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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 15, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 15, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911021501_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 15, 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. .MiB.il.tT1)lrty--.- i" 'ii wiimim f iVMI1 i'' 'ill t 37th ' In THE HARTFORD HERALD. S ' Keal,y El6CB; "J 6TW6' fe6 Herald of a JVoisi World, the jyews of All Nations Lumbering at my Bach." Snbscrlptlon, $1.00 per Year, In AdYaDM EAE. ter part HARTFORD, of last week what was thought to be some cases of smallpox, and on Investigation he declared tho ailment was smallpox. There are only two cases, among a camp of men from Hopkins- - county who are getting out railroad ties near Unity church. Tho disease "is of very light form, and all precaution is being taken to confine the trouble, Greenville Record. KI., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1911. suc,h things SO 7 OF ed, that tho Twentieth Century Did Begin Jnnuarv 1, 191 1." Affirmative: J. P. Foster, C. E. Allen and Negative: Robert Davis. O. D. Carson, W. R. Carson and W. R. Speech Clifford Stevens. Stevens. Select Reading Bertha Ward. Paper. Reading of Program. Criticism. FILYDIA FOSTER, Sec'y. TAFT'S TIME WASTED T.UKING TO FARMERS GIRL Columbus, O., Fob. 10. Upon the heels of President Taft's speech at fatho National Corn Show voring a reciprocity treaty with Canada, 300 members of the Ohio Cora Improvement Association, in session at the Exposition, adopted resolutions condemning the proposed reduction In the tailff on farm prod,,, ucts. The resolution read1 "We doubt the wisdom of throwing open unreservedly our ports to By so doCanadian farm products. ing, the American farmer will b unable to obtain a fair compensi-tlo- n for the time nnd labor wlilc'i he Invests in his business, and we recommend thai no action be taken by our National Government that shall be detrimental to his Intery, ROOSEVELT FUR IHE DIRECT VOTE Election of United States Senators. W te HE IS IN FAVQROFAMENDMENT GEORGE HEAD LOCATED IN LESLIE, ARKANSAS George Head, tho Fordsvllle merchant who disappeared tho night of Monday, January 20, after having left home with about $250 en route to Owensboro, has been located in Leslie, Ark. His wife, who is said to be a nervous wreck as the result of having worried over her husreceived a disappearance, band's telegram from Head last Wednesday morning, stating that he is in Leslie, and Is in comparatively good health. , Ho assigned "no reason for his sudden disappearance. Since the disappearance of Head the members of his family have spared no pains to learn of his whereabouts, as they were laboring under the Impression that he had met with foul play while In Owensboro. and others do not. An should not be expected to know the names and residence of all your uncles, aunts and cousins, even if he should see them get on or DEFEAT off the trnln. Tell us about it. It's news that make the newspaper, and every man, woman and child can be Or "Progressive Republic- associate editor if they only will. Never apologize when you give this Candidate, bit of Information to an editor, for If there lives one so dead that he has lost his appreciation of such favors, A CHANGETO WIN," SAY OTHEHS he Is dead, Indeed, to every vlrtuo that Imparts value to a paper. TAFT AND SURE editor PARENTAGE SOME 1 His A P UK FatherWas of a Roving Nature. an With BEAOTIFOLJFJTUCKY ToPresentConstitution--Als- o Thinks Electoral College Not Needed. IS FOR THE CANADIAN 1 The Ultimatum That is Being Put Up to Republicans Everywhere. GARDNER GIVES HIS REASONS By Clyde H. Tavenner Seclal Washington Correspondent of TheHerald Washington, Feb. 11. Taft and suro defeat, or a progressive Repub- TREATY ft- - L Grand Rapids, Mich., Feb. ii. The election of United States Senators by direct vote of the people Is favored by former President Theo. Roosevelt. He believes the Constitution should bo so amended as to provide for popular election. In a speech-here at the Lincoln Club banquet Col. Roosevelt came out squarely in favor of the change. Asserting that the present method of electing Senators was a "relic" of old times and should be remedied, th6 Colonel also declared himcelf in favor of abolishing the electoral col- WANTS THE lege In the election of President. Col. Itoosevelt's subject was "LinIN CHURCH HEALED coln and Progressive Republicanism." The banquet hall, seating more than 2,000 people, was crowd- raUonUrgesUn'on of'M.EXhurch ht lican candidate with a chance to win. This Is the ultimatum being put up to Republicans all over the country by the recently organized Progressive Republican league. The striking campaign slogan was coined by Gllsou Gardner, one of the press agents of the progressive EAST VIEW. Feb. 13. The roads here are so bad that It Is almost Impossible for anyone to travel them. It looks like the tax 'payers ought to put a stop to the "good roads" movement ahd taxation. Mr. B. C. Austin, of Beaver Dam, spent last week In this vicinity with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Bills Bartlett spent Saturday night at Union Grove with relatives. Mr. L. D. French was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. B, C. Austin, at Beaver Dam, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. David Saddler Is dangerously ill of throat and lung trouble. There are several cases of measles In this community. WasChamp's Mother Reared in a Wilderness, Close to Nature. CHAMP'S FATHER A DEMOCRAT ed. s W Col. Roosevelt In his address also urged the adoption of the proposed reciprocity treaty with Canada. Col. Roosevelt said: "One of the progressive policies upon which I think the great majority of progressives are agreed Is that United States Senators should lie elected by popular vote. The Constitution' should, In my Judgment, be so amended as to provide for this. "The Insistence upon the election of Senators In some way which shall not permit the people to pass dlrect-l- v upon them, Is merely a relic of the same fcellnc which mado the founders of the Constitution trust the election of the President to the electoral college instead of to direct popular vote. "The same fears of the people expressed now by those who are against cholco of Senators by popular vote wero expressed a century and a quarter ago by good and wise men who erroneously felt that it was not safe to trust the election of the President to direct popular vote. "A comparatively short experience convinced the nation that the President should be voted for directly by the people. And although the form of an electoral college has been rctnlned, the actual fact is that the vote for President is a direct vote, the electors having no function except formally to ratify the popular decree and if it wero possible even the slightest function U could with ndvantago be abolished. of the evils prophesied "None have resulted from the change in the case of the President and the same thing, I am perfectly sure, will happen when the chnnge is made as regards Senators. It will be a change markedly for good Just as much for good as was the change In tho case of tho President. "But tho United States should under no circumstances surrender one particle of the control It now has ns regards the election of Senators. To do so would be a mistake which might havo grave and consequences nnd nbsoutely no argument worth heeding can bo advanced in favor of such a change. For Cnnmllan Treaty. "I feel that we are to be congratulated as a nation upon the likelihood of obtaining a closer reciproc-It- v of tariff and trado relations with Among all the powers of Canada. the earth there is none with which we should deSlro to bo upon more Irtlmate footing of equal rights, to which wo should bo more closely hound in relations of mutual esteem and good will, than in the case of our groat neighbor to the North, whose prosperity and growth should bo a'mattor of pride to all who dwell on the Amorlcan continent. I welcome the proposed reciprocity as marking a signal advance in bringing about the closest jand most friendly relations between the two countries." help-fulnes- If what the progressives say Is MILTON OLIVER FINDS true, that the of Taft means defeat for the Republican LYON COUNTY TOO HOT party In 1912, it might as well be accepted now that the next President of the United States is to be a Confessed Night Rider Ready To Democrat. Mr. Taft seems certain Leave Kentucky Arranges South, and Alethodist of a This Is because he has the necessary machinFor Sale of Farm. Church. ery to get the nomination. gives seven reason why Gardner " Kuttaua, Ky., Feb. 12. Milton Chicago, Feb. 10. Union of the Taft should not receive n Oliver, confessed night rider and Episcopal Church and the Methodist 1. His failure to receive Indorsewitness for the prosecution in trials Methodist Episcopal Church, South, ment nt the hnnd3 of Roosevelt. at HopUInsvllle, who was recently was urged strongly by John A. 2. His alliance with Aldrieh, wounded at his doorstep by a would-b- e Chattanooga, Tenn., chairman assassin, has arranged for the of the Bookt Committee of the Meth- Cannon, Balllnger and others generally credited with connections sale of his fnrm, consisting of 230 odist Episcopal Church. acres, for a cash consideration of "There Is no reason," Mr. Patton with specinl privileges. Preliminary arrangements $4,000. 3. Tho hostility of the progressaid, "why there should bo more esterdny with Jess than ono Mothodlst Church in Amer- sive wing, led by men like LnFol-lett- were closed Beverldge, PInchot and Roose- KeoUjOy, of Cadiz, and the transfer ica e -- The- split or the church occurred velt. of tuj deed will be made at disapproval 4. The public of In 184 4 over the question of slavTuesdav. ery and Mr. Patton Insisted that Taft's bad faith In accepting the The sale will not Include livestock church leaders above and below Ma- Presidency as a progressive, and ad- or farming Implements. Oliver reserves the privilege of reson and Dixon's lino bellove the time ministering the office as a reactionmaining on the farm until the first has come when the breach between ary. 5. The bad effects of his support of March, and during this timo will tho sections can be healed permaof Ralllnger and opposition to gen- testify against Dr. Amos and, others, nently . The spirit of union found expres- uine conservation. whose cnse3 will be called at tho G. In the February term of the Christian Taft's acquiescence sion later In tho day when It was decided that tho publishing houses Aldrieh tnrlff bill, his uso of patron- county Circuit Court. It wns said located In Now York, Cincinnati and age to coerce progressives, his dethat Oliver will not leave the Chicago should hereafter bo Incorpo- feat of an Income tax, etc. State until all of the night rider 7. The cumulativo effect of these cases are disposed of. rated under one name and be known numerous He as "Tho Methodist Rook Concern." as seen in the repudiation of tho has mentioned point3 as prospective locations, no The action was the result of Instruc- party In the late elections. having Opposed to these aro tho facts definite conclusion been tions Issued by tho General Conference, whloh met In Baltimore in that he has the confidence of Wall reached, but In selecting a futuro 190S, calling upon the publishing in- street; that there is a strong sen- place of residence he Is likely to terests to seek reincorporation and timent In favor of giving any Presi- choose a distant one. Since being consolidation. dent a second term, and that the wounded, Oliver has been under regulars in his party favor his He has been guard of militiamen. PRIZES TO HE GIVEN But the facts which able to work his crop of tobacco and FOR FARMERS' EFFORT practically cinch a plnre It In bond. Ho sold tho weed for Tnft are these: to tho Imperial Tobacco Company 1. Thnt tho Republican organi in Eddyvllle at $8 around nnd hns To the A. S. of E. Locals in HartAs a sation Is controlled by Big Busi- delliered n portion of the crop. district: ford Magisterial spur to greatereffort in building up ness; Do you know thnt croup can be i,. tho A. S. of E. we havo decided to i mi i uiu ai'uuieru ueieKuiea Chamberlain's Give otter as a prize a nice banner to tho aro brought under Taft control by prevented? local union showing tho best record federal patronage and cash. Couch Remedy ns soon as tho child 3. That the Southern delegates, becomes hoarse or even after the for tho three months ending the last Thursday In March, 1911. Tho combined with tho delegates who croupy cough appears and It will award Is to be made by a committee can bo delivered by State machines preent the attack. It is also a cerr. tain cure of three, to bo selected by the dis- controlled by such as Penrose, for croup and has never Crane, Aldrieh, Carter and been known to fall. Sold by all trict union nnd will bo based on m of the dealers. 1st. Per cent of old members Warren, make up delegates to the national Republicpaying dues. Pat-to- n, e, ." SPlF Eddy-vlll- y While Champ Clark has risen Into prominence, his road has not been strewn with roses, and it has been through the hardest kind of digging that he has reached the Speakn.ymrsmvu ership. Born In Anderson county among the cliffs along the Kentucky river, whose scenery Is often compared to that of the beautiful Hudson, Clark was immured within tho confines of jiature. The home of Clark was similar to that of other pioneer homes, consisting of three rooms tho sitting room, the bedroom and the kitchen and dining room combined. At the time of Clark's birth there wero no railroads In this section of the country, and the farmers rode on horseback to the nearest "grocery store" and post-ofllfor their supplies and mall. Reared In what was then almost a wilderness. Champ Clark in his earlier childhood was a student of nature. He loved the little spring beauties which were found in the woods nestling In tho grass and thousand-lea- f weeds, the rose, which blossomed In midsummer, and the goldenrod, which betokened the coming of winter. He knew the voices of the "bob white." tho thrush, the mocking bird nnd a score of other birds of beautiful nlumnro which made their homes in the hills. John Hampton Clark, Champ Clark's father, was a native of New .Terser, and was born where Atlantic City now stands. He was a wanderer and roved from Philadelphia to New Orleans, then worked his wny up the Mississippi and the Ohio The city proved not to Louisville. to the liking of the vigorous young adventurer, and ho finally drifted to Lawrenceburg. There he met Ale-th- o Beauchnmp. She was a frail, beautiful girl, nnd tho wanderer quickly succumbed to her charms. He lost all doslro to roam further, and after an ardent courtship, hor to become his wife. 11 wns an educated mnn, n n.e'hanict"' penlus, nnd an enthuntnsti'- - exponent of the doctrlno of Dem-crnMrs. Clark was nlo veil educated for thoso days, having received six vears' "schooling" In n convent. Lawrenceburg (Kv.) Cor. Louls-vlll- o per-suad- ed cv ests." SHOT THROUGH HEART , OVERJLD QUARREL Eugene Holmes Kills Ed Scott at Drakesboro Trouble a Year Ago. Eugene Holmes, n miner, shot and killod Ed Scott, a follow miner, at Drakesboro at midnight Saturday. The bullet pierced Scott's heart, and death was Instantaneous. Following tho shooting, Holmes walked to his home and retired. He was later placed in iail. The shooting Is supposed to be the result of n difficulty between th two men about a year ago. It Is stated that Holmes mot Scott In the railroad yards and said: "Scott, you stamped me In the face a jear ago." Scott replied: "That Is all over now; so let us forgot It." The response wns the report of a pistol, and the victim dropped. The body was removed to an undertaking establishment to be prepared for burial. The remains passed throug Owensboro Sunday night, en route to Eldorado, III., the former home of tho deceased, whore the Interment took place. It Is stated thnt Holmes has a good reputation, and is n man who does no drink. For Snle. Fnrm, lfi" acres, on Hough river. R miles north of Hartford, Ky. Price A gront bargain. $0."0. A. C. YEISER & CO.. Ants., tf GOVERNOR'S IN Hartford, Ky. REWARD K.-.- Courier-Journa- l. THE THOMPSON CASE Lor-lme- two-thir- ' Reason Enthroned. Because meats aro so tasty they aro consumed In great excess. This lends to stomach troubles, biliousness and constipation. Reviso your dipt, let reason and not a pampered appotlto control, then take a few Idosps of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets nnd you will soon bo Foley's Kidney Remedy An Apprewoll again. Try it. For sale nt nil ciation. m L. McConnoll, Cathrlne St., Elml-r- a, dealers. Sample free. N. Y writes: "I wish to express my appreciation of tho groat ALL CAN RE ASSOCIATE EDITORS IF THEY LIKE good I derived from Foloy's Kidney Remedy, which I used for a bad case Tho newspaper man Is blamed for of kidney trouble. Five bottles did a whole lot of things ho can't help, the work most effectively and provHon. Denny P. Smith, of Cadiz, such as using partiality In mention ed to mo' beyond doubt it Is the most now serving hU second term as ing visitors, giving news about some reliable kidney medicine I havo ov""" . kf ' Commonwealth's Attorney, has for- folks and leaving others out, otc. er taken and shall always havo my Smallpox In Muhlenberg! I ' endorsement. For sale by all DrugtJ Canute health offlcer Dr. T. J. mally annouced himself as a candi Ho simply prints all the news ho can m find. Somb people Inform him about gists, Sltsf ks reported to him tho lat date for Attorney General. I J 2d. New members socured. 3d. Amount of farm products pooled, compared with membership of local. 4th. Attendance at local meetings. Now, friends, we feel sure that nny of yon will be proud of tho distinction of belonging to tho banner local In tho Hartford district, and the way to get this honor is to got busy. There never was a better timo to push the farmers' organization than now. So let us go to work and seo who call show tho best results by our next meeting, which meets with Heflln Local on tho last Thursday In March, 1911. All locals In this district are cordially invited to com-pot- o for this prlzo. T. F. TANNER, E. C. BAIRD, R. A. LEISURE, Committee. an convention. "Shall It be Taft and suro defeat," demand the progressives, "or a progressive Republican candidate with a chance to win?" It looks as If tho answer Is to bo: "Taft and sure defeat!" PER CAPITA WEALTH OF UNITED STATES, JjKM.Ifl Washington, Feb. 13. Tho per capita wealth of the United States as based upon the new census figures Is $34.43. Under tho consus by tho of 1900 It was computed Treasury Department ns $3.'. 10. According to tho latest estimate the total amount of money now In Is $3,211, r.r0,46ri ns circulation ngalnst 33,12.', 5SG.720 a year ago. Tho Increase is represented by the coinage of gold. Providence. Ky., Feb. S. Yieldof ing to the pressuie brought to bear Residence has upon him by citizens of Providence Beaver Dam, Ky. s, five rooms, with good cellnr, and other residents of Webster 20 acres of wheat sown, a county, Goiernor Willson of Kengood orchard, all embracing 90 tucky has offored a reward of $5 on Will Fell on for the arrest and conviction of the acre of good land. reasonable terms For further par- unknown person or persons who ticulars see or write E. F. Render, murdered II. T. Thompson near a 7t4p Beaver Dam, Ky. . cemetery hero on Dec. 20, 1910. .. Mayor Ed Montgomery recently FOR SALE. appointed a committee of six perFive-roocottage with fi acres sons to work secretly on the case of land, in Hartford, Ky. Good out- and report to him from time to time buildings nnd a woll of never-fall-lthe progress being inndo following , a mass meeting here after tho wntr. PHce 1,1 00. cottago in For S.ilo Five-rootrlnls of Thomas ThompPrice S"0. son, son of the murdered mnn, and 'v. For Suit- Lot on Clay street In Kerney Benjamin, who wpre arrestHartford, Kv 90 feet front, 44. ed on the chnrro of being tho shivfeet deep. Thl3 lot is n portion of ers of Thompson, but wore acquittho Walker estnte and Is ono of tho ted. most beautiful lots In Hnrtford. Despite thoso two arrests and a A. C. YE1SER & CO.. Acts.. court of Inquiry, n committee Is now Hartford, Ky. tf Investigating tho matter In nn effort to procure evidence. 1 THE NOCREEIC SCHOOL Tho total reward for the appreIMPROVEMENT LEAGUE hension and conviction of tho murderer Is now $1,."00. Program for Friday evening. February 17, 1911: Song. Roll-cal- l. Look For the Roe Hive Reading of minutes. Song Filyd-l- a On tho package when you buy Foster. Speech Carroll Ward. Foley's Honey nnd Tar. None genReSolcct Rending Marllssa Foster. uine without the Boo Hive. Hudson, member tho name, Foley's Honey surprise Forest Comic Hudson, Charllo Fostor and Luther and Tar, and reject any substitute. Chamberlain. Lecture J. P. Fos- Foley's Honey and Tar relieves ter. Select Reading Lizzie Hud- coughs and colds qulcklv, nnd is son, Charlie Foster and Luther safe and sure. Contains np opiates. m Business. Debate, Subject: "Resolv- - Sold by al dealers. st novor-bulldingm m H. - Farm for Sale. Situated ono mllo north-we- I I N V BASIS OF ALL GOVERNMENT And How It Applies to the SPRINKLE NTQLERANGE OF Individual. OUR REPRESENTATIVE FORM flower. We know how to print everything from a card to a cataOf Government A Review of logue in a way that will make Of How Religious Antagonism your business hold up its head Can be Magnified and Conditions Pertinent to and bloom. est, and most benevolent tho world HUMAN VAGAIUES OF AMj TIMKS ever saw. If, then, this be true and who can gainsay It, that representative (Written for The Herald and the government Is the only system suitfirst of a series of articles discussing able to the temper, character and governmental policies.) would It easy to hold fast a door state of our civilization? "It Is not be well for the restless citizen which, once fairly opened, It may be yielding to the spirit of disImpossible to shut; It Is easy to who is content, to pause and Inquire whethprevent a movement which, onco It may not He gathers wny, may prove resistless." er somo share of blame tho trouble at his own door, whether Among the last public utterances may not He In the people themselves of Patrick Henry, that profound stuthan In the system. dent of social organization, who, rather In republics, the private citizen, by the spirit of liberty when fired shot up from the commonality Uko not a king, is crowned with soverAre we, upon whom this meteor, eignty. dazzling some blazing, whose opinion on public affairs the awful responsibility rests, measurworld awaited with bated breath, ing up to Its requirements, Its honnot, whose bold and masterful defense of or. Its dignity nnd Its duty? If If this be the "damned spot," then, mankind human rights electrified nnd the Impress of whose matchless mark you well, for the same reason, genius glows In every line of our any other system is foredoomed to constitutional bulwarks against Fed- tragic failure. It Is stark folly to Imagine that a eral aggression, was this solemn government can reform and elevate warning to his countrymen: "For, If over you recur to another Its people. In the nature of things, rliaiiKOi you mny hid nilleu forever this cannot bo. We may reform our You government, because It Is our creato representative government. ran never eclinnge It hut for n mon- ture, but the State should pay somearchy." It was Lord Byron who body to keep the man who believes ypnrs scarce tho creature can reform the creator. p?ld: "A thousand serve to form a State that an hour No crank or enthusiast, however eager he may be to riot like a bull In may lay in the dust." In Its ultimate analysis, the ob- a china shop and stalk In whero anject of all government is the secur- gels dare not tread, can ever make a ity of the private home, and the nat- silk purse out of a sow's ear. The ural right as well as desire to own only possible reform begins within that home Is the basis of all Its the human heart. All others are The right mere arrogance, Intolerance and deshopes and possibilities. to own property Is the clutch of steel picable shams. For centuries, I that binds society together. With- repeat, our dauntless race have been out it society would disintegrate the pioneers of liberty, watching exand whatever vitiates that desire or amples furnished by the ceaseless abridges that right, can have but struggle between the great master one of two endings either revolt wheel In tho center and the little wheels in the circumference, seizing or decay. From the dawn of history, exper- upon whatever fostered freedom and imental government has drenched equality of opportunity. That they with blood the pathway of human had rich fields to glean from, his The field is well nigh tory amply proves. advancement. rtennn envs: "You may search In there's nothing new unexhausted der the sun and, In the light this vain the Roman law before Conbloody history sheds upon our times, stantino for a single passage against It Is passing strange to find so many Freedom of Thought. The history adventurers, bold and confident, so of Imperial government furnishes no ready to drag from limbo a lot of Instance of prosecution for enterold theories tried, repudiated cen- taining an abstract doctrine, and turies ago trot them down to the men who would have gone to the foot-lighand with much sawing of stake In the middle ages, lived tranarms, grabbing at stars and tiring quilly under the law." Trojan, In off old boss pistols, exploit them as a letter of Instructions to Pliny the Younger, whom he had appointed "New." fiod save the mark! "The peo- governor of a province in Asia MiKdmond Burke says: ple never give up their liberties but nor, charged that under no circumstances should the Christians be under some delusion." In this article I trust I shall be- prosecuted on anonymous Informatray, as I feel, no partisan spirit, tion, as It would be establishing a my sole object being an honest ap- precedent wholly opposed to tho peal to the calmer, better Judgment spirit of the age. It was Roman toland Innate patriotism of the reader. erance and magnanimity that cheerSo many of our good citizens to fully set up beside their own the the manor born, chafing under well strange divinities of conquered naIn tions. It wns Roman liberality that nigh conditions. intolerable search of the raio and Its remedy, saved, in the outset, Christianity Itat tho overlooking the Important fact that self from utter destruction a largo majority of our grievances hand of Judaism. Five hundred mny be traced to our own Inexcusa- vears before our Christian era the ble neglect of an exacting public Romans restrained these despots duty which demands that a share of with a fixed constitution. our time and talent shall be. devotThe skilled architects of our ored to public nffalrs, are Inclined to ganic law knew the Jews had tried go off In all sorts of projects and tho Judges: that Rome had tried a History nffords so Republic; that the Christians had experiments. many sad examples of this same fa- revised their law from the "Old" to tal error that It Is both painful nnd the "New;" that Greece had tried alarming to see good men, whose everything. They knew we owed loyalty to their country can't be our religion to the Semotlc race, but questioned, mistaking the evils of (they also knew this race had sought which they complain ns due to some to make tho Church the head of tho Inherent defect of our system and State. The Aryan race had combat-te- d seeking redress upon the same this tendency for centuries and, treacherous grounds underneath from the lessons of this struggle, It "flying was determined to make separation which volcanoes smoulder to evils they know not of, rather organic. Five hundred years before than endure those wo have." In our Bill of Rights, the rude, rugged veering from the rocks of Scylla old barons of Kngland had extorted they are being drawn Into the whirl- from Kltj John the "Charter of EnplbTi Liberty." And vet, with all pool of Charybldes. For thourands of years the bold- of her fruitful pa-s- t to guide her, It race have took a thousand years to build up est of our llbertv-lovln- g . borne aloft the banner of Individualher splendid ism. Its progress as It groped Its But the spirit of liberty was not way through the benighted ages Is born at Runnymede. It had only marked by the blood and bones of' boon Intensified nnd emboldened by countless martyrs, but Its advanco thnt glorious admixture of Roman, has been steady, substantial and Angel and Saxon blood, and the feusure. Those dauntless, unconquera- dal systom of Europe was but ble Bplrlts, after gathering from tho the manifestations of tho lusty ages, profiting by tho bad examples growth of Individualism, which a and preserving tho good, at last be- century beforo Christ, had given now queathed tho sublime work of polit- hope and courngo In revealing to ical evolution to the patriots of our the hungry heart of tho lowly times, who, after more than thirty that the soul of a Lazarus was just years of prayerful and arduous la- as precious at the gates of heaven as bor, devised a system of Representa- that of Dives; that the guardian antive Democracy; not perfect, to bo gels poise and hover over cot nB well suro. since nothing human can be as castle. XX perfect, but the freest, Justest, wis- (To be continued.) ts sv-tem- fw handtom circular or booklet about town and American your butlnaia revlva. Good idvertislntf Is to a drooping1 business what water is to a thirsty JOHNSON'S & RELIGIOUS KIND Is Foreign to the True Spirit. W R. Right 2 C Us B 4 Ordering Printing Done O U Kid U Bet U ii., CASTORIA i,..luij.i.i...mai ,w u.uaJ ,. ul B Tor Infants and Children. SPECIMEN Elsewhere. WBo-Th!z!!!!!?!a" "" """' '"""- AVcCetable PreparalionrorAs' 1 - The Kind You Have Always Bought IH IH the Present. Worked Up. We Want No Pay Unless O. K. slmilatlng ihcFoodnndBcgula-tin- g theStoaacte andBawels of Bears the Signature of itf a v trr. iiiiiiiiBti Promotes neither Opium.Morpliine norfincxaL XOX "NA31C OTIC . RKIJGIOUS FANATIC A MENACE no man who attempted to work tho religious proposition into this camHon. Ben Johnson, a prominent paign was actuated by either religcandidate for tho Democratic nomi- ious or patriotic motives. It seems nation for Governor of Kentucky, to have been an underground and has Issued a card withdrawing from wireless scheme on the part of unthe race, and gives as tho reason that scrupulous politicians to forward he Is the victim of religious pro- tho interests of certain candidates. scription. He cites somo startling It will fall, for tho people of KenInstances where he considers a sin- tucky believe in fair play. ister and sympathetic organization It was a most drastic step taken has been secretly effected to stir by Mr.Johnson, but Its tendency will again the religious prejudice that bo to make the Democrats of KenBowltag Green Mes we had thought had been scotched tucky think. years ago. senger. Mr. Johnson Is, and has always been, a member of the Catholic FROM SCHOOLTEACHER Church. All who have known him have been apprised of the fact, for TO neither ho nor his friends were ashamed of It. But Just why that should be a handicap to him In his political aspirations, Is more than we Is the Remarkable Story of a can fathom, any more than If he had Kentucky Man J. C. C. been a Methodist or a Presbyterian, an Episcopal or a Baptist. What a Mayo's Fortune. man's doctrlnnl belief has to do with hl3 personal fitness or unfitness to John C. Calhoun Mayo, of Palnts-vill- e, hold an office of trust, Is a problem Johnson county, Is the richest we cannot solve. that Twenty-fiv- e There Is probably no greater or man In Kentucky. more ferocious fanaticism than reli- yeurs ago he "wa a teacher in the gious fanaticism. Charles Dickens Kentucky mountains, with nothing at the weaves the "No Popery" riots in save his earnings. he Is one of the London in 1775 Into a very enter- age of forty-siwith a taining story. Tho fiercest, the most country's active and tho most violent of the fortune conservatively estimated at rioters was nn Idiot, to whom the $20,000,000 and one that will conmystic words had no significance. tinue to grow. Tho story of this Kentucky school But ho fought with the bravery teacher's rise to great wealth is one worthy of a patriotic cause. In this country we have had the of the most Interesting over recordparty, which had for ed. In many ways Mayo is the most Its slogan, "Down with secret or- remarkable millionaire In the counders." In Kentucky we had tho try. His Is tho first great fortune party, which started that has ever been built In Kentucky up tho senseless cry against all per- by a Kentucklan from Kentucky resons of foreign birth. This termi- sources only. It was not due to any nated In the Bloody Monday riots In stroke of luck, such as the discovery Louisville, whero every man with a of a mine, nor was it duo to the had his face gradual development of n business. foreign countenance Sixteen It was duo to Mayo's ability to see smashed with a black-jacyears ago, the State of Kentucky an opportunity and to take advanelected a man to the Governorship tage of It through , frugality and many years, who was secretly a member ofho thrift that continued American Protective Association, a for all of Mayo's fortune started aggregation with a plat- from the money ho saved out of his political form tending to Inflame the minds earnings as a school teacher. Although he was born and has of the Ignorant against the Cathospent his life In a region where Relics. It may bo that Mr. Johnson mag- publicans are in the majority, Mr. Democrat. nified tho Importance of the opposi- Mayo has been a life-lon- g tion. We do not believe he did It His business activities gave him no designedly. We have known hlra time for politics In his earlier years, personally for twenty years, and but of late he has been more Interduring all that time he has shown ested. He holds a high place In the himself a man of honor and integ- councils of his party and ho has rerity The primary election proposi- ceived ballots for United States Sention had not sufficiently progressed ator In the Kentucky Legislature. to determine whether ho would have There have been persistent reports won the nomination or not. In fact, of late that Mr. Mayo's name will be many good and loyal Democrats had offered for Senator before tho next not satisfied themselves whether the Legislature, but close friends say he proposed primary was to be on tho Is not a candidate. Mr. Mayo's caMr. Johnson reer and his achievements are a matlevel or a frame-up- . could not, therefore, have Issued his ter of pride to Kentucklans. At the card of withdrawal under tho Im- ago of forty-si- x ho has risen, by his pression of defeat. talents and energies alone, from the Of course, all will understand that obscure position of a country school teacher In tho Kentucky mountains to that of a master of tremendous capital and one of tho most forceful FOR BALO HEADS. factors In tho development of Eastern Kentucky, which promises a A Treatment That Costs Nothing now and better era for tho whole MULTI-MILLIONAITo-da- y, x, multi-millionairanti-Mason- ic Know-Nothlrig k. AvAtf A Jap ofouo-swunmciO- A dlfV In Apcriecl Remedy Worms.Convulsions.Fcverish-nes- ca rW tut Use For Over s and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. Thirty Years WRAPPER. I CASTORIA t-- thi eiTun eoMMHT. antMi r fZ February Bargains! DHILY Courier-Journ- al One Half Price dur" 3G ni If you will bring or send us your subscription ing the month of February we will send yo"U The Hartford Herald ONE YEAR AND THE DAILY COURIER-JOURNA- L Four Months FOR ONLY $1.75 Or this paper ONE YEAR and the DAILY COURIER-JOURNAL Eight Months for $2.50. Subscriptions received at this price only during month of February. the The State and National Campaigns are opening and yon want to keep posted on political events. s editorials. And Mr. Read the Courier-Journa- l letters from Europe will be interesting. Wat-terson'- A- -" if it Fails. State. O BREATHES We wnnt you to try threo largo bottles of Rexall "93" Hair Tonic on our personal guarantee that the trial will not cost you a penny 'If It does not glvo you absolute satisfaction. Thnt's proof of our faith In this remedy, and it should indisputably demonstrate that we know what we are talking about when we say that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will grow hair on bald heads, ox.cfept has been of such whero baldness long duration that the roots of the hair are entirely dead, the follicles closed and grown over, and the scalp Is glazed. we are basing our Remember, statements upon what has already by the use of been accomplished Rexall "93" Hair Tonic, and we have tho right to assume that what It has done for thousands of others it will do for you. In any event you cannot loso anything by giving It a trial on our liberal guarantee. Two sizes, BOc and $1.00. Remember, you can obtain Rexall Remedies, in this community only at our store Tho Rexall Store James H, Williams, 214 Main Btreet. ooooooooooooooo THERE THE OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO MAN. O Subscription orders under this offer must NOT bo sent to the Courier-Journabut to the HERALD l, Breathes there the man with soul so dead, Who never to himself hath said, "This Is my own, my native land!" Whose heart hath ne'er within him nc JO QG H 111 burned, As home his footsteps ho hath turned From wandering on a foreign go, mark him well! For him no minstrel raptures swell. High though his titles, proud his name. Boundless his wealth as wish can claim Despite those titles, power, and pelf, Tho wretch, concentered all In self, Living shall forfeit fair renown, And, doubly dying, shall go down To the vile dust from whence ho sprung, Unwept, unhonored, and unsung. w1 KENTUCKY! (INCOIIPOKATKD) strand? If such there breifthe, ight and Power Company E. G. BARRASS, MGR., r(; , Will wire your house at cost. Electric Tlghts aie cleahi, healthy and safe. No home or business house should be ivithout them when within reach. FOLEYSKIWEYCUIE Hartford Herald Only $1 Per Year, . ' ! - .iTu. i, nj ' v" n."!",1- - ;il"i'r ' " sf )1 n Krl'""ri'l-''w","- ' ""; HE 1 i COURT POOLING Li POOLERS Upholding the Crecelius Tobacco Law. Grant Circuit Court in tho caso of E. M. Cook against the commonwealth, the Court of Appeals holds, in opinion written by Chief Justice Hobson, that a tenant should not bo Indicted under tho Kentucky statutes for selling pooled tobacco if tho landlord, without his knowledge or consent, sells tho poolod to bacco In which he has an Interest. As a tenant on tho farm of J. W. interMartin, Cook owned one-ha- lf est in a crop of tobacco sold for $400, on which Martin had loaned Cook $200. Only Cook's part of tho During tobacco had been pooled. Cook's absence from the farm, Martin sold tho tobacco and Cook was indicted on tho charge of selling pooled tobacco and fined $190. The court says Cook should have been given peremptory Instructions, and that "while the rule Is that a sub sequent ratification relates back to the beginning and makes tho transaction as If the proper authority had been originally given, tho principle cannot bo applied in criminal cases, for this would be to punish Cook.not for disposing of his crop, but for not complaining of what Martin had or condone without knowledge ENDS HER LIFE IN JEEP WELL Be- Mrs. Preston Moore came Despondent. SHE RAD him over, held a parley, and, having discovered that he was not the man they wanted, set him free.. He attributed the fact that ho Is still alivo to his having dismounted when ho saw the nail, and as tho nail from his own mill was tho cause of his good fortune, ho decided to have It glided and engraved so that he can wear it always. New York Press. THAT OLD HOT IJRICK FOND IlEMEMBRANCES When I go home at night and find my room is freezing cold, I always think of comforts that I had In days of old. One thing I call to mind Just now, I knew In time now dead, Is that hot brick that mother put, In flannels, In my bed. Each night she'd go and get the brick Just when the clock struck 8. 'Twas heated In the oven, on the stove or In the grate. I'd Jump In bed and cover up and put my feet on It, and with a certain shlv'rlng boy It always made a hit. I haven't had a heated brick for 30 years, I guess. I'm sorry that I haven't, too, because I must confess I've seen cold nights yes, lots of them when one hot brick in bed, would sure have been a comfort and a blessing on the dead. New York Telegram. T PARCELS Have You Tried them It? There Is a bottle of Cardui waiting for you at the drug store. Have you tried it? If not, we urge you to do so, before your troubles have obtained such a hold on you, that nothing will drive Even now, it may be nearly too late. But try it anyhow. If anything can help you, Cardui will. It has helped in thousands of cases, where other medicines had been tried in vain. Why should it not do the same for you? out I How TO ALL BEENJJLL HEALTH It Affects People Who ForTwoYears t Had Spent the Grow Tobacco and Sell to Agents. ALSO AS AFFECTING Entire Day With Her Children. Z J45 CARDUI The Woman's Tonic - TENANTS SHE LIVED IN McLEAN COUNT!' "! i r i Jl V J Ifc sells pooled tobacco and has no Interest In raising the tobacco, is not amendable to the statute prescribing a penalty for the selling of pooled tobacco. Tho court also holds In the same case that tlio buyer of pooled tobacco Is amenable to the penalty prescribed In the same statute "for the buying of pooled tobacco," but that In order to punish the buyer of tobacco for the offense of Felling pooled tobacco, he must be indicted for buying pooled tobacco. The opinion Is tho first construction of these features of tho famous Crecelius law, passed by tho Legislature here three years ago for tho benefit of the Burley Tobacco Society and other organizations pooling farm products. Mnlonn was Indicted for unlawfully and knowingly selling and disposing of a crop of pooled tobacco without the consent of the authorized agent selected to sell It and In violation of section 3940 of tho Kentucky statutes. Tho tobacco had been raised by one Mitchell on the placo of a man named TIernoy, and Mitchell sold the tobacco to Malone. Tho court says this being true, the act or Malone In selling tho tobacco did not make him amenable lo the penalty prescribed by the statute. The court says: "From the reading of section 3941a, Kentucky statutes, It will be observed that tho crops pooled under this provision must bo "raised" by tho person pooling them. The owner ot toljacco or- - other crops which he did not raise, cause to bo raised by a tenant or In some manner assist In or authorize to bo raised, cannot come under the provisions of the statute. " "The object of the statute Is to protect the grower of tobacco against tho buyers of the product, who, in the absence of such protection as the statute affords, might by combination make themselves have the absolute power to fix tho prices at which tho grower must sell? Therefore the mere buyer of tobacco raised by others Is excluded from its benefits, and this being true, ho 'cannot legally enter into or bo bound by tho pooling contracts authorized by the statute. "While the statute provides that one who buys of a grower, tobacco In violation of a contract where It has been pooled, makes himself to the punishment that amenablo may bo Inflicted upon the grower for selling tho same In violation of such contract, Malone is not indicted, in this caso for buying of Mitchell to pooled, but for bacco which selling same Reversing tho Judgment of tho Frankfort, Ky., Feb. 9. Affirming the Judgment of the Mason Circuit Court In the caso of the Commonwealth against Thos. Malone, a tobacco buyer, the Court of Appeals held, In an opinion written by Judge Settle, that a tobacco buyer who sent." FIRST GUN FOR O'REAR FIREHTJFiVER a Back Seat As to Prominence. Tho says: Bowling Green Mrs. Preston Moore, nearly sixty years of age and for many years a resident ot McLean county, while suffering with melancholia following a nervous disorder of two years' by suicide standing, committed drowning herself in a well at her homo some time during Wednesday night. Tho body was discovered Thursday morning by relatives, who, finding a cane and a pair of glasses belonging to the aged woman, lying beside the well, concluded that she DIM must have taken her lfle, and dragged In the well, finally bringing the body of the lifeless woman to the . "My daughter, Octava, would have been in her grave today, had it not been for that fine medicine, Cardui," writes Mrs. Laura Lawrence, of Drennon Springs, Ky. Nothing I tried helped my daughter, until she had taken Cardui. I had sent for the doctor, when I thought of your medicine and- got a $1 bottle. When she had taken four doses she became all right I often recommend Cardui to my friends." Your druggist sells Cardui with full instructions for use on the bottle. lotSptctallnttructioru. Write to: Ladles' AdWjorr Dept, ChatUnoon Medicine Co., Chittanoota. Tenn., andM-pij- e book. "Home Treatment lor Women." stntlree. POST LAW AKOther Republicans Must Take surface. Messenger fV $1000 wouldn't take a thousand dollars for the good VINOL has done me. I was told that Cod Liver Oil was the medicine I needed for my weakened condition and poor blood. I Could not take the greasy mixture, and when our druggist told me that VINOL contained not only tonic iron but all the medicinal properties of Cod Liver Oil without the grease or oil or bad taste, I made up my mind that was the medicine am for me. I tried it and y strong and well." Mrs. J. T( Snyder, Greensboro, N. C. to-da- "I Vo guarantee (he genuineness of the above testimonial. 7 We sell VINOL with the understanding that if it does not give the purchaser perfect satisfaction, we return his money without question. Will you try a bottle under these conditions? ' C For Sale by Hartford Drug (Incorporated) Co., It Is supposed that our Butler county friend, Commodore Holeman, dominated the senatorial district convention that nominated him at its session at Beaver Dam. Any W. H. and J. F. GILLESPIE, Proprietors. man who could run the steam roller over Harvey Myers, of Rochester, and flatten him out In bucIi a neat manner, ought surely to be some pumpkins In a convention In which he is the only candidate. : : Purely In a perfunctory manner, efc mall-ordthe convention Indorsed tho admin-A HORSESHOEING istration ofv Governor Willson and SPECIALTY said a few kind words for Senator Bradley. But when It came to Indorsing Judge O'Roar, the Commodore and tho convention camo out strong. 'This is an exact reproduction, as well as the Republican There Is now pending before Con Louisville Herald could catch It: gress a bill providing for the transDeafness Cnnnot be Cured "Believing that Judge E. C. through O'Rear more nearly represents tho ? local applications, as they cannot portation of merchandise Interests of tho great farming and reacft tuo diseased portion or the ear. the mails. It Is a measure favorable r$? laboring classes of the people of There is only one way to cure deaf to the catalogue houses in the large ness, and that la by constitutional cities and detrimental alike to the Kentucky than any one else who has been suggested for the Republican remedies. Deafness Is caused by an retailer and the wholesaler who nomination for Governor, and hav- Inflamed condition of tho mucous lin- transact business after recognized ing the utmost confidence In his pat- ing of tho Eustachian Tube. When) and established methods. Southern ability and this tube Is inflamed you have a rum merchants are almost a unit In the riotism and excellent " knowing him to be fully qualified to bling sound or imperfect hearing, and belief that a parcels post law would .. m make the mall-ordwhen it Is entirely closed, Deafc.i-s- s Is immediately defend the principles of the Repub(s ft Inlican party In the coming campaign, the result, and unless the Inflamma- business manv times over more tion can bo taken out and thl3 tubo jurious to legitimate trade than It we indorse him for the Republican The CONTINENTAL offers tho policyholder absolute safety restored to Its normal condition, hear- has been up to this time. In order (!): nomination for Governor." M and the agent proven loyalty. oughtn't Now, this to jar ing will bo destroyed forever; nine to protect their own Interests, thev Net surplus, exclusively protecting Policyholders American Kj your preserves? Here's Franks, ov- cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh have prepared for the holding of a more than ?13,000,000 larger than that of any Fire Insurance pi er at Owensboro, who could bo In- which is nothing but an inflamed con- great convention In Nashville to crystnllze sentiment against the bill Company. duced to take the forlorn hope of a dition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars nnd have It presented In concrete Republican nomination and go half for any case of Deafness (caused by form before Congress. way to catch It. Tho movement is In the hands of again, there's Attornw-Gener- catarrh)thut cannot be cured byllall's Then, committee of Send for circulars, an executive Breathitt, of Catarrh Cure. James DKTST. & retail merchants, with R.L. who has been sitting on a free. .ill Durch, of Nashville, as Chairman. F. J. Cheney & Co., ToIedo.O. gubernatorial egg for the past year. Sold by Druggists, 75c. To say nothing of Speight, of Too !?nl. Mayfleld, who Is not averse to graspTake Hall's Family Pills for con"How Is your husband?" expectations, m after stipation, ing tall-hol- d "The doctor says he will Just pretenholding out for front-en- d about live the week out." His Lust Request. '"Posravs- sions. "Oh, isn't that a shame! Is there As the doomed man was led to PLENTFULaSpmoi Why should Commodore Holeman -, nothing you can do?" scaffold the Sheriff asked: Jump over the boundless waste be the 7cc&sysrAA. "What would you suggest, that I UNUSUAlt "Have you nny last request to tween tho Purchase and tho Big knock him in the head?" Sandy to pick out a gubernatorial make?" SrA ..' (HEAP-- ' "Yes," said the wretch. "I would running mate? If Judge O'Rear iBOAk to have a pair of suspenders." !" Ti t "more nearly represents tho Inter like they assigned two hangmen to So ests of tho great farming and laborone. --- w,.,,-v. ing classes of tho people of Ken- the Job Instead of ililfcfcWCV.. 0 tucky than any one else who has Sutherland's Kngle Eye Snlve been suggested," then Governor Is tho best eye? remedy over offered rWCWWt0&. Wlllson Is repudiated, for tho def- the public. It Is a snow white ointis the tradeiant Judge figuratively pointed his ment, painless, harmless and absofinger In the Governor's face on one lutely guaranteed to cure. At ell mark which occasion and said: "You can't drive dealers. 25c a tube. in is found on an Idea through nn Anglo-Saxon- 's head with a bavonet." For which LUCKY HORSESHOE NAIL every bottle OWNER'S EXPERIENCE act of leso majeste, the Judge was called down good and proper. The of the genuine Only a fow days ago a Hartford Governor certainly tried to drive a who owns a factory for few ldoos through tho heads of tho man people of Muhlenberg with a bayo- making horseshoe nails called on a Was Judgo Jeweler with a nail having his owr net. Was he wrong? O'Rear right? There's a little mat- factory mark on It and wanted 11 the standard Cod Liver ter that Commodore Holeman can shaped into a ring and wanted it I'HE and "Weeiciy Courier-journa- l 1.50 settfe with his constituents when ho doubly glided. Although It bore ))! I, " " Weekly Louisville Herald Oil preparation of the 1.35 own factory mark, it came fromMex-icstump. mounts the raging " " Daily Owensboro Messenger 3.50 whero ho had bought a large world. Nothing equals ( " " Twice-a-wee- k tract of land. Riding on n burro U. S. ARMY WANTED FOR Owensboro Messenger.. 1.75 (I unmarried men be over hia broad acres one evening, be " " Twice-a-wee- k it to build up the weak Owensboro Inquirer... 1.75 chanced to see something glisten in tween ages of 18 and 3S; clti-e( " " Daily Owensboro Inquirer 3.25 and wasted bodies of of United States, of good charactor the road and dismounted, thinking l( ' " 1.25 Kentucky Farmer Louisville temperate habits, who can It might bo a discovery of mineral o' and ( " " Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer young and old. 1.50 Instead he picked up p speak, read and write the Enellsh value. (1 " Bryan's Conamoner " language. For Information apply to horseshoe nail, and as ho examined it 1.50 FOR SALE BY ALE DRUGGISTS Recruiting Officer, Main street. roft. ho noticed the brand of his own fac" Tiirice-iMvee- k " New York World 1.6b tory In Hartford. Just then bullets 5t9 ver Dam, Ky. (I i Twice-a-weeSend 10c., name of paper and this ad. for St. Louis Republic. .. 1.50 began to sing over his head, and h's our beautiful Savings Bank and Child's '. " National Magazine Monthly " 1.50 e Each bank contains a burro, piorced by fifteen of them.fcll Good Luck Fenny. " McCall's. MagazineFashions dead. All around him Mexican banu 1.30 FOR FLETCHER'S SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St, N. Y. dits rose from their ambush and Address THE HERALD, Hartford, Ky. made him prisoner. They looked anti-parcels Mrs. Moore had been In poor health for tho past two years, and at To Assemble in Nashville Aler- times became very melancholy and chants From Everywhere despondent, but she spent the day Wednesday with her chilAre Going to Attend. dren and seemed to be In unusually good spirits. As to what promptNashville, Tenn., Feb. 11. The ed her to commit the rash deed durretail merchant, particularly of the ing the night, is not known. country, has for some The family retlrpd .about Hip usu- Southern al time on Wednesday night, and years past recognized the fact that nothing out of the ordinary was no- tho catalogue mall order house In ticed In the conduct or demeanor the large city Is a positive Injury of Mrs. Moore, but some tlmo dur- both to the merchant and the con ing tho night, or early morning, she sume'. Tho situation Is succinctly left her home and quietly made her stated In a letter received recently way to the well, which Is about at the headquarters of the Parcels twenty-fiv- e feet deep and filled to Post Convention or, more accurately post conven within five feet of the top, and end- speaking, tion, to be held In Nashville, Feb. ed her life. house In 28, March 1, 2, and 3. A merchant the catalogue Justice of the Peace Jones was sum- In apiosperotis Alabama town savs: moned and an Inquest was held over "Our people send their monev to the tho remains, the verdict of the Jury 'cat' houses anvwhere from ten to a being to the effect that the woman hundred days In advance, and make suicided while in a state of great us wait anywhere about the ramp despondency which was caused by length of time for our money, thus making It doubly hard on us." nervous trouble. en-ti- ro er Z BLACKSMITHING AND REPAIR WORK $ & Hartford, Kentucky. er n ViV i n iTii lonnnentai nre insurance 10. ine I i; al renro-sentati- ve m I A. CYEISER, HARTFOBD, AGENT, i (M. See&svsngr 3&striessjfanhfsZxrfien. 7i;, s J ' This vto . cott's Emulsion Clubbing Rates FOR YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS. Herald HARTFORD HERALD'S o, Ablo-bodle- d, ns I k Children Cry Sketch-Bool- CASTO Rl A iM N K. i T&? form of obituaries Hartjord Her aim not take theand we are always glad resolutions, FRANK L FELIX, HEBER MATTHEWS, EDITORS. FRANK L. FELIX, Pub. and PropV WEDNESDAY Occupying tho first two columns of the second page of The Herald y will be found the first of a change the name of our Why not Whitewashing! series of articles to be written by National capital to one well known to the old readers ton? of this paper. It Is an appeal to the This Is tho season of the year1 private citizen to do his full duty as when farmers and candidates are a sovereign; to resume the reins of looking after their bacon, government not only as the only remedy for our public evils, but Evidently this Congress will not Justifying the confidence rebe too short to spend a big lot of thus posed in us by the founders' Ol 9Jr the "ultimate consumer's" money. free Institutions and demonstrating ... . r, i.il..At least we ought to get a little inai repreeemumi;- fcuivii"v..v la .. ..... .. . uusi'ivcu !, ....! work yet out of Congress before tnc best il win ue lecture season op while these articles reveal an underthe Chautauqua '; AJPfc ens up. current of a somewhat sobered mind. It has lost none of Its honest T wns nrobably Just a thm and aeeress'lve fririt, and that his branco of "blocks of Ave' ' arguments, as they always were, are tho Adams county, 0 strong and conclusive. nromnted .. voters to do as they did. Mnrill "' Celebration New Orleans, The Steel Trust has cut the salary ! Ln., Feb. 23-2year. of its President to $50,000 a On account of above, tho L. &: N. Just think of It! Only Just about will sell round-tri- p tickets from what the people's President gets! Hartford, Ky., to New Orleans, for ,. that Mr. Johnson had $19.2.". Dates of sale, Feb. 21st to tu religious belief at all, seems to 27th, inclusive. Final limit return-hav- e any surprised some people, as most jPB, not later than midnight of 4 ll. nt t r II I ..... S1 A .iarcn 4inn, 4 A1 1 men leave tneir reunion II. E. MISCHKE, Agt. while running for office. to-da- FEBRUARY 15 or country, where you could stick your fingers In tho chunks of mud beobituary notices tween the logs, and we all drank to get them. But cup and are of Interest to few outside of the out of the same drinking of there was not a healthier set any Immediate relatives and friends bunch of children, tho deceased and a small rash rate where than that publishing nnd we didn't have any sterilized Is only fair to the papers rags to wipe tho dust off the sterithem. lized desks." THE COUNTY PAPER AN ACTUAL MONEY-SAVEK TOLSTOY WANTED BLOOD." His Quarrel With Turgeneff and the Reconciliation That Followed. .., I 1 i". 8. . Vl a "u Is said there Is a wealthy woman In Denver who has never worn "There are some who withhold from the local publisher the small amount that his publication costs, apparently, the not considering, that It Is to the real money-save- r says tho Chlpley (Fla.) family," Banner. This, of course, Is only meant for a subscription list boost but It Is none the less true, and The average certainly Important. cost of a local newspaper is two cents or less a copy, and, as the Banner correctly says, "no man ever subscribed for a wceky newspaper that did not In tho course of tho year save the price many times over by consulting Its pages In regard to purchases and otherwise making use of the Information contained there in." The country or city paper Is a necessity In every family, and the cost. Is trifling when compared to the of its usefulness and Importance presence in the house and business farmer, place. The progressive merchant and business man understands this, and does not depend upfor the news or on his neighbors general Information. m It a hat, which provokes a Colorao pa per to say: "Most any woman could pet wealthy that way." Nearly a fact. They are about to construct a million-dollar Jail In Havana, and from all accounts as to the way things are going down thorp, all of It will probably be needed for the accommodation of the grafters alone. county, The Jailer of Christian a gallows for sale Ky advertises slightly used, but good as new. No doubt some of us know of a few men whom It could be used on to good purpose, but times are hard and we Just haven't got the money. With a little over two weeks of the Congressional session remaining, none of the Important measures be fore Congress when the session began have been disposed of. The people's money has been lavishly used for some very costly legislation that failed to legislate. J body to explain or define what stitutes "work" In the efforts put Torth by a layman In the Interest At Danville, 111., of a candidate. Feveral voters testified that they did not sell their suffrage, but accepted money for a little "work" dono for a man running for office. Catching the spirit of the times nnd aligning himself with Democratic, and modern progressive ideas of party, former President his own Roosevelt comes out strong for di.Tunics M. Yewell Demi. rect vote In the election of U. S. James M. Yewell, one of the best And straightway some of Senators. most highly respected his party men chalked up another known nnd In Daviess countv, died nt farmers black mark against him. his home about three miles southBeckham has disposed of east of Owensboro, on the Hartford his Interest In the Kentucky State road, In the Zlon neighborhood, SunJournal at Frankfort and retired day night shortly after midnight, of from tho editorial field to the exclu- Infirmities Incident to old age. The sive practice of law. The State funernl took place from the famllv Journal has been consolidated with residence Tuesday morning at 10 tho Frankfort News and the papor o'.clock, with services conducted by l. will be issued as the Rev. J. A. Bennett, of Utlca. The Mr. Beckham made a success of the Interment was In Elmwood cemetery, State Journal and well evinced his and was In charge of tho Mason, of fine ability as an editor. which order tho deceased had been a g member. If you have dizzy spells, ringing i confusion of Ideas, moIn the ears, Notice to Creditors. mentary attacks of vertigo, or kin of tho Ohio County Creditors dred symptoms well, that may bo Bank will please como forward and an indication that you have been settle their Indebtedness. It Is my reading tho political news of Ken-toic- purpose and the desire of everybody a little too closely of late. connected with tho bank to have divNothing serious about It, however. idends declared to tho depositors as You'll recover all right. It's a com- Bpecdlly as possible. This cannot bo mon ailment and In fact Is a good done unless creditors of tho bank Indication that you are keeping post- will assist by meeting their obligaed and up with tho times In cur- tions. rent Information. A. E. PATE, Assignee. 5tf conEx-OoNews-Journalife-lon- It now seems to be up to some- GREENBRIER. Feb. 13. Mr. Norbert Boss is at tending school In Indiana. Miss Eva Wllfon Is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Maddox, of the West Providence neighborhood. Mr. Wnyne Rock has moved Into this vicinity from the Union neigh borhood. Mr. Alvin Chlnn is attending the spring school at Shultztown taught by Miss Mae Rogers. Misses Corinne and Sallie Mary and Master Goebel Shultz visited their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. M. N. Shultz, at Prentls, Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Ophelia Tayor has returned from- - visiting her sister, Mrs. Sam Snell, at Williams Mines. Mrs. B. Brown, of Taylor Mines, Is visiting her mother, Mrs. L. M. Roach, who Is very sick. Mrs. Loyd Hocker, who has been very sick, Is some bettor. Chlnn, wife and two Mr. Elvis children, of Shultztown, visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Chlnn, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Reld. of Lit tle Clifton, visited Mrs. Reld's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Chlnn, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Render, of , visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Chlnn, last week. Mrs. L. M. Roach Is no better. She will go to Louisville thfs week for treatment, and we hope she will v bo benefited. Prayer meeting Is progressing nicely at Cool Springs near by. Woman Must have a beautiful skin. Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salve removes pimples, black heads, chaps, nnd roughness, leaving tho skin smooth. Try m It on our guarantee. A Beautiful im.VDLHY COMES OUT FOK TREATY Feb. 13. Without Washington, any reservation benator uradiey y In favor of Presicame out dent Taft's Canadian reciprocity. He will vote for tho ratification of the treaty. In this respect he and Representative Langley differ. They seldom disagree, but In this mnttcr they have como to the parting of the ways. Langley says he will not vote for the treaty. "It puts lumber on tho free list," said he. "In the summer of 1009. when the tariff was being revised, I nearly ran my legs off trying to get a high tariff on lumber. It would now If I look very Inconsistent should vote to wipe out that tariff Raymoud --Recouly In the Paris Figaro gfves the following account of nn early encounter between Tolstoy nnd Turgeneff. which shows tho Russian sage In a different frame of mind from the one in which tho world has since come to know blm: It was on the estate of bis friend, the poet Fet, near Yasnaya. Turgeneff was among the Invited guests'. The hostess Inquired afrer his daughter, who was being reared In France Turgeneff spoke highly of bis English gorerness. "With a truly British exactitude." he said, "she requested me to Ox the sum which my daughter might spend for charity. And now she teaches ber pupil to mend the ragged dollies of the poor." 'And, you consider that a good thli.gV" asked Tolstoy. "Certainly," replied the other. "It brliigs the behefnctor Into direct contact with the persons whom he ts helping." "On my part. I think that a well dressed child who handles dirty and 111 smelling rugs Is playing a hypocritical and theatricnl farce." "I must nsk you not to speak In tbh wny," exclaimed Turgcnorf, with menacing looks. "Why should I not say what I am convinced Is the truth'" remarked Tolstoy. "You think, then, that I am educating my daughter badly." nnd, while Fet was Interceding. "If you will talk In that way I shall box your ears." Then he left the room, begging his hosts to pardon his abrupt departure. Tolstoy also went. At the neighboring station he wrote to Turgeneff demanding nn apology. He ordered pistols nnd tried to provoke his rival to a duel. Turgciieff's nnswer. very dignified, brought the apology demanded by Tolstoy. He closed by saying that lie thought It best that two men with stub nposlto tempers should hence forth break off nl relations. Tolstoy, carried nwny by bis auger (it was iu 1S0H. declined to be satisfied with such nn answer He felt that he had He demanded been gravely offended. reparation br arms. He therefore re peated his provocations. His friend Fet. who attempted to parity mm. succeeded only In drawing from blm this vigorous reply: "I be? of you henceforth not to write to me any more. I shnll return your letters unopened, the same as I do with Turge-nefTs.- " After theso occurrences Turgeneff returned to France, where he passed the greater part of his time. Some months later, on reflection. TolSeized stoy regretted his violence. r with remorse, he sent Turgeneff n nnklmr his pardon. "I find It ex- prw(lln"lv lmlnftil." he wrote, "to. think that I have made nn enemy of you." Turgeneff forgave, as one may Imagine, but the complete and definitive reconciliation took plnce niucu later. let-to- Invitation fb The Shopper. -- a - time to go to market and w4e must make room for .the J It1 is almost the time to buy- goods'J cheap. Come wherefyou can get your money's worth. You need the goods and we .... need the the money is . Goods. Spring Now J. ROSENBLATT. ZZllTHEZSTOBE TEAT SATISFIES. ' hXrtforjd, Kentucky; MAGAN. entirely." All of tho Democratic Congress men from Kentucky were prepared to back when the House met up Taft's Canadian reciprocity trea ty with their votes. to-d- workmen who were fifteen OLD ENGLISH HOUSES. MAIMED CERVANTES. A preacher In a neighboring church was recently heard to remark, as ho put the Idea Into action at the beginning of a sermon, that he would leave the pulpit for the nonce and como down where he could get nearer the people. This evinced a very commendable spirit, but In these modern times of towering and expansive headgear, the preacher would perhaps bo more and much better seen by tho audlcnco, at tho summit of a ladder. six-foot Several papers of the State seem to have followed the rulo of tho two Hartford papers In charging a small straight rate per lino for all obituaries, resolutions of respect, &c. Wo are finding the now plan much more satisfactory than the old. No reasonable person can find fault tirHh t Of pniirBA ntl nowa accounts of deaths are free, where they do Bravery In Battla of tho Famous Author of "Don Quijote." , An Incident of the battle of Lcpan-towhich broke the power of the Turks in Europe, has an Interest for studonts of literature. "In the galley" we quote from Commander Cuney's "Sea Wolves In the Mediterranean" "was lying In his bed. sick of a fever, a young man years of age, a Spaniard twenty-fou- r of Alcaln de Hcnarcs. the son of honorable parents, we nro told, although When this these parents were poor young man beard that a battle was Imminent be rose from his bed and demanded of his ?nptain, Francisco San Pedro, that he should be placed tn tho post of greatest danger. Tho captain and others, his friends, counseled him to remain tn his bed. Senores.' replied tho young mun. what would be said of Miguel de Cervantes should he take this advice? On every occasion up to this day on which his enemies have offered battlo to his majesty I have served like a good soldier, iind today I Intend to do so In spite of this sickness and fever.' He was given command of twelve soldiers In a shallop and nil day was to be seen where the combat raged most fiercely. He received two wounds In the chest and another which cost him the loss of bis left hand. To those to whom he proudly displayed them In after years he was accustomed to say. Wounds In the fnce or the chest nro like stars wblcb guide one through honor to the skies. Of him the chronicler says. 'He continued the rest of All Skin Troubles his life with honorable memory of Are overcome by using Dr. Bell's this wonderful occurrence, nnd. Antiseptic Salve. It Is as pleasant ho lost the uso of his left to use as pure cream and Is guaranhand, It added to the glory of his teed to glvo satisfaction. 25c a right.' now glorious was that right hand la known to all readers of 'El ra box. Ingenloso Hidalgo Don Quljoto de la Mancha.' " HE TAKES NO STOCK IN THE GERM THEORY ' Pluoked Triumph Out of Trouble. An Indianapolis retail merchant reKy., Feb. 11. Tho Henderson, cently took advantage of an accident Common Council passed on Its first which happened to his store. reading an ordinance providing for A runaway trolley car had crashed the medical Inspection of the public Into his show window, wrecking It. schools of this city nnd providing While the crowd of people who had for the appointment of an inspector been attracted by the collision were by tho School Board and prescribing still gathered nbout tho front of the his duties. This ordinance was urg- store the enterprising retnllrf came ed by the Board of Health, Woman's struggling through the wreck-agand Club and others. placed a large enrd bearing the word It was opposed by only one Coun- "All cars stop at Blank's" lu n promt-cen- t place The effect was fertbwm cilman, Dr. W. S. Galloway, who said that the doctors were "all bug lag. System. crazy" and that he was "raised In a d In schoolhouse the ( Mar-quesa o mud-daube- lean-twas added aud later another nnd another. Tho roofs were of thatch, the beds of looso straw or straw beds with bolsters of the same laid on tho floor or perhaps eventually shut in by n shelf and ledge like tho berths of a ship or by n small closet. Tho Sason thano or knight built n more pretentious "hall." a largo open room like the Roman atrium with n lofty roof thatched or covered with slates or wooden shingles. In the center of the hard clay floor burned great fires of dry wood whose thin acrid smoke escaped from openings In tho roof, above the hearth or by the doors, .windows nnd openings under the eaves of the thatch. By day the "heartbsmen" nnd visitors when not working or fighting eat on long benches on either side of tho Are and, ns John liny puts it. "culmly drinked nnd Jawed" or. gathering at long boards placed on trestles, regaled themselves on some sort of porridge with fish nnd milk or meat nnd ale. At night straw or rushes spread on tho floor formed beds for the entiro rnmnnnv In tho I'nrllur und ruder days. when tho "baser sort" were glad to share their straw with tho cows. Charles Wlnslow null in National Magazine. o In the Days of Wooden Huts, Thatched Roofs and Olay Floors. The habitations of English common people for centuries consisted of n wooden hut of one room, with tho fire built In the center. To this hut. If n mnn Increased iu family and wealth, u Feb. 11. The death angel visited tho homo of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Powers on last Wednesday afternoon and took their little Infant son. The remains were buried at Pleasant Hill cemetery Thursday. E. E. Miller went to Pleasant Ridge Thursday on business. Mrs. A. C. Baughn is on the sick distant. feet Master Commissioner's Sale. Ohio Circuit Court, Kentucky. I. K. Westerfleld, et a!.. Plaintiffs, vs. N. R. Baize, et al., Defendants. By virtue of a Judgment and order of sale of tho Ohio Circuit Court, K list. rendered at the February term, Dr. I. L. Denton went to Dunaeo Frldny morning on business. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Leach, on last Wednesday, a line boy. C. E. Miller went to Owensboro Mr. and Mrs. James Magan, of near Dundee, spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Muffett, of this place. Miss Lizzie Muffett, of this place, visited friends near Fordsville, Fri- property A certain tract or parcel of land day and Saturday. Mr. Shelton, of near Sugar Grove, lying and being In Ohio county, Ken tucky, on the waters of Nocreek and has1 moved here. Barnett's creek, known as the two Interests In the old PeterShown tract Foley Kidney Pills Are tonic In action, quick In re- and bounded as follows: Beginning sults. A special medicine for all at a stone a the letter "C", thence E. 131 poles to a beech and kidney and bladder disorders. Mary N. 32 corner, at Abbott, Wolfeboro, N. H., says: "I dogwood, Ed Shown's poles W. 48 was afflicted with a bad case of '.'B"; thence S. 57 rheumatism, due to the uric acid to a Btone on the road at "E", on the W. 130 that my kidneys failed to clear out old plat: thence S. 32 of my blood. I was so lame In my poles with the road to a stone at poles E. 48 feet, Joints and back that It was ag "F"; thence N. 57 ony for me to step. I used Foley to the beginning, containing 40 Kldnev Pills for three days, when I acres, be the same more or less. The purchaser will be required to was able to get up and move about and the pains were all gone. This execute bond with approved security The Cabal. Tho term "cabal" as applied to se great change In condition I owe to immediately after sale. rlso Foley Kidney Pills and recommend This 14th day of February, 1911. cret factions of any kind bad in England about iuui, ncing ursi ap- them to any one suffering as I F. L. Felix, plied to tho cabinet of Charles II. nnd have." Master Commissioner. For salo by all dealers, ra formed from the initials of tbo cabiW. H. Barnes and Y. L. Moseley, net members names Lord Clifford. Attorneys. BY IMPACT to-w- lt: Friday. 1911, in the above cause, for the purpose, of dividing tho proceeds amongst the parties as their Interest may appear, after paying the costs herein, including a reasonable attorney's fee, I will offer for sale by public auction at tho court house door In Hartford, on Monday, the 6th day of March, 1911, about one o'clock p. m upon a credit of six months, the following described H X Take The Her alt Lord Ashley, tho Duke of Bucking-ba- KILLED OF ANOTHER'S, BODY Lord Arlington nnd the Duke of Lauderdale C, A. B, A. I Stnco Chicago, Feb. 11. A man's body that day It has been customary, In all English spenklng lands nt least, to ap- hurled through the air when struck ply the name to any socret conclave, by theOverland Limited train, killed especially In politics. another man last night and seriously Injured a third. The Way She Saw It. Tho man struck was Edward Don"You must not mock people, Hazel. Once upon a time, tbo BIblo says, a ahue, foreman of a gang of laborcrowd of little children mocked a good ers. He survived tho effects until The train, on Us way to the man named Ellsha, and two bears came out of tbo force t and killed forty-- Pacific coast, had not yet cleared the two of thom." Chicago and Northwestern railroad "Wasn't that nn awful thing for yards here when the accident octheir mothers?" Newark News. curred. Donahue, with fifty of his men, were at work cleaning snow Uieleis Telling. "You can always tell nh English- from the tracks. The foreman apparently saw tho man," said tio Briton proudly. "Of course you can." replied the locomotive approaching, but before Yankee, "but it doesn't do any good, he could escape he was struck and becnuso he thinks he knows it aU." his body shot through the air, keel- Philadelphia Ledger. lng over in an Instant the other two to-da- y. For That Terrible Itching-- . Eczema, tetter and salt rheum keep their victims In perpetual torment. The application of Chamberlain's Salve will Instantly allay this Itching, and many cases have been cured by Us ubo. For sale by all m dealers. Wntterson's Ron Insane. The commission to determine tho sanity of Ewing Watterson, son of Editor Henry Watterson, who entered a plea ,of Insanity to an Indictment for assault, filed its report that Watterson was Insane on July 1st last, when he shot MIchaol;J, Mar tin at Saugertles, N. Y aMe still The commission recominsane. mended that Watterson be confuted, i in the State Asylum. for the Ii m tiwppwpwwii'ti.wj. imqmmmmmimww ynn'HiU'WM'iy"1 i' mrmm ynw "fattQWpty " lWNlfrgyyWWHfg'' ' Last Chance! TO-DA- Y 1 route Mr. H. T. Porter, Beaver Dam, O 3, gave us a pleasant call ooooooooooooooo CIRCUIT COURT NOTES. o o ooooooooooooooo O day Don't fall to read the most liberal offer ever made for two good newspapers, found on 8th page. This offer Is only good during the month of Feburary. Capt. J.M. DeWeese, who Is in the revenue business In Owensboro, spent Saturday and Sunday In Hart ford, having come here In the Interest of his military company. Mrs. Virgil Stateler, LIVermore, and Mrs. Ed Johnson, Bucl, McLean county, visited Mrs. Ann eBnnetti Com'th. vs. Clarence Dlllard, set forward to Wednesday, the 9th day, for trial. Com'th. vs. Tom Wilson, filed away with leave to reinstate, on motion of Commonwealth or County, Attorney. Com'th. vs. Joe Wilson, charged with manslaughter, verdict of Jury, not guilty. vs. Com'th. Charles Condor, charged with' felonious shooting and wounding, bond fixed at $500. The grand Jury has returned 70 Indictments classified as follows: Unlawfully selling liquor, 32; gaming, 3; petit larceny, 1; unlawfully furnishing liquor to a minor, feloniously 2; unlawfully and wounding another, 1; discharging a deadly weapon on public highway, 1; drawing n deadly weapon on another, 1; unlawfully wounding another, 1; distributing liquor In Ohio county, 2; falling to list property for taxation, 26. The grand Jury being unable to complete Its work In one week, the time was extended y Wednesto and incudlng day. to-da- tho West Providence cemetery Monafternoon. Clifford had been complaining a few days but was not thought to be serfously ill until Saturday morning, when a physician was sent for and was soon at the bedside of the boy whom he saw was past all human aid, and Clifford soon passed away. HAS NO SUBSTITUTE pOYAl DEATH OF WILLIAM HARRISON TAYLOR - The Ending Dey The Day-- You ought to visit and daughter. Miss Mamie Bennett, city, from Saturday until Tuesday. Mr. H. B. Taylor and family and Mrs. B. F. Zimmerman, of Louisville, who had been summoned to the bedside of their father, W. H. Taylor, In his last illness, returned home Sunday. Mrs. E. L. Miller, of Chicago, who FAIR'S has been the guest of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Wayland Alexander, and her children here, for the past two weeks, will return to the city to-da- y. Kum Down SALE. JOIN US Have your friends to meet you at Fair's and let us make the Last Day the BIGGEST Day. T BIG Miss Gertrude Wright, milliner and saleslady for Barnard & Co., will leave Friday for Cincinnati, for a few weeks' study of the new millinery styles and to purchase goods for the store. The winner of the fine rug at Fair & Co.'s, offered as a prize for the one who guesses nearest the number of spots on a paper balloon displayed In a show window, will be announced Messrs. C. F. M. R. Maddox, Boswell, Dundee; John T. Rone, Brown, Echols; Hartford, route 4; Centertown; A. J. Misses Mattle Ben- p -- r . It Pays to trade with a house that saves you Money. b-- Rememb i nett and Zella Nail, city, were among The Herald's callers Wednesday. Messrs. V E. Hunley, Echols; J. L. Lee, Olaton, route 1; Hiram Miller Beaver Dam; R. E. Eudaley, o; y i Nelson; Solon Chlnn, Beaver Dam, route 2, gave The Herald a call while In town Monday. Messrs. W. E. Caloway, Center-towIsaac Foster, city; J. W. McHenry; Wm. V. Sproule and T. E. Mitchell, Dundee; T. F. Crow-de- r, Beaver Dam, route 3; Gilbert Simpson, Horton, and R. D. Carter, Hartford, route 4, were among our callers yesterday. n; Lo-ne- y, M. C. Everly, Jsfe&Gbi kuzimmYmzi 'The Hartford Herald ..FEBRUARY 15 WEDNESDAY, Illinois Central Railroad Time Table at Beaver Dam, Ky. South Bound. North Bound. No. 1324:05 a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. No No. 12212:28 1022:48 p.m. No. p.m. No, J. p.m. p.m. E. Williams. AgL 1012:48 1318:65 U. S. Carson wants your Furs. Rev. L .W. Tlchenor, Centertown, was among our callers Monday. I1 K -- J Mr. Sam Jones, Mountain Park) Oklahoma, Is visiting his mother, Mrs. J. C. Jones, city. Mr Arthur Petty, foreman of the Leltch field Gazette, spent Sunday with his parents here. Mr. "A. D. Woodward, fcV of Center-tow- n, ky., gave The Herald a pleasant call while In town Monday. Mr. Howard Gray and wife, of St. Johns, Kan., aro the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Taylor, city. Exclusive sale of Beaver Dam Flour at our meat shop. SANDERFUR & CO. Nickels, Dimes and Quarters do double duty spent at our 5, 10 and 25 cent counter. HARTFORD GROCERY CO. 5t4 Scores ment. 5t4 our new 5, of remarkable -- values In 10 and 25 cent Depart- HARTFORD GROCERY CO. Mrs. L. H. Render and Mies Nina Maddox, of Beaver Dam, were pleasant callers at The Herald' office Wednesday. Mr. T J. Morton, cashier of the Island Deposit Bank, at Island, Ky., spent Sunday ,with relatives In J" mjr. Grocery. Work Guaranteed. Domestic finish. Called for and prompt delivery. Hcr's Grocery. 'Phone 140. Mr. J. R. Dunn, cashier of the Rockport (Deposit Bank, remembered The Herald by a visit whlhs In town Thursday. Hartford. Leave your Laundry at Mr. A. C. Yelser, the Insurance and real estate agefU, has moved his headquarters to the two front rooms over James H. Williams' drug store, where he Invites his friends to call and see him. The live little balloons set free by Carson & Co. In their Come-Dow- n Sale, each carrying a ticket good for were Mr. Iva Nail returned last week $1 worth of merchandise, from Smith Grove, Ky., where ho at- found by Mrs. Lon Stevens, who captured two; Miss Elsie Bennett 1, tended the funeral of his father-in-laEarl Mauzy 1, and a little daughter Mr. D. L. Crane. Miss Clara Ellis, an Ohio county of Mr. Zack King 1. girl who Is attending school in The prize of $5 In merchandise paid us an appreciated vis-- It for the biggest load of ladies, ofwhile In Hartford Thursday. fered by Barnard & Co., on account The protracted meeting at the of a misunderstanding, was awarded Methodist church here Is going to both Ernest Moxlcy and Holalong splendidly. The sermons are land Shown, the former driving up all good and Interest Is Unabated. to tho store with 50 of tho fair sex on one Wagon and the latter 40. All kinds of Feed Stuff, Chicken The Farmers Mutual Telephone Grit and Shells, and Seed Oats for Co. of Ohio county met In Hartford W. E. ELLIS, sale by Monday, with a majority of the diThe Produce Man, rectors present, both town and coun4t4 Hartford, Ky. ty. It was decided to put In a Rev. Birch Shields, of Beaver an early date, Dam, and Mr. M. R. Maddox, of switchboard here at when connections can be had all Hartford, Route 4, Included The county. This will be a Herald among their calls Wednes- over the great convenience to the citizens and day. business men of the town. Mrs. Kate Dawson and grandMessrs. J. W. Baker, Render; J. daughter, little Abble Catherine Miller, Owensboro, are visiting Mr. B. Tlchenor and Dr. S. W. Crowe, and Mrs. D. L. Miller, Beaver Dam, Centertown; E. F. Render and W. T. Stevens, Beaver Dam, route 2;R. S. this week. Taylor, Beaver Dam, route 3; Josh Mrs. F. L. Felix, who had been Tlnsley, Hartford, route 3; Charles visiting her nephew and niece, Mr. Davison, Narrows, route 1; Henry and Mrs. John H. Wallace, Louis- W. Cummlngs, Dundee; W. E. Johnville, for the past two weeks, re- son, Paradise, and Samuel Davison, turned homo Saturday. Barrett's Ferry, were among those Mr. Seymore Bennett has return- who called on The Herald Thursday. county 111,, ed from Champaign Rev. F. G. Jones died Monday where ho has bedn employed for tho night at his home In Drakesboro, past several months. He will re- Ky., after an Illness of a year or main in this county until the first more of diseases incident to old of March, when ho will return to age. He leaves a wife, daughter Illinois. and three sons all grown. His reThe Methodist Church Is prepar- mains will be Interred In the cemeing to give a play In a short time tery at Greenville He as soon as practicable after the re- was a Baptist minister of consideravival. " Two plays aro to be given ble note and was well known in this probably during one evening. The county, where he had often preachwork is under tho supervision of ed. Miss Mary Taylor. Mr. Herbert Sanders, who has "Hon. John J. McHenry, wife and been in the drug business In Louisyoung son, Henry D., came from ville for the past three years, has Saturday to visit rela- come to Hartford to take charge of Louisville tives here. Mr. McHenry returned the OhlosjCounty Drug Co. store to his business In the Falls City Sun- Griffin's old stand. Mr. Sanders day, but his wife and boy will re- formerly lived In Owensboro and main here for an extended visit to was later in the drug business at Mrs. Jen- McHenry and Central City. Ho Is their nie T. McHenry. no stranger to tho people of Ohio Hon. W. J. Felds, Congressman-elec- t county, having married a daughter of tho Ninth District, has ma- of Dr. B. N. Patterson, of McHenrv, who, however, pnsscd away several triculated in the law department University, at Lex- years ago. Mr. Sanders is a comState ington, this being the same work petent druggist and a splendid genwhich Mr. McDowell A. Fogle, of tleman, and the Ohio County Drug this city.. Is taking. The Idea of a Co. did well In securing hlsservlces. Congressman being "one of the boys at college" has caused much comment among the law students. mother-grandmoth- FOLEKHONEYTAR The death of- Mr. William Harrison Taylor occurred at his home on Washington street, Hartford, Thursday morning at 2 o'clock. For several months he had been In very bad health and an invalid. Wednesday afternoon It was thought the end had come, but he appeared to rally, death coming a short time later. Mr. Taylor was well known throughout the county, and many will be sorry to learn of his death. Besides a wife, four children survive him, as follows: Mr. Henry B. Tha only baking powdor made front Royal Crapo Tayor and Mrs. B. F. Zimmerman, Cream of Louisville, .Mrs. W. M. Fair and Miss Eva Taylor of this city. NO LIME PHOSPHATE The funeral services were conducted Friday morning at 10 o'clock HOPEWELL. from the Methodist church, "of which Fob. 13. Mrs. L. S. Engler went denomination Mr. Taylor had been a faithful member for many years. to Greenville last Saturday to seo Jury TilnR Mrs. Karl Engcases on tho ordinary docket The services were conducted by Rev. her daughter-in-laThe Virgil Elgin, assisted by Rev. J. W. ler, who Is very sick. have been disposed of as follows: Mrs. Oma Wydox Is on tho sick R. B. Martin, admr., vs. L. & N. Bruner. Interment followed at He was a good man and will list at this writing. R. R. Co., verdict of Jury, $2,300, be greatly missed. Mr. Ike Douglas made a business for plaintiff. trip to McHenry last week. Burt Petty vs. Chas. WIgginton MISS KATIE BAILEY DIES Messrs. P. S. Coleman and W. E. & Co., continued. SUDDENLY AT FORDSYILLE Johnson will he In Hartford a few John M. Graham vs. M., H. & E. days more this week on the grand R. R. Co., set forward to 9th day After having been In 111 health for Jury. Wednesday. 111 for several months, but seriously Mr. Luther Brown Is on the sick G. W. Powers vs. M., H. & E. R. only a few hours. Miss Katie Bailey list with cold and grip. R. Co.,. same order. died of abscess of the brain at the Mr. Porter and his little daughJ. J. Roberts vs. L., H. & St. L. R. home of her sister, Mrs. Charles Evlln, visited Mrs. Rowe, of CenR. Co., same order. Kissinger, near Fordsvllle, Sunday ter Ephralm Brown vs. I. C. R. R. Co., morning at 4:30 o'clock. Her death tertown, last Sunday, and Monday made a business trip to Hartford. agreed Judgment $60 for plaintiff. came as a great shock to her many j Mr. Sam Knight, of Muhlenberg W. Condor vs. M.. H. & E. R. friends, as It was thought she was J. county, wbg the guest of Mr. and R. Co., continued. gradually Improving. Mrs. Elbert Hunley last Sunday. R. S. Taylor vs. J. P. Tavlor, verMiss Bailey was twenty years of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Taylor gave a dict of Jury, $85 for plaintiff. age and was the daughter of Charles social Inst Saturday night In honor S. I. Boslcy vs. M., H. & E. R. R. Bailey, deceased. She Is survived Hunley, who loft Mon-dn- v Co., cortlnued. by two sisters. Mrs. Charles Kissin- of Mr. Nevil f orhls home In White county, vs. L H. & St. ger, of Fordsvllle, and Mrs. Ida EvSheridan Rusher L. R. U. Co., verdict of jury, $3." ans, of Delaware, and one brother, Illinois. for plaintiff. Rev. Zone Bailey, of Rome. MOTHER O" .1AMES BOYS Ora Trail vs. I. C. R. R. Co., verThe remains wore taken to OwI 'ASS KB AWAY ON TRAIN Jury for defendant. dict of ensboro Monday morning on tho IllN. H. Baize vs. L., H. & St. L. R. inois Central train and funeral conOklahoma City. Okla.. Feb. 10. R. Co.. verdict of Jury, ?100 for ducted from the First Baptist Mrs. Zeralda Samuel, mother of the plaintiff. Church, after which Interment was famous bandits, Jesse and Frank Leroy Condor vs. J. W. Condor, made In Utlca church cemetery. James, died on a train near hore tills verdict of Jury, $400 for plaintiff. Sho wns aged Sii years. vs. Larkin Per- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO afternoon. Charlie Colburn Mrs. Samuel was on her way to O O MARRIAGE LICENSE. due, dismissed settled. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O Kansas City from Fletcher, Okla., Robert Robinson vs. Broadway where she had been visiting her son Coal, Mining Co. Motion to transYclser Lnshbrooks, Sutherland, to Frank, who hns a large farm there. and fer to U. S. Court overruled For 20 years sho kept her two Ida Belle Holbrook, Llvla. cont'nued. Morgan Pedley, Provo, to Lilly boys from being captured by her wit vs. r. C. R. R. Co., Ivan H. Arnold and courage, and while tho whole Gentry, Prentls. verdict of Jury, $60 for plaintiff. C. H. Duncan, Narrows, to Sadie West was hunting them she was) use and benefit of Com'th. for the ever ready to to go to their defense. J. C. Wlthrow vs. W. H. Blackburn, King, Narrows, R. F. D. No. 2. It was while guarding her homo C. L. Evans, Fordsvllle, to Eflle Jury, $287.50 for &c, verdict of that one of her arms was blown off Farmer, Fordsvllle. plaintiff. G. F. Harder, Fordsvllle, to Min- by a bomb which detectives had seEd R. Ashby vs. M. D. Ashby, vercreted near tho house in an effort to nie Stone, Fordsvllle. dict of Jury for defendant. Jesse Craig, Rosine, to Dora blow It up. C. R. R. Co., Bessie Hurt vs. I. Her first husband was a Baptist Brown, Rosine. verdict of Jury for defendant. minister. S. P. McDowell vs. M H. & E. R. HEFLIN. R. Co., now on trial. Found the Bank All Right. Feb. 13. The farmers In this NOTES. Rockport, Ky., Feb. S, 1911. neighborhood are very busy burning Mr. Marvin Miller, official sten- plantbeds. To the Directors of the Rockport ographer for the Sixth Judicial DisMiss Cora Thomasson, who Is at- Deposit Bank: This Is to certify I trict, spent Sunday with his family tending school at Hartford, visited have made a careful examination of In Owensboro, returning to Hartford her parents from Friday until Mon- your bank and find It in a most Monday morning. The books and excellent condition. day. Messrs. G. D. Black. Fordsvllle, A. V. Rowan are on accounts are nicely kept, and having Mr. and Mrs. and Armlstead Jones, Nelson, were the sick list. gone over tho notes and bills of the Inadvertently omitted from the list Ed- bank with n committee of the direcMrs. Mollle Ellis and Master of visiting attorneys attending the ward are visiting Mr. G. W. Bennett tors and being assured that they aro Ohio Circuit Court here last week. and relatives at Beda this week. all good, I feel that you are to bo Hoover and family congratulated on the healthy conMr. Gilbert For Sale, have moved on Aunt Ann Rowan's dition of your .Institution. A pood team of horses. For further farm near J. A. FRAYSKR, Pleasant Hill. Mr. Dock particulars call on or address, 7t2 State Bank Examiner. occupy the Porter and wife will HIRAM MILLER. house Mr. Hoover moved from. W. T. ELLIS TO Dam, Ky. 7t4 Beaver Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Rowan and CAPT. ENTERTAIN THE "SONS" , visdaughter, Rosamond, of .MR. JOHN W. PETTY DEAD AT FORDS VI LLE ited Mrs. Martha Rowan and Ann It has been announced that Capt. Holbrook Sunday. W. T. Ellis will entertain the W. T. , Is Chlnn, of Mr. Frank Mr. John W. Petty, a well known Ellis camp of Sons of Confederate school teacher of Ohio county, died visiting his daughter, Mrs. Luther Veterans Friday night, March 10, Dooley, this week. Sunday afternoon at his home In,' a banquet at the Rudd. It Is Mrs. Oma HIggs and little son with Fordsvllle, after an illness lasting Forspent tho day with Mrs. expected that Nathan Bedford several weeks. The funeral took Kermlt, rest, Jr., will be one of tho speak, last Friplace yesterday morning at eleven Minnie Rowan, at Owensboro Messenger. ers. o'clock, from the Baptist Church at day. The A. S. of E. local met at ChapFordsvllle, with services conducted by tho pastor, Rev. Lewis, and Inter- man schoohouse last Saturday night regulnr meeting night. burying SCHROflDER'sCASHljROGERY, ment was In tho church Miss Donnle Ellis went to OwensPetty was about 62 grounds. Mr. HARTFORD. years of age and had taught school boro Sunday to stay with, her father, nearly all his life. He has several Mr. G. W. Ellis. Extra fine eating Potatoes per 7."c grown children residing In Califorbushel . Public Sale. ii'.ic nia, and also n daughter, Mrs. Will We will, on Wednesday, the 22d Arbuckle's Coffee per lb Neel, living at Paducah. day of February, 1911, at the late Good Roasted Coffee per lb....ii(e residence .of Ed Davison, deceased, Brooms, 4 string, extra good. . . ,30c s. Standard Granulated SuTerms of Ohio Circuit Cou"t. offer for sale by public auction sevgar First Monday In February, 3 eral head of mules, all farming Im$l.no weeks. lie plements, BOO or 600 bushels of corn, Best Leaf Lard, per lb 1 1c Third Monday In April, 2 weeks. all household and kitchen furniture. Compound Lard, per lb Spcond Monday In June, 3 weeks. U."c Sale All sumo of $5.00 6 Bars Laundry Soap Terms of 2 and TMrd Monday In October, under, cash In hand. AH sums 3 cans Polk's Best Tomatoes. . . .2."c -- 5c weeks. over $5.00 on twelve month's time 3 cans Polk's Best Corn with approved security. Sale will 3 boxes Capital Parlor Matches. .10c Clifford Render Dead. 3 packages Oatmeal U."e begin at 10 o'clock a. m. Clifford Render, the twelve-year-ol- d 3 large packages SAMUEL DAVISON, son of tho late( Wm. Fender, Washing Powder 10c VIRGIL DAVISON, and stepson of Felix Shafcr, died We sell for cash. Have no expen6t2 Administrators. very suddenly at his home In the sive clerk hire, an,d sell tho best Liberty neighborhood, last Saturday HARTFORD HERALD ONE quality for less money than credit afternoon, of brain fever. After fu- YEAR AND LOUISVILLE houses possibly can. neral services conducted by Rev. ' 8 .MONTHS FOR TELEPHONE, NO. 32. Brown, his remains were Interred in ONLY $2.50. COUNTRY PRODUCE WANTED. POWDER Absolutely Pure of Tartar ALM Oak-woo- d. 18-Ib- Rub-No-Mo- ro jjij1 J- - jwv u. tjfrfl. frwnkU U .. fc yj$mJg$'? 1a v 'The Hartford Herald FEIUIUAKY 1 WEDNESDAY M. 5 ,E II. & E. RATLTtOAD 11MB, TA-IH- AT IIAKTFOUD, KY. . .Time tabic effective Sunday, Dcr. 4th, contains, tlie following schedule: No. 112 North Hound duo 7:20 n. m. i. M Sunday. Itbund due 3:40 p. m. Sunday. Hound due 8:55 a. m. ia Sunday. Hound duo 1:10 p. m. O An Accomplishment. O It's not all pleasant sailing on this STATE FI.OWKRS. ocean Sunday. has "There goes man that OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO For storms of our life. breaking and accomplished asomething really this are always in II. E. MISCIIKE. Act. the deeps are stirred with strife. world." Goldenrod Alabama "Is that so? What has ho done?" Apple Dlossom It's quite a windy planet, with some Arkansas "Bought a house on tho Installthunder and some rain, Eschscholtzia California CASE CLOSED BY Colorado Columbine But, oh, how Bweet Irs solace if we ment plan." Colorado only bear its pain! "That's nothing. Thousands of Peach Dlossom Delawaro men are doing that." Syrlnga Idaho Some think it's velvet Brussels all "I know, but that man actually Corn E i Indiana along the daily road, MOTHER'S Wild Uose With naught but song and gladness has his houso paid for." Iowa Sun Flower Kansas A Reliable Cough Medicine. and no bearing of the load. Goldenrod Kentucky It is a valuable family friend. It's not all woven tapestry by any Scene in Hender- Louisiana Magnolia Foley's Honey and Tar fulfils this means till you Pine Cone and Tassel Have borne your share of sorrow as condition Maine exactly. Mrs. Charles son County Jail. Apple Dlossom Michigan Kline, N. 8th St., Easton, Pa. states: the Lord ordains you to. Moccasin Minnesota "Several members of my family Hitter Hoot It's Just a cornbread country, and have ben cured of bad coughs and IN Montana HIS ROMRJLLOHS Goldenrod the cake we eat wo win Nebraska colds by tho use Foley's Honey and ose By sacrlfico find service and a dally New York Tar and I am never without a botWild Rose fight with sin. Dropping on Knees, Tells Al- North Dakota tle In tho house. It soothes and Scarlet Carnation So don't expect the roses while the relieves the irritation in the throat Ohio Oregon Grape mighty How She Had garden's full of weeds, Oregon and loosens up the cold. I havo alGoldenrod And somewhere there's a brother ways found it a reliable cough cure Pennsylvania Hi r Boy. Raised Violet with a heart that aches and and do not hesltlto to recommend Rhode Island Goldenrod bleeds! South Carolina coughs It highly." For la grippe TRAGIC END OF MURDER TRIATj South Dakota ....Anemone Patens and stuffy colds, for children and Don- - GOVERNMENT WILL QUIT Texas. .Buffalo Clover or Dlue grown persons and for delicate perTHE PRINTING BUSINESS Henderson, Ky.. Feb. 10. With n nett. sons, use only Foley's Honey and Sego Lily mother's prayer, Just as the murder Utah no opiates. For1 Postmaster General Hitchcock has Tar. Contains Red Clover case of Cheater Fentress was opened Vermont m by all druggists. announced that after next January sale Rhododendron hore on Monday morning, so was It Washington Hoves and Mules Crcnmtwl, closed this afternoon when the Jail West Virginia . . Rhododendron the Government will discontinue the glinting of stamped envelopes and Ky., Feb. 8. The Leltchflold, Maximum. doors clanged behind him. Followrecommends that the same he done brick livery stable at this place, oping the Jury's sentence of life imImpossible to by the local newspapers While It Is often in every erated by Mllprn Bros., burne'd this prisonment, Fentress was led to the prevent an accident, It Is never im- town. where there Is a newspaper morning at 4 o'clock. Two horses, His mother and father followed Jail. It is not and by special permit for tho towns possible to be prepared vehicles and two mules, several him into the county prison and went beyond any one's purse. Invest 25 nearest the newspaper where a town large quantities of hay and corn up to the very door of the cage. Chamberlain's has no paper of Its own. No large cents in a bottle of were consumed by the flames. The On her knees in front of the Liniment and you arc prepared for town will be allowed to havo a mo- loss is estimated at $3,000 to $4,000. Judge's bench at the beginning of sprains, bruises and like injuries. nopoly on the printing of tho envel- The origin of the fire is not known. the trial, the nged mother was the Sold by all dealers. m opes to the detriment of tho smaller central figure of a dramatic moment Falls Victim to thieves. newspapers. as she prayed aloud for Justice to be Too Grasping. S. W. Bends, of Coal City, Ala., A uniform scale of printing will done to her boy. "The late EH Perkins," said a grievance. Two has a Justifiable debe prepared by tho post-offiEvidently she was not wholly con- magazine editor, "had an apt way of partment and Insisted upon, or the thieves stole his health for twelve vinced by the evidence as offered in driving home his points with little newspaper will not be sold stamped years. They were a liver and kidthe case, for when she saw her boy stories. envelopes for printing. Tho scale ney trouble. Then Dr. King's New "Perkins once offered me a sketch of printing will be such that a reas- Life Pills throttled them. He's well hehlnd his Iron grated door, she again knelt down on the floor and at a bargain price. I accepted the onable profit can be made by the of- now. Unrivaled for constipation, began to pray. She said in her pe- sketch eagerly, and I asked for more fice printing them. The department malaria, headache, dyspepsia. 25c. tition to the Almighty that she had at the same figure. m will also soon make a ruling that no at James H. Williams. "Hut Perkins, laughing sourly, first-claprayed from the time her son was mall will bo allowed Economy. born until the present that he be a shook his head. through the mails un be Doctor (cheerfully) You'll him of a transmission "Ho said I reminded Christian and that she would contil it has a return card written or. glad to know It's twins. tinue to supplicate her Creator. She tramp to whom a genial old lady printed thereon. (overcome with Mr. Quiverful asked that if Russell Knight and gave a nickel, saying: " 'Here my good man, take this glaness) I knew it. It's always Joseph Abel, whose evidence conA Cough victed Fentress, had not told the nickel and drink my health in a Is a danger signal and should not been an idea of my wife's that two could live as cheaply as one. truth, that the Lord would forgive glass of beer. be neglected. Take Dr. Bell's " 'Thank you, ma'am,' said the once. It allays liW them. at , In South America. 'But you look so infirm, flammation, stops tho cough and Moved by the powerful entreaty tramp. "Your soldiers look fat and hap" m heals the membranes. of his aged mother, Fentress waver- hadn't I better drink two beers?' py. You must havo a war chest." ed In the stoical attltudo he had fol"Not exactly, but things are on a An attack of the grip is often maintained all through the case and lowed by a persistent cough, which SHARKS HOM) VI STEAMER higher plane than they used to be. INCIDENT OF THE OCEAN broke into tears. Then, as he bade to many proves a great annoyance. This revolution is being financed by good-by- e and turned to Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has his mothor a moving picture concern." Sharks delayed the progress of walk backfrom the door of his cell, been extensively used and with good he cried out, f1I hope Knight and success for the relief and euro of the Royal Mall steamer Marlma, For which arrived here Tuesday. Abel will go to h 1." this cough. Many cases have been THEY I1LL DEMAND IT. three days she drifted Idle and help"My son, don't say that," exclaim- cured after all other remedies had of a school of about 20 ed his mother, as she ran back to failed. Sold by all dealers. m less because man-eatewhich hovered about the the door of his, cell. Hartford, Like Every City and stern. "Well, I doA't mean It that wny," WISHES ASHES SCATTERED During a storm a quantity of rope Town in the Union, ReON HUSBAND'S GRAVE Bald Fentress, "I mean that beon the nfterdeck was washed overcause they haven't told the truth, ceives It. BIddcford, Me., Feb. 11. Direc- board and became hopelessly entangthev will go there." Sailors were The Jury made quick work of the tions that her body be cremated and led In the propeller. case, following the conclusion of the tho ashes strewn over tho grave of let overboard and they prepared to People with kidney ills want to be argument this afternoon. The attor- her husband, who is buried at Ber- cut away the knotted mass with cured. When one suffers tho tortures neys consumed but two hours in oral gen, Norway, aro contained In the hatchets. They were surrounded by of an aching back, relief is eagerly will of Mrs. Sara C. Bull, widow of sharks in an instant and soon the sought for. There are many remedies y Mrs. Bui! men had their hands full defending Ole Bull, the violinist. that rulievc but do not cure. died In Cambridge, Mass., on Jan. themselves with their hatchets. Here Is evidence to prove thntDoan's FOR ABED PEOPLE. The sailors refused to make fur- Kidney Pills cure, and the cure is IS. An estato valued at upwards of up $500,000 Is disposed of in tho will. ther attempts after being hauled lasting: Efforts Is a daugh- from their first experience. Old Folks SroulJ be Careful in The principal beneficiary J. C. Weatherholt, High street, fuCloverport, Ky., says: ter. Olea Bull Vaughan, of Cam- to frighten tho sharks away were "Two years tile. The skipper ordered all refuse ago I did not think it possible that I Their Selection of Regulative bridge. kept on board. At the end of three could evor bo well again, in fact, 1 Crovp days, deprived of food, the sharks had Medicine. settled up my affairs. I cannot Causes uneasy nights but If you will depnrted and tho propeller wair describe, the misery I endured from will freed. it use Dr. Bell'3 Port Llmon (Costa Rica) pains through my back. Whenever Wo have a safe, dependable and is relievo I stooped, the pains became so sharp altogether Ideal remedy that Is par- nothing- - In a few minutes. There all Cor. Now York Sun. better. Guaranteed by ticularly adapted to the requirethat it really seemed as if someone Asthma m dealers. ments of aged people and persons Is a distressing disease. Dr. Bell's were thrusting a knife into my kidof weak constitutions who suffer relieves almost In-- It neys. I was often very dizzy, dark Notice. or other bowel from constipation to give spots floated beforo my eyes and I Wo guarantee All persons having claims against stnntlv. We are so certain that the estato of Mrs. S. M. Tucker, de- satisfaction. had to grasp something to keep from disorders. m My Joints became swollen falling. it will relieve these complaints and ceased, aro hereby notified to fllo plvo absolute satisfaction in every the same, properly proven, with tho Tn Memory of Sister Anun Russell to twice their natural size and I lost weight rapidly until I was almost a partlcuar that we offer It with our undersigned administrator or with Lnrtnu. personal guarantee that It shnll cost W. H. Barnes, attorney at law, of Itocknort Chapter, No. 103, O. E. skeleton. Tho doctors' medicines or the many guaranteed kidney cures the user nothing If it faiU to sub- Hartford, Kentucky, on or bofore S., Rockport, Ky. On January 4, 1911, the death an- that I tried, did not help me and fstantiate our claims. This remedy Monday, February 27, 1911, or tho gel again summoned one (Sister An- inally it was my good fortune to hear Is called Rexall Orderlies. same will be forever barred. I imRoxali Orderlies have a soothing, my hand, this tho, 16th na Layton) from our chapter to the about Doan's Kidney Pills. Witness healing, strengthening, tonic and day of January, 1911.' Ornnd Chapter on high, adding an- mediately procured a box and I was regulative action upon tho bowels. other link to tho endless golden gratified with the results received. L. T. BARNES, They remove all Irritation, dryness, Administrator of the Estate of Mrs. chain now forming around the Star Before I had taken the contents of They Her kind disposi- tho second box, thoro was a marked soreness and weakness. of Bethlehem. 3t4 S. M. Tucker, deceased. tho bowels and assoclnte tion and fine character won for her improvement and I continued using A few minutes delay In trentine; much nffecnon and admiration. this remedy until I was completely to more vigorous and healthy They arc eaten like can- somo cases of croup, oven the length activity. Whereas, Our chapter has lost an cured, I am now as well aa any man dy, may ho taken at any timo with- of timo It takes to go for a doctor, excellent member, her church one of in this county and I glvo Doan's Kid out inconvenience, do not cause any often proves dangerous. Tho safest Its best and .most faithful members, ney Pills the credit." For, sale by all dealers. Price 50 nausea, diarrhoea, exces- way is to keep Chamberlain's Cough her homo a devoted wife and daughgriping, Co., 'Buffalo. sive looseness, flatulence or other Remedy in tho houso, and at the ter and a perfect mothor, and her tents. Foster-Mllbur- n New York, sole agents for tho United dlsagreeabio effect. Price 25c and first indication of croup give tho friendr a deT nscoclate. , Resolved, That our heartfelt sym- States. 10c". Sold only at our Btore The child a dose. Pleasant to take and tho, name Doan's Remember Rexall Store James H. Williams, always cures. Sold by all deal- pathies be extended to tho bereaved m ers, family, feeling assured that as she ( ind take, no other. 214 Main street. Dally No. 114 Dally Xo. 115 Dally No. 113 Daily except North except South except South except work. Tho defense stuck to its theory that two men unknown to Fen-tres- B came up behind him and Constable J. T. Ska'ggs. pf Clarkson, Ky., on the evening that tho officer was shot to doath, and that these strangers did tho shootipg. The testimony of Knight and Abel, which was a complete identification of Fentress as tho man who ran away from tho scene of tho shooting, was the strong point that the defense could not got around. Fentress will be taken to the penitentiary In a short time. ooooooooooooooo was Inspired by tho Star of Bethlehem, she has been guided to her eternal homo not made with hands. The Herald's Special Selections. Not long shall they await e'er they O O will follow our sister. May her Innocent babies receive God's richest blessings. NO SATIN WOULD. Resolved, That a copy of these This Is not a satin world where ev- resolutions be spread upon the minutes of our chapter,' one presented erything goes smooth, No tent upon a silver shore nor yet to her family and one sent to each county paper. an Orient booth. EVA ROBERTSON, This world Is plain rag carpet, with ANNA GIBBS some calico to boot, AGNES NICKEL, And it it does not please us, we will Committee. have to make it suit. oooooooooooooo POEMS YOU'LL ENJOY. Woman's Power Over Man Woman' mot glorious endowment is the power to awaken and hold the pure and honest love of a worthy man. When the loses it end still lovei on, ao one in the wide world can know the heart agony he enduret . The woman who suffers from, weakness and derangement of her special womanly organism soon loses the power to sway the heart of a man. Her general health suffers and she loses lirr tfnnd looks, her attractiveness, her amiability and her power and prestige as a woman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with the assistance of his staff of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many thousands of women. He has devised a successful remedy for woman's ailments. It is known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is a positivo specific for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, regulates, strengthens and heals. Medicine dealers sell it. No honttt dealer wilt advise you to accept a substitute In order to make a little larger profit. IHKiL IT MAKES VEAK WOMEN STRONG, ii pirrct'i PlUMmol Pellets regulata SICK WOMEN WELL. and strenxtnea Stomach, Lhtr and Bowtlt, .... A Pathetic ..' Every kind of .business needs advertising: nowadays to make it succeed. There are two kinds of advertising the good and the bad; the kind that brings results and the kind which does no good. Of course you want the first mentioned, in order to be sure of the result. HI 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 won't cost you much. It will help you. Try It. THE HERALD, Hartford, Ky. HHH$i LIPPINCOTT'S )f jrcj rono.f ortnAUTT Omplrtr loMI it wmi mutt Itotacotf i to ramlar. bail tl til grulttl wnliinlitiorlsiortci For Good "Reading Get MONTHLY MAGAZINE in Each Issue Complete Itself bra Itrtl KSttni Bit l augulM. El mtaibAA.iiYft 1 ". " v Its contents is of such a compelling nature as to causo the render to buy one number and want I IPP1NCOTT"! wirl tli.. timf nnw rami discriminating readers who seek only ffej e' that which is best in Fiction, Fact, and Fun. SUBSCRIPTION WILL BRING TO YOU N'OVELS-o- ne ce ONE YEAR'S ss I in each issue. TIMELY ARTICLES by competent writers. SHORT STORIES -- clever, clean-cu- t, and vital. 50 PLEASING POEMS that need no interpreter. OF NEW AMERICAN HUMOR 200 PAGES the most widely quoted humor ssctioa in "Walnuts and Wine," in America. 2000 pages yearly of exhilarating reading. 25 ctnta pr copy JLEOjsr.v Send all orders to this paper or to Philadelphia. Pa. UPPINCGTTS MAGAZINE E.wM.sts 2 GREAT COMPLETE 50 75 SCAD FOR OUR SPECIAL MASAZIVE OFFERS Pine-Tar-Hon- Lipplncott's alone, $2.50 Lipplncott's and Hartford Herald both one year for only $2.55 A great bargain. HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE IN YOUR RESI- DENCE OR PLACE OF BU3- INESS, AND PUT YOURSELF IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH THE ProiewBionul Cards. J. M. PORTER, Attorney at Law, BEAVER DAM, KY. Will practice hla profession In Ohio and d. olnlng counties. Special attention Rirentoar bualneaa entrusted to btacare. PRANK L. FELIX, rs Attorney at Law, HABTP0RD, KY. Will practice bla profeaalon In Ohloandad lining counties and In the Court of Appeal Jrlmlnal practice and Collections a specialty. Office In the Herald building C. M. BARNBTT. C. B. SMITH. Long Distance Lines TO ALL STATES. FOR THE COMPANY'S SPECIAL TO THE FARMERS, CONTRACT CALL ON OR ADDRESS X J. W. O'BANON. Local1 Manager, Attorneys at Law, HARTFORD, KY. Will practice their profession In all'the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In thp Coor of Appeals. Collections a speclaltr. BARNETT & SMITH, Hartford, Ky. W. C SEXTON, Incorporated. Local Manager, Beaver Dam, Ky. DR. BELL'S For ANTI-PAI- N Internal and External Pains KILL the COUCH AND CURE the LUNGS 41 laBBa&vfii diamond, " Jt HstoTClS Ufl IRfflH lasaaaaaaaaail jewelry or silver. IBKnLBI wsre, you can get 1B3bbbW beat quality at the PURflBfl MCKgtb.e nsuSH Hrc&gftni npsT MAllSSMoflH ....... R from the dusively the Southern trade. Wrle Address. for our free lllaatrated catalogue. to-d- XH a watch, Ttn? lowest prices IifWlSirgaaB PMSKB! tii : sniiTii. sV7 For almost ruu ccniury wc nave ocrrcu c m vMMP ' ORDER HOUSE "" IW Trial Bottla Frte AND ALL THROAT AND LUNQ TROUBLES. par run Dr. King's New Discovery WITH Pm. VUILo ""fi-jp-s I A .ML4.UM, PRICE GUARANTEED S ATISFAOTOBrf OR MOWRV RXffUNUXP C. P. Box 26 UalsrHKKr. Co. Barnes & -- JRvery Artlola Ouarantted. jPV P If you find it in The Herald, it will Dr. Bell's promptlr obtained In all omintrlMflR HO PRE. TRAOLMaRKS. CTetl and CopyrlEMs Hend Hketch. Uoia or fboto. for fRSIRiroRTonpatBtablUtr. Patent prod-Ic- e exclusively. BANK RSFIRINOIS. Send t cents In stamp, for ourtwolnTalaaMa books on ho to obtain and aiLi. IMTS, Which ones will pay, llpw to km a partner, patent law and other Taloable Information. ro or-tra- .. jfrsA'l be worth reading. It costs only SI. 00 yGar. Pine-Tar-Hon- ey D. k303 Seventh SWIFT & CO. PATENT L1WVIRS. St, i Washington, D. C. mmmmmmmwmmmmmmmm , For Coughs and Colds Dr. Bell's AntisepticSalvt Good for all Skin Diseases. "",l JSJr vM!f-J'irTV- POLICE iSL 0 PARIS, if Thclr Methods Effective Even ciruKrs Cttaads for circular, concise, clear TDRAGCG rr 'rV wwWftiW TESTING A MAN' l MlllUtIV OF COURAGE. Th 8ecrt 8ervlc Knew More About Hit Own Affairs Than 'Ho Did Him- elf and Proved It In a Molt Startling and Concluilve Manner. The police of Parts bare always made it a rule to keep closely In touch with the criminal element, tho spies and secret officials of the department posing as criminals among the real criminals when necessary to learn tbelr secrets. The following Incident, In which the national Impulse for dramatic effect crops out, will serve to Illus trate how well at times they do their work: At the beginning of the French rev olution the chief of the polico of Paris had upon his register the names of no fewer than 2,000 suspected and depraved characters whose pursuits were known to be, of a criminal nature. A merchant of high respectability in Bordeaux had occasion to visit Paris upon commercial business, carrying with him bills and money to a very large amount. On bis arrival at the gates of the French metropolis a genteel looking man opened the door of the carriage and addressed him to this effect: "Sir, 1 have been waiting for you some time. According to my notes, you were to arrive at this hour, and, your person, yoiir carriage nnd your portmanteau exactly answering the description 1 hold In my hand, you will permit me to have the honor of conducting you to M. de Snrtlno." The gentleman, nstonlshed and alarmed at this Interruption nnd still more at hearing the name of the chief Inspector of the police mentioned, demanded to know what XI. de Sartlna rf wanted with blm, nddlng that he bad Jf tJever committed any offense against the laws and that the police could have no right to detain blm. The messenger declared himself Ignorant of the cause of the detention nnd said that when bo had conducted blm to M. de Snrtlno he should havo executed bN orders. After some further explanations the gentleman permitted the officer to conduct him to the police official. M. do Snrtlne, the chief of police, received him with great politeness nnd. after requesting him to be seated, to bis astonishment described bte portmanteau nnd told blm the exact nmount In bills nnd cash which he bad brought with blm to Paris, where be was to lodge, bis usual time of going to bed and a number of other circumstances which he had conceived were known only to himself. Hnvlnff"fl)u3 (Txcltpd hla attention. M. dq Snrtlne asked blm: "Sir. are you n man of courage?" The gentleman, still more nstonlsh ed at the singularity of his Interroga tory, demanded the reason why such a question was put to him. adding that no man bad hitherto doubted bis courage. "Sir. you are to be robbed nnd murdered this night," replied M. de Sar-tln"If you arc n man of courage you muRt go to your hotel and retlro to rest nt tbo usnnl hour. But bo careful not to fall asleep. Neither will It be proper for you to look under your bed or Into the closet which Is In your chamber. You must place your portmanteau In Its usual situation near the bed nnd botrny no suspicion. Leave what remains to me. If you do not feel your courage sufficient to bear you out I will procure some one who will personate you and go to bed In jour stead." being convinced that U M.The merchant, Information was accude Sartine's rate In every particular, refused to bo personnted and resolved to follow literally the directions he had received. He accordingly drove to the hotel and went to bed at bis usual hour, 11 o'clock. At half past 12 the time mentioned by M de Snrtlne the door of his bedchamber was quietly forced open, and three men entered with a dark lantern, daggers and pistols. The merchant, who pretended to be asleep, perceived ono of them to bo bis own servant. They rifled bis portmanteau undisturbed nnd discussed nnd settled the plan of putting blm to death. Hearing all this and not knowing by what means ho was to be rescued, tho merchant was under great perturbation of mind during such nn interval of suspense. Just nt tho moment the villains were preparing to take tbo merchant's life four police officers, who wero conceal-t- d under the bed nnd In the closet, rushed out and seized the offenders in Jhe very act of attempting murder nnd with tho stolen property in their possession. The law made short work of the crlmtnnls. and tbepollco congratulated the merchant on his courage nnd e. Don't knock your town! for, printing them, Don't refuse to advertise! Pttandi tho price. for the Job, done, to cheap The A. S. of E. Reconsiders Don't patronize mail order and jo well. houses ! for the Increase in food) Its Action. you will tell. Don't fail to give us your orders for all kinds of RECIPROCITY ALSO AGAINST job printing ! your Order Today Good Roads Mail V Advocate Lost a Don't forget to stand by your home paper, and it will Fine Resolution for Lack goods store in Oxford, O. One night stand by you! his store was robbed and a sum of of a Second. money taken. He employed detec- IS DON'T MIMED E point of success yet attained. The Woman's Home Companion, which occupies a powerful position in the woman's field and whose growth has been phenomenal. Is edited by Gertrude B. Lane and numbers on Us staff Hayden Carruth, Graco M. Gould and Sophie Kerr Underwood. Farm and Fireside, edited by Herbert Quick, formerly of Sioux City, Iowa, Is pn agricultural paper of high quality and wide national circulation which Is the leading exponent of agricultural methods. This amalgamation will make for increased efficiency and Influence In the case of all three of these publications. te r fr J 9 tives and tried to capture the robbers, but was unsuccessful. several He came to Kentucky years ago to llvo and hud given up all hopes of the money, when to his surprise he received tho letter from tho unknown writer this week with a largo sum of money, but no explanation. The letter came from Oxford, 0., and corresponds with the amount of money stolen and Vanfleet feels sure the thief returned the stolen money In order to relieve his guilty conscience. JOHNSON'S WITHDRAWAL WHAT IT MAY MEAN The Owensboro Messenger says: The withdrawal of Ben Johnson from the race for Governor, under such circumstances as are described UnIn his card, is most deplorable. doubtedly Mr. Johnson has been hounded and secretly stabbed for whispers by contemptible months and suggestions that, on account of his religion, he could not be elected Governor of Kentucky, but we cannot bqllevo that any of tho appellate court judges has declared he would not vote for him as the party nominee on this account. This is InconMr. Johnson has maniceivable. festly been misled In this matter. While he has undoubtedly been persecuted by covert attacks, we regret that Mr. Johnson, as a Democrat, in withdrawing from the race for Governor, felt it necessary to wrlto this letter, which may result In great misfortune to the Democratic party In Kentucky. Its consequences cannot bo fully measured today. It will Infuriate many people at least for a time. It mav cause some radical realignments before the primary Is over nnd render the result in November gravely doubtful. We have surely had enough of bitter personalities between Democrats several In the past In Kentucky years, the consequences of which we are suffering now. We had hoped to rivalry for the see a nominations this spring and an easy party victory In the fall. The responsibility for tho present unhappv situation, however, is not primarily upon Ben Johnson and his friends, much as the manner of Mr. Johnson's withdrawal Is to be regretted. The assaults upon Johnson, who Is a manly man, originated with bitter, Implacable, porsonal enemies, who did not fight him fairly in tho open, and Senator McCreary would better have a care not to lend himself to these people and their ' schemes. good-natur- fr & m Life Saved at Dentil's Door. "I never felt so near my writes W. It. Patterson, of Wellington, Tex., "as when a frightful cough and lung trouble pulled me down to 100 pounds, In spite of doctor's treatment for two years. .My father, mother and two slstrra died of consumption, nnd that I am alive Is due to Dr. King's New Discovery, which complete!' cured me. Now I weigh 1S7 pounds and havo been well and strong for years." Quick, safe, sure, it's tho best remedy on earth for coughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, croup, and all throat and lung troubles, fiOc nnd $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by m James H. Williams. gr-iveto-d- SCHOLARSHIPS FOR SALE. The Herald has a scholarship for sale in each of the following well known business colleges, viz: Bryant & Stratton Business Louisville, Ky. Pnduc.ih Central Business College, Col-lego, Paducah, Ky. If you aro contemplating taking a business course, The Herald can save you money. iif Advice. Wife Got Tip-To- p "My wife wanted me to take our boy to the doctor to euro an ugly boll," writes D. Frankol, of Stroud, FOR FLETCHER'S Okla. "I said 'put Buckien's Arnica I Salve on it.' She did so, and it cured ..I tho boll in a short time." Quickest RESTITUTION MADE OP MONEY STOIjEX LONG AGO healer of Burnes, Scalds, Cetaoln healer of burns, scalds, cuts, corns, Best Glasgow, Ky., Feb. 9. In nn effort bruises, sprains, swellings. an anonymous Pilo cure on earth. Try It Only to make restitution, m writer of Oxford, 0., this week re- 25c at James H. Williams. money which ho turned a sum of tolo fifteen, years ago to its owner, FOR FLETCHER'S Grant Vanfleet, of this place. Many years ago Vanfleet conducted a dry coolness. Children Cry C A ST OR A Chtlldroo Cry CASTORIA ATTENDED Chicago, did on January 24, 1911, at tho City of Chicago, County of meeting of the delegates Cook, Stato of Illinois, aforesaid, At the of the Green River District of the then and there being, did then and American Society of Equity, held at there with a certain Instrument comthe court house In Owensboro, Feb. monly called hot baked potato, said 2, a committee, composed of Frank hot baked potato being a dangerous K. Moseley, of Daviess county; J. B. and deadly weapon, without" any provocation whatever Holland, of Hancock county; John considerable showing Cullen, of McLean county; L. V. and under circumstances L. Stevens, an abandoned and malignant heart, Brown, of Indiana, and S. of Ohio county, was appointed to did assault said Anna Hygslck with confer with the directors of the Intent to do great bodily Injury." Home Warehouse company, for the Chicago Inter Ovean. purpose of attempting to perfect a plan, whereby the Home Warehouse OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O SPECIAL NOTICE O company is to sell the crop of tobacO ill regard to O co pooled with the A. S. of E., and O OBITUARIES, RESOLUTIONS O receive a commission of one per O OF RESPECT, &e. O cent, out of which the dues of each OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO pooler with the A. S. of E is to be paid. This was the most Important The Hartford Herald has adopted action taken by the delegates, and a new rule In regard to Obituaries, the committee will meet with the Resolutions of Respect, Cards of directors of the Home Warehouse Thanks, &c, whether written at the company to discuss the plan Thursthe behest of lodges, churches or inday dividuals, and that Is, we shall The district meeting, which was charge at the rate of two cents per largely attended by members of the line for all such articles, except obit- ,,, , ,. , society from Daviess, McLean, Han- uary jiuuiry, which win ue one ceni , .. cock and Ohio counties, was called .pur mini, i ins is iiie sunnito order by President W. P. Stevens, est rate webuuiK'ii. for anything and charge of McLean county. Immediately af- is only one-fift- h of our regular rate. ter the meeting had convened, the The amount, in cash or stamps, question of reconsidering tho action must accompany each article, or taken at the last district meeting, It will not be printed. Six when It was voted to limit the acre- words average a lino In ordiage to 10,000 hills, was brought up nary reading and every separate by J. W. Dunn, of Whltesville. The character or Initial letter counts as question to reconsider tho delegates' a word. The heading and tho sigformer action caused a rather heated nature both count one line each, discussion, but by a vote of twenty-si- x even if they are only a word or two. to eleven, the motion to recon- All poetry, straight obituary sider was adopted. The passage of hrough, one cent per word. this motion leaves no limit to the Our old rule In regard to Obituaquantity of tobacco that can be rais- ries, &c. was lHO word3 free, balnnco ed by one man, and the society will a cent a word, but this did not prove only recommend that the members satisfactory because tho bounds were attempt to hold the crop down. Ac- almost always overstepped, and wo cording to those championing the have been forced to adopt thl3 new motion to take off the bridle, the ac- rulewhlch Is In effect from now on. tion was taken because the 'mem- Contributors will please remember. bers of the Green River Tobacco Growers' Association usually grow as Tortured for 1JJ Years g large a crop as they care to, or can. By a stomach trouble Good Ronds Advocate. that baffled doctors, and resisted all Frank K. Moseley offered a resolu- remedies he tried, John W. Mod-der- s, tion, which was lost because of the of Moddersville, Mich., seemed lack of a second to his motion for its doomed. He had to sell his farm adoption, Indorsing the action ofev-era- l and give up work. His neighbors representative citizens and clubs said, "he can't live much longer." of the State concerning the move- "Whatever I ate distressed me," he ment for good roads throughout the wrote, "till I tried Electric Bitters, State. The resolution provided that which worked such wonders for mo the Green River district of the Amer- that I can now eat things I could ican Society of Equity go on record not take for years. It's surely a as an advocate of good roads, and grand remedy for stomach tiouble." that the society use its Influence at Just as good for thi liver and kld-ne- s. tho next meeting of the General AsEvery bottle guaranteed. sembly In an effort to have that body Only ."0c at James H. Williams, 214 enact laws for the building of good Main street. m roads. The resolution further provided BECOMES INSANE AFTER EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGE that the society go on record as favoring the passage of a law making Biandenburg Ky., Feb. 10. It a penalty for tho hauling of more than 1,000 pounds on a wngon with News has been received here tint Sani C. Lewis, cashier of the dorunct a tire less than three nnd one-haState Bank of Ekron, U1I3 count.', Inches wide. who was Indicted on eleven counts Opposes Reciprocity. delegates voted unanimously following the bank's failure, has The for the resolution offered by Frank been adjudged Insane In Owen counMoseley placing the American So- ty, his former home, and ordered ciety of Equity on record against the committed to an asylum. After being indicted here, Lewis Canadian reciprocity measure. The resolution in full is as fol- gave bond for $4,000 and returned with his father to Owen county. Ho lows: Whereas, through the press of the was succeeded as cashier by A. C. country, wo have heard of a propos- Crouch, who Is also under Indicted agreement between this country ment. and Canada, whereby this country If troubled with Indigestion, conproposes to reduce tho tariff on cer- stipation, no appetlto or feel bilious, tain articles, almost entirely prod- give Chamberlain's Stomach and ucts of tho farm, and In return pro- Liver Tablets a trial and you will poses to reduce tho tariff on certain These bo pleased with the result. articles, mostly manufactures, and tablets Invigorate the stomach and whereas, it Is known to all men that liver and strengthen the digestion. under tho present tnrlff scheme tho Sold by all dealers. m farmer is tho least protected of any ' Consolidation. lli class In tho country, therefore be it Through an amalgamation Just Resolved, That wo recommend and that our secretary Instruct tho Con- effected, threo gressmen and Senators from Ken well known publications are horcaf tucky that we are opposed to tho rat ter to bo published by one Companv ification of this measure, and wo ask although no change In tho policy or them to stand against it, and stand personnel of editorial management for a yea and nay vote on It when it is to tako place. The Crowoll Publishing Compais presented to Congress for consld-- , ny, owners of Woman's Home Comoration. panion and Farm nnd Fireside, takes Magazine and over the American BAKED POTATO WAS A DANGKROUS WEAPON1 will publish It in conjunction with Mr. i Its other two publications. Against Frank Smith,! cook at the George 'H. Hazen Is President of tho i La Sallo street railroad station, his Crowell Publishing Company; Mr. assistant, Anna Hygslck, makes the II, J. Fisher 1b General Manager. following complaint: The three publications In quite "Frank Smith, late' of tho City of distinct Holds are at the highest MEETING LARGELY A HOME TREATMENT FOR LUNG TROUBLE. It Is a recognized fact that fresh HARDWICK tests eyes. HARDWICK grinds lenses while you wait. HARDWICK has two Graduate Opticians. HARDWICK has tho only Lens (Jtindlng Plant in Owensboro. HARDWICK has the only up-tdate Jewelry Store In Owens- ho:o. HARDWICK hos a fine Jewelry Htpairer. HARDWICK has nn Expeit En- graver. HARDWICK has the Best Watch Repairer. HARDWICK Is fine on Clock Repairing. o- 4tt 1 n ri air, plenty of nourishing food and a treatment correct constitutional have done more to cure lung trouble feeland that weakened, ing, than nil other forms of treatment combined. to A constitutional treatment, 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 Increase 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 these requirements nnd Is producing some marvelous results. run-dow- n You will never know what a fine stoie Ou'eusboio has until you see HARDWICK'S. You will never know what HARDWICK can do till you try him. --J- W mm McCALL ......,.. . I If you have consumption In any form, blood disease: If you are troubled with ulcers or chronic sores, coughs, pains In the chest; f you have weak lungs and feel generally run down and weak, write the Ohio Medical Co.. Box 9., Columbus Ohio, and they will send you a full sized bottle of this medicine abso- lutelv free, as a Miol. If you will mention the name of Haitford Her tito aid. PATTERNS CrUbnlcJ for Myle, perfect fit, Jhl reliability nearly 40 jiti. hold In nearly erery city and lonn in the Untied Mates ani CatiJil.i, or bv null ilircct. Mnre told Hut any othir nuUc. bind tor free dialogue. wonderf;.!. VniNDL'c:i-.::vr- s Til . McCALL'S MAGAZINE More subcribers 1. n nny other fuMnn mgtzine million 1 n nt'i. Invaluable, l.i:. est style', pttUrn, i rinsruilini-- , n illinfr? plain kewjf ,f im y n idlewoik, 11 iirdresmir, etiquette, i;oid liri-- , etc. On y CO cctt-- a cir (wort l ,lnullc, 1 c'mlii;: 3 ir e Pal'r-- 1. Subscribe tod ly, or tind lur sjiupic cny, to Ascnt n c iti.j u, brHtri p- -' nnd new c t!i rizen.'.i. . A . . TOE McCALL CO.. 2.3 to H3 U. Z:ih St.. MW YCSX ij ClftOttS nnd luiuriant Promote! HAIR BALSAMh&If. Ui3 growth. PARKER'S KnlckT Why do you think the rr"7rVi burglar was a man led man? Docker Because when I asked him the time of night he said 12 Instead of 3. Sight Is Too Valuable. fiutliei land's EaTo be neglected, gle Eye Salve will cure any case of soro eyes, granulated lids, opthnlmin or any Inflamed condition of tho eyes. Painless nnd harmless. 2.ic m a tube at all dealers. An Excellent Reason. "You gliN are bojond said the father us be tied the ribbon of his lcvc!5. Never Falls to Itcstoro Gray to It Youthful Color. Cum wilp diwfcu-- i a heir ULlni. U xK.iL'iiWKwpiv'!i?rttKn.T7rts&rF SOLD CY CARSON & LIBERTY SPECIAL HATS CO. HARTFORD JiJ.V. lii" cure-defyin- daughter's slim. "Why don't ,ou wear unfits buttoned Mines tlmt won't toned Inste.id ef these confounded things tb.it are untied half the timeV" "Because, pipi." snld Gladjs sweetly. "I'd rather have n bow than get tho boo!;." Harper's Weekly poor little What I' "peilcnee? but constructed from the nuns of the pnlnce of gold and murbie called our RARE Big CHANCE! MHltQjUim Pay for Solicitors! sand Dollars in cash premiums to solicitors, in addition to a liberal Illusions. coimuibMon that is more than ample Help Wanted to pay one's expenses, besides afFor that cough. Get a bottle of Dr. fording a living profit, while enBell's It is the gaged in the work of soliciting sul. nt best scriptions. y. THE CINCINNATI WEEKLY ENQUIRER is offering Five Thou- THE WEEKLY ENQUIRER CASTORIA For Infants and Cbildica. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature oiOuzz7ui lf Ths Capitol Dome. The capllol dome nt Washington Is the only considerable dome of iron in the woild. It Is a vast hollow sphere weighing S.000.::oo pounds. How much Is that? .More Hum 4.000 tons, or almost the weight of 70.000 full grown persons, or about equal to 1.0UO Itldencd tonl curs of four tons em b, which. If out one behind the other, would ixcupy u mile nnd n balf of track. On tho very top of the dome tho allegorical liguio "America." weighing IMS." pouuds. lifts Its proud bond high In the air. The pressure of this dome and figure upon tbo piers nnd plllnri 1m 14.477 pounds to the square foot. It would, however, require n pressure of 7.".".'JS(1 pounds to tho square font to crush tho supports. A HAPPY HOME 5 one whore health abounds. With Impure blood there cannot be good health. Witha disordered LIVER thero cannot be good blood. paper, chuck full of reading most acceptable to any home. Each issue contains a sermon by Pastor Russell, an essay by Dr. Madison C. Peters, a serial and short stories, natural history, general news and special record of political and national affairs that are of interest to all people, cut patterns for ladies and youths, and miscellaneous matter, nil of high moral influence; also market reports from all commercial centers, and veterinary columns. The editor's aim being to present the reader with an exceptionally good family journal of superior merit, free from all matters that antagonize morality , justice and truth. To circulate such a paper, all persons can benefit their community and add their mite in the uplifting of civic and political thought and action. Any person, lady or gentleman, with leisurehours, desirous of doing a good turn for the community, at the same time earning fair payment, should applv at once for particulars by writing 'to THE ENQUIRER, Cincinnati, O. well-ordere- is now atwenty-fourpag- e magazine-styl- e d well-meanin- g Mn-jaln- e SDTHERUliD'8 EAGLE EYE Good : N"thine hut tho Eyca AS S S. Sffi revivify the torpid LIVER and restore It natural action. A healthy LIVER means pure blood. Pure blood means health. Tiitt'sPills jf whIbT! ) Hi S.k...' ,ti, iU S. hdJ lortlgu i i. ( bend tkucU or iilioto ol limntJon lor t unreport on rcr frro boo, i 4tn f tT.Mr tr CnnuiwVn H uu wvv. i nsnifirv-- to I ilHULVUlHimO Patent nmt nlcl, viifi l llllllfA , Health means happiness. Take no Substitute. Ail Druggists. m ft a!in m Herald only $1 y'i HENRY THE THIEF. The Black Heart of the Greely Arctic Expedition. STORY OF HIS EXECUTION. AFTER THE TEMPEST. The Genial Calm That Settled Over the The Order Issued by the Emaciated Commander and the Way It Wa Carried Out The Rifle Shot That Put an End to the Traitor. One of tho many tragedlps of the Greely arctic expedition wns the execution of Private Ilenry. who had been caught time after time stealing fool from tho scant store of tho starving party. Henry alone was strong and active, thanks to the Htolen food anil to tho fact that he did no labor he could possibly shirk. Lieutenant Groely hnd warned and warned Ilonry and bad punished him. but to no avail, and finally, nfter a particularly despicable act of theft, tho commandor. In fear that Henry's course would cause a general raid on the store of food and thus bring about the destruction of the whole party, condemned Henry to dentil. The story of the execution, which makes a new page In history. Is told in the American Magazine by Frank B. Copley, who got liln data direct from the survivors of the expedition He writes: "All his lethargy gone. (Treely dismissed tho man. poized 'pencil and paper and. with trembling, emaciated lingers, wrote: it mad dog. iceable rllle. "The three sergeants drew lots to see who would do the shooting. When they had dono so they bound s witli an oath that tho identity of the mau thus chosen never should be revealed. "Henry was at tho tent on Cemetery ridge with all the other men when the time for putting him to death came. What was to tako place, of course, was known only to tho threo hergeants and the commander. Two of tho sergeants remained in the vl- cinlry of the old hut, whllo tho third went to tho tent to bring Henry down. "The mau who went for Henry told him that he was wanted nt the old camp to help carry up some more of tho suppHes tlnit had been left there. Suspecting nothing, Henry readily ac- corapanled the sergeant to tho place chosen for putting him to death. "Now, Greely had repeatedly cautioned the three sergeants to take no chances on Henry's getting nwny, for, although none at Capo Sablno knew the man's past history, enough of the man's black soul had been revealed to make his comrades feel that no crime could be put past him. "So Uralmml, Long and Frederick, cautioned by their commander and warned by their own knowledge of the man with whom they hud to deal, had decided that Henry should bo made to Btoop to pick up something und that then ho should be shot from behind. At least one of tho sergeants' had no inoro compunction about killing him than he would have had about killing them-helve- "Npa"- - Capo S.iMne, Jun B. IWI. "Serueants Drnlnard. Lour nml Frederick promises given t "Notwlthstnnillntf Private C. II. Henry yesterday, ho nan elnce, as acknowledged to me, tampered with aeat thoriKa If not other food nt the THEY LIKE PRISON LIFE. old camp. This pertinacity and audacity Is the destruction of tho party If not at onco ended. Private Henry will bo shot A Class of Persons In Japan Who Try today, all care being takon tn prevent hie to Break Into Jail. Injuring nny one, as his physical strength In Japan there are people who make Is Rreater than that of any two men Decide the manner of bin death by two sham confessions In order to obtain a ball and one blank cartridge. This order period of the comparative warmth and Is Imperative nnd absolutely necessary for comfort of n Japanese prison. The any chance of life. A. W. GrtEELY." Japan Mall says: "Tho police slang "In tho official report of tho Lndy Franklin bay expedition It Is sim- of the capital has words to describe ply announced that 'shots were heard nnd distinguish these persons. 'Meslil-kuor the about 2 o'clock, and later the order some small rice criminal, will steal article from a shop front was read to tho general party.' The In such a way as to be seen doing It. manner In which the order wns He then makes n bolt of it. pursued by appears for the first time. "Sergeants Bralnard. Long and Fred- tho master of the shop, or soino faithful kozo. but prohcntly allows himself erick could not, ns ordered, 'decide the to be caught and handed to tho pomanner of death by two ball and one lice. He has to 'do time' for his pre blank cartridge.' Greely had failed tended theft, Is secured his to take Into consideration that at this for a period, butwhen rice and time the pnrty had left only one serv- elapsed he will allow that period has himself to bo school-ma'aml. Pretty Schoolma'am. A pretty schoolma'am once taught All school In a Long Island village. the young fellows for miles around were mad about her but the school-ma'awas proud, nnd nono of the boys seemed to stand the ghost of a chance. Young Jim Brown. :he Judge's son, was the best looking chap In the town, and Jim probably loved the scboolma'am more than any of her other swains, but be never had the pluck to declare himself. He felt too small and mean before the beauty and learning of the schuolma'am. But one day, the scboolma'um being nwuy on a visit In New York state. Jim asked advice of the editor. The editor said: "Take the bull by the horns and Insert an announcement of your forthcoming marriage In my society column. It will cot you only 50 cents." So Jim Inserted an announcement '.o the effect thnt the schoolmn'am and he would be married the next month and would spend their honeymoon at Atlantic City. Well, a short time after this announcement nppeared the came h:rs home. Jim heard on all sides how furlou he wns. For sevkept away from her eral dny Then one uftenn.on m she was com ng home Jron. $"fcvol be ran plump Into her in the lane She let him know nt once what she thought of him nnd t'.i outrageous conduct. She fc'.ornn-- and raved, and her pretry eyes fiafced Are J'.m stood first on one foot und then on the oth er. und finally lit blurted out "Well. If you don't like It I can have the announcement tontrndlcted." . "Oh. bother It!" said the "It's too late now." Washington Star. j Cjt v v r v v r v p v r r " n r v r p v r v v r v v v v v r cj 1 G-r "ft FOR EVERYBODY ood News? I -- 9 HERE'S A PIECE OF U R ODR REGULAR PI'IT-SB- M An event which a lot lnlLLtt WHO HAS A MONEY-SAVING INCLINATION Off T $? it, SALE M of you have been looking forward to. A sale J of High Grade Merchandise offered to yoy at prices you will be glad J'to pay. We have marked down our fall and winter stock away 'below g line. We have bought every big bargain we could J the profit-sharin- jj fr ii N find in the wholesale markets in order to make this the most attractive we have ever had, and we have succeeded; you will J say so when you see our showings sale, proposition Your success lies in you appropriating these good things to your personal use. Are K you going to do it? At this time of the year, when your time is least valuable,, are you go- - j lT ing to fail to make a few dollars by not attending this sale? Vr It will do you good if you don't buy a dollar's worth. The hustle and bustle will put J K new life in you and you will leave here with a determination to have some money to spend A V the next time that Barnes' Store has a sale. f. The benefit is not all yours. While you make the money, we make a lot of good f friends. Every sale malces us some new customers, and we want you nnd everybody vf j else to come to this sale. f fe BHRCHINS IN EMERY LINE. If you haven't come to the store and the merchandise will speak for itself. ' fi X seen our big ad., drop us a card and we will mail you one. Better still, 4 f i- - & jn. J ?r''sTrs,'?r'5r35rrr'W''fw''w''i'W'W' BHBWBiBBRIIBI, caught again. "The 'uuandon.' or 'eel bowl' criminal, Is wilier than the one Just mentioned. He does not actually commit n crime. nucIi as will put him Into tho convict Hide of the prNon. but allows himself to be found looking in suspicious places, underneath the broad verandas of n temple, or In the garden of n private house. He gets into prison nil right, but he secures the more generous treatment of the house of detention, which is to tho fare of tho convict Jail what n dish of eels Is to a bowl of plain rice. "Tho 'kuruma' Is n criminal who makes a sham confession in order to sneak a free railway ride. Tho Asasl tells of n case connected with a murder, known us the "decapitated corpse case.' which took place last year. A mau gave himself up to tho police In Sendnl ns the perpetrator of the crime. He was brought to Tokyo and his story Investigated. It was found to bo a puro fabrication." A 4 1 s P BARNES & BRO Beaver Dam, Kentucky. IE MARBLEanoGRANITE jStyrfcrfcrfcrfcfytyefcrfcrfcrfctfcrfcrfctfcrfcrfc rii.ipjiprj;. 4? I I A Strauss Story. ells n French contemporary piquant story of the composer of "Salome." He was dining one night with n pnrty of musical friends when the conversation turned on the compositions of the kaiser. Some of the guests had expressed their opinions pretty freely when Herr Strauss put his linger to his lips and said: "Sh-sh- : You should never run down the compositions of crowned heads In com pany. There Is no tolling who wrote them." iPebrtiary Bargains DRILY Courier-Journ- al One Half Price If you will bring or send us your subscription dur- if: Tl Monuments, c& X ing the month of February we will send you "Hut one of tho other two men weakened at the last moment. To shoot n man In cold blood from behind, to send him into eternity witli no opportunity to compose his soul, was too terrible n thing for hlui to stand. It wns a mlstako that nearly proved disastrous. "Henry was told face to face that he wns to be put to death In accordance with the order of the commandor,. and he wns advised to kneel and make ids peace with his God. At the same time the executioner appeared with his ride nt a convenient distance before the doomed man's eyes. "Henry stood ngape. Ho muttered something about something not being right. Near where tho third sergeant stood an ux lay on the ground. Henry's gaze, hoarchlng tho ground, encountered tho ax. no sprang for It. A warning cry was raised. Tho ser geaut who stood near the ax Jumped and got lilt foot on it almost as Henry was upon him. There was 11 cry of 'Quick!' Even then tlioro wns danger of tho executioner shooting his fellow sergeant If his ulm was tho least unsteady. "But despite all ho hnd been through tho aim of tho executioner was true. The ritlo cracked, and tho bullet sped, penetrating tho breast of the man for .whom It wns Intended when It was molded, nenry whlrfed. crying: 'You havo. tricked me! Yon have tricked m'ej' ' Again tho rifle cracked. The second bullet wont through Henry's nead.'and he fell dead.'; A word from a friend Is doubly the two which contain nothing are M T (empty), that four express great corpulence, 0 B C T (obesity): that two are in n decline. D K (decay): that four Indicate exalted station. X L N 0 (excellency!, nnd three excite our tears, yet when prouounced together are necessary to a good understanding L E G (elegy and leg). Willing to Compromise. "Didn't you promise never to do that Some Letters. An Ingenious person has discovered that the threo most forcible letters In our alphabet are N it G (energy), that The Hartford -a- Herald ONE YEAR. AND 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 Just this class of work. Let us show you In dollars and cents that it Is 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 in dealings. GROWN AND BRIDGE WORK For the refined nnd dainty Woman Is what sho demands now. Americana fa are on dentistry, and are not satisfied with anything but tho acme of perfection in dental work. Teeth extracted with as little pa'.n as possible. Children given careful attention. Special attention to plate te . work and ALL WORK OUAItAX-TEEWork dono at lowest prices. DR. H. J. BELL, Office in Republican Building, The Thomas Monumental Works, HARTFORD, Headquarters for f 1l - KY. the DAILY Hartford, Ky COURIER-JOURNA- L Building Supplies. again?" "Yes. ffither." "And didn't I promise to whale you good If you didn't V" "Yes. Imt 1 btokc me promise and won't hold you to yours." Toledo Blade. To the Point. At n teacher's conference one of principals rose to propose the toast, "Long live the teachers." And u meapur. pallid assistant Instructor In n hollow voice nsked, "On what?" Ladles' Home Journal. URNAL . Four Months FOR ONLY $1.75 Or this paper ONE YEAR and the DAILY COURIER-JONight Months for $2.50. Subscriptions received at this price only during the month of February. The State and National Campaigns are opening and yon want to keep posted on political events. Read the Courier-Journa- l editorials. And Mr. letters from Europe will bo interesting. Subscription orders under this offer must NOT sent to the Courier-Journabut to the HERALD. l, We Ask You to tako Cardul, for your fcmals' troubles, because ws are sure it will help you. Remember that tbi3 great female remedy TCARDOI has brought relief to thousands of other sick women, so why not to you ? For headache, backache, periodical pains, female weakness, many have said It Is "the best medicine to take." Try it 1 Its Resemblance. "Did the roan whose auto wns In collision last night giro it a cursory ex amlnation?" "It sounded that wny. sir." Baltimore American, Advlco Is not disliked because It is advice, but because so text people know how to give It Leigh" Hunt. Wat-terson- 's Doors. Sash, Moldings, Flooring, Ceiling, Finish, Siding, Lathes, Shingles, Columns, Rubber Paper and Metal Roofing. Ridgeroll Cresting 11 and Guttering, House and Rbof Paints, Lime, Paten Plaster, Cement, Common and Fire Brick, Soreen Doors and Wire. If you need building ma-- , terial, call on us. We have Rough and Dressed Lumber, m t i Sold in This City Suhcribe for n on dark days. Hi jL 3D DC 3G 1J1 Bean Bros., End Union West .4--4 St. Th9 Eerald $1 av7ea: A Ho IICIILIUIU, - V iv ..