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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, March 1, 1911.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, March 1, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911030101 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, March 1, 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. feilliir n t q a n 1rn Phy f CHE HARTFORD HERALD a i Subscription lfJl Per Year in Advance I Como the Herald ef a Noisy World the NSewi f ill Nation linberiis al Mj Back All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed r I 37th YEAR HARTFORD KY WED ESDAYMAROH 1 1911 NO 9bA r CLAIMS MIDEFOR ABRAHAM LINCOLNI llByPeople of BerksCounty COURT HOUSE OOROS TELL Of Transactions By the Lin coins and Boones in Early Days I SOME INTERESTING Reading PaFeb 25Tho birth day anniversary of Abraham Lincoln was as usual generally observedI Berks county because t l that Lincolns ancestors 4throughout countlans Within re searchers have found thatl J not only did the early Llncolns live in this section but that thoy wereI intimately associated with DanielI Boono and the family of Nancy Hanks mother of Abraham Lincoln Xlncolns and Boones are still nu merous hereabouts especially iin Southern Berks In Exeter Town i ship about a mile from Blrdsboro t there is an old stone house in which lived up to the time of his death iIn May 1736 Mordecal Lincoln theI greatgreatgrandfather of President Lincoln The Lincoln homestead InI Exeter embracing at present sixty one acres on which are the old stone ti t house and a bank barn Is owned by Richard G Lincoln of Reading Samuel Lincoln Lincolns earliest ancestor In America came from thei Exe Valley Exeter In England and settled In Hlngham Mass where hei died leaving a son lordecal Lin coln whose son Mordecal Jr set tied more than 175 years ago on the eastern bank of the Schuylklll river rear Blrdsboro In 1735 he laid out the highway which is now the road Trom Reading to Amltyvllle Mor h decal LlrfnytrrTTtrevised the land 1o his twq sons Mordecal ahd Thom as and a posthumous son named Abraham who was born in the old Jfc stone house and died there in the eventlqlh year ot his age in 180C the same year that President Lin I coIn who was named after him born In Kentucky- In wasII 1701 Abraham became the band of Anne Boone who daughter of James Boone and a first cousin of Col Daniel Boone the Kentucky pioneer The Boones were Quakers and Abraham Lincoln was a Congregationalist Hence it ap pears by the minutes of the Exeter Meeting Oct 27 1761 that she was condoned for her marriage to one I who was not a member of the So tJclety of Friends Abraham Lincoln was survived by tour sons Morde l cal James Thomas and John and I live daughters The court house records here are full of the transac tions in which the early Llncolns and Boones figured About 1750 at the time the Tloones left Exeter now Lorane this county for the South Mordecai Lin colns son John moved with his tam lIv to Virginia From there his son Abraham moved into Kentucky and while out in a cornfield was killed by an Indian He left three sons otI which Thomas the youngest was the father of the President Nancy Hanks the wife of Thomas Lincoln was the granddaughter of John Hanks who also left forks county about 1750 and finally settled in Vir ginia where Nancy was born She married Thomas Lincoln in 1806 About a mile from Blrdsboro on the Reading turnpike there was a tollgate and on a yellow stone milepost Phlla 44 Miles was inscribed on one side and Reading 8 Miles on the other Standing in a hollow is a stone house which property Daniel Booties father Squire Boone 1 sold to William Mogridge April 11 1710 just before he moved with his wife and eleven children to Yadkln N C Daniel Boone Vas then seventeen years old When her Vas fifty live years old he came back accom panted by the wife and apn Nathan tenon horseback to visit relatives in Exeter township I Thomas Lincoln off Blrdsboro who died about forty years agog aged eightyseven years was ai relative of President Abraham Lincoln He told 1 Col Nicholas Jones of Reading that 1 o he remembered well that when hii was a boy Daniel the Kentucky vljIj oheer returned ona jrlslt and told I d of his daughters capture by the In dians and her rescue from them and related his own experience with the graitdtathI son George daughter Mary to Pennsylvania to investigate and report He spent the following winter in Wales with his wife andI eight children mostly grown andI came to America with his family In the spring of 1718 and located fIn Oley Ho and his five sons George John James Samuel and Squiresettled in what is now Exe ter It was in 1730 that Squire Boone bought of Ralf Asheton of Philadelphia a farm of 158 acreso- which Daniel was born It was three years af er Daniels birth that the father sold to the Quakers the 1land for the burial ground of which he was trustee and what Is now known as the Exeter Friends Meet Ing House Nant cy Hanks Lincolns mother belong ed were oldfashioned Pennsylvania Germans The name of Hanks IIs frequently met with throughout the State of Pennsylvania and most per descendantsIfamily of Lincolns mother CHILDREN WITNESS KILLING OF MOTHER Somerset Ky Feb 26Georg Spencer of Whitley Station this county shot and killed his wife 1 I their home The only witnesses toI the shooting are Spencers two little girls who told the police he delib orately shot their mother Spencer claims the shooting wasI accidental According to the chil dren Mr and Mrs Spencer are said to have had some trouble over tam ily matters and this morning she told her husband she was going to leave him As she started to go thot little girls say their father threat ened to kill her and then kill him self She turnedto comp back Into the house and as she did she fell shot In the breast She lIved but a few minutes Spencer was arrested by the mar ghal jrfWhyiey andbroughjto JailI in Somerset When asked about theI shooting he said that it was accidental that ho did not Intend to kill his wife Spencer killed Green Lewis of buTwast AX OHIO COUNTY COUPLE MARRIED AT OWEXSHORO The Owensboro Messenger says Mr D S Clouse and Miss Minnie F Waters both of Ohio county were married by Justice Lancaster In the office of the county clerk Thursday morning The couple came to the citv In the early morning and after being married spent the day here leaving for their home In the country In tho afternoon Mr Clouse was for a long time an employe of the W A Guenther and Sons hardware store but resigned his position several months ago and moved to Ohio county where he is now engaged In farming S SCHOOLBOYS OX JURY FINE THE DEFEXDAXT Owlngsville Ky Feb 25 The case of the Commonwealth against Thomas Daugherty for the alleged sale of maltmead which proved In toxlcntlre was tried In the Bath Cir cuit Court before a jury composed of schoolboys their ages ranging from 13 to 18 years Both Juries being out on other cell Judge Allle W Young ordered Sheriff Botts to go to the city school and select twelve of the boys who were taken to the courtroom and placed in the regular Jury box After hearing the evidence they retired to the Jury room and after being out about twentv five minutes returned the verdict fixing the fine at 25 DYNAMITE USED IllI NIGHT RIDER FIENDS Owlngsville Ky Feb 23One j house wrecked by an explosion of dynamite and notes of warning posted In newly grown tobacco bedscon stltuto the Initial work of night riders to date In this section Sentiment I among the tobacco growers in Bath t county has been strong for the elimination tt of the 1911 crop The house dynamited was untenanted but had I been rented by a man who proposed- to sisal tobacco this season The village of Sharpsburg near by wast shaken early today by the explosion which wrecked the house I I fJ Y- L23 OHIO COUNTY BUNK- CREDITORS ASSEMBLE To Discuss Affairs of tilt Insti tution Which Recently AssignedI Pursuant to a call of depositors 1 inl the recently assigned Ohio County Bank of Hartford a meeting wasI held in the School Superintendents office in the court house here last Saturday for the purpose It was aboust oI about thirty people present Includ ing several ladles The meeting organized by electing C M Crows chairman and Heber Matthews secretary Mr J P Austin opened with a talk say- Ing among other things that the main purpose of the meeting was that the depositors simply wanted to know how the bank had been run Mr H f Taylor attorney for the bank who was present was called upon for any remarks lie might wish to make He said he had sent for Mr Austin and told him that both he and the assignee Mr A E Pate were ready to give any Information or aid In their power to enlighten the depositors or acquaint them with the affairs of the bank Mr willnbe done Is to collect up money due the bank an speedily as possible anil adjust matters to the satisfaction of all The notes and accounts of tho bank are on file in tho County Clerks office and ore open to tin In spection of everybody Nothing IIs concealed or suppressed Attorney Taylor spoke In behalf of Capt S K Cox as cashier of Urn bank Capt Cox would have bee present also but for the critical con dition of his health The attorney ppldI Cnpt Cox has given un everything In his personal control for the benefit of the creditors of the bony Capt Cox otter employing evnry ef fort to relieve the situation and then being advised that he would have to make an assignment said he would rather die than do so as he felt that every depositor was a per sonal friend Ho was advised to make A E Pate his assignee which he did and tho assignee Is heavily bonded The affairs of the bank show that there are about 55000 of debts coming to the bank with about HtOOOlIabllltles- Attorney Taylor has the matter In hand and will administer same to the best Interest of all concerned He will ask Judge Blrkhead to clas Pity the notes and accounts and pro coed strictly according to law governing such cases Mr Taylor said the depositors will in all probability got dollar for dollar if they will only be patient and abide the proper proceedings Mr Austin on behalf of the depositors asked for the priv- Ilege of sending a responsible per son to look Into the books and af fairs of the bank Mr Taylor readi- lY agreed to this saying that any of the officials of the other two banks of Hartford or any efficient or ac ceptable person when empowered by authority from the depositors would willingly bo shown through the affairs of the bank Chairman Crowe said he lead been approached bv depositors In the hank some of whom ho represents He said they merely wanted to know what could be done that they are entitled to know the business of the bank He advocated the cheapest plan of adjustment whatever that might be Mr Taylor made a few touching remarks about the banks stricken cashier Capt Cox who has passed through months of worry and trou ble about the banks affairs which finally culminated In almost a total physical collapse ho having been for several weeks confined to his home on account of a nervous breakdown I He said he was quite sure that none of the creditors of the bank wanted to persecute or hound Capt Cox on the banks account No one In the community stands higher In the matjj ter of respect honesty and Integrity than Capt Cox who has given his all and yet stands ready to do any thing In his power to relieve the digressed condition of the bank He Is gradually improving and all hope for hlsspoe4yrecovlry After deliberating about an hour the meeting adjourned subject to a callo fathraeidepoaltora at any time Thera JB nMjHf feeling displayed and every hingi sed eJrQuletlyI I t t A SlllTS IN U SI COURT tI FOR 15000 DIMESS Jtt Agjprtst the Broadway Coal Min Jrtg Company Filed By jRobt Robertson 7j tA suit has been flied In the United States Court at Owersboro by Rob ert Robertson against the Broadway Coalaud Mining company for 15 000 damages for injuries sustained while the plaintiff was at work In the mines of the defendant j The defendant operates a coal mine at Simmons Ohio county Hugh Chumbley Is known as the boss driver and John Jones as su perintendent of the mines and both are sued Jointly with the company The petition stairs thnt t roultl the carelessness and negligence of all the defendants they allowed large quantities of stone and slate to remain above the entry to the coal mime where the coal hat been removed from beneath same onus ing It to become unsafe and danger ous and that same was without props or other supports Tho Tnlntlff pays that luring the month of August 1910 and within s11 lx hours offer point to work In the mine about throe tons of slate and stone fell from the roof of the mine breaking one leg near the thigh and causing his hands head and body to become badly bruised and lacerated whereby he has suffered great pain and has been permanently Injured Thin plaintiff asks judgment for 15000 subject to n credit of 600 paid by the coal company for doer tors bills nurse hire and other sup plies furnished The suit was tiled by Iteavrln ft Hartfordnnnd the ease stands for trial at the May term of court 1ORKER RATS DYNAMITE DrCordele Oa Feb 23Chief of Police Sumner returned today from Worth county where he hnI a nar row escape from being blown to pieces in n peculiar accident He says that a farmer named Strlebln 1rer had some very valuable swine and desired him the chief to see the drove One of the finest porkers In the hunch was sound a 1ppn and rpfu pd to get un The farmer kicked the plea in the ribs and there was an explosion that took the chief of po lice off his feet knocked the far mer down and Mow nut tho shn of the building Incidentally It killed the pig TIIJ farmer Inter fl rnv rui Hint a Miiantlty of dynamite tlipt ho had Milder unipr tho pop for hlastlngI purposes had been paten by the pig HOYS cony 1LPBAC- IIANChI KOK FARM HOYS Tho organlztnlon of corn clubs throughout the State Is an admira ble plan formulated rind being w rlod out liv fTommlilnt of Agri culture Rankin with the coopora tlon of the Pclipol Superintendents and county school teachers through out the State Mr Rankin proposes to distribute the finest seed corn he can find to fifty schools boys In each counts throughout the State and offers nrhes for the best results We believe we can sneak for the boys of Ohio county that the will strive for some Rood premiums for rood corn It has been demonstrated thpt One corn can he raised In this coun tv and that It is a profitable cron It is only necessary to get good seed corn and then give It necessary culti vation In order to double the yield and vastly enhance the value We hope to hear of good results from the boys of Ohio county in this compet itive cornraising contest Granulated Eye Lids Do not need to be cauterized or scar ified by a physician Sutherlands Eagle Eye Salve Is guaranteed to cure them without pain It is harm less and a sure cure for graulated lids 25c tulles at all dealers m JUDGMENT GIVEN AGAINST CIRCUIT CLERK MOSELY Henderson Ky Fob 25 Judgment for 516835 was entered Ini the Circuit Court hero today against I Wynn Go Mosely and the American I beingIMoselya I competent The total amount charged to Mosely in the Commissioners turninSK over certain notes bonds mortgages and other securities Mosely Is also the Circuit Clerk whose office was oxamlped during last December by Assistant State Inspector Carver HEAVER DAM Feb 27Albert Lead purchased the home of J Will Cooper on Main teet has moved to same and Mr Cooper has moved to one of Mr Mnnn Tllfords new cottages Mr J H Barnes has bought the residence of Mr GIbson and the lat ter has moved to Central City The protracted meeting at the Methodist Church Is still In progress The pastor Is assisted by Rev p H Davis of Russellvllle There have been about 20 conversions so far Miss Emma Kuvkendoll of Woodbury Is visiting the family of Mr- S P Taylor Mr Fred Tnvlor P nrpton Iv was In town on business a day last week Mr L T Hp among and JMss Tea- M Taylor of Liberty neighborhood were united In marriage Rev O n Chick omclatintr Mr W E Rnld win and Miss Clime Roach w rp Rise united In marriage Rev C 1D Chick officiating Both these weddings took place recently i Mr Hvron nnrnnq end his little niece left last wp V for Crowlpv In to visit the I family of Mr Shelby Taylor Hiss ninnle HUPPV of Honewpll was the guest of Mrs Matp Hune the nnat wppk and loft on Satura for Hartford where Qhn seas unltf In marriage to Mr Sam Knight of Mnhtonherir countv We received Ifst wolf th mh ttes of the nesting of the Daugh tern of the fnnfcileracv that was hrh In Louisville last October It was nrcpcnted bv the Tom Johnson Chanter located at Princeton Kv It Is the onlv orcanlatlon In existence tint perpetuates the memory of the boys that wore the gray All honor to these noble Christian wo men Democrats of our town pro for McCrearv for CJoverror HP has bopn tried and everybody knows he will make a good Governor y f H V- Haptlst Ministers Mcrtliitr The Beaver Dam Baptist Ministers Institute held a very Interesting sea sinn In the law office of Rev C D Clich Beaver Dam Thursday afternoon February 23d Mlnlstprs pros ont were Elders A B Gardner o H Lawrence C D Chick and Birch ShieldsOur next meeting will be held Wedrepdnv evening March 1st at 130 oclock at the same place InvlterlltoInterestedBIRCH SHIELDS Secy THREE MOUK OHIO rorxrvM- EX I JOIN THE C S IDlY Arnold Rushes John Bollng and Klmnr TucVor all of Ohio county Joined the U S Army at the army recruiting station at Owonsboro Kv February 23 They enlisted for the Infantry branch of service and worn sent to Tofferpon Barracks at St Lnuls Mo for their preliminary tn Ing In the duties of P soldier Since till recruiting station has been opened at Owonsboro Inst Nn vepbor there have lheen about fiO annllrants accented at that place rk 20 of whom wero from Ohio county CARRIE XlTlOX WILL LEAE HOSPITAL SOON Lcavenworth Kan F hII Carrie Nation who has treatment In a hospital here for aII monthls greatly Improved In health In spite of the fact that physicians recently gave up hope of her recov eryMrs Nation has been suffering j from a nervous breakdown but her mental condition Is now so satisfactory that she Is taking treatment for her eyes from a specialist She ex pects to leave the hospital shortly af ter March 1 Farm For Sale I have one hundred acres of well Improved land on the Knotts Ferry road three miles northwest of Cen tertown for sale On this farm are good dwelling tenant house good young orchard of 50apple and other fruit trees just beginning to bear For further particulars call on or address W L JAMES 9t4 Matanzas Ky MAYOR HEAD NOW OUT OF THE RACE For Democratic Nomina tion for Governor MCREAIY AND ADDAMS LEFT Political Prophets Seem to See Chance for Convent tion Yet AXOTIIKR MEKTIXG SATURDAY Mayor Wlllam O lead of Louis ville on Saturday afternoon an nounced his withdrawal from the race for the Democratic nomination for Governor This announcement leaves but two declared Democratic candidates In the field for that hon or former United States Senator and low James IL McCreary o Richmond and William Addams of Cynthlana Mayor Heads withdrawal narrows the field to two entries but there Is a chance that others will come Into the race If one believes wellinform ed politicians conversant with the situation over the State Amoni those who have been mentioned are Congressman A 0 Stanley of the Second district and Judge Allie W Young of Morchead The Mayors card follows To the Democrats of Kentucky As the governing powers of the Dem ocratic party have called a primary to select candidates for State offices I find It would be impossible for me to canvass a hundred and nineteen counties by May 27 and look after my duties of the Mayors oflico So I deem it hest to withdraw from the race for Governor In doing so I want to thank mv friends who have so loyally supported me I want to assure them I an I prcclate their friendship beyond words to express- I am a Democrat from principle and whoever may be nominated will receive my hearty support and I trust every Democrat In fhe State will rally around the party flag whether he gets his choice or not and that we will win a glorious victory In November for the party and Its principles are greater than nnv mar I retire from the race with the kindest feelings for all I am Signed W 0 HEAD Other astute observers of the political weathervane profess to see In the withdrawal of Mayor Head a callIforcratic prlnrltilp of a rnnvpntlon This was the plan originally advocated h h Mayor Hend and nlco was supported bv Congressman lien Johnson of the PVnrti district who recently with drew from the race Mr or Toad aside from Issuing his cord declined Ito give out nn In torvlpw regarding Ms withdrawal or to discuss what effect It might haw on the rare When scon bv newspaper renppntatlvps n + his once In tbr pt Hall he said Povs mv oplclnl n n nonrronpnt of withdrawn tells tle story I have no further statement to make When Oov McCreary was caller over tho tolenhone at Ms home In Richmond and told of Mfor Healts withdrawal and asked whether he desired to make a statement he re plied I dont think I should Pay anything In the matter The Democratic State Executive Ioullll11eIt time there may be some action look ing toward the call for a convention to formulate n platform even If the call for a primary on May 27 stands While the date for the primary has been designated the qualifications of the voters the rules govern ing participation in the snore have not been adopted and It Is neces sary that the Executive Committee act on this matter before this call for a primary Is regarded as final FO1ZSAI Flveroom cottage with 6 acres of land In Hartford Ky Good out buildings and a well of neverfall ing water Price 1100 For Bnlc Fiveroom cottage in Hartford Ky Price 550 A C YEISER CO Agts tf Hartford Ky k y 4 W fv r Y AY THE FREEDOM OF i HUMAN THOUGHTI As Applied to Principles Of GovernmentIi1 CONCRETE IDEAS OF JUSTICE The Principle of Doing Right I Because It is Right Is I Always Best THE DUTY OK EVERY CITIZEN Third of a series of articles on governmental policies written ex pressly for The Herald Way back yonder when the beet lebrowed saints of our race rejoiced in hair shirts as marks of their priesthood and the flercefleecegrown potbellied laity wore streaks of sunshine with possibly a few Jays feathers and stubs of tails It took 1 hickory withes stone mauls despot- Ismsi and brimstone to keep the peace But as we laborously climb ed the rugged steeps of advancing civilization we revised and refined our politics Just as we revised and refined I our morals and religious laws precepts and examples always following I never preceding the result not the cause of moral awakening I that mysterious principle in mans t nature always tugging at his heart I e to lift his eyes toward the stars 1 Otherwise tell me why could not Congress enact 11 law requiring all 1 men to repent and be baptized and thus at one fell swoop as It were settle the whole moral muss Yet In the face of the mnny dangers with 1 which changes of systems are al- Ways I fraught and of which we should scarcely allow ourselves to even think without gravest fears and forebodings considering our dlrellc tlons and indifference to public duty our temper character and all our shortcomings in selfgovernment and moral Imperfections are the latter day theories ultra progressive apostles I of discontent not to say discord who so flippantly Indict everything that Is and much that Is not and who strangely confuse cause with effect got their cart before the horse committing the fundamental error of assuming that forms of govern ment lead blnc the way Instead of following In the wake of progres she civilization I say are they pre k pared to demonstrate that we are now equal to that high order of Ideal citizenship upon which a Pure Def I nI mocracy or Utopia so helplessly depends Remember that a people who enter this field of experiment leave all hope of representative government behind May not this be but the one ex treme of the arc of theoretic gov ernment and New Nationalism which Is but another name for oneman power the other from which grave dangers our Dill of Rights and Con stitution so wisely sought to save us f May not our short terms of office Just as they were Intended consid ering the popular Indifference to public affairs be a better system of Recall than the subversive one proposed May not our rights to public ascemhlagowlth all our faculties for discussing matters of public concern thereby creating a strong commanding public opinion before which the tyrant whom the law may not reach trembles and which ambi tion corruption and vice even when the arm of the law Is helpless so much dread be a better system of Initiative and referendum than the revolutionary doctrine of which we begin to hear so much and whose strongest supporters are the theor ists and visionaries who rellglouslv believe that laws make men Instead of men making laws which brings us back to the Idea of the creature un dertaking the task of reforming Its creatorOne thing Is sure and that Is Inl tiative and referendum destroys the representative character of our sys tem of government Has the aver ngo citizen so absorbed In the ar duous task of supporting family government schools churches char t ities and a thousand other drains I upon his overtaxed energies either the time or Inclination to dismissi p his public servant abolish the office and add its duties to his endless work Certainly there must be lim itations to his powers of endurance and I fancy this would be the pro verbial straw Society could not justly ask such sacrifices because that citizen Is not a mere beast of lt burden and has certain inalienable rights which oven governments cant not abridge with impunity But It would not be asking too much to re tQulrehim as he values the safety of J1c his country to Intelligently particle pate In maintaining that strong aggressive d compelling public opinion keeps the hand of ambitions c jFjjwhich upon the pulse of the people and the sensitive ear of the demagogue upon groundWe out like whipped chlldre against extravagance In public expenditures industrial restraint heavy taxation delays of courts miscarriage of justice and all that train of public evlk but we have neglected our public duty so long we are as Ignorant of the causes as we are of applying remedies Yet in one election day we could clean up the phitterrestor our temple by asserting our sovereignty and resuming the reins of government Our system provide every facility except brains public opinion and honesty which no system could supply for carrying out all reforms and It Is cowardly 1 to stand and whine and try to shift responsibilities Either do your duty or take the consequences like men Changing systems Is not going to help reforms begin within the mat not within legislative halls You area good neighbor citizen and friend not because the law forces you to be but for a thousand times better reasI on became you want to be and this Is the onlY true reform The forum of conscience Is the temple of reform moral suasion its only apostle and force Its deadliest foe It maybe a social privilege Indeed the zeal ous might deem It a duty to rea sop with and try to convince In a kindly respectful and most tolerant way a fellowman who you think is wrong on a question of public Importance but right there your mission and privilege end not n hairs breath further may you venture Right there his rights of conscience and freedom of mind begin and raise a barrier you are bound to observe and respect and if the poor deluded dev U persists in going righton to hell as we not always wisely or justly so much fear we are unfortunately absolutely helpless but altogether1 blameless The savage desire tc ram things we only believe and at which he revolts no difference why down a fellows throat hardly comports with the spirit of tolerance upon which republics are founded Be sides how do we happen to know we are right and he Is wrong Is It the spell of the happy delusion that we are directly Inspired and absolutely infallible Why thats the craziest kind of fanaticism A coterie of religious bigots so cocksure they were right and all unfortunates who differed from them were not only wrong but as good as dd once called upon Oliver Cromwell some what of a bigot himself The case however was so extreme he said Brethren I beseech you in the name of Christ to imagine it possible that you might be mistaken Broadminded bighearted tolerance Is not only noble just and wise but It Is prudent Every ago has stoned Its prophets revised Its theories and reversed Its Judgments Science has whipped Its weight In Wildcats and each cat had nine lives full of prejudice It Is said the word religion has ten thousand different meanings A ferret after curious facts recently discovered that a single word appearing several times in a short article by an eminent English writer was susceptible of five hundred different constructions That greatest of French ministers M de Tallvrand who passed with undiminished power through the revolution republic empire and re stored monarchy a cynic In morals atheist In religion and an arch deceiver In diplomacy declared that language was given man to conceal his thoughts Plato says we only know that we dont know The belligerent old Armenian charging the Calvinist with the doctrine of foreordination predestination Infant damnation and perhaps other singular irritating theological epithets with similar suggestive end debatoIhis scornful adversarys defenseless nose and shouted Your God Is my devil Who was right and how can you tell When Lord Sandwich expressed some doubt as to what was heterodoxy Bishop Wharburton ex plained that orthodoxy was his doxy ind heterodoxy was the other fellows doxy We know that tho heterodoxy of today Is the orthodoxy of tomorrow Then how can we be so sure Not that we merely strongly feel 30 for that Is not a safe guide The faith of the devoted mother who sac rificed her precious babe to the Ganges was put to the severest possible test and she must have felt known she was right but now we know she was wrong The East Indian devotee who held his arm above his head till it perished affords the strongest proof that ho was sure it was a4 great service to his deity but now we know It wasnt The horrible spectacle of a New England bigot searing with molten Iron the sensitive tongue of a helpless quivering witch no doubt was justified at the time but now who does not shud der and recoil at the bare thought of Its Inhuman remorseless sickening cruelty Our judgment and all our a Copyright by American Press Association LATEST LIKENESS OF MRS WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT first lady of the land Mrs William Howard Taft used to be THE Herron of Cincinnati In the early eighties a young man out of Yale helped to organize what was called the Salon composed of young persons who met each Saturday evening at the home of John W Herron and talked literature and other things The young Yale man usually lingered after the others had departed He married Mr Herrons daughter now the wife of the president of the United States Mrs Taft has been at the head of social life in Washington for two years and she is accounted a gracious hostess She is widely traveled having gone with her husband on many of his globe girdling trips also she jla widely read Her tastes are not essen tially social in the society sense She prefers her own family circle with a few friends added to the larger domain of society senses are vary easily deceived So- IlS a matter of prudence as well as principle we should never be too cocksureBy means believe and have faith in things and act upon convic tions but dont lynch a felluw just because he honestly differs from you dont kick the dog for principles and compassions apart the t brute may bo chock full of dynamite When we shall have attained that high plane of morality when we shall do right not In hope of present or future reward for that smacks of bribery not In fear of present or future punishment for that smacks of Intimidation but just simply be cause we know It Is In every pass ble way best to do right Dr Franklin said a man was a scoun drel because he hasnt sense enough to see that It Is always bettor to be honest when we refrain from do Irg to one that which If done to all would bn nn Injury to society when wo can fully respect the rights of conscience freedom of mind angle of view and honesty of purpose I say that we shall need no govern ment of any kind for every man will be P righteous law unto himself But so long as we have elements below this standard some lawless and pome with no more concern about the common weal than a wooden In dian li concerned about the func tion of n ductless gland we must have laws to direct and restrain In their grent wisdom the devis- ors of our representative system fully conscious of the Intricate and complex relations of social organiza tion fully realizing the delicate compromises and serious sacrifices to be mnllc hetvcen the greet conflict- Ing factors Ponce and Oder and Personal Liberty with little less than inspiration Itself deemed It best that the busy private citizen engrossed with the manifold cares and duties of home with no time to perform those public duties left to our representatives should go to the polls with full knowledge and Judgment of the public needs of men and measures and choose efficient men who would scrupulously obey I an explicit public sentiment to fill the offices of the various departments making construing and en forcing good and wholesome laws for the protection of the rights of the I people while the voter resumes his private duties but not to forge that everything depends upon his keeping well Informed on current af fairs and his helping to maintain that sound enlightened public opln Ion which ambition so much fears and which makes the officeholder try his darndest ajll the year round to look and talk just like his campaign pictures and speeches Who has a better plan and lion docs ho know It Is better Why God Almighty would give the mat who knows a better plan a little world of his own to run It woulld seem however that reformers we have who think He Is right nowov erlooklng some mighty good timber to take charge of some of His planets that need reform If It Is an oversight the sooner Ills attention Is called to the fact the better It will bo for our weary and overload led country Upheavals In politics as in phys ics cast the sinkers to the surface and every submerged political fail ure in the land Is working and pray- Ing for that catastrophe honing he may at least for n time ride upon the crest of the tidal wave In a re public the will of the neople Is the Biinreme law of the land An act of n legislature may not be law that rtpnptiria hilt VOX pnnull olwaVB HoW ninnrtant then that that will ho pound vigorous and enlightened o Ehenat the sovereign private clt en bo he never so humble for ho Is n sovereign Just the same arouse himself to a sennn of public duty and ho vlellant for theres much to puard ho stronrr for thpren much to do be brave for thorns much to dnre and above nil let him be extremely warv of swapping that old fnmlllar devil whom wVve known FO long and well ugly and nnpreposses Ring an his nlbbs sometimes seems for a blooming rantankerous stran ger And now In conclusion let me re neat because of Its supreme Importance that of all the perplexing problems that have engaged the master Intellect of mankind through out tho hoary ages that of political science Isat once tho iqqqt engross- Ing and prpfound Alt o systems but paternalism arid oiysjbave fail ed and even purs jaJay JI1ltb1Ii1 the experimental stajee ere rthttE Bin gle sublime example of theology Itself Inaugurated at the Red Sea vtth the miracles of divided waters nil resplendent pillars of clouds and life was ultimately abandoned Whether the imperfections of Israel were not equal to the perfections iof the system as it Interfered with the full scope of mans free moral agency and individual responsibility or other reasons we can only conjee tune We only know that it was succeeded by aristocracies monarch- Ies and despotisms What then must be thought iolf- our modern shockheads whose hobby IB reforming governments ans constructing States and who coils you on every corner and insist on telling ajl about just how It should be donejust how the complicate knot should be tied In the damn 41 Plutocrats tall Shall we say as Festus said 1to Paul Much learning doth mak themad or as Pope said A little learning is dangefdtftf thing XX Rockport Ky Fob 23 1911 Foley Kidney Pills Neutralize and remote the poison that cause headache rheumatism nervousness and alj kidney and bladder Irregularities They build up and restore the natural action of these vital organs Sold by all drug gists m PAID 935 TO HAVE HER HUSBAND KILLEI Plymouth Mass Feb 24The she paid 35 to have her husband put out of the way and stood by am saw him murdered was the admis sion credited to Mrs Lena Cusuma no by her sister when the latter tes titled at the trial of Mrs Cusumani I on the murder charge in the Supe I rlor Court The sister Mrs Acculsa do Le garto of Boston testified that Mrs Cusuinuno visited her home slew days before the body of Frank Cusu mano was found In the surf at Sun set Bench Hull and In discussing his disappearance said My head told me to have hint killed I paid 35 and had him kill IedI Are you sure he is dead arent they fooling you the sister asked The reply of Mrs Cusumano aegis en by the witness was I saw it done with my own eyes They gave it to him one blow in the I reck with the ax Where Is he burled the ques tioner persisted according to hei testimony He Isnt burled but wrapped In a quilt tied with wire and thrown Into the sea at 3 oclock at night Mrs Cusumano Is said to have re I pliedThe witness said that a few days later she read of the finding of the body In the surf at Hull under con ditions exactly similar to those which had been described by her sister q A Fierce Night Is the hoarse startlingAlnrmI child suddenly Often It aroused Lewis Chamblin ofI Manchester 0 R R No2 for their four children were greatly subject to croup Sometimes In severe attacks he wrote we wore afraid they would die but since we proved what a certain remedy Dr Kings New Discovery Is we have no fear We rely on It for croup and for coughs colds or any throat or lung trouble So do thousands of others So may you Asthma hay fever la grippe whooping cough hem orrhages fly before It 50c and 1 Trial bottle trees Sold by James H Williams m Clever He seems to be very clever Yes Indeed He con even do the problems that this children have to Work out at school Mnming to Rnflroad Men Look out for severe and even dangerous kidney and bladder trou ble resulting from years of railroad Ing neo E Bell 639 Third St Fort Wayne Ind was many yearsII a conductor on the Nickel pavs Twenty years of railroading left mv HdnevH in terrible condi lon There was a continual pain Across my back and hips and my kidneys gave me much distress and the action of my badder was fre quent and most painful I got a supply of Foley Kidney Pills and the tlrnt bottle made a wonderful Im provement and four bottles cured mo completely Since being cured I have recommended Foley Kidney I Pills to many of my railroad friends Sold by all druglsts m I IThoEasiest Which one of your many bad habits do you think you could manage to give up7 Kasy lOne nettled That of lending my friends money Baltimore American I The Colds That Hang On Are readily cured by Dr Bells Pine Tar Honey It relieves the colds and stops the cough There Is only one genuine m 1 X000000000000000o ooo00oo000oooooPhysicians t subject have disposed with blood i J I letting as unnecessary claiming that said practice would weaken the vital energies and deplete the system This Is no doubt sometblmes the case of the human patient whose I blood Is already below the standard qf health but dll experience shows that men of full habit and rich inr I blood may be safely bled A It is objected that the practice it barbarous If It is the safest as it t sertalnly Is the quickest method of relieving the human from the pain and danger of inflammation I cant see wherein it would be barbarous Such objection to a remedy attend ed by s0 little pain to the person urgbywith duo care or to test the theories by actual experience The object ofIbloodletting Is to relieve the clrcuii latlon of Impure diseased blood and to relax the system generally and in this condition medicines may be administered to some pur pose Often the blood is thick al most black and moves sluggishly i the veins congested No medicine can be made to operate upon the 1 system while the blood remains In this condition The mucous absorbents of the intestines ago nearlYIclosed and food passes through them undigested while Y communication between the dices tlve organs and the blood Is so nearhI ly cut off that It is folly to give med Iclne Bleeding thins the blood as well as decreases Its quantity relaxIes the system and enables the ab sorbents of nutrition to perform I their proper offices Medication can thus again reach the circulation and he carried to the extremities by ttvlcapillaries The quantity of blood taken should depend upon the character of the symptoms and condition of the larhoI unless the natural functions are restor-ed to their healthful activities I speedily the person must die Will medicine do this Rarely indeed fqr the medicine may distend the stomach to its utmost capacity and the blood be scarcely influenced by it M D ASHBY V S TilE USB OP TOBACCO AS GENERALLY PRACTICED James R Day Chancellor of Syracuse University who thinks that Rockefeller Is a great man and Roosevelt a chump breaks a long silence by saying that he doesnt un derstand the use of tobacco itWe refer him to the works of John rLocke Tbnt famous Author of the Essay on Understanding fully understood pnd expressed his IIdeas on the subject In these words Bread or tobacco may be neg y lected but reason recommends their trill and custom makes them pleasant i Lord Bacon the wisest of man rind wan a smpVer and Milton whofe soul was like a star comforted himself with a nulet pipe of Virginia leaf at eve when fallen on evil tongues and evil days frTobscrotranqulllzes the overstrained mind jat the mature man of letters makesythe tollworn laborer forget his pcbes Is the sailors delight the soldiers Joy and the contemplative persons recreation Have yoU a matchDoston Globe Children Cry FOR FLETCHERS OASTORIAw The Coming Out of u Prophet Jonah emerged Nobody cared about me ho ex claimed but the S P C A got me out for the sake of the whale A FACT ABOUT THE BLUES What Is known as the Blues f- Si I seldom occasioned by actual exist r therordered UVER THIS IS A PACT which may be demoastni I ted by trying course orfi TuttsPillsThey L They bflsgbopeandbouyancy to the lIIall They bring healtil and elastic rtr- ttyte the body I TAKE N04UMTITUTC I I IimiLAJD EIBLE EYE SALYS Good f Nnthlns hut the gyp cl ns- rr I TTir1J N 4 L r A r ywlNa M1 I cL r I r SHREWD BEGGARS OF JEW Exposed by Journal Pub lished There- t I t ARE THOROUGHLY ORGANIZED And Equipped and ConstantlY Impose Upon People of All Nations WRITE MILLIONS OF LETTER rtJerusalem Feb 24A curious J Account of the wealthy organization j of over 16000 Jerusalem beggars IIs given in the Jerusalem Truth a i weekly journal published hero IIn EnglishThese beggars It Is said thrive and wax fat upon systematic Impos turn practiced upon the benevolent and simpleminded of every country or the face of the globe They have t1 sciencetInvent new strategems novel con trivances and ingenious tricks how to ensnare the credulous into their p traps Their transactions are con ducted upon strict business lines F with wel1acitnted offices double bookkeeping copying presses and typewritersThe says the Jeru salem Truth employ wellpaid agents who travel all over the world collecting the names of all who are likely to extend their sympathies to the poor and suffering of the Holy City Millions of addresses are thus 1 received with minute descriptions of the nature of each Individual so that petitions may be drawn upto touch the right chord In the compas sionate soul of the recipient I The petitions are generally ac L companied by some paltry souvenir tot the Holy LanddrIed flowers supposed to be gathered from the Mount of Olives Bethlehem or Oethsemane cheap olive wood arti cles purporting to be made In Jeru Isalem from the branches of tees growing In historic places In reality I many of these articles are Im ported from Marseilles The nefarious business flourishes In spite of all revelations and warn ings and a large proportion of the begging letters sent out are gener ously responded to often with a prayer that in return the donor will be remembered at the Waiting Wall Hachaels Tomb and Mach t Jpelah It Is estimated that these beggars send out about 60000000 letters a yearS Are you frequently hoarse Do you have that annoying tickling In your throat Does your cough an noy you at night and do you raise mucus In the morning Do you want relief If so take Chamber lains Cough Remedy and you will be pleased Sold by all dealers m SS THE SOCIALISTS OPPOSED THE KAISERS AUDACITY i Tho German Kaiser made a great speech at KonIgsberg great In au theAdomestic virtues as the men culti vate the military virtues He lauded the divine right of kings The crown he declared was placed on COMFORTING WORDS I Many a Hartford Household Will Find Them So To have the pains and aches of n bad back removed to be entirely free from annoying dangerous urinary disorders Is enough to make any kidney sufferer grnteful To tell how this great change can be brought about will prove comforting words to hun dreds of Hartford readers f William Johnson Cloverport Ky says Doans Kidney Pills In my case proved to 1M a very reliable rem edy and consequently I have no hesita tion in recommending them For six years my kidneys were disordered the secretions being too frequent in pas sage and when allowed to stand de positing cdlment My back nclitd se verely particularly at night and In tho morning I was co lame and sore that I could scarcely get around Whenever I contracted the slightest i cold It settled In my kidneys and made my suffering more Intense Doans Kidney Pills have given me great relief from these troubles For sale by ah dealers Price 50 tents FosterMilburn Co Buffalo New York solo agents for the United i States Jlemember1 the hajncrDoans end take no other nt his grandfathers head by Gods grace alone and not by parliaments assemblages of tpe people or resolu tions of the people The Kaiser proclaimed himself the Instrument of the Muter The same day the will of tho people In a district of Saxony polling nearly 25000 votes a majority of which have hitherto been cast for the Conservative upholder of the divine right of Kings in the Reichstag elected a Socialist member by a large maojrlty overall other candidates The Socialists now have 51 votes In the German Parliament Big flnnte in Georgia Henry L Stimson who was beaten for the Governorship of New York by Dlx last November took a drive through tho city of Savannah Ga while ho was visiting there The cabman was oldfashioned darkoy who was very communicative- Do you have any big game in thls part of the state Inquired StimsonYas suh yas suhreel responded the cabman Evy spring de New York Giants plays practice games heat- BOWLING GREEN HET BY COURTS DECISION After Deducting All Fraudulent Votes Still a Majority For Liquor Frankfort Ky Feb 24The ap pellate court has affirmed the War ren Circuit Court in the local option election case of NFHlll and others against E L Motttey and oth ers In which the lower court sustained an election of June 28 1910 irt which the city of Bowling Green voted wet by eightytwo majori ty The court concludes FIrstThat the manner of hold Ing the election was proper that there were separate booths and separate officers for city and county SecondThat after deducting all illegal votes on each side and giving contestants the benefit of every doubt the trial Judge properlv held that there was still a majority of fourteen votes for the sale of liquor ThirdThat It Is not sufficient to show that an election might have been affected by fraud It must at firmatively appear that it was so affected and the evidence of contest ants does not measure up to this standardThe of the court was writ ten by Commissioner W Rogers Clay The questions were discussed by tlje full bench and there was no dissenting voice from the ruling he announced Chamborlalrs Stomach and Liver Tablets Invariably bring relief to women suffering from chronic con stipation headache biliousness dizziness sallowness of the skin and dyspepsia Sold by all dealers m INVINCIBLE COUNTRY ROY A SUCCESSFUL PERSONAGE A glance at a list of the great mpn of the big cities of the United States will prove beyond a doubt that the countrybred boy Is far superior to his cityborn cousin In point of bus ness and professional ability and general capacity Many reasons are advanced for the success of the country boy in the large cities but the one that seems to hIt the nail on the head Is that the youngster of tho provinces Is taught to work and by this Is meant a good honest days workone of twelve hours Ho Is a sticker too who Is will ine to start IIP at the bottom and when you find a country bov who is a worker and a sticker ho is invin cible You cant keep him down Salt Lake Telegram Attacks School Principal A pvero attack on school princi pal Chas n Alton of Svlvanla Ga IIs thus told bv him Yor morn than three years ho writes I suffered Indescribable torture from rheuma tism liver and stompch trouble and dlseneed kldnevs All remedies fail ed till T used Electric Bitters but four bottles of this wonderful reme dy cured me completely Such results are common Thousands bursa them for curing stomach trouble bil iousness and for new health and vigor Try them Only BOc at James H Williams m A Smooth Skin Black heads chaps pimples sores eng all unhealthy conditions of the skin are unsightly and detract from the looks Buy a box of Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve a creamy snow white ointment apply as directed and your skin will be as clear as a babes At all dealers In medi cines m Children I Cry FLETCHERSc A 0 r j THE IRON HORSE INSTEAD OF PONY Used by William and Ma ry Ellen This Time GAVE GIRLS FATHER THE SLIP And Eloped to Tennessee Parents Move to City Ddnt Avail THE FATHER AT LAST GIVES UI The Owesboro Messenger says It was an Iron horse this time that carried William Wells Bad Miss Mary Ellen Tichenor to matrimonial bliss Instead of a little bay pony The young couple were married in Clarksvllle Tenn at 5 oclock Tues day afternoon after successfully eluding the father of the young wo man who strenuously objected to the marriage It was about a month ago that the young woman of sixteen years let her home in McLean county and joined her lover Willie who was waiting for her at the appointed trystlng place mounted on his bay pony Getting In the saddle in front of Willie the pair dashed away to Owensboro hoping to arrive In time to board the early morning train for LouisvilleThe to Owensboro was a successful one until the asphalt street was reached No sooner had the clatftr of the ponys feet sounded than two policemen who had never heard 6f Lochlnvar pounced upon them and conducted them to tIle police station The police had been notified by telephone of the elope ment aril were In waiting for the couple Tho boy was held at the nollce station until the next morn- Ing and the rlrl was taken to the homo of a relative Tho young womAn was returned to her home end after the smoke of the train had blown away Willie was allowed to remount his pony rl wend Ms WPV back to the fer tile gelds of McLean county But Wllllo had made declaration He cnld that tho rather abrupt ending of their elopement only meant a postponement of the marriage Ho declared that they would marry sooner or later Willie was PO sincere In his tpternent that the father of the young woman derided to leave hlq One farm In McLean cotipty and romp to Ow n9l oro to reside there hv hoping that the city life would RuSe Ms daughter to forget her conntrv beauIMr Tlchpnor deserted his rual home and came to Owensboro a few weeks are and was under the Im irr Ion that his daughter had torI rotten all about Willie But such was not the case Ho had occnnlon to return to his farm on Tuesday When he returred at roon he was told that his daughter had dlnnn neared InQuiry over the telephone brought out thn fact that Wllllo too was missing from his home In McLean county Further information brought out the fact that the young couple bad left Owensboro the Illinois Central train onI Mr Tlchpnor made every effort to rpneh the Illinois Central trains hoth on the main line and branch hat to nef avail r He was Informed hv Willie shortly after 5 oclock that they had reached Clarksvllle Tenn and had been married What can I do replied the father when asked what ho Intend ed doing There Is nothing to do Of course they can come home When Willie was In Owens horo on his previous trip he bad 250 which he had derived from the sale of his crop of tobacco It is the peneral belief of the people of the vicinity In which Willie rides thAt hn Iq fully capable of taking earn of himself and also his young bride Medicines that aid nature are aI- WRYS most successful Chamber laIns Cough Remedv acts on this- nlan It loosens to cough r Movr t11 InrCI opens the secretions and aids rahq in reeteringfA system 0 r healthy condition Sold b al dealers m W1nlink TilE A FIENDISH ASSAULT Hopklnsvllle Ky Feb 23An unsuccessful attempt was made l1tst night about 1030 oclock to crlmln plly assault Miss Bernice Haa aged seventeen a telephone operator She had ftarted to a closet In the rear of her hoarding house when a man ccucealed In the outbuilding seized her by the throat In the struggle her clothes were partly torn from her body She fell striking her head against a stone and was ren 0 dered unconscious being found an hour later In some way her assailant was frightened off without accomplish ing his purpose Miss Hale says he was A large man wearing a slouch hat She could not tell whether he was white or black Bloodhounds were unable to take the trail KENTUCKY DERBY IS TO DE RUN MAY 13 Lexington Ky Feb 22The State Racing Commission at Its meeting here Tuesday sanctioned a twentythreeday race meet at Churchill Downs Louisville begIn- ning on Saturday May 13 on which day the Kentucky Derby will be run Louisville had asked for twenty orIderSaturday June 10 when the Latonia Derby will be run Louisvilles meet will end June 8 giving one day for shipment of horses to the Kenton county course Lexington previously had been awarded an elevenday meet begin ning April 29 ending May 11 This gives sixtyfive days of spring and early summer racing In Kentucky OIL LANDS THAT ARE WORTH MANY MILLIONS Given To Former Negro Slaves of Cherokee Indians By Decision of Court St Louis Mo Feb 25Dy 3 decision handed down Monday In the United States Supreme Court In a suit pending since 1892 Attorneys Robert H Kern and Henry DLauph Hrot St Louis expect to be paid a fvi of approximately tl000000 Oil lands of a value estimated bv them at more than 10000000 will be allotted to their clients the for rnpr peers slaves of the Cherokee Indians by virtue of the decision In a former case Involving an al lotment of rentals of this land Kern and Lau hlln obtained the payment 1000000 to the former slaves lOt d received P fee of about 100 The Indians had rented the lands to rattle men for 300000 a year for grazing purposes The discovery of oil In the Okla homa fields near Bartlesville Ches sea Lenapah Nowata and Tulsa led to the filing of the present suit While the case has been pending manyof the former slaves have been ejected from the lands and valuable oil wells have taken the place of the cabins on the negro homesteads According to the decision this prop erty will now revert to the negroes and will make some of them million aires 4WANTED FOR I S ARMY Ablebodied unmarried men be tween ages of IS and 35 citizens of United States of pood character and temperate habits who ran speak read and write the English language For Information apply to Recruiting Officer Main street Beaver Dam Ky 5t9 There IsOnly PlneTnrIIonoy That Is Dr Bells It Is the original and ran be relied on in croup coughs colds and all lung and bronchial troubles Look for the bell on the bottle I m The Rood Old Religion PastorT do wish I could hit upon a series of sermons that would warm up the congregation keep them awake so to speak Deacon Er why dont you give em hell How To Stop- Stabborn A Cough We dont mean just stop the irri tation in your throatbut cure the underlying cause Cough syrups cannot do this It bodybuilderand cure you to stay cured Vinol is the remedy you need HERE IS PROOF Dire Minnie OAgood of Glens Fatly N V wrlteit Alter trying several rem edlfi for n bad cough android without benefit I wu asked to try Vinol It worked like magic It cured my cold sad cough and I gained In health and strength I consider Vlnol the mot wonderful toulo and invigorator I ever taw If we cannot stop that cough with VINOLour delicious cod liver and iron tonicwhich is made without oilwe will not charge youbuypropositionandought to be accepted Dont you think sot With this understanding we ask you to trv a bottle of VINOL For SAle by Hartford Drag Co Incorporated a t F Fads for Weak Women Nine tenth of all the i dieasecuredeveryDr Pierces Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong Sick Women WellIt nets directlyon the reltorativeprivacyofandlocalupon so to every modest woman ofthosewomen wanting full information as to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred to the Peoples Com mon Sense Medical Adviser 1008 pages newly revised and uptodate Edition sent free on receipt of 21 one clothbindingAddress Dr R V Pierce Buffalo NY iGILLESPIEE BROos f Vol t W H and J F GIIiliESPIE Proprietors t t BLACKSMITHING tAND REPAIR WORK HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY ft tHartford Kentucky t KENTUCKY Light an Power Company INCORPOKATttU E G BARRASS MGR HartfordJKy Will wire your house at cost Electric Lights are clean health sand safe JYo Monte or business house should be without them when within reach LO I 1 1fJBB ff8I fEvery kind of business needs advertising nowadays to make it succeed There are two kinds of advertisingthe good and tbe bad tbe kind that brings results and tbe kind which does no good Of course you want the first men tioned in order to be sure of Jhe result JVfB EDRRD 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 Eke figuring is free and the advertising wont cost ynu much It will help you Try it THE HERALD Hartford Ky II r JOB PRINTING The kind that makes you look good in the eyes of the whole sale dealer and the city merchant that makes your Neighbors proud of you increases respect and sets you right In the minds of all people this kind Is NEATLY DONE And promply delivered by the HARTFORD HERALD Everybody m any kind of business needs Printed Stationery Noe Heads Cards Envelopes Statements Etc nowadays the lowest work the best Call or write us PricesII T5Ae HERALD Hertford t s V 1 71 r The Hartjord Herald u HEOEK MATTHEWS FRANK 4 FELIX EDITORS t FRANK 1 FELIX Paba aid Prop r 1 1 k WEDNESDAY MARCH 11 t Col Roosevelt has been nicknam i ed a human seldlitz powder As a sedative however he has proved disappointing Whether It comes or not there Is evident need for an extra session I of Congress to untaxjome of tbeI necessities of lifemany tt If somebody will loan us a chafing fish we will chafe a little more I while we wait for another meeting i of the State Democratic Executive Committee next Saturday iI A Harvard Professor advocates the restriction of the birth rate bylaw About the only concensus ofI opinion Is that It would have been a fine law had It been In operation or so previous to the Pro j Just a year r fessors birth 14i i iI 11I11 I lodged In Jail charged with bootlegging Which Incident excites the eurloclty of the Owensboro Inquirer list and It arises to remark that In thett matter of how the lady carried her ticker It Is from Missouri III There Is a movement being em I played loosing to the purchase of Mammoth Cave by the Government to be fitted up as a National WontI der Why not Incorporate the State Democratic Executive Committee also It has set more people wonder I l the curiosities of t litenlistlit A little kid girl twelve years old IT was married in Newport Ky a few days ago Of course the consent of t j her parents was In evidence or the eereraory would not have been performed We seem to need a neII law In the matrimonial premises one that will make it a crime which it Is for parents to allow their ba I I bios to marry Next Saturday Is sot as a date forIj the State Democratic Executive Com ralttee to meet again and reaffirm ItsI previous two affirmations for a primary or something of that StateII Democrats out In the State are not reaffirming such reafflrma I tory tactics by any means We need a committee that will talk and do things every time it meets or get off toe line The haremscareem skirt of mod ern fashion Is creating quite a commotion in the large cities of this and other countries In New York and Paris last week mobs nearly swamp I od some wearers of the garb and there was much excitement It is a bifurcated garment of the most hid I II eous conception and a fellow meet Ing one with a woman In It would I be excused for most anythingi might say or do r heII There Is a movement on foot 1 higher educational and religious circles of some of the big cities to I shorten the Ten Commandments by I ITThoulong as nlneteentwentleths of the I people couldnt give half of them j from memory offhand why not letf them remain like they arena mono ment of true religious law that Is I much honored but only partially obtt served I The withdrawal of Mayor Headl of Louisville from the Democratic gubernatorial nomination In Ken i tucks leaves only exGov McCreary II of the Eighth and Mr Addams ofII the Ninth district IP the race WestI ern Kentucky was left without li candidate whon Judge John K Hen drlck of Paducah withdrew The j I strategic advantage that a Western j Kentucky man would enjoy In this j congressImanj j I urged to enter the race The entries are probably not yet closedI The Louisville Commercial Club I j has Interested Itself In the moveI ment to develop and Improve the ru j ral school conditions of Kentucky and for this purpose has called a I meeting of all cltlznns of the StateII who are Interested In school I and particularly In rural schools to i he held In Louisville on Wednesday I March 29 for the purpose of inaugurating a Statewide campaign In i order to secure better educational I conditions This Is a matter of the utmost Importance to every Kentucky citizen and the meeting should be largely attended The first I arbjngers of spring the song btrda are now upon us among the most noticeable of which f perhaps on account of their con trasting colors as well as voices are the redblrd or Kentucky cardinal the blueJay The males of each C 1andj jf1 are easily distinguishable on accountI of their brighter plumage bird seeks the topmost limb from which be pipes forth his shrill wet year notes while the blueJay will take most any old limb upon which he will apparently rear and stormI noiselUkeown element enjoying Gods sun shineThere have been so many scraps and attempted fisticuffs during the Congress now drawing to a close It has been suggested that the office of sporting editor of the Congressional Record should be created It would be his business to act as referee on the floor of the House to decide as to who first used the word liar and who pronounced it the loudest who struck the first lick etc and to report the matter wrrectly for of ficial record His services would hardly be needed now however as the next Congress will be Democrat- Ic and destined to be peaceful f The region of Hartford Connecti cut like the region of Hartford Kentucky Is much disturbed over the prevalence of bad roads Republican nominee James H MacDonald who has held the office of High way Commissioner for sixteen years disturbed by the criticisms throughout the State of his service- AS a public roadbuilder During his long official career MacDonald has disbursed millions of dollars of the nubile money on the fifteen thous ard miles of roads In the State with the result that Connecticut Is accorded the distinction of having the worst roads In the country accord t- Ins to tbe cpmplalnti made to the Governor Despite this MacDonald f the endorsement of the entire Republican machine and will probably be reelected ard give the peo- pleI some more of the same sort of doIngs A POLITICAL PHARISEF Replying to an assertion In the ast Issue of The Herald In which we laid It Is not so important as to which Democrats are nominated as its that all Democrats should support the nominees of their party the Hartford Republican says The Herald Is very much mis taken when It takes this posi tion It Is important and more Important than any party should nominate the very best men for office than It is that they should he supported whether good or b badThis kind of blind partisan shin Is over ever In Kentucky and a nomination whether good or bad by either party Is no more equivalent to an election And some more of such sagacious jII bservatlons in confused language all of which would appear all right If they were backed up by the proper spirit of consistency and practice upon the part of the observ eraH the Hartford Renubllcan will cite a single Issue during Its career as a newspaper and party Journal therein It failed or refused to support the nominees of Its partv whether good or bad men Includ ng the Impossible Bill Taylor the mutterable Gus Wlllson and a few of enual unsavory political rep utatlonIf It will show us just one 11 Instance where It batted an eyelash when Its party rammed nominations own Its throat on account of their unsuitableness why well have good Iparn all around and a rattler for tl1e baby all at the pxpense of The f Jerald True It did come along vlth II postoJprtlon rrowl because I Ir Ropcevelt hart foisted Mr Taft iion Its unwilling conscience but lies of HP paper will show that It mpnortcd tM ppptlcmnn to the In lit minute of election lay and waited until after he was President to sav vhat It should have said beforeII nut dlspulslpr Its grimace It Is eII n now shouting for his reelection Die Hartford Republican Is a fAir I ipeclmpn of the purerthan thou Journals those Pharisaical blots hat strain at a germ and swallow m elevcpfoot hippopotamus TheyI ilwnvs have pood medicine some wholesome advice for the other fel Ilow while their own pepravatpd ease moteplckIIt were not disgusting We repeat that It will be the duty jf all good Democrats to support the nominees of their party and we want more consistent and reliable author- Ity than the politically hidebound Hartford Republican to show us wherein we err In the premises We have confidence In the integri ty and discernment of the voters to wake the proper choice A Pleasant Physic When you want a pleasant physic give Chamberlains Stomach and LI- ver Tablets a trial They are mild and gentle In their action and always produce a pleasant cathartic effect Ca lat any drug store for a free sample m 4 CLUE JAMES BIKES SOME POINTERS TO PRESIDE Kntuckian Says There Will Be Regular Fireworks Until Next November Washington Feb 25IC PrcslI ident Taft Is really anxious tb knot what the House Democrats wllJdo should he call an extra session the President ought to call orirrlte to Ollle M James Representative from the First Kentucky district Ill tell you what well do If he calls an extra session said Mr James Well pass fifteen tariff bills and while we are debating those well set nine Investigating committees to work on all the Federal departments of the Steel Trust and on the public buildings pork barrel Thats what well do Well revise the tariff from Hall fax to Hanover and from ScandinavIaI I to the sea said hrlnglngI down his list when he uttered these sentiments Well pass his reciprocity bill later alorg alright but well attend to our own tariff and Investigations first Why these Republicans wont even pass the Presi dents bills so why should he look to us to sidetrack our own legislation for hs2 Well give Mr Wickersham the Attorney General and Mr halIng er the Secretary of the Interior some things to think about also When our committees get to work on their departments there will be some things published for the public to think about This is the first crack the people have had at affairs for sixteen years and they shant be cut short In their business Mr James says hell tell President raft the thing IT the President wants to know2OOOOO Tubes I Of Sutherlands Eagle Eye Salve were sold In 1908 and not one word of complaint though every tube was old under a positive guarantee It i eesjAskM IKASOXS FOR ELECTING SENATORS BY PEOPLE Seven main reasons are eetforth shy the Constitution should be mended and the Serators chosen by direct vote of the people Instead of py the legislatures of the respective States The reasons are It will make the Senate ot the Jrlted States more responsive to the wishes of the people of the Inlted StatesIt will prevent the corruption of legislatures It will prevent the Improperuse of money In the campaigns before the electorate by men ambitious to obtaIn a seat In the Senate of the United States It will prevent the disturbance and urmoll of State Legislatures and the nterference with State legislation hy the violent contests of candidates for a position In the United States Senate It will compel candidates fortheI Tnlted States Senate to be subjected to the severe scrutiny of a campaign ipfore the people and compel thsc action of the bestfitted men It will prevent deadlocks due to olltlcal contests In which various fates from time to time have peon thus left unrepresented IH will popularlre government and pnd to Incrpajp tin confMpnco of tho people of the United StMes s n- Ih i Senate of the United States whIch has been to some extent Im nlrotl in recent years Harpers Weekly Fro ifcnnnof the Skin Nearly all diseases of the skin itch an ecretnn tetter salt rheum nd barbers Itch are characterized iv an intense Itching and smarting hick often makes life a burden and reeficrlalns Salve It allays the itch ncr end smarting almost instantly Mnny rases have been cured by its use For sale by all dealers m KMOCRATS AND 1012 THEIR EXPECTATIONS The new electoral college of 1012 contaIning 531 voteswill require 26G votes to elect Although Mr Bryan In three campaigns and Mr Parker In 1908 were unable to win forthe Democratic party It is by no means a hopeless task that confronts the Democrats next year Mr Cleveland In 1884 won by carrying the solid South and four Nothern States New York Now Jersey Indiana and Con necticut Mr Tilden had previous ly done the same thing although derived of his victory In Florida South Carolina and Louisiana The Democrats can win In 1912 bye f arI rying the solid South and those four tatestC The solid South counting Dela ware and West Virginia as a partoC It and Including the new State of Oklahoma 17 States In all totals 186 votes New York with 45 New Jersey with 14 Indiana with 15 and Connecticut with 7 give 81 more or a total of 267 This is one more than a majority and there is still Jeft Colorado Nebraska and NevadawlU a total of 16 votes all of whit States Bryan carried in 1908 and Arizona and New Mexico with tbree each both of which may be Democratic New York New Jersey Connectl cut and Indiana have Democrat Governors and all were carried twit by Cleveland and once by Tildes Cannot history repeat ltaelUBost- on Globe Farm for Sale Situated one mile northwest of Beaver Dam Ky Residence has five rooms with good cellar never failing well of water good out buildings 26 acres of wheat sown a good orchard all embracing 96 acre of good land Will sell on reasonable terms For further particulars see or write E F Render Beaver Dam Ky 7t4p c TERATiVO Feb 27Mrs Blackburn of Ev insville Is visiting her son Mr W H Blackburn Xfrs J O Everly and children vis ted relatives at Rockport and Nel son last week Mrs Emma Fulkerson returned Sunday from a visit to Nelson Miss Minnie Mclntyre of Beaver Dam visited her parents here Saturday and Sunday Miss Mattlc Wood of Prentls iis siting her old home here Mrs Bertha Chancellor Broad rat is visiting friends and rela Ives here of Mrs Lena Sturgeon after spend- Ing several days with her parents tr8d Mrs James Mcintyre has returned to her home In Evansville Mrs Mattie Maddox went to Ow nsboro Monday Mrs Susan Fulkerson Is very sick Mrs J M Everly spent several lays with her son Dr G L Everly and daughter Mrs Eddie Hill at tockport last week Kills n Murderer A merciless murderer Is appendj Itls with many victims but Dr rings New Life Pills kill It by prevention They gently stimulate stomach liver and bowels prevent Ing that clogging that Invites appendicitis curing constipation headache biliousness chills 25c at James H Williams m KASTVIKW Feb 27Mr Ernie Hinton went to Waco Texas Monday to make that his future home Mrs Lue Smith Is elf of grip Mr Charlie Westerfield of Mason rllle spent a few days last week with Mr and Mrs H S Ward Mr S A Daniel Is dangerously III1 of grip- Born to the wife of Mr Leslie ewell on the 21ft a boy The Infant child of Mr and Mrs Barney Taylor died on the 20th Mr and Mrs Ves Taylor of Hen lerFon have moved to this vicinity Mrs Joe Chapman Is on the sick list Mr and Mrs Tom Fletcher of Tpprterson spent last week In this vicinIty with friends and relatives Notice to Creditors Creditors of the Ohio County Bank Will please come forward and ettle their Indebtedness It Is my purpose and the desire of everybody connected with the bank to have div- Idend declared to the depositors as pecdily as possible This cannot be lone unless creditors of the bank will assist by meeting their obligations 5tf A E PATE AssIgneeI Notice to Creditors All persons having claims against be estate of Edward Davison de cased aro hereby notified to pre ent same to the undersigned ad- mInistrators of said decedent pron erly proven on or before the first lay of May 1911or they will bo forever barred Those knowing themselves indebted to said estate bv note or account will please call and settle Given under my hand this Febru larf 25 1911 SAMUEL DAVISON VIRGIL DAVISON Administrators Barretts Ferry Ky Strikes Chair Leg Killed Upper Sandusky 0 Feb 24 While the eightyearold daughter and fouryearold son of John De Jean were playing today Glenn the son who was sitting on the floor performing childish antics threw hilt lead backward and struck the leg If a chair BO hard that he died in convulsions in less than 20 minutes The city council of Madlsonvlllo has passed an ordinance prohibiting tbe operation of chewing gum ma iinea WOULD CUT OUT THE GROWING OF BURLEY In 1912 American Society of Equity Adopts a Strict Pledge Mt Sterling Feb 24Bak Into the hands of the farmers was th slogan of the members of the Stat Union Executive Board of the American Society of Equity In a secret session this afternoon when they adopted a pledge relative to the pooling of the 1911 Burley tobaccc crop For the purpose of organiz- Ing at once twenty field workers will be thrown Into the Burley dIstrict under the direction of Prof J B Secrest of Lagrange who was today elected State Organizer According to the ledge there will be an executive board made up of three members from the Burley district at large and the chairmen of the various county boards The prIce fixed on the tobacco by the pledge IIs 12 cents per pound in winter order or 15 cents per pound If redried or In keeping order though these prices can bo changed If a majorIty of the executive board thinks that conditions justify It RICKKTTS Feb 2ilost of the people are done burning and sowing plant beds in this vicinity Mr C B Patton wife and chil dren of this neighborhood are via Itlng his mother Mrs Sam Roach at who Is sick and was no better the last report Messrs Rannle Hoover and Archie Daniell returned home Monday fromI andvisiting friends Clear Run Mr Herbert Hoover will leave to- daY for Livermore where hewm make his future home Iteems tprp wont be rev many left In this pelgborhood If they all keep on leaving it Mr Mack Daniel and wife spent Saturday and Sunday with his sister Mrs Lee near Dundee Mrs Angellne Leach of Sander furs Crossing spent Sunday with Mrs Sam Roach Mr and Mrs Emmet Griffin and children of spent Saturday and Sunday with his mother of this neIghborhood Messrs Jlih and C B Patton were In Beaver Dam Saturday on business Mr Willie Baldwin of Beaver Dam and Miss Cllffle Roachof thia lelghborhoad were united In mar lape recently at the brides home and left for the Mines to visit his brother Mr Harry Baldwin ACoIrIi LaOrlppe Then Pneumonia Is too often the fatal sequence Fo eys Honey and Tar expels the cold hecks the grip and prevents pneumonia It Is a prompt and reliable cough medicine that contains no narcotics Foleys Honey and Tar Is the best cough remedy I ever used as It quickly stopped a severe ough that had long troubled me iays J W Kuhn rlnceton Neb Just so quickly and surely It acts In all cases of coughs colds laprlppe and lung trouble It Is as safe for our children as for yourself and should be used In all cases of croup vhooplnj cough and measels cough Refuse substitutes m 1IEFIJX Feb 27Amorilt those that at ended the entertainment at Alex nder schoolhouse last Saturday light from this place were Dir A V towan R A Rowan and Miss Iva Vpllace All enjoyed themselves ind reported a large crowd Mrs Minnie Rowan of spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mrs Martha Rowan and Mrs Inn Holbrooks of this place Master Robert Simmons of spent Tuesday night with Robert Shown of this place Mr and Mrs Autry Patton and Ittle son and Miss Sallie Patton of the Buford neighborhood visited tlr Ell Chlnn and family from Saturday until Sunday afternoon Mr John Sam Bennett of No reek visited his sister Mrs J B Rowan hero Friday Mr Albert Riggs went to Buford Thursday Master Charlie anJl Cecil Rhoads ot Buford visited their uncle Joseph Thomasson from Saturday until SundayIMrs Settle Whittaker and son Charlie of visited Mrs lartha Rowan Sunday O r TIlE NOCREEK SCHOOL- IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE eveningarchSong Roll call answered by notations from lien FrankltnRcad Ing of minutes Opening address W R arson Recitations = Carroll yard and Clifford Stevens Questions addanswersCury WallaceI and Secretary Sat +Ottd Carson Select reading Lula WprL Song Myrtle WiHlfordl Recitation Lizzie HudsdnV Old busfness Ap t pointment of coamlttee to arrange a program Recess Song New business Debate subject Resolved that Love Is a greater Incentive to action than Duty Affirmative J P Foster Robert Davis A Corter Nega tive O D Carson D E Ward W R Stevens Reading of program Query box Criticising 1 FILYDIA FOSTER Secyit For8ale A good team of hprses For further particulars call on y address HIRAMyIIILLER- 7t4 BeXyerpam Ky Master Commissioners Sale Ohio Circuit Court Kentucky I K Westerfleld et alJ Plaintiffs- vs Julia A Hoover et at Defendants By virtue of a judgment and or der of sale of ttie Ohlo Circuit Court rendered at the February term 1911 in the above cause for theii purpose of dividing the proceeds amongst the parties as their inter est may appear after paying the costs herein Including a reasonable attorneys fee I will offer for sale by public auction at the court house door In Hartford on Monday the 6th day of March 1911 about one oclock p m upon a credit of six mouths the following described property towit A certain tract or parcel of land lying and being In Ohio county Ken tucky on the waters of Nocreek and Barnetts creek known as the two Interests in the old PetorShown tract and bounded as follows Beginning at a stone at the letter C thence N 32 E 131 poles to a beech and dogwood Ed Showns corner at polesI I 1 fpolesf f The purchaser will be required execute bond with approved tot va Immediately after sale This 14th day of February 1911 F L Felix Master Commissioner W H Barnes nnd Y L Mosele v Attorneys r A Special Medicine for Kidney All nicnts Many elderly people have found In Foleys Kidney Remedy a quick relief and permanent benefit from kidney and hjadd r ailmegts and from annoying urinary lrrregulari ties due to advancing years Isaac FoIleys Vilete cure In my case and 1 want oth J ers to know or1t Sold by all drug- gIsts m p Notice The undersigned assignee of The Bank of Centertown will be in Cen tertown Ohio county Ky at the office of the Bank of Centertown on Saturday March 18 1911 at which time and place said assignee will sit to receive claims against said estate and any creditor failing to present at the time named his claim verified in the manner as are claims against the estates of decedents chc cept that It need not be verified by Jashall be deemed to have waived his rIght to any part of the assigned es I tate See Russells statute Sec 402 This February 20 1911 8t4 ALVIN ROWE Assignee pf The Bank of Centertown Notice to Creditors All persons having claims against the estate of Laura K Magan deceased are hereby notified to file same with me properly verified at my residence in Bufbrd Ky on or before April 1 1911 or they will bo forever barred This February 25 1911 O C MAGAN Admr 9t4 Hartford R F D No3 In the nand of Orange Blossoms Lakeland Fla Feb 23 1911 Editors Herald Hartford Ky Dear SlrsAs we are In Florida now please change our paper from Rochester Ky to Lakeland Fla We are situated about one mile rom Lakeland a city of between 8 000 and 9000 people Have a grove of 200 orange and grape fruit trees besides some lisa peaches and lemons Lots of ripe JtreesFYours truly CLAY TAYLOR Sweet Clover in Pendleton County The farmers of Pendleton county Lqseem to have solved one ot the great est form problems how to restore the soil to fertility and utilize uat the saute time Many glowing accounts come from there s totbow sweet clover bastfdeemed the too laccogorn hill ands and at the same time furnished pasture and hay second only to alfalfa f ra9wX i r 4arvf i ills ii i n Still Hold Good + aawR1 N order that we may clean up our entire stock of WINTER SUITS AND OVERCOATS we have decided to let prices remain same as during our recent Big Sale This means a great saving to you If interested come and see the Best Stock of Clothing in Ohio County We are sure our prices and styles will induce you to make a purchase This means a 1 i 2000 Suit now1498r 1 1500 Suit now9981250 Suit now 848 It + Orercoad at tame rfdottinm Dont forget Hal it pair to trade with a home that runt lot mooch r I Illinois Central Railroad Time Tn ble nt Bwr rDam Ky North Bound South Bound I No 132 405 am No 121 1135 pm s No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm 4 J No 102248 pm No 131855 pm t J K Williams Agt U S Carson wants your Furs Dr Clarence Woodburn Bremen Kywas in Hartford Monday We are receiving new spring goods every day Carson Co We are prepared to show you lots of new merchandise for spring Carson i Co Best Northern White Seed Oats 50 cents per bushel 8tf Hartford Mill Co Best Northern White Seed Oats k 50 cents pdr bushel tl1 W E ELLIS 8t4 The Produce Man Exclusive sale of Beaver Dam Flour at our meat shop- SANDERFUR CO All persons owing me will please call and make settlement 9tf E W FORD M D Miss Nellie E Smith of South Carrollton spent last week visiting friends In Central City Rev Birch Shields will preach at Cane Run church at 7 oclock Thursday night Leave your Laundry at my Grocery Domjjatfc finish Work guaranteed I Jailed for and prompt delivery Phone 140 liars Grocery Mr Byron Petty of California and sister Mrs Annie Neal of PaI ducah visited relatives In Hartford Monday There will be regular services at the Baptist Church in Hartford next Sunday morning and night Every i j I ffbody invited I p Messrs L H Peyton of Louisville I l1A and A P Mlles of Smiths Grove Ky are in Hartford on advertising I businessII Mr T R Barnard of the firm of Barnard Co Is in the Eastern J markets purchasing a new stock otI j spring goods for his store IIjj iII 7 State Auditor F P James has ap r r1pointed Mr S A Ardereon of the jj- j 5 local bar as Revenue Agent for Ohio county Mr Anderson Is a good 1 lawyer and will no doubt make arili f clet offlclaj 1ii- tyI r- ic Editor C M Barnett spent Wednesday In Mr Sterling Where he at tended the State Farmers Institute of which he Is vice president Miss Elena Smith of Madlson vllle is the guest of her father Prof T H Smith Vice President of Hartford College at the Foster House Mr Sam Morton Ceralvo is the guest of his daughter Mrs T R Barnard Mr Morton gave The Her ald a pleasant call yesterday evening Mr Luke Brown who has been quite sick at the residence of his son Prof Hallle E Brown for the past week was improving yesterday We have just opened up a big as sortment of mens and ladles Oxfords and Shoes also a fine lot of spring Clothing and Dress Goods Carson Co Messrs J C Bennett Livia route 2 Henry Cummings Dundee P B Tayjor and R T Her city were among those who called on The Herald Friday Miss Pearl Heifner route 7 and Mr J C Tucker of Livla were mar ried at the court house here Thurs day afternoon County Judge Wed ding officiating Mr Z Wayne Griffin left Sunday for Louisville where he has accept ed a position as traveling salesman for the wholesale queensware firm of Bayless Bros Regular services will be held by the Methodist peope in Hartford next Sunday morning and night Preaching by the pastor The public is cordially Invited Judge J P Miller cahler of the Cromwell Deposit Bank J B Tlch enor Centertown and C B B Fe lix Olaton were among The Her aIds callers yesterday IMr and Mrs Howard Gray of St I visitinguHon and Mrs H P Taylor and Dr and Mrs E B Pendleton for several days returned to their home Wed nesday afternoon I For SaleFarm on Rough river i I 5 miles North of Hartford Ky This farm contains 210 acres Will sell all or divide to suit purchaser Has sevenroom dwelling in good repair fine barn godd orchard plenty of water and Refine lot of sawlog tlm betjPrlco2400 VAyC YEI8ER CO- HartfordrU KY i y +w r of icj Messrs J D Crowe and son AN Crowe Hartford route 7 Robert Stewart Hartford route 5 R L Woolen Olaton and Jas A Bat lard Hartford route 1 were among our callers Monday Miss Mary Wayland Alexander of Shelbyvllle Ky and Mr Joe Alex ander of Owensboro were the guests of their uncle and aunt Dr and Mrs Wayland Alexander city a day or two recently Mr Hugh Murray of Equality Ill who is interested in the oil bus iness Is in Hartford for a few days Mr Murray makes frequent trips here and reports that prospects for oil in this county near Hartford are good Messrs B W Hocker McHenry E P Brown Hartford route 4 W L Parks Geo G Hudson and Thos Greer Hartford route 3 O C Ma gan Buford and Prof A E Ellis city were among The Heralds call ers Saturday There will be a doubleheadder game of basket ball between West Ky and Hartford College first and second teams In the skating rink here Saturday night March 4 Be sure to come Admission 25c and a sight for you Mr John T King will complete his work at the court house this week The paper put on court hall Judge Weddings and Sheriff Blacks offices makes those compartments present a very different and much Improved appearance Born to the wife of W E Fulker son Smallhous last Friday two tine boys Boys and mother doing well and Mr Fulkerson says If every other Democrat will do likewise Muh lenberg county will remain in the Democratic column forever Ij IMrs T J Morton of Island who had been visiting Mrs S A Ander I son and other relatives and friends Ir Hartford for the past ten days returned home yesterday accompan ied by Mrs S A Anderson who will spend a week with Mrs Morton Mr L ML Render wife and little daughter of Louisville came down Saturday to visit Mr Renders par erts Mr and Mrs W B Render and assist the other children In cel ebrating the elder Renders 84th birthday which occurred Monday Mrs Addle E Drennan filed suit for divorce from John Drennan In Jefferson Circuit Court Louisville Ky last week Mr S A Anderson of the Hartford bar filed the suit on the grounds of abandonment The plaintiff asks for the custody of a child and 2000 alimony Mr and Mrs C W Evans of Evansville Ind are In Hartford the guests of Mrs Evans parents Rev nnd Mrs W B Wright Miss Sue Wright who Visited her sister in Ev ansville has returned home Mr and Mrs Evans will leave soon for a sojourn In Colorado and will probab ly be accompanied by Miss Wright Mr T S Greer a former resi dent of the Beda neighborhood this county who has recently become a regularly ordained minister of the Methodist Church was married last Wednesday February 22 to Miss Carrie Pendleton at Fort Worth Texas The bride was formerly of Virginia and visited friends In this county a year or two ago They will reside at Potwln Kan where Mr Greer has recently moved in order to preach there The entertainment at Dr Deans Opera House Friday night under the auspices of the Ladles Aid Society of the Methodist Church for thn benefit of the church building fund wns exceedingly well patronized and highly enjoyed by all present It was a home talent affair but all ac quitted themselves exceptionably well For the success of the enter tainment much credit is due Miss Mary Taylor who had the entertain mert in charge and whose excellent coaching so well equipped the va rious young participants Something near 100 was realized for an excellent and praiseworthy purpose Will Have Exchange In Hartford The Mutual Telephone Co of Ohio county at P meeting of its stock holder and officers held In the Coun tv Sunerlntendents office last Fri day decided to put In an exchange In Hartford and work will soon be begun to this end Tenchcrs Money Tleailv I wish to Inform the teachers that I have received the last months pay for them I will begin to pay the money out just as fast as possi requiredItopayI LEACH Supt Judge H Clay Howard of Paris who was appointed Minister to Peru to succeed Leslie Combs has gone to Washington to take the oath of office and receive his final instruc tlonsISubscribe for The Hartford Herald J L SUDDEN FIRE BURNED CONCORD CHURCH Arrangernents for Rebuilding Commenced Before Fire Died Out Op last Saturday just as the crowd was gathering for the 11 oclock service at Concord Baptist Church five miles northeast of Hartford It was discovered that the church was on fire some place be tween the ceiling and the roof The Hrg in the stove had been made only fifteen or twenty minutes before and It is supposed that the building had caught from the sparks through a defective flue Rev J W Bruner who has been serving the church as pastor preaching at their Saturday meeting and Sunday afternoon once a month was on his way to the church and discovered the fire while going over a hill near by It was then only smoking and had there been buckets at the church It could have doubtless been saved but it was some distance to accessible buckets and before a runner could mnke the trip the fire was under such headway that there was no possible chance of control By hard work on the part of all present the church furniture car pet doors and windows were saved Since there was no insurance the loss Is estimated at a thousand or twelve hundred dollars As soon as the fire could be checked In the Woods shout the church Rev Brn ner called a church conference In the yard and they at once before the waits had fallen down agreed to rebuild on the same ground A building committee was appointed and a public subscrlptlou of about four hundred dollars was taken from tb people who hnd come to be pres ent nt the Saturday meeting Ar rangements were made to hold the services In the school house near where the church stood send the ser vice on last Sunday afternoon WPS held there Before the close of the Sundays service about six hun dred dollars had been secured for the new building and doubtless much more has been added since that time With the energy and love that the good people of Concord have for the Lords work and the help and pray ers of the people over the county we are sure It Is onlv a question of a short time until they will have an other house In which they can wor ship God Wants to Keep Posted Natchez La Feb 19 1911The Hartford Herald Hartford Ky Gentlemen Wishing to keep In touch with my home affairs you will find enclosed a check for one dollar for which please send me your live wideawake uptodate paper RespectfullyS TAYLOR 00000000000000000O MARRIAGE LICENSE O- ooooooooooooooo Henry Pirtle McHenry to Maggie M Maddox McHenrv I Claude Johnson McHenry to Myr tie Fulton Maddox lcHenrII Mary Beaceley J C Tucker Livia route 2 to I Pearl Heifner Hartford route 7IWillie Muffett Fordsvllle to Dena Bowen Fordsvllle L THammons Beaver Dam to Iva M Taylor Beaver Dam Samuel F Knight Paradise to Blnnle1 Hunlev Echols W E Baldwin Beaver Dam toI Cllffle Roach Hartford- M W Duvall Arnold to Annie Daugherty Ira V ArnoldII McDowell Hartford route 2 aFor Sale Corn oats pure wheat bran hay feed meal alfalfa meal cotton seed meal Acme horse and mule feet1 corn chops all kinds chicken feed chicken grits and shells Delivered tree anywhere in HartfordW I 9t4 The Produce Man House and Lot for Sale Situated on corner of Main and Washington streets Hartford known as the old Jail property and now occupied as a residence by Mr and Mrs W H Griffin Twostory brick house with all necessary outbuild ings Will sell on easy terms For further particulars call on or ad dress Mrs W H Griffin Hartford Ky8t2MET A HORRIBLE DEATH ON WAY TO MEET FATHER Nashville Tenn Feb 25Death overtook Fannie Morris of Macedonia Ky as she traveled to meet her father whom she had never seen in the eighteen years of her life It was discovered today Bits of cloth Ing worn by the girl when she set out from Macedonia to Clarksville t Tern to meet her parent were Identified In the debris of wreckage I thatInear Clarkavllle recently OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O EVENTS OF THE WEEK 0 000000000000000 WEDNESDAY- Dr Manuel E Araujo will be In augurated President of Salvador Ash Wednesday Inaugurating the Lenten or penitential season will be obfervefl by Catholics throughout the world Michigan Democratic State Convention will be held in Muskegon and will nominate candidates for two Supreme Court Justices and minor offices Dividends will be disbursed by many railroad and InriiiPtrlal corporations Including the Baltimore and Ohio and the Illinois Central Rail road Companies THURSDAY Pennsylvania Democratic State Central Committee will meet In Harrisburg to consider plans for a reorganization of the party IJlchlgan Republicans will open State convention In Saginaw to porn mate two Supreme Court Justices two university regents and other candidatesAnniversary of Texas Independence commemoratinc the successful revolt against the Mexican Government will bo observed as a holiday In the Lone Star State- SATLRDAY Charles D Norton secretary to President Taft will retire from ser vice at the White House Sixtyfirst Congress of the United States expires at noon to be succeeded by a House with a larcre Demo cratic majority and a Senate with a reduced Republican majority HOPEWELL Feb 2jUeltU l enlJtt preached us two fine sermons last SundayOur annual telephone meeting was held at Rockport last Saturday to elect directors for the ensuing year Messrs Tim Russell Lfre Woodburn John Miles Layton Brown Luther Hunsacker and Dr Pork were elected Mr and Mrs L S Kngler went to Greenville last Sunday to see their daughterinlaw Mrs Earl Eneler who Is very sick Mr Mark Brown of Prentls spent Inst Sunday night with Mr W D Sluill Grandma Russell who has been sick for some time Is Improving She Is 74 years old Instead of 94 as stated last week Mr and Mrs Murray Chinn of Echols visited Mrs Chinns father and mother Mr and Mrs Luther Brown last Saturday returnI ed home Sunday from a weeks visit to Mrs Englers father and mother Mr and Mrs Joe Wilson at Ren frew OLATON Feb 2GRev Birch Shields of Beaver Dam filled his regular ap pointment at Olaton Baptist Church last Wednesday evening and also Wednesday night Mrs Mack Bruner of Lcadville Nev who has been the guest of rel atives at this place for some time left last Friday for her home Miss Jessie McDanlel of this mace was the guest of her sister Mrs Roy Crawford at Frledaland last wo1 VPS Mrnrclo May of Tptofleld Is vMtini Ier parents near here Miss Xea Lyons went to Fords vllle last Thurc nv on bulnp 9- Mr ion Mlllor and fcmllv liv ing near Frlednland are the guests of nnd Mrs W H Lyons Miss Mary Daniel living near here who has hoen ratite 111 for the past few weeks Is Improving slowI Miss Stella Daniel who is teach ing a spring school at Rosine went to Owensboro last Friday and returned I home Saturday Miss Garnotte Felix went to Fordsvllle last Friday morning re turning Friday nightC tiCirculating Petition Tuesdays Owensboro Messenger saysPetitions are being circulated In business and professional circles of Owensboro by relatives of James H Parrish the former president of the Owensboro Savings Bank and Trust company who is now serving a five year sentence in the Eddyville penI tentiary in an effort to secure sig natures to be presented to the board of Prison Commissioners for Par ishs parole from the penitentiary y a+ Mr Fred Patton and sister Miss Clara Patton Horton were pleasant callers at the Herald office Thurs day Miss Patton Just recently re turned from a twoyears sojourn In haupaln Illinois FoI1TMiONEYDTARRurns j I IAbsolutely Pure only baking powdar GrapoII AiUAULILI Inlowensboro and Mrs Tom MIdklff who have measles and pneumonia- Mr and Mrs J H Mlllor of Nar rows spent Monday with their son C E Miller of this place Mrs M V McCarty of the Sugar Grove neighborhood Is spending the week at C E Millers The little son of Mr and Mrs Sylvester Powers has brain fever Mr Albert Baughn of Canalon Mo Is spending a few weeks with friends and relatives here CE Miller made a business trip to the upper counties last week and while pone made the purchase of tv fine young jack Liberty Wood MammothThe son of Mr and MrsSyl Henry Ralph Is very sick The dance at Henry Mnpans last Tuesday night was largely attended Mr J W Westerfiold went to Fordsvllle Thursday Miss Coca Wright went to Ow ensboro Saturday I Fm Sale Two good work horses gentle and sound Also three good milch cows I will sell reasonably For particulars call on or address W H RILEY 9t4 Hartford Ky RIllltON OV THE DEAD IS A PRAYER FOil SOX Cincinnati Feb 2r1Nathan Eln horn a tailor yearns not like other men to he rich but merely that he may be blessed with a son for It U written Thou shalt Increase and multiplyTo Einhorn and his wife this has all the force of a divine command It mar be many of their friends said today that the plea of the Eln horns that they mar be given a son Is now before the Great Throne and that their special pleader Is the kind ly spirit of Moses Elnhorn the fath er of Nathan who died In syna pofue Sattinav while nttomllng services The Elnborns themselves and many of their friends believe that Moses Elnhorn will not forget for when he was burled there was wound around the Index finger of his right hand a white ribbon as the symbol of his duty tied by his daughterIn- law As Mrs Einhorn fastened the ribbon whe prayed Give me a pon O Loiii Year his plea Let me not die childless About pity women surrounded the casket and ojlned In the supplica tionThe symbol of the white ribbon Is based on the oldtime theory that a child Is a divine gift and that moth erhood is a precious blessing Rhode Island Reds Single Comb Reds also Black Or pingtons stock and eggs for sale 9t4 MRS A S CHINN Phone 99G Beaver Dam Ky DOCTORS THUMB MASHED IX SETTING JAWBONE The Owensboro Messenger says While hauling a load or hay on his farm near the western end of the city John Able a well known farm er of the county met with a very painful accident when he fell from the top of the wagon and had his Jaw dislocated by striking his chin against the wagon wheel Dr Roy D Gabbert who was called to reset the Jaw while working with Mr Able and his thumb mashed by hav ing It caught between the teeth when tho jaw was sprung Into its normal position SWEET CLOVER Best fertilizer hay and pasture Very hardy rank growth Send for circular and price of seed Bokhara Seed Co 9t4F lmcut Ky emu r The Hartford Herald WEDNESDAY k MARCH ti M H E RAILROAD TIME T BLE AT HARTFORD KY Time table effective Sunday DeC 4tlicontalns tho following schedule No 112 North Bound duo 720 a m Dally except Sunday No 114 North Hound duo 840 p m Dally except Sunday No 115 South Hound duo 855 a m Dally except Sunday No 113 South Bound due 140 p m II E MISCHKE Agt i iCURIOUS WillS OF t FAMOUS PEOPLE Show the Idiosyncracies Of Mankind I PAUL REVERES WAS PERFECT One Drawn 45 Centuries Ago Was Gotten Up in Very Modern Style ADAM PROBABLY LEFT A WILT Paul Revere chiefly noted for a famous ride Is famous among law yers for an additional reason He left one of the most perfectly drawn In American records acc tdI IwillsIng to Virgil M Harris Mr Harris who Is a trust officer of the Mercantile Trust Company and lecturer on wills at the St Louis University has Written a book the first in the United States about last wills and testaments He thinks from what antiquar- Ians say that Adam probably left a will And ever since then men have been making written disposi tion of their property to become ef fective after their deaths Not long ago William M F Pe j trle nn Egyptologist unearthed at I Knhum the earliest known written will It was dated 45 centuries ago and by It the testator settled his property on his wife Teta for life but empowered her to dispose of It and named a guardian for the Infant childrenThat will Is so curiously modern said Mr Harris that It would be admitted to probate hero today It la witnessed In the manner pre scribed by modern laws and Is a clearcut documentIThe will as we know It originated In the Roman law Cicsnr left a beautiful will But there is rea datrslbackI cannot be doubted that Jacob left aII will for the Scriptures record Joseph received a portion above his brethren Sennacherib left n will 700 years before Christ under which he bequeathed to various persons certain bracelets coronets and other objects of gold ivory and precious stones i deposited for safekeeping In the I Temple of Nebo Plato Aristotle and Petrarch left wills of great length and sentimental beauty and so did the poet Virgil Part of the will of Columbus Is preserved at Genoa Martin Luthers will Is under a glass case in the i Heidelberg Library and Napoleons I will which was for a long time at the old Doctors Common In London is now In French custody It Is a wellknown document ComerIPPtl I there after tho Doctors Common was abandoned 30 years ago as a registryThe original of Washingtons will Is on file In Virginia but there Is a copv In Washington and the rocorris there contain a rich store of wills bv great Americans Robert E Lee nirloMv enough freed his slaves by his will written before the emnnclnatlon proclama I tion So also lid Thomas Jefferson Chief Justice Marshall Henry ClavIt Patrick Henry and John Randolph P T Barnums will Is one of the on record and Is printed lr I IIOnltlRt form- Brlghnm r Yoiine will providesI t for 1 0 wives and more than twice as I man children Florence Nightingale decliningI the distinction of burial In West t t minster Abbey bemicathcd her bodv for dissection In the interest ol medical science and disposed of her t and decorations her pet cats er parrot I llmorlal and Grant died lntesi 3 although Lincolns estate r i to 100000 a large I J amount In those days and surprls Inely large one would think ford Abraham Lincoln to leave During the battle of Trafalgar y Lord Nelson wrote a codicil toblsII will requesting the British ment to care for Lady Hamilton but the request was Ignored and she died In poverty on French soil Wills written In rhyme have been successfully protested In man Instances Writers of fiction are fond of making wills Dickens par trayed the foibles of elderly people In making wills In his America Notes and he displayed an accurate knowledge of testamentary affairs When death overtook that prince of I jokers Don Quixote he exclaimed An end to Jesting bring me a con fessor to confess me and a notary to write my will There Is a will IInE Dr Jekyl and Mr Hyde and aII childs will In Little Women Andr who can forget the will of old Nortt tier In The Count of Monte Cristo FCL1RltT J10JMIS- SOURI II- Ho halls from old Missouri The land of corn cob pipes and mules And hell show some corporations That farmers are not foolst He has hoed and dug potatoes He has sweated from morn till nightsAnd now In this high position J He Is sure to treat you right IS Yes he Is big and strong and healthy I And his duty hell not shirkaKor will he hand a lemon To the honest sons that workc He Is just a plain old Democrat He was never much for style Jut for common sense and Judgment Hes got Joe Cannon beat a milelJ r With Champ Clark In the Speakers chair You can take this tip from me That It will not be plain sailing For the noted G O PeFor the bottom Is out of the Dinner a Pall And the Big Sticks now at restII So for President in 1912tI thick hell stand the test C COLEMAN TATUM For CrmlrDr Bells Pine Tnr Honey Is the best t known remedy Do not experiment et the genuine Dr Bells PlneTar loneym c Cause and Effect So poor old Knute Is dead eh Vail wall time sartin do fly Vhatd he die of Bill He didnt die of nothln direct t- Ike Pears like he had th fifth ace- In th deck er sumpn like that I Fully nine out of every ten cases IIof rheumatism Is simply rheumatism the muscles due to cold or damp or chronic rheumatism neither otI which require any Internal treat mont All that Is needed to afford relief Is the free application of Chamberlains Liniment Give It atria You are certain to be pleased t with the quick relief which It nf ords Sold by all dealers m Defining It So the authorities have decided that a mans home Is where he mostI y sleeps have they asked MrsI Jetathlm with a glare at her hapI IIless spouseThey my dear he replied meekly Then the next time you go to register give the church as your home she said with an emphasis not to be mistaken by a guilty cow ring soulA socent bottle of Scotts Emulsion given in halfteaspoon doses four times a day mixed in its bottle will last a yearold babynear ly a month and four bot tles over three months and will make the baby strongand well and will lay the foundation for a healthy robust boy or girlFOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS Send 10c name of paper and this ad for our beautiful Saving Banlc and child Sketch hock Each bank contain atood Luck Penny i SCOTT BOWNE 400 Pearl Street N Y Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve Good for all Skin Diseases ROMANCE OF FIGURES AS CURRENTLY USED What Trouble the Nought1 Caused Before It WaS Understood In the current number of the Open Court George Bruce Halsted wrlt ing on the Foundation and Technl of Arithmetic presents briefly the wonderful story of the cipher Men struggled through centuries of Intel llgence with cumbersome numbs notations At first five men In a row to count 10000 ten fingers raised by the first one by the second ten raised again by the first and two by the second ten raised by the second then one by the third and thus tone finger of the fifth man equal- Ing 10000 Then the abacus with pebbles to represent the fingers and a row or grooves for the row of men i Cen of Intellect using the decimal system but struggling with It because unable to comprehend the possibility of the cipher to Indicate position In the row of men or In the grooves of the abacus r centuries ol struggling with other symbols adopting Hindoo numerals but fal- lngto find a character which would Indicate nothlngto Indicate that position was empty A Hindoo genius created zero Hindoo num rats have been traced back to the early part of the third century B C But writes Mr Halsted a whole millennium was yet to pass the creation of the most use ul symbol In the world the naught the zero a sign for nothing a mark for the absence of quantity the cl her whose first known use in a document Is In 738 A D This little IHpse picture for airy nothing Is in Indispensable corner clone of nodern civilization It Is an urlel ending magic powers of computation promoting our kindergarten babies at once to an equality with n sar Plato or Paul In matters irlthmetlcal This giving to airy- othing not merely a local hoblta ton and a name but a picture a ymbol Is characteristic of the Hln loo race whence It sprang It Is like coining Nirvana Into dynamos The Arabs taking the symbol tailed It clfeempty Our moderns are making romance ont of arithmetic tale of Ohio City of Toledo Lucas county BS Frank JChoney makes oath that her senior partner of the firm of F J heney Co doing bulslness In the My of ToledoCounty and State afore aid and that said firm will pay the um of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of Catarrh thatI annot be cured by the use of Halls jatarrh Cure Frank J Cheney Sworn to before me and subscribed tn my presence this 6th day of De ember A D 1886 Seal A W Gleason Notary Public Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter ally and acts directly on the blood anll mucous surfaces of the system Send for testimonialsfreeF Co Toledo Ohio Sold by all Druggists 7Bc Take Halls Family Pills for con tlpatlon T SCHOLARSHIPS FOR SALE The Herald has a scholarship for sale In each of the following wellI known business colleges viz Bryant Stratton Business College Louisville Ky Paducah Central Business College aducah Ky If you are contemplating taking a business course The Herald can save you money Has Millions of Friends 1 How would you like to numberI our friends by millions as Buck ens Salve does Its astounding lures In the past forty years made hem Its the best Salve In the world for sores ulcers eczema burnt holls scalds cuts corps sore eyesI sprains swellings bruises ores Has no equal for piles 25c at James H Williams m IOV FAn DO YOU DANCE PROBLEM OF DISTANCE Every ono has observed that the ady or the beau who objects strenuously to taking any sort of eier clso and pleads Incapacity to ensure train will dance through a full and xhaustlvo o program helps In this fashion reduced into a most vigorous and under proper conditions oneflclal exercise A certain scion tlst Interested himself in dancing md has been anonymously voicing ils deductions In various journals olt I ate I It SPI1TI tp a Cqr IlIt lo dance the parties travel something Ike 11 Va miles and dolt In much more strenuous fashion than they would If they calmly set out to walk the same distance An nverag waltz takes you over something like three quarters of a mile and the va O rlous oldfashioned square dance are at least a half mile long The same investigator points out that to make dancing beneficial the room should be thoroughly ventilated ro that a constant supply of fresh pvy gen Is available for the overworked heartChlcago Tribune ooooooooooooooboO SPECIAL NOTICE I0 O in regard to I 0JO OBITUARIES RESOLUTIONS 0 O OF RESPEOT c I0 00000000000000 The Hartford Herald has adopts a new rule In regard to Obituaries Resolutions of Respect Cards of Thanks c whether written at the the behest of lodges churches nr in dividuals and that is we shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles except obit uary poetry which will be one cent per word stralghtThis is tile small est rate we charge for anything and Is only onefifth of our regular rate The amount in cash or stamps must accompany each article orI it will not be printed Six words average a line in ordi nary reading and every separate character or Initial letter counts as- a s word The heading and the signature both count one line each even If they are only a word or two All obituary poetry straight through one cent per word Our old rule In regard to Obitua ries c was 150 words free balance- a cent a word but this did not prove atisfactory because the bounds were almost always overstepped and we have been forced to adopt this new rule which is in effect from now on Contributors will please remember J r a A HOME TREATMENT FORrLtTNG TROUBLE It is a recognized tact that fresh air plenty of nourishing food and a orrect constitutional treatment have done more to cure lung trouble and that weakened rundown feel- Ing than all other forms of treatment combinedIA constitutional treatment to sect all the necessary requirements neat not only kill and remove all the disease germs from the system mt at the same time It must 111s crease the appetite aid In digestion I and assimilation of food renovate I and build up the nervous system and ill parts of the body Germinal Remedy meets all theseII requirements and is producing some narvelous results If you have consumption in anyJJ orm blood disease If you areII troubled with ulcers or chronic j sores coughs pains In the chest if I OU have weak lungs and feel gen erally run down and weak write the Ohio Medical Co Box 95 Columbus I Ohio and they will send you a tullI sized bottle of this medicine abso ulely free as a trial If you willI nention the name of Hartford Herald 515 1 CASTOR IIA For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears thedSignature of S XDIAN HAS NEGRO VALET AN ADEPT AT HIS TASK Joseph Decora a fullblooded Pawnee Indian left Omaha today for his home near Columbus Neb accompanied by O J Jackson an Omaha negro who is to be his valet The servant was the object of the Indians visit to Omaha Decora owns a large farm and Is wealthy and he has grown weary of attend- Ing to his trifling personal affairs It will be the valets duty he said to cook to care for the wardrobe and provide generally for his comfort The negfiro proved an adept at his work and left here with his red master for the latters ranchOma- ha Cor New York World 1GII Prompt Relief William HDouglas Jr of Wash Ipeton DO says I take great nraeure In Informing you that I harp tired Dr Dells Pine Tar Honey IP it gave mo almost instant re lei m e 1How to Use Husbands RrIthA girl should use the same wire I n choosing n husband that she rfr oI in electing a piece of beet Ants ntiotild bo tender rrlpnrl after marriage she shoufl trent them the same Both 1should be well roasted- Chamberlains Stomach and Tablets arc safe sure and reliable rind have been praised by thousands I of women who have been restored to health through their gentle aid anti curative properties Sold by dealers a m I 000000000000000O POEMS YOULL ENJOY 0 ri 0 If The Heralds Special Selections + O O s 0 0 TWO MEN J Bill Drown Is dead Upstairs ii- grlpf In I His widow weeps while down below The neighbors now In charge ot things Are softly moving to and fro now and then come mqn to speak f Tbelr words of sympathy and cfeeer To sound tfiqpralses of poor Drown And place tlJielr roses on his bier Across the strect Tom Green plod on- Alone V unaided In hlkflght To keep his wife and children clothed He has to hustle day and night A word of praise would do him good Hes hungry for a bit of cheer But all his neighbors take their flowI ers To decorate a dead mans bier doesnt know whats going on But poor Tom Green across the way Turns to his wife and sadly says Ill have a lot of friends someday Some day youll hear my praises sung I And men will bring me roses red Theyll all push up to boost poor me The minute that they hear Im deadDr Hells Anti + Paln A sudden attack of Cholera Mor bus iIq dangerous Keep Dr Bells ntiPaln at hand a dose relieves almost Instantly It also cures Dlar Cramps Flux and all Bowel Complaints m Children Cry FOR FLETC- HERSCASTOR 1AA- UGER SALARIES ARE URGED FOR PREACHERS Cleveland O Feb 24A na lonwide movement to get better alarles for ministers was started by aymen representing different relig ious denominations in Cleveland today at the Chamber of Commerce vhen a resolution was offered urg ng that the question of pastors sal tries be carefully considered The movement WBS startedbT F M Barton an old Y M C A man- n his address Mr Barton showed by Igurcs that the average salary for preachers except in the 150 largest cities was 573 per year We do not want ministers to aspire to the pulpit for the salary nor lo we want them to keep out on account of the low salary said Secretary Lewis of the Y M C A AVOID HARSH DRUGS Many Cathartics Tend to Cause Injury to the Bowels If you are subject to constipation ou should avoid strong drugs and Cathartics They only give temporary relief and their reaction Is harm tul and sometimes more annoying than constipation They In no way effect a euro and their tendency is- o weaken the already weak organs with which they come In contact We honestly believe that we haveI the best constipation treatment ever devised Our faith In It Is so stron that we sell It on the positive guarantee thatlt shall not cost the user a cent If it does not give entire sat sfactlon and completely remedy onstlpatlon This preparation Is called Rexall Orderlies These I areII rompt soothing and most I In action They are made of a re t pnt chemical discovery Their principal Ingredient js odorless taste lets and colorless Combined with other well known Ingredients long eptabllflbed for their usefulness In the treatment of constipation It forms n tablet which Is eaten Just like candy They may be taken a- my t time either day or night without fear of their causlrs any Inconvenience whatever They do not gripe purge nor cause nausea The act without causing any pain or ex cessive looseness of the bowels They are Ideal for children weak dell cato persons and aged people as well as for tho most hearty persons They como In two size packages 12 tablets 16 cents 36 tablets 25 obtainrthem opjr at our store The Rexnll StoreTnmes H Williams 214 Main street llEu lbscri6floce Tholl a1d41a1 Teat 16 III HARDWICK tesU eyes HAlfoWICK grinds lenses while + you walt 4i HABDWICK has two Graduate S + Opticians + HARDWICK has the only Lens + + Grinding Plant In Owensboro HARDWICK has the only upto + + date Jewelry Store in Owens + + boro + HARDWICK has a fine Jewelry + + Rtpalrer J + HARDWiCK has an Expert En t h + graver F + HARDWICK has the Best Watch Repairerr+ HARDWICK Is fine on Clock I + Repairing 4 + + 4 You will never knbw what a f fine store OWensboro leas until Vyou see HARDWICKS You will + 4 never know what HARDWICK + can do till you try him + M SOLD B- YCARSON COe HARTFORDi t HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESI + DENCE OR PLACE OF BUS INESS AND PUT YOURSELFJIN DIRECT CONTACT WTH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO AlL STATES J FOR THE COMPANYS SPECIAL t1 CONTRACT ADDRESSCCALL ON OR JyVOBANON Local Manager Hartford Ky W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Beaver Dam Ky ikt if Ita a ring diamond iJewelry or IBIIJware you the best the lowest trim the OLDEST MAIL ORDER HOUSE IN TilE SOUTH 1c1ui rMeCALL PATTERNS Celebrated for style perfect tit Impllcltynd reliability nearlyyarn Sold In nurly etery city and town In the United States and Canada or by mall direct More sold than cataloguegMeCALIS MAGAZINE More subscribers than say other ashlon magazine million a month Invaluable Lat est style patterns dressmaking millinery plats sewing fancy needlework halrdresslnp etiquette gOOd Aorta tic Only to cents a year worth double Including a lire pattern Subscribe today or send for sample copy WONDERfUL INDUCEMENTS ItoAgents Postal1 brings premium catalogu new cash prlteoflets Address tug HcUU CO 2U to ItJ W ST4S 5r KCH YOU I Rhoumatism 1 More than nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of they muscles due to cold or damp or chronic rheumatism ID such cases no internal treat ment is required The fret application o- fChamberlains Liniment i is all that is needed and it is cer tarn to give quick relief Give it a trial and see for yourself how quicklyi it relieves the pain and soreness Price sac large size sex 11 G 1 v 1 1 1t r I fL u W U OJ L STEEANECDOTES The London Debut of Edmund Kean the Great Tragedian A SUCCESS AND ITS PATHOS I The Tearful Meeting With His Wife After His Triumph on the Boards J Snubbing a Noble LordAn English Crltlo on Edwin Forests Macbeth Edmund beans London debut was made in 1814 at a time when his financial affairs were ut a very low ebb With his wlfo and one child he was lodging in an attic ills reception hs Sbylock was morn encouraging and flattering lu an almost frenzied es stasy be rushed through the wet to his f humble lodging sprang up the stairs 19 and threw open the door His wife ran to meet him No words were required tphis radiant countenance told all and they mingled together the first tears of true happiness they had as yet experienced Ho told her of his proud achievement and in u burst of exulta tion exclaimed Mary you shall ride In your carriage and Charley my boy taking the child from the cradle and kissing himyou shall go to Eton nnda sad reminiscence crossed his mind his Joy was overshadowed nnd ho murmured in broken accents Oh that Howard his dead child bad lived to see Itlbut be Is better where he Is On tho night of Edmunds first np pearanco as Richard a group of idlo actors In the greenroom were discuss ing his merits in anything but a liberal r spirit I understand said one with an elaborate sneer that be Is an ads mlrablo harlequin Bannister entered at that moment overheard the remark nnd retorted I am certain of that for he has Jumped over all our beads It seems that the great tragedian Kdainnd Kean and Charles Incledon the popular singer wero one day walk Ign In Bond street when they met II Lord Essex who bowed coldly to l Kean though they were on terms of Intimate friendship The next day Kean found a note at tho theater from my lord desiring him to call at his house When there the nobleman said to the tragedian My dear heap qou will pardon me You t gentsee you In company of that singing man Incledon My lord said Bean with flashing eye Pray dont excite yourself now my dear Kean Interrupted my lord but the respect I may say reverence I have for your wonderful genius prompts me to speak thus Lord Essex cried Kean drawing himself up and casting Y a withering glance nt his noble patron twelve years ago my family were in want of bread and Charles Incledon my friend supplied the means to pro foffiefsAnd from that hour tbo two men never exchanged courtesies Bean from early manhood had an Internal complaint for which be bad always been his own physician and prescribed that sovereign balm called brandy from which It generally found relief and at least It always proved an alternative While travel- Ing from London to Belfast on quit ting the conch nt Donegal Arms ho missed his sovereign balm and be call ed out to the Irish waiter to search the lately abdicated vehicular conveyance as bo had left his pocket pistol behind The devil a pistol am I find cried the searching Hibernian or anything else but this producing the leather covered charm Why thats it you blockhead exclaimed Kean suiting the action to the word and tasting to be convinced Pat scented tbo cordial ands laughing cried Do you call that r Iapistol sir Why then faith though Im n peaceable man I wouldnt mind standing a shot or two of that pistol myselfWhen Edwin Forrest went to Lon don ho was received in anything but a cordial way One criticfwrote Our old friend Mr Forrest afforded great amusement to the public by his performance of Macbeth on Friday at the Princess Indeed our best comic actors do not often excite so great n quantity of mirth Tho change from nu Inaudible murmur to a thunder of fiouiid was enormous but tbo grand feature was the combat In which ho stood scraping his sword against that of Mncduff We were at a loss to know whoa this gesture meant until an en lightened critic In the gallery shouted out Thats right sharpen It1 A good story is being told nt the ex pense of n certain local theater whose Standing Room Only notice Is no longer needed One night after the curtain was tong up a small boy was discovered In front of the box office The manager of the theater wot t to the lad and kindly asked him what the trouble was 1 want my money back sobbed the boy In answer to the query In surprise the manager nslcetl his reason for such a request Becnuserbeirnupo Im afraid to sit np In the gallery all alonel he walled His money was returned Franklin t eBarry in St Louis Post Dispatch a A Mere Trifle N Tho young lady had won tho pbilo i penn Well said tho gantlomnn who had lost Ive lost what shall I give If ronhYNU photograph nothing but your photograph she answered In a prtitty lltro gold mounting set In a gold brn olet with a sprinkling of envi crnlja nnd Just one solltalreono only Mind youno morel tlnbIMi lilt deepest law of human CatersterlyleII BOILED BANKNOTES Cauttte Soda Used to Destroy Worn Out French Currency Everybody known that wornou banknotes in this cutiutry are destroys ed by maceration ut tbo treasury department but the manner In wblcb the notes of the Hank of trance are destroyed Is lirobubly nit so well known At the bead ottlce of the flank of France there In ji permanent tribunal before which all doubtful paper Is brought The tribunal writes anule on the faces of the banknote The Judgment Is countersigned by the treasurer and they are taken to the cellars In which the printing office Is situated In the presence of the banks official they are brought out for an nihilation Distributed one by one Into baskets the condemned notes are emptied Into n great cylinder half tilled with water and caustic soda Tbq orifice of the cylinder Is then locked and set lii motion It turns for two days at the end of which time the officials who presided at the be ginning of the operation return to wits pens the end of the notes Furnished with u long spoon a work man thrusts Into the depths of the cylinder anti withdraws a thick steam- Ing liquid which be pours Into a tbln basin Another workman approaches with a similar spoon with which be stirs the stuff around to make sure not a remnant has been left of tbo notes When the banknote soup has been reduced to paste It Is sold for 1 a hundred kilos about 200 pounds although the paper at one time cost 5 for two pounds Washington Herald KIND CAPTAIN KIDD His Wickedness and Burled Treasure Both Said to Be Myths Doomed to an Infamy undeserved his name reddened with crimes bo never committed and made wildly ro mantic by tales of treasure which he did not bury Captain William Kldd la fairly entitled to the sympathy of pos terity and tbo apologies of all the bul lad makers and alleged historians who have obscured tbo facts in a cloud of fableFate has played tbe strangest tricks with tbe memory of this seventeenth century seafarer who never cut a throat nor made a victim walk tbe plank who was no more than au ama teur pirate In nn era when this inter esting profession was In its heyday and who was hanged at Execution dock for the excessively unromantic crime of cracking tbo skull of his gunner with a wooden bucket because for sooth his majestys officers were un able to prove their charges of piracy As tor the riches of Captain Kldd the original documents In his case preserved among the state papers of tbe public record office In London relate with much detail what booty be bad and what be did with It Alas they reveal the futurity of the searches aft er tbe stout sea chest burled above high water mark The only authen tic Kldd treasure was dug up and In ventoried more than 200 years ago nor has the slightest clew to any other been found since then Romances of Burled Treasure In Metropolitan Mag azine The Snail and the Screw It Is no doubt true that nearly all hu man Inventions have been suggested by natural objects M Charles Fre mont of the French School of Mines xatnploIndamental idea of which be believes was suggested to primitive man by the spiral shell of the edible snail It was not the shape of the shell that suggest ed the screw but tbo spiral motion which It Is necessary to give to tbe body of the snail In order to with draw It from the shell This at once showed that au object of n screw shape embedded In a solid powerfully resisted attempts to withdraw It by a straight pull The hint was enough and the screw became one of the ears liest of mans Inventions Youths Companion Real Accommodating Olga Swedish maid of all work had curiously defined Ideas regarding prop erty rights although she had no Ins tendon of being at all dishonest On one occasion when It was Olgns after noon out her mistress said to her when she was about to depart from the house Olga I cant Und those handsome silk stockings of mine Have you seen themYes mnnm I have them on I know you stay homo today und do not need them You can have a pair of mine to wear yoost around homo If you hat none Minneapolis Journal Wanted Job To the colored man who made ap plication for work he listened and awaited the finish of the tale of the applicant qualifications for the Job tben stalled In this manner Well Id like to give you the place but Im afraid I cant for you tell too you are married I have special reasons for wanting to give this position to a sins gle man Why boss exclaimed the willing worker If dots dp ony iron ble Ah kin git u dlvobce between now an when you alls ready tot me to start In Argonaut An Insulting Addition An Irate citizen started for the office of his local newspaper for the piirpoim of clubbing the editor One of hlH friends asked him what the dltnr tied done to him and IIP sold I sent him n letter signed TIoneMns and hp printed It lent added another sMlrn4 palls Journal II f Difficulty l only a word Indicating thevtipprwi1 Hir ngtli ti iiiHui farce compiishlu n Iparticular object ioi DRESSING A SHIP A ManofWar Wears More Than One Suit of Clothes INNER AND OUTER GARMENTS Besides Its Coat of Armor Plate It Has a Special Set of Underclothes to Pro tect the Vital Parts of its Anatomy Mineral Wool Mufflers Battleships wear coats of stout ar mor plate tin everybody knows but everybody does not know that they wear undergarments which are pros duced chiefly from cocoanuts Your most powerful manofwar Is really a very delicate object und requires special underclothing so that stone vital partx of Its anatomy may not be tome loo cold cited HO that other equal ly vital portions may not become too botIrromstem to stern wblctrls another way of saying from head to too your enormous superDreadnought Is envel oped In an undergarment placed Im mediately behind Its topcoat or armor plate This Is Its special mackintosh or rather waterproof which nets as a protection from tire ns well as water In tho ordinary way If u shot pierced the side of a battleship water would pour In at the hole und possibly tho ship might sink but this Is obviated by providing u backing to the armor Great secrecy 1 Is kept In the various navies regarding the material used and IIts arrangement- In many of the latest battleships however the coating Is made of cellu lose which again Is obtained from tboI fibrous cocoanut rind Cellulose pos sesses the peculiar property of swell- Ing immediately If It comes In contact with emit water Therefore the moment that water pours In nt n bole at the ships side the cellulose almost Ins stantly expands und HO closes the nper turo Of course the cellulose Is es pecially treated In order to render It fireproofA war has Its vitality enor mously diminished It certain Iranians of It become coo cold In with the same way as Its human tenants Ac cordingly Its boiler and steam pipes are clothed with Jackets In some cases tbo Jackets are made of ordinary blanketing others of n fibrous claylike composition or even of close grained wood In general the material used for a ships underclothing of this dp scrlptlon consists of mineral wool However the great ship Is more like ly to suffer from the effects or heat than from those of cold There Is III ways flue danger owing to the newer typo of machinery employed that the powder magazines may get foe hot In the latest men of war the stores are surrounded by n thick coating of mineral wool Mineral wool by the way has nothing whatever to do with wool as It consists of a mass of snowy threads of it kind of glass It Is made by blowing Jets of high pressure steam through the furnaces In the manufac ture of Iron and steel Enormous quantities of this strange variety of wool are used on board for the purposes of underclothing the bulkheads and the more delicate portions of the ships body This invaluable substance acts equally well as a pro tector from heat and from cold It Is such a remarkable nonconductor of beat that it is used for covering the refrigerators and tbo cold storage chambers nnd therefore the explosive stores In tbo dockyards all men who are employed In packing the mineral wool In tbo spaces on the ships are obliged to wear masks This Is to prevent the sharp needlelike particles from being Inhaled and HO causing chest troubles of fatal character Tho ammunition rooms themselves are kept cool by a refrigerating plant In addition to being clothed In mineral wool the same applying to the ammu nition passages The wool is also packed between the double bulkheads which separate the holler spaces from the other portions of the vesselI AltoII gether the uses of the mineral board arc extremely numerous Even reindeer hair Is to bo met with on board In the capacity of a particular sort of underclothing This material Is very light considerably lighter than cork for Instance nud It Is not so subs ject to decay For this reason among its many uses it is of great value as a filling for the life buoys Boston Transcript Smoking Before Meals People will persist In smoking even after they have read tbe following from that eminent authority tho London Lancet Smoking Just before meals Is to be deprecated because tbe pungency of the pyrollgntnix products contained In tobacco smoke renders the buccal mu cosn Insensitive to alimentary stimula tion In fuel the effect Is to dull or abolish the olfaetogustntory reflex thus depriving us of what Pnwlow calls appetite Juice Self Confidence Do you believe In nil the vlpws yon t ndvocntoV I Yes replied Senator Sorghum after some hesitation I do lint I I doubt whether u less skillful rrnsoncr than myself would be chic to convince fur of the correctness of some of them Washington Star His Conclusion Mrs Onaggs Ill never forget the light you proicwd to me YoiT acted Ike n perfect fool Mr 3najws That ivuant nrtliiaIlillmlflpbln Record r TnlPbinrrrs nre Just ns bnd ns tales uniHcr Sheridan OUTWITTED THE ORIENTALS An Experience With the Customs Officials at Kermanthah In eastern lands the collecting of customs dues IM attended with per haps more than ordinary fraud In his book Prom Uatiim to Baghdad Mr W B Harris has told his expert ence with the customs otllcers of Ker mansbah The Incident bad its com feat feature us well on Its serious less son Two hours later than I bnd Intended we mode u Ktartandproceedlugtbrougb the long tutenel like bazaars emerged from the town Hers fate bud annoy ance In store for me At the local cus tom house the guards wanted 10 search us and make us pay duty on our scanty baggageI hired a mule to carry our sad dlebags as far as Baghdad using the owner of the mule u wily old Arab who accompanied us as a guldt These two mule und man the guards absolutely refused to let pass without my bestowing a perfectly Illegal and Illog ical baksheesh This 1 stoutly refused to do nnd knowing that In the costa show of temper Is of no avail II swal lowed my wrath and argued coolly and collectedly with the soldiers Soon they confessed that they had no right to touch either me or any animal of mine but they maintained That the mule and the rider were both Arabs and that therefore 1 could not InterfereThis Just what I wanted and I solved the matter In a minute 1 put the Arab on my horse and I rode his mule There was nu question about It tben The guards on their own con fession could stop neither me nor my horse and we rode quietly on nmld tb laughter of the men to change our mounts again fifty yards past the custom house GARBLED QUOTATIONS Popular Passages That Are Frequently Rendered Incorrectly Almost everybody who quotes nt all I misquote Nothing 1 Is more common than to hear A man convinced against his will- Is of the tame opinion still This Is an Impossible condition of mind for no one can he convinced of one opinion and ut the saute time hold to an opposite one What Butler wrote was eminently sensible He that compiles against his will Is of his own opinion mill A famous passage of Scripture is of ten misquoted thus He that Is with out sin among you let him cast the firsts stone It should be Let him first crust a stone- Sonetlwes we uro told Hehold how Igreat n Ore n little mutter kludlpth whereas St James said Behold bow great n matter 11 little fire kludleth which Is quite u different thing We also hear that u miss Is as good as a mile which Is nut as sensible or forcible as the true proverb A mist of an Inch Is as good as a mile Look before you leap should be And look before you ere you leap Pope Is generally credited with bay- Ing written j derpnsojany one j the verses In his writings They were itoseommonMFranklin said Honesty Is tbe best policy but the maxim Is of Spanish origin and may be found In Don Quixote Pearsons Weekly Puzzled An aged colored wan was passing a fish store when he stopped to examine a huge turtle chained In the doorway as an advertisement He had never seen a turtle before nail hi prodded the strange creature curiously Suddenly be popped his tin ger Into his month with u howl of pain After the finger had stopped bleeding he gazed at It ruefully then eyed the turtle apprehensively Whats the mutter Rustus asked the fish dealer with n grin Xutlln1 sab uullin Ah was Jest wonderln whether Ah had been bit or stungLipplnevttsThe A famous singer was undergoing tbe ministration of the ships barber I opes sold the barber that wo shall ave tho pleasure of earin you at the concert ronlgbt I No explained the famous singer jI Ive had n long and exhausting sea son In Anicrlcn land within a few days I am to open In London I have decid ed not to do anything on this voyage Its the same way with me said the barber understandingly When j Im bastion I never looks at a razor Success lugullIeII I A Legal HolidayII Blndlpsworth scorns to rather look upon his wife with UIIYes I met him yesterday and be wanted to burrow 5 from me I asks I ed him why he didnt go to his bank I for It and he replied with surprise I that he was unable to conceal I Why bless mel Id forgotten that the banks were open today Just the slime You see this Is my wlfps birth dayChicago IhocortlHeraldII This Hard Cruel World Mrs CrawfordYou can have all tho bread nnd butter you want but no more rake- WlllleSay ma how Is It I can sever have a second helping of any of the things I Uke11lllphltOftSI Vulgarity Whjylo you say IIP Is vlllltRrI Because lie mm ut Iwist ten times AS ninthmoney as I have Chicago i RecordHerald tr I 1yru4 YYa Tlio Kind You Have Always Bought and which has beenII in uso for over 30 years has borno the elgnatiiro of ZM and has been inndo Ills sonal supervision since perI110 ono you All Counterfeits Imitations and u Jnstnsgond are but Experiments that trio with and endanger the health of Infants and ChildrenExperIence against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor 011 Pare Drops and Soothing Syrups It is Pleasant It contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic substance Its ago is its guarantee destroys Worms anti allays Fovcrishness It cures DJnrrh a and Wind I Colic It relieves Teething Troubles cures Constipation anti Flatulency It assimilates tho Food regulates tho Stomach and Bowels giving healthy and natural sleep Tho Childrens Panacea Tho Mothers Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Signature of C2iO I Q e The Kind You toAlways Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TMC CINTAUn COMPANY TT MUHMV STRUT ltW roan CITY HARTFORD HERALDS Clubbing Rates v V FOR YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS TILE HERALD and WeeKiy Courier journal 8150 I Weekly Louisville Herald 135 II Ce OwensboroDaily Messenger to tt e Twiceaweek Owensboro Messenger 175 II Ce II Twiceiweek Owensboro Inquirer 175 II D 25m1 r Kentucky FarmerLouisville 125 t II Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer 150 ii u Bryans Commoner 150 If CC U Thriceaweck New York World 16o it II1wice a week St Louis Republic lfne it to National Magazine Monthly 150 11 tt II McCalls Magazine Fashions 130 Address THE HERALD Hartford Ky Frofeeaional Curd J M PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice hie profession In Ohio and ad olnlngcountlea Special attention Riven to banlntiiientruited to his care FRANK LFELI- XAttorney at Law HARTFORD KYIWill practice his profession In Onloandait lining counties and In the Court of A Yam lnsi practice and Collection a praltII Office In the Herald building C art DAKNBTT 0 Nr BARNETT SMITH SNITIIII Attorneys HARTFORD at LawII Will practice their In all the COllrlIolOhlo and adjoining countlen and In the jf Appeal Collection a IlCIIvII reiVt I I hyaletemlI nutleepxcludlveljlorFREEInriluaMetooki j nirtrtnetDo SWIFT CO PATENT LAWYERS 303 Seventy St Washington D C DR BELLS ANTIPAIN I For Internal and External Pain ti 1 r Wu 1 rmtl odatn rN eul Jorelgn t Hand KnlclASctch or r I oto cl loTcntoa lu tr orujnirt nu ifliwitatillli j For fro boot IIate 81CuroTIltIJ1Io ARKS pwc i Dr Dells PineTarHoney For Coughs and Coldsl under its I Allow to deceive in gorse It 350 aI profession RARE CHANCE Big Pay for Solicitors I uap- lTHE CINCINNATI WEEKLY ENQUIRER is offering Five Thou sand Dollars in cash premiums to solicitors in addition to a liberal commission that iis more than ample to pay ones expenses besides af fording a living profit while engaged in the work of soliciting suu f script ions t THE WEEKLY ENQUIRER is now atwentyfour page magazine style paper chuck full of reading most acceptable to any wellordered home Each issue contains a ser mon by Pastor Russell an essay by Dr Madison C Peters a serial and short stories natural history gen oral news and special record of po litical and national affairs that are of interest to all people cut patterns for ladies and youths and miscella neous matter all of high moral in fluence also market reports from all commercial centers and veterinary columnsThe aim being to present the reader with an exceptionally good family journal of superior merit free from all matters that an tagonize morality justice and truth To circulate such a paper all well meaning 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 leisure hours desirous of doing a good turn for the community at the same time earning fairpayment should apply at once for particulars by writing to THE ENQUIRER Cincinnati O PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Clttniti ODd bnatino tin bale PromoUfl ft Inxuritnl growth OTa7flairCuro td Subscribe fc r The Herald 100 a yr Y 4 t i ttThe Hartford Herald I MARCH 1 cfWEDNtDAV f WHISTLER IN A RAGE i 8p4tetWith Anger t I Whistler painted three portraits ot Lady Meux one of which the Sable L Picture of Lady Meux 1Is missing J That one was the third for wblcl Lady Meux sat to the eccentric artist The other two are described In thi rennells llfo of the artist us amoni his most distinguished portraits lAdy licux wes handsome of a more luxu that type than the women who usual ly sat to him and he found for hei harmonics appropriate to her beauty The first was an Arrangement In White and Black which law people hate seen There Is a sumptuousnesi in the black of the shadowy back ground and the velvet IOU In th white of the fur of the long cloak that Whistler never surpassed Wbls tier was pleased with It and spoke ol It as his Iwnutlful Black Lady Lady II Meux was so well satisfied that she al r once sat for a second portrait This r time the harmony was In Flesh Col- er and Pink afterward changed to I Pink and Gray to The missing portrait was smaller So far as the artists biographers could find out it was never flnlsbed The explanation is probably to be found In this story quoted In the Life from Mr Harper Pennlngton The only timo 1 saw Jimmy stumped for a reply was at a sitting of Lady Meux for the portrait In sables For some reason Jimmy became nerv ous cxaspcratod and Impertinent Touched by something he had said her ladyship tunfed softly toward him and remarked quite softly See here Jimmy Whistler you keep a civil tongue in that head of yours or 1 will have In some one to finish those portraits you have made of me with tho faintest emphasis on finish Jimmy fairly danced with rage He came up to Lady Meux his long brush tightly grasped Mud actually quivering In his hand held tight against his side stammered splattered and noI aspcd out now dare you dare you nut that after alt was n not an answer was It Lady Meux did not sit again Jimmy never spoke of the incident afterward and I was sorry to have witnessed it BLITZ WAS MODEST Yet Webster Wouldnt Give the Ma gician a Treasury Job During the presidency of Mr Tyler 3 had occasion to call on Daniel Web I ster then secretary of state I Glancing at my card be turned and wellcomearmsAfter I explaining to him my object I received the required Information We laughed and chatted a tow minutes and I was about to retire when I men honed that I was an applicant for I office and hoped I could rely upon his I Influence In the matter You a magician an office seeker f 6signorThere is only one sir I aspire to- all others I should refuse without re emolumentsbI Well what one Is that questioned tbe great statesman In bls deep and powerful voice- Counting the treasury notes MrI WebsterTbe notes signor Yes sir You might give me 100 000 to count and watch me closely but you would find only 75000 when 1 returned them Signor he exclaimed with lively animation there Is no chance for you there are better magicians hero than you Ior there would not bo 60000 left after their counting From Life and Adventures of Signor Blitz In the Wrong Church- A d Cleveland man recently told this tory of the Itev Stephen II Tyng fa mows New York divine of a generation ago A wealthy man came to him and said ho wanted to rent one of the most expensive pews in the church ant ho added Ill only take it on one con dition you mustnt expect mo to do any church work The eminent rector smiled My friend he replied you have come to tho wrong church You belong four blocks down tho street in the Church of the Heavenly Rest Cleveland Leader A Changed Man Admiral Copps addressing a temperance society told a story of one of the best men he had ever known who quickly went from bad to worse be icauseJ of excessive drinking until he 1 1became a total wreck Ouo evening said tho admiral this prematurely old tbln worn out man with red rimmed eyes said You are a good true noble woman Jenny sad should have married a better man I amIat him and thinking of f what ho once had been she quickly answered I did James New Yorki t Tribune IfIi A Religious Innovation- A certain well brought up little girl who lives in the near vicinity of Hit tcnbouso square yawned at the break I fast tablo last Sunday morning and ventured a polite proposition to here motherI dont feel at all lIke going to church this morning she remarked I Cant we Just send cargsTPhil- r adelphia Times Subscribe for The Hartford Herald S CAUGHT BY DRIVER ANTS I Exciting Experience In Wilt Afrtor With There Deadly Pests The driver ants are a terrible pest in West Africa Crawling gvertbu rouud In co uu ileus thousands Invincible to anything but a wall of tire they bring quick death to every live thing unfor tunate enough to be caught In their path and leave behind Ithem the skeletons of lizards rats sheep cutUu and even human belnjIIln his book encl tied Wo Two lu West Africa Major K G Guggb berg recounts the terrors of one night when the pests Invaded his house 1 beard voices calling Get up the ants are on us Sitting bolt upright I found the room apparently In dark ness In reality the lantern on the floor at the foot of the bed was still burning but as 1 threw my hand out and felt the heavy weight of the mOil qulto net I suddenly realized that It was coated with ants so thickly that It kept the light out as effectively as a velvet curtain Two bounds took me out of that mosquito net and the but but It was an uncanny feeling when my feet crunched through the living carpet of ants nitflug the side of the doorway In my hasty exit I brought down a shower of the little pests on my head and shoulders from rafter wall and root and then thp fun begun Some people wry that the ant buries his head In you Mud leaves It there others that be drives some other part of his body Into you I didnt worry about examining which theory wan correct It did not nff ct the torture of the result Ior the m xt tpn min ues I was standing In n state of na ture In the open the rain boating down and the buys hastily rotispd picking ants oR my body by the light of torches I was so engrossed In this now sport that I quite forgot about Lees then 1 suddenly realized that he was not there I won a moral V 0 by going into that infernal place and hauling him out He was a pitiable sight In tho torchlight his bnlr waving as if Iin a breeze as the ants crawled through It his tidy bleak with them To pick them oft was too slow n Job I1 seized a tin of kerosene oil and poured it over biio sweeping the Iffio emy off in thousands One of my ham mock boys rushed up with a flaming torch meaning In tbo kindness of his heart to give master more light I yelled to him to keep away and he thinking be was being urged on rushed toward us quicker than ever Luckily Lees cook stopped blm In time and a tragedy was averted We spent the remainder qf the night under a tree In spite of the discom fort of it nilthe persistent rain the mist the smarting pain of tbe ant biteswe could not help laughing at the Idea of our helplessness against the little brutes that were occupying our comfortable huts flow ver tbe only thing to do was to wait patlenUy until they cleared out A Repulsive People Tbe Inhabitants Dutch New Guinea two not an attractive race The na five woman says Dr Eric Marshall the explorer drags up tbe children cuts tbo firewood brings In tbe sago works tbe canoes occasionally proving her skill as a warrior In the family and village quarrels and always coming off best with her tongue She Is isually content with a strip of bark loth When in mourning she dispenses even with this Tbe male MX predominates and most of tbo men have to be content with one wife On tbe death of a man tbe widow clad like Eve but as ugly as Satan crawls round the grave walling and bant- ing performing weird movements with inns and body which may or may not be meant for dancing Pall Mall Gazette Blue Tits Love the Bolo Bees have enemies of various kinds lice the rest of creation Everyone knows that many birds are insectivorous but all Insects do not form the food of any one species Tbe bird which has formed a taste for bees Is the blue tit and If a pair of these dls cover a suitable nesting place In the neighborhood of an apiary It Is sur prising how many bees will be carried ra to satisfy them and their young Generally their work Is mostly felt where queen raising Is extensively Indulged In for queens and drones being largest and slowest on the wing form a desirable and easy prey Agricul tural Economists Up to His Standard A merchant In a small town was about to become bankrupt for the seventh time He called In the accountants to go over his books When they had finished they fold him he would be able to pay 3 cents on tbe dollar- A troubled look came over the mere chants tore Heretoforp ho sold 1 hove always paid 10 rents on the dollar unit Ill do It now tin ntllrmed 1111 11 bpnpvolcnt smile over+ prend his race Ill pay the rest out of my own pocket Everybodys A Reminder Mrs Crimson bonk Did you think of ne while 1 was away in the country fohn Mr CrlmmmbpiikI certainly lid dear II wore that necktie you taught me for my birthday and every body asked where on earth I got It tad I bad to tell themYonkers Statesman A Well Done Job Is she well married I should say so Shes been trying for years to get a divorce and Exchange canLI Pcrslstfnt people begin their natvpua where others end In failure Kdward eglcston i igofoofot rtioftrttof i tf I American Pence a cTheshort timber supply and the high prices of good wood fencing ma tenals make the wire farm fence an economical necessity If you buy a fence you want a good one If we sell you a fence we cant sell you T anything else We handle nothing but the AMERICAN FENCE iThere isnone better Twentysix inch 39inch and 47inch fences carriedmm in stock We can furnish the fence that pays E P BARNES BRO KENTUCKy BEAVER DAM rt T 4 4c t rj T + + + + + t + t 0 t + + 1 + PEOPLE WRITING + + For THE HERALD will please + + get their articles to us pronipt + + ly Matters Intended for pub + + llcation in our regular Issue + + Wednesday must be In our 4 + hands on Monday without fall 4 + ure to insure publication 4 + + + + + + + t+ + + + + + 4 THATS WHERE PRICES ARE GOING But Our Rates For Jot PRINTING REMAIN THE SAME They Are Still Low Down + to + c + 1 t + t i NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS d + Opposite your nqrne 04 the paper or wrapper you wilt find + + the date your subscription far + + pires If you find your sub d to scription line expired pleapo 9 + send us one dollar We will tip I + predate a prompt remittance II 4 44 + + + + t + 49I + + + + 4 FtllANnwiT tf J I WhyNot Read TheCourier JournalHENRY Editor WE CAN FURNISH YOU The Hartford Herald AND TilE Weekly Courier Journal BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ONLY 150 We can also give liberal combination rate with Daily or Sunday CourierJournal Write CourierJournal Com pany Louisville Ky for free sample copy of edition you desire but be sure to send your subscription order to the BAKTFOKD HERALD NOT to the CourierJournal We AskYou to take Cardul for your female troubles because we are more It will help you Remember that this great female remedy OfCARDUI has brought relief to thousands ef other sick wpmen 99 why not to you For headache backache periodical pains female weak ness many have said It is the but medicine to take Try U I Sold In This City SndThe Heral- dtheNEWSwe yiH appreciate it f i II mire IIY Yi CROWN UND BRIDGE WORK For the refined and dainty woman is what she demands now Americans are uptodate on dentistry and are not satisfied with anything but the acme of perfection in dental work Teeth extracted with as little pain as possible Children given careful attention Special attention to plate work and ALL WORK GUARAN TEED Work done at lowest prices DR H J BELL Office in Republican Building HARTFORD KY THRIOEAWEEK WORLD Without a Rival In Its Fleld The Larg est Cheapest and Best Newspaper Published at the Price Read in Every Englishspeak ing Country It has Invariably been the great effort of the ThrlceaWeok edition of the Now York World to publish the news Impartially In order that it may be an accurate reporter of what has happened It tells the truth irrespec tive of party and for that reason it has achieved a position with the 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as to our honesty and responsibility in dealings v The Thomas Monumental Works Hartford Ky Headquarters tor Building Supplies dIf you building ma terial call on us We have Rough and Dressed Lumber Doors Sigh Moldings Floor SidingLathes Rubber Paper and Metal Roofing Ridgeroll Cresting and Guttering House and Roof Paints Lime Paten Plaster Cement Common andIFire Brick Screen Doors and Wire BeanWest 35nd B1osIItII Hartford Ky 1I If you find it in THIS HERALD it will lewprtli teadingt It Costs only lODVyear l R J