INCOnrOHATKD A E G BARRASS MGR HartfordJKyWill wire your house at cost Electric Lights are clean healthy and safe No withoutthemHartford HeraldOnly 1 Per Year F r Y WHfc Ii nt r- r rrRwrt + r 11 4 1 itj b w- W y t I f Tka Hartjord Herald WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 8 ABOUT MAX BEAN AGED THIRTEEN y Who Had Strayed Away from the Alfalfa THE FAMILY NAME IS LEGION i Great City Journal Just Failed to Size Up Old Hartford JJProperlyt tAF MODKRN PASTORAL LESSO- r The following bright editorial I1 Fridays CourierJournal Is neat but I unfinished In defense of Max Deanl aged thirteen and away yonder shy of a descrlutlon of Hartford Ohio I t countyMax Bean aged 13 disappeared mysteriously from his home In Ow ensboro the other day He left the r 1house about 8 oclock ostensibly to- go school When It was learned r later that he had not appeared at the school building his parents sent out a general alarm They feared Max had been kidnaped or had met withI some serious mishap The pone were notified and the entire city became interested in the case of the lost heir of the Bean household Late that night the boys par ents found a note which he had left in the warming pan of the kitchen stove It was brief and to the point merely setting forth that he was lonesome and had gone to Hartford where the family formerly hadI lived After pile month of city life Max Bean aged 13 had hied himi back to the alfalfa It subsequently developed that he had been saving money for the trip and had accumu lated iii cents This being D centsi short of the railroad fare to Hart ford he had borrowed the requisite nickel from a cousin and had sped blithely on his way to Hartford and to happiness It Is a puzzling proposition that the parents of Max lean are up against Doubtless the Bean family saw prospects of bettering Itself when It left the hills and dales of Ohio county behind and plunged hopefully Into the vortex of urban life It Is evident from the succeeds ing events that the heart of Bean junior was not In the move andt that he must have been outvoted I en the matter came up In the fam dividediWagainan aged 13 positively refus llaz th In Owensboro long enough- es to Sta umated what are his dis to get derits going to do about It turbed pare Iderably like the Bean It looks cflnt the beans both lit family spilled uratlvely when its rthrand fig the hayfields of members forsook urements of Da I Hartford for the al vless countys caplt4tOse sympa There be many tpeating ml thles will follow the jWi blue flow norlty In Its quest for thiPfc repose or which brings peace uIs no of soul In all creations tlit Qlruto I11A ryaratthe statement holds good thougflttk city happens to bo no larger tliHIPK Owensboro and the rural strangtJ1ruII happens to be Max Bean aged The ancestral Bean was planted l hero over a century ago and the I nnmo Is legion One member of this cereal or soy family as the casor r may be from off the alfalfa nowJ1 living and almost a centenarian hasp also living some ten or a dozen sonsI and daughters twenty to thirty grandchildren and we are afraid tott say how many grandchildren of theI second degree In leaving the parent nest Max Bean aged thirteen was1er returning to the fathers mingling j with the brethren Joining the union j as It were Besides Beans Is good and It follows that more Deans are better even unto the superlative Secondly Owensboro Davless jacounty was cut from Hartford and county meadows hllla and- y I dalesas In case of waste lands 1Hartford Is a sort of metropolis It 1 railroad electric self it has a now lights waterworks macadamized streets an opera house many miles three miles of sew t IIerageand will soon havo to pay taxes H I at rate of three dollars on the f i hundredWhy did not the CourierJournal the matter straight We stateIr t for both Hartford and Ohio county Ky and Max Bean aged thirteen BEAVER DAM Feb 0rMr Albert peach sold In Southsituatedtown lotsY some Beaver Dam fronting the Rochester road outside the corporationi but the sales not being satisfactory they were rejected The Sunday School at the Baptist Church had the largest attendance Sunday known since Its organization After services the ordinance of bap tism was administered to eight can didates There was also service a the Methodist Church and a good at tendance Miss Jimmie Gatewood of Prince ton Ky was the guest of Miss Myrll Miller the past week Muster Rumsey Taylor of Prince ton Ky was the guest of his grand parents here Saturday and Sunday Mr Cecil Wright of Evansvlllo visited Dr Sim Taylors fam Hind last week Born to the wife of Albert Leach last week a girl The mother and4 child are doing well Reason Enthroned Because meats are so tasty they are consumed In great excess This leads to stomach troubles bilious ness and constipation Revise your Indiet let rcrson and not a pampered appetite roitrol then taVe a few doses of Cham1palns Stomach and Liver Vblets and you will soon be well again Tv It For sale at all dealers Sample free m IIOIEWEMj- Teh GOlr and Mrs Elbert Hun ley visited relatives and friends In Auburn Ky last week Mr Clayton Brown has sold his house and two acres of ground to his brother Charley for 125 and bought a house and two acres of Mr Porter Hunley Latter consideration 175 IIo will move soon Mr Douglas has moved to the Murray Chinn farm better known asI the Rock farm Mr Dick Coleman bought five 100lb hogs for 50 of Mr E V Bennett Hog meat Is high Messrs Dick Coleman William Johnson and John Miles are attend Ing court at Hartford this week Mr William Johnson has torn down a log barn that was built In slave time the logs hewn out of fine poplar trees He had them sawed Into weatherboarding and is going to build a barn with them Mr E V Bennett has moved to his new home across the river from Ceralvo where he will raise a crop Mr and Mrs W D ShuK gave the voung folks a nice social last Satur day night CEKALVO Feb GRev Robert Danks and family of Nelson visited relatives here Friday Mr Robert Taylor and wife of Buell visited her sister Mrs Luclan Kimmel last week Miss Minnie Barnes of Is visiting her sister Mrs Bert Bar nardDr 0 L Everly and family moved to Rockport haveII Mr P R Robertson visited his daughter Mrs J H Wood here last week Mr Lon Barnard returned from Oxford Kan Thursday where he went to bring the remains of his son John who was burled here February 2nd Several from here attended the burial of Mr Martin Woodburn at Rockport Sunday U SotlreIIAll persons having claims against the estate of Quinton Ballard de ceased are hereby notified to file same with me at my residence eight miles east of Hartford Kentucky properly proven on or before the 15th day of February 1911 or they will be forever barred JAMES A BALLARD Admr Hartford Ky Route 1 k- 3t4 Fofiiys Kidney RemedyAn Appro elation L SfcConne11 Cathrlnc St Elmlbj a Wl Ywrites I wish to ex ness my appeclatlon of the great ood I derived from Foleys Kidney Remedy whIch T usod for a bad case of kidney trouble Five bottles didC the work most effectively and proved to me beyond doubt It Is the most reliable kidney medlclnvo I have ev taken and shall always have my endorsement For sale y all Drug gistsmi a CORN In Nineteen Ten by an Improved method of farming I raWl seventy bushels of corn per acre without fer tilizer on ground that had beenI 1 planted to corn only for more thanI sixty years Best previous crop for 1 ty bushels How It was done sent I free JOHN T JACKSONI 3t4 Rockport Ky Do you know that croup can be prevented Give Chamberlains Cough Remedy as soon as the child becomes hoarse or oven after there croupy cough appears and It will prevent the attack It Is also a certain cure for croup and has never been known to fall Sold by all dealersmHartford Herald Only 51I Year c gT rti T rtttukt iI3 4T T roJ t rf HERES A PIECE OF j 11 1Gqod Newst FOR EVERYBODY WHO HAS A MONEYSAVING INCLINATION i J t OU REGULAR PROFITSHARING SALE IS NOW ON I I t An event which a lot of you have been looking forward to A sale + I r of High Grade Merchandise offered to you at prices you will be glad 1 t ji to pay We have marked down our fall and winter stockaway below i p the profitsharing line We have bought every big bargain we could i p find in the wholesale markets in order to make this the most attractive + J sale proposition we have ever had and we have succeeded you will J say so when you see our showings jt- f Your success lies in you appropriating these good things to your personal use Are K- VA tt V you going to do iU At this time of the year i when your time is least valuable are you go lag to fail to make a few dollars by not attending this saleXbJsc lr It will do you good if you dont buy a dollars worth The hustle and bustle will put t 1 4 K new life in you and you will leave here with a determination to have some money to spend t tho next time that Barnes Store has a sale i I The benefit Is not all yours While you make the money ve make a lot of good r 0 friends Every sale makes us some new customers and we want yon and elerybodyr1i I V else to come to this sale j 3 t te BHRGHINS IN EMERY LINE t 44 eIfyou havent seen our big ad drop us a card and we will mail you one Better still rt 1b + ft come to the store and the merchandise will speak for itself B 1 JF1I1J IIIIf tEeP BARNES BRO k tBaaver Dam Kentucky t- ft LIPS SEALED IN Lad DEATHS Kills Sister Who CHARGED HIM AND With Awful Crime HerHe Says Was Accidental MOXIIKK DYIXO IX A Evnnsvllle Ind Feb 2 with a single shot the lips already fastened an upon their father and had own assault upon her Messel aged 17 years shot ed hiff sister Fern II years 1030 oclock Thursday Informedof killing occurred at tile home street The Boy shooting was accidental but lice and coroner suspect murder done Messer was by Detective Bon Ieck He attempted to get away house and made no was crying when the officers the house In the room at the time killing were the boy and Bessie and John Logsdon ter two are children of Mrs Logsdon 813 Wmlam had been keeping bouae for sels since the mother was thou antftubercnlosls weeks 80- Three days ago on brought to him Henry special officer for the Board drens Guardians leged criminal relations father Clark Keseel and ter The result was the Messel and his confession the mother had been away sinned against the girl bound over to the Circuit Judge Gould He was not the killing last night Neither the mother yet know of It the That the Board of Childrens had planned to arrest Sfcssel for committing a crfme against the little girl that to which the father Bad al confessed was the statement night of S IV Douglas presi of the Board It was stated by to president of the Guardians that the little girl had told of box brothers act to Calvin Hunsln 701 Grand avenue Hnnslnger the house In which the JTessels Suspicious of the actions of the Messel ETunslnger approach the girl and asked her what her had done according to Mr It is said that aria then down and weeping declared her brother had treated her her father As far as could be last night the girl made the to nIT one else Young would make no statement the murder Tears were In his I when he entered the police sta I I FoleyICfilney 1HIn tonic In action quick In re A special medicine for alt and bladder disorders Mary Wolfeboro N IT says I afflicted with a bad case of duo to the uric acid my kidneys failed to clear out my blood T was so llame In my Joints end hack that It was ag for me to step r used Foley Pills for three days when I able to get up nnd move about the pains were all gone This change In condition r owe to Kidney Pills and recommend to any one suffering as I For saIl by all dealers m nOMR BURNS WITH A t 2500 LOSS Fire of unknown origin complete ly destroyed the home and content of Mrs 81m Weber of the Yelving ton vicinity Davlcss county lateI Frlay evening entailing a loss of something like 2500 with no In surance Mrs Weber had not been residing at her home for several weeks and late Friday afternoon went to her home and building a flrecleaned out- the 1 i house She left a small fire In grate and It Is generally sUPPOs- ed that the hoses caught from embers in the grate The house and contents were destroyed before aw slstance could arrive upon the scene I Are overcome All Skin Qy TroublesII SalvoAntiseptic as use as pure cream and is guaran teed to glvo satisfaction 25o at im Notice to Creditors Creditors of the Ohio County Bank will please come forward and settle their Indebtedness It Is my purpose and the desire of everybody connected with the bank to have dividends declared to the depositors as speedily as possible This cannot be lalwilllal MM8l m GIUl TE MONUMENTS Our business is devoted exclusively to the Granite Marble and Stone trade and being thoroughly practical In same enables us to know your requirements We only handle the very best Granite and Marble And our reputation has been gained on lust this class of work Let ui show you in dollars and cents that It IB to your Interest to buy of us We gladly refer you to any of the parties we have furnished as to our honesty and responsibility m dealings The Thomas Monumental Works Hartford Ky 1 f CROWN AND BRIDGE WORKtt iwhatt are uptodate on dentistry and are not satisfied with anything but tho of perfection In dental work Teeth extracted with as little pain possible Children given careful Special attention to plate ork and ALL WORK GUARAN TEED Work dono at lowest prices DR H J BELL Office in Republican Building HARTFORD KY Headquarters for Building Supplies If you need building ma haveRoughDoors Sash Moldings Floor SidingLathes MetulRoofingand Guttering House and PatenPlaster andWire Bean Br6stWest End Union St Hartford 4 Ky