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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): April 12, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): April 12, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911041201_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): April 12, 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. Einwr 7-- ' ' ".r?J '' I THE HARTFORD HERALD. Subscription $1 Per Tear, in Advance. 37th YEAR. spent several months. When he returned he again added to his deeds He was crossing ' the bf valor. bridge on an Interurban car, on his way from Jeffersonville to Louisville. Four men on the trolley bebadly frightening came boisterous, Durnlng the women passengers. Intervened, corraled the four and marched them down to Central Police Station, where ho turned them over to an officer, who placed them "I Cone, lit Herald of a Soiij World, He fin of All Mom Lnmkerinz at Mj Batl." .W Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. NO. 15 important speech recently that has not as yet been printed In any newspaper. It wns made In caucus, at which no newspaper men were presrt ent. It was a private, talk between Clark and his Democratic party fellows. Here is what Mr. Clark said, not for the public, but for the ears of the Democratic members of Congress: "I congratulate Mr. Palmer and bis associates upon their retrenchment program. I congratulate them with all my heart and strength. "There is only one way to economize, and that is for each man to do a little economizing on my own hook. I am going to cut down my go furoffice staff. Then I shall ther. I am going to cut down my $6,000 by doing away with the Speaker's automobile. If I can not legallv get rid of It, I will run it The RepublicInto the Potomac. and ans will say It Is cheese-parin- g peanut politics, but the people have some sense, and thev will know that If we begin by giving up our own little grafts, that we will then be morally fortlfed to go after the bigger ones. And I don't care what the Republicans say, I will with any man in this House who enn find a plnce for sensible economy. I don't care whether it Is a little economy or a big economy that is I will work with any proposed, member to brliiK it about, If It Is a sensible one." A Itcniihlictm View. "The legislative program outlined by Speaker Clark will meet with public approval. It Is progressive and only radical to those who hold that legislation In the interest of the general public Is radical and opposed." Philadelbe should phia North American, (Republican.) heart-to-hea- a Is , HARTEORD, KY., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1911. E ; "DARE DEVIL HUNDRED MINERS married, and the orphans left ber 137. ernment rescuer, num- I j t I if It wf'' BUif WIRES PENSH Among those killed was a Govand a volunteer overcome while trying to aid entrapped victims. Definite cause of disaster not de- EXPENSES GUI BYJEMOCRATS In Carrying Govern ment Affairs. 041 F ?v Tn His Home Paner About Fierce Fight DN MEXICAN BORDER SATURDAY In Alabama and 76 in termined. Officials allege proper precautions could have prevented. Mine property not badly THE NOCREEK SrtlOOIj IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE ev- Pennsylvania. CREPE ON EVERY OTHER HOUSE under arrest A few weeks later several men engaged In a fistic encounter at Fourth and Jefferson streets. A riot II Newspaper Man's Thrilling Experience Is Noted for Daring Feats. 'XHK BRAVE GENERAL IS DEAD r k- - April 8, 1911. Louisville Herald, Louisville, Ky. To-da- y has been an awful day. Fighting seven hours. Seventy men against six hundred. They lost one hundred. Only twenty of us escaped. Gen. Stanley Williams shot Ave 'times and dying. Am O, K. I hope BUNNY. this gets through. 3:20 a. m. April 9. A Sketch of "Bunny." Concerning the above, the Louisville Herald says: That's all! Briefly, the story of the fierce tattle waged on the Mexican regulars In Mexican, Mex., by American Insurrectos, under the leadership of Gen. Stanley Williams, Is told In the above night letter from T. Alvln Durnlng, formerly a reporter for the Herald, now a soldier of forCalexlco, Cal., along, ensued. Durnlng happened got Into the midst of the battle, and a few minutes later peace was restored. Mexicans. Now he is fighting More power to him, his friends declare. Bravo General Dead. 9. Gen. Mexlcall, Mex., April Stanley Williams, who was wounded yesterday In the spectacular assault when his little force of seventy men engaged the entire Eighth Battalion of the Mexican army, died today In the improvised hospital esby tho United States tablished troops at Calexlco. Together with the other dead brought from the battlefield five miles away, the fallen chieftain was In the little graveburied yard at Mexlcall, Just behind the ht Two Mine Disasters of Awful Program of S. I. L. for Friday ening, April 14, 1911: Proportions Many WidSong. Reading minutes. Opening address W. ows and Orphans. Roll-cal- l. In Course of a Year Effected By Democratic Policies of R. Carson. FIGHT FOR THE DEAD BODIES breastworks. Fifty men who participated In the daring sortie have returned to Mexlcall. Eleven others have deserted and are now In the Jail established by the American troops at Calexlco. im GOOD FARM PROSPECTS '$" ' tune. Containing plain facts, the mes sage, following in me wane oi jijwb dispatches relating the onslaught and repulse of a handful of Amerithe describes cans, graphically skirmish, the slaughter and the ultimate retreat of the lnsurrectoa, fighting bravely for each step of lost ground. More than this, the telegram reveals the whereabouts of often called "Bunny" Durnlng, Durnlng," who left "Dare Devil' Lo'ulsvlllo tho latter part of last year ln.order to accept a position In . INDICATED BY REPORT 1 Spokane, Wash. It was startling news that was flashed over the wires. Instead of on the firing line, amid tho smoko of battle and the booming of cannon, It was thought generally that Durnlng was covering assignments for some newspaper In Washington, or was roaming one of Western States In d the of rest and fortune. Few search dreamed. he had Joined tho ranks of tho rebels, had taken up their cause against Diaz nnd his regulars and was jeopardizing his life for the sake of adventure. knows Everybody In Louisville "Dare Devil Durnlng." Incidentally, all are acquainted with his reckless spirit, his daring, his manner danger, Immcdlato of welcoming smiling Into tho grim Jaws of death. Between tho lines of his telegram can be discerned a martial spirit aroused and flaming despite the repulse of Gen. Williams' band. After lighting seven hours, In the hope that their handful gf men would lie able to route tho enemy, six hun dred strong, ho and nineteen others had been driven across tho Mexican border Into California, leaving behind them a trail of 'blood and tho bodies of fifty bravo and adventurous Americans. With the heat of battle hardly his "Bunny" remembered over. friends" in Louisville and tersely wired them that he had fought and lost, but was safe. "Only twenty escaped Am O. sun-kisse- . 4 Irv These were tho reassuring words ' lie sent. Durnlng won his title of "Dare Devil" shortly after he entered the A newspaper game in Louisville. reporter for an afternoon paper, ho soon distinguished himself by going after fire stories at the risk of his life. He gained recognition as the an Whenever "Flro Reporter." alarm was sounded he was one of tho first to arrive at the scene of the "blare, for always ho made the trip In the flro chief's auto. In December, 1909, he was badly Injured when tho Are auto skidded at Ninth and Jorforson Btreets" and ovorturned, pinning Durnlng beneath It. Fire Chief Dillon was killed. Upon recovery, "Bunny" resumed his work as a newspaper man. Then lie Journeyed to Texas, where he K." fied thov were tagged, and If relatives did not come to clnlm them, FARMER NAILS HIMSELF UP IN A FEED TROUGH they wero turned over to the underTho undertakers taker for burial. Ky., April 7. J. C. fairly fought for bodies, believing Somerset, Bullock, a prosperous farmer of this tho company would stand for a good county, went to his barn yesterday round charge, and scenes that were and, finding a slat off tho hayrack, disgraceful resulted until tho police got upon tho feed trough to tack It Interfered. every othor house In Almost back and stuck his head through tho hole and nailed himself up and Throop has crepe ot the door. Most before he released It.throw the ham- of the funerals will occur Monday. In the number of victims, this is mer to the ground. The barn was such a distance from his home that the worst mlno horror that ever oche could make no ono hbar his cries curred In the Lackawalfha Valley and he had to stay penned In tho and the worst In tho wholo anthrarack from early morning until late cite fields since the Avondale disasIn the afternoon, when hU son came ter in September, 1869 when 110 to feed. Ho was In such a cramped lost their lives. explanation for yesterday's No condition that when ho was liberatdisaster has yet been given. ed he fainted. Tale of Disaster In Brief. IN ALABAMA. One hundred and PREACHER COMMENTS ON convicts, working In tho NEEDt OF NEWSPAPERS twenty-on- e Banner Colliery, at Littleton, near 10. Cambridge, Mass., April Birmingham, Ala., were killed by "Keep In touch with the nowspapor black damp, following an explosion. negroes, Majority men," Is tho advise of Rev. C. F. of victims Roisner, a New York pastor, who Is though several are free men, nnd the. chief speaker of tho Now Eng- about thirty white. , Methodist of Few of tho bodies could be reland Conference churches, In session horo. covered last nleht, owing to power"It Is a great mistake for some ful gases which spread through clergymen to keep aloof from nows-pape- r' the mine corridors. Forty-fiv- e men and refuse to bo Interwero saved by a wild viewed," said Dr. Relsner. dash for the opening. "Evorybody reads the newspapers, Explosion thought to have been and If you want ta get your Inter- caused by the ignition of powder, ests beforo the public, you must ad- setting fire to coal dust. vertise in this Important agency. PENNSYLVANIA. Total IN They will always' treat you fairly if number of thoso killed by Are in you glvo them reason for doing so. mine at Throop, three miles from I never could get a congregation in Scranton, Pa., seventy-simy Now York church did I not get All bodies recovered. forty-fiv- e the newspapes on mjr sle." Of tho victims, were x. Fankfort, Ky April 6. Commissioner of Agriculture M. C. Rankin has Issued his first crop report for the year, and says that the weather during the month of March has been favorablo for farm work. There has been a great deal of plowing done, several communities reporting 75 per cent, of tho ground broken. The rainfall during the winter has been quite sufficient to keep the ground In good condition, so that It Is breaking up In excellent shape. Tills Is one Indication of a good crop year, as It Is of very great Importance to have a good seed bed before planting. The warm weather In February and the first of March, followed bv freezes, resulted In the peach crop being damaged, and the apple crop will bo light In many sections. Damage to othor fruits cannot be determined as yet. The averages and conditions In Wheat, 95 per tho report follow: cent: rye, 93 per cont; clover", 95 per cent: alfalfa, 98 per cent; hogs. 9 per cent; sheop, 3 per cent; cattle, 2 per cent; horses, 3 per cent; mules, C per cent; poultry, 12 per cent; fruit condition, 68 per cent, and tobacco, 75 per cent. Littleton, Ala., April 8. Of 121 miners, most of them negro convicts, believed to have met death in tho explosion at the Banner nilne3 of the Pratt Consolidated Coal company, near here this morning, less than half a dozen bodies had been recovered w'hen work of rescue was temporarily suspended at nlghtfuall because of the forming of the deadly blackdarop. Late this afternoon those familiar with the mine said poisonous black-dam- p had spread throughout tho mine and all hope that any persons yet In the mine might be allvo was given up. Though no official statement waB made, It Is believed the explosion was caused by safety powder ignited by a lamp and also followed by Of the 170 men a dust explosion. In the mine at the time, only five were free laborers, the others being convicts, mostly negroes. Charley Brown, a negro convict, who reached safety at the mouth of the shaft Immediately after the explosion, turned back and assisted sixteen fellow workmen to safety. In tho mine reached In all forty-fiv- e the ground In safetv. State mine Inspectors and Government rescuers will enter the mine as soon as possible to recover tho bodies. Just when the wrecked ventilators enn be put In operation again Is problematical, but until then It is bolloved all bodies cannot bo recovered. Undertakers Fight For Unities. Scranton, Pa., April 8. Soventy-si- x lives Is the revised total of the toll of the mine fire at tho Panconst colliery In Throop yesterday. A canvass of the families of tho vicwidows and tims shows forty-fiv- e orphans. It was authoritatively stated tonight that everq corner of thi workings which the fleeing victims might have reached In frenzy for pure air, has been searched and that rvery body has been removed. Tho last group of dead, numbering seven, was removed at noon. As fast as the bodies werp Identi137 Robert Davis. Recitation Clifford Stevens. Composig Debate, tion Iva Wallace. Stump P. D. Tweddell. Speech Tymer Solo Westerfield. Bettle Ward. Comic declamation O. D. Carson. Select Reading Marllssa Foster. Old Business. Appointment of committee. Recess. RecitaSong. Comic Surprise. tion Iva Wallace. Debate. Subject: "Resolved, That a left hand plow Is no Improvement over a right hand plow." Affirmative: J. P. Foster, W. F. Stevens, Curry Wallace, Ernest Bennett, Robert Bennett, Robert Davis, Tymer WesterNegative- - Otis Carson. P.D. field. Elder Henry Tlnsley, Tweddell, Ernest Dodson, Oscar Buchanan, Allen. Music P. D. Tweddell. Paper. Criticism. FILYDIA FOSTER Sec'y. Solo sub-son- Enforced. CLARK'S UNREPORTED SPEECH HE MADE CANNON RALLS FOR THE WAR OK 1H12 Paris, Kv., April 7. For the first years Thomas time In sixty-eigBones, a pioneer resident of Hath county, Is visiting his old home near Owlngsvllle. He Is now a resident of Washington, D. C. His father. Thomas A. nones, and his brother. Lylo Bones, came to Owlnirsvlllr from New York and operated the famous old Slate Creek Iron furnaces, paid to have made tho cannon .balls used by Gen. Andrew Jackson's artillery against tho British nt tho battle of New Orleans From 183S to 184.1 thev worked ui Into casting large quantities of scrnp Iron nnd Imperfect moldlncr that wero left over bv the first Among of the furnace. these wero a large number of rnn-no- n balls condemned ns imperfect by the Government cvnerts. a large remembers Mr. Bones number of the old settle! s of the county and the citv, but no one whom he knew then Is now living. ht rs Inspection Co. II. Every member of Co. H, 3d Inft., K. S. G., Is required to attend inspection, April 13. 1911. It will be necessary to report not later than 2 o'clock p. m.. In order to obtpin the new equipment nnd prepare for the which will be held at Inspection p. m. 7:30 All who fall to respond on this date will be reported to the Adjutant General. The Commanding officer is very anxious to have the attendance 100 por cent. JAMES M. DeWEEESE, Commanding the Company. -- - From n Staunch Old Friend. Editors Herald, Hartford. Ky: to Inclosed please find money-ordo- r pay my arrears for your grand old paper. If you will examine your books, you will find that I have been of a constant subscriber thirty-si- x years life of The tho thirty-seve- n certainly admire her I Hernld. faithful and unchangeable stand in politics, and her good general business principles. Respectfully, G. W. PATTERSON. P. S. Next January I will bo 72 vears of ace and I am still a good representative of Old Kentucky G. W. P. stock. In Washington. "I understand." says the first statesman, "that they are going to build a wing to the cowshed at tho White House." "Are they going to put another cow in there?" asks the second statesman. "No. They're going to put Lor- lmer'B goat In it when they get tho goat." , Sl useless but expensive House Savcommittees will be abolished. ing $12,000 a year. A saving of $3,000 a year will bo effected through dispensing with the services of two attendants nt the old library space. These positions were created while tho library was in the cnpltol. Tho library wns moved manv vears ago. Since then the two attendants hnve had nothing to attend to but blank space. It was an ensy job. Two night watchmen charged to the folding room will he dropped. Seventy-fou- r policemen on duty at the enpitnl, and unlss the two stalwart Republican night watchmen wntched the policemen. It is difficult to understand how they put in their time. Here Is anothor illustration of wastefulness in running tho government: Before tho telephone was Invented, n telegraph wire wns constructed between the cnpltol nnd war department, for quick communica tion. Slnre the telephone lias couk into existence, it lias been used exclusively. But the jobs of the twr telegraphers remained. At las saving thov are to be abolished, $2,800 annually. "During the Spanish war," says "somebody's Mr. Palmer, friend told somebody's cousin that somebody's aunt had heard someone sav that a plot was on foot to dynamite extra pothe cnpltol. Thirty-eiglicemen wero added. They have remained ever since." The Palmer committee believes the danger Is now over, nnd will have thirty-fou- r private policemen nnd one lieutenant given a permanent leave of nbsence. Saving $39,000 annually. Retrenchment In the House alone sums up as follows: Saving under Speaker $ 2,320 Saving under clerk 39,970 Saving under Sergeant at Arms 47,050 Saving under Doorkeeper.. 31,340 Saving through abolishing extra month's pay.... 50,000 Saving through abolishing six useless committees 12,000 n-- e ht DISGUISED AS A TRAMP salaries aggregating $G,2G0 AND GATHERED HIM IN went right on. The Republican machine needed the patronage, and Attired In an old tattered suit, why be discouraged by a llttlo thing slouch hat and a pair of like a statute? Deputy United States Marshal (By Clyde C. Tavenner, Special Correspondent of Tiie Herald.) Washington, April 8. That the doorkeeper of the Houso of Representatives has hla thirteen-year-ol- d daughter on the payroll as "clerk to 0 the doorkeeper" at a salary of an extra year with a month's pay, was one of the unique discoveries made by ConPalmer, Mitchell gressman A. of the Ways and Means comusewhile Investigating mittee, less positions on the House payroll. Palmer's retrenchment program was unanimously adopted by the Demothe cratic membership, reflecting greatest of credit upon the young who has member Pennsylvania come to be recognized as one of the strongest leaders ofthe House. The position of "clerk to doorkeeper" will be abolished. Although the clerk's document room and all the offices therein were abolished by tho statute In 1895, $1,-20- the run-dr- w shose. Charles T. Nichols played tho part of a tramp for a short time Thurs-da- v morning, while attempting to arrest Nick Lewis, a white man In whiskoy nccused of selling Lewis had sent Grnyson county. word to the officers thn: he could not bo arrested, and woul 1 kill anv-on- e attempting to arrest him. He was found working with a swtlon gang on the main line of the Illinois Central, near Rockport. When Marshal Nichols caught him, Lewis was so dumbfounded lie could not resist arrest. He was arraigned before Commissioner Rice at Loitch-fiel- d and In default of a $200 bond taken to Owonsboro and placed in the county jail to nwalt the action of the federal grand Jury. H.RTKORI"r7"k. better. 1). NO. '2. April S. Mrs. Sam Ronch, who has beon sick for some time. Is no Mr. Emmett Griffin, who has been sick, is improving. Mrs. Joe Harnett and daughter Miss Sllva, of Hartford, are visiting Mr. Tom Anderson and family. Tho dance at Mr. J. H. Richardson's Inst Wednesday night was much enjoyed by those prosont, as Misses Emma Johnson, follows: Bessie Greer, Dosslo Greer, Corda Johnson, Minnie Johnson. Lessle Greer, Ora Moore, Edna Moore. Moore, Dora Richardson, Manila Messrs. Owen Johnson, WIte Johnson, Simon Griffin, Mamie Moore, Energy Moore. Wyone Richardson, Cappy Davis, Husher Roach, Herbert Roach, C. B. Richardson, Ed niack, Mr. nnd Mrs. Hprmnn Black. Mr. and Mrs. n. H. Moore, Mr. and All report a Mrs. iinvc Johnson. nice time. Miss Maggie Austin is on the sick list. HOPEWELL. School April 10. Our Sunday opened the first Sunday with 30 enrolled. We are glad to note Mr. J. R. Shull, who has been very sick for two weeks, Is Improving slowly. Mr. Arthur Johnson, while trimming up a tree one day last week, struck a limb over his head. Tho axe came down and cut off the toe next to his big too nnd a little off tho next one. Mrs. Stella TIchenor has purchased a loom for weaving purposes and will weave for anybody. It Is a now 3182.G80 "Economy In public expense, that labor may bo lightly burdened," has but just begun In Washington. One department after another will bo taken up by the Democrats, and wherever they have tho power, thoy patent. .Toiich Brand, Mr. Bert Hope hnd an old fashPure Animal Matter Fertilizers, will abolish useless offices and sub- ioned last Saturday. stitute a business administration for manufactured by Jones Fertilizer The Kentucky State Fair will bo Co., Louisville, Ky., for Bale by W. wastefulness and extravagance. J iheld In Louisville this year, SepAn Unreported Speech. i. Ellis, The Produce Man, Hart ' Speakor Champ Clark made an tember 11 to 1C. 14t4 ford, Ky. log-rolli- Total itkvb 1&M.U. . .j-i- U ffipSPSBSPgS l , allel. npexampled In ferocity, blood I Democrat and that means I respect O and devastation, the titter disruption I the right of conscience, the freedom O MASTER COHMLSSIOXEK'S RELIGION'S DEB T O SALES. of a solemn compact upon which or- of religion, and could never pro- O One of the most wonderful electrical or doom a man for OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO annllanccs Is the ganized society rested, the flagrant scribe, oct-lawhich may bb confiscation of billions of slave prop- what he honestly believes; and. furused both In the treatment of various dis eases and In tbe diagnosis oi many ot) CATHOLICISM Ohio Circuit Court, Kentucky. erty, to tie security of which the thermore, it means politics has no nu m am i no infenro condition. Terr Constitution itself was solemn- jraore to do with religion than dear. J. F. Hicks, et aL, Plaintiffs. terior of tho human body If no longer tho vs. ly pledged, and a system o' brutal, old Uncle Billy Render has to do book it has been heretofore. Abnormal states of the bone, gall stone, tafamoes reconstruction, a thousand with pantomime In Mars or lunar Ex parte. And What We Owe to the By virtue of a Judgment and order st.jne in tho bladder or In tho kidneys, an XX. a a d. times worse than war, that teat a gymnastics. plainly by what arc known as Rockport. Ky.. April S, 1911. of sale of the Ohio Clnnlt Coutt, shown above all. patriotic? Whatever ob - shdder of horror throsgboet the Ancient Church. photographs. Internal tumors, anj world, to 'do what a few rendered at the Februnr term, the enlargement of tho orJectfcm we aay have U their creed, j drfltzed DIVORCE GKA.YTKD WITH ay we lad a saar. sooad- - krrlag priests did. la the middle age, 1911, In the above cause for the pur- - gans, aro abo discovered by this mean where A STRONG EGG FLAVOR THE BIGHTS OF CONSCIENCE er. nf rilrfriln? the ..-nrocel8 be-- and In tho diagnosis of tuberculosis of elesMstt of tre Asaerleaa without a peaay or heartache. Cath.. a most iiimrs tlif4 rltiacMZtlB? Wka arf tWc did olics kaow what we have sever tne parties as me. i... WIk-ap.liod to i'--w -i. th ,aX aid. nzeni Im proven some o Indianapolis, lad.. April 6. The tween appear, may oi genu ciihh.ic ciiai-iithey ever fall their comatry ta lu( leaned that the trisirnpb cf reason tno jesj aiior paying me Saprease Court - vtrT cffcc"5 ruled that herein. Including a reasonable attor- - origin it hm a AndFreedom of Religiousldeas tiaae of aeed fail to sy to field or over brute strength, salad over a hasbaBd aay eaase his wife menwhea their eomuy called? 'ter. fe all that is worth wfcile. Had jney's fee. I will offer lor saie Another interesting proceeding Is tho tal tortare by writing aec;atiOB5 by public auction at the court noose violet-raAre Above Political wuuureu uycono DM they not share ta all the antold the goddess of persstaslo graced the from . and drawing pictures on eggs and the tratln? ttio, violet or chemical p'repar.d ,u ,f sacrifice of loas; and onooaal lipe of our Protestaat Perlc'es and a door In Hartford, on g,Kair Domination. leaving said eiws where she would April. 11 1. !"out oho carbon upon any por.ion oiine iouyti, t straggle for iadepeadeace. aad are deeper love and aaderatacding of find 17th day of be the sat of them. The decision was ia tbe o'clock p. m.. upon a nf bIt nwfnWa sciatica, pain. Sufferers f rum we not aadhf everlaaticf obUcatkms , hnmaatty ailed the hears of our rheumatism, strain-- , ease of Dr. William II. Stewart aad PEBTIXKST FAfT WELL PIT to thesa for their pan in tbe tre--' Protectant priesthood, oar beloved months, the fllolng Bi.rilfi nixifrom tboc olicure exhaust and twelve wife, of Oakland City, in which the Ing pains 'tho origin of which cannot it. described property, m dona coat of our naraiflcent country wonld never have been eoa- ucu'nuiiitu; iruqiu times oo igotrr ararders religion to heritaae? Who. then, ta the aame vnlaed with that awfnl eata'Iyssa of former was charred with patting the land on the ly find lmraellal relief from, a Mni A certain tract of eggs to a new and very aevol aee. ghost." Blair In treatment snd usually with a Httfe j fools wth oi Jsatice aad eommoa aenaroaltr. fratricidal horror. Bat. shame on The Stewarts were married is Hartford and Hawesvllle road. fHitenco In Win uvoi tins ani.comioru "The moat etaetnal enre for woaM deny them a fall measure of ins! It was Protectant hate pitted Ohio county. Kentucky bounded on or perfect recovery is obtained 1ST, aad became the pa reals of six the North by the lands of Weslev health liuMiide-en- t llcht bath. conlt,r:r This U true, Its fruits, its riches aad its xlory? The . try is knowledge. against Protestant rags, without . nf a vial.lmit In rhirlf the Tifltlpnt j children, foer of whom are llviar knowledge is to know we don't an laerau could ever; case or extenuation Mark yon, I and grown. The evidence indicated Tlasler: on tbe East by Rapheal b,thwI ,n ttlP combined rays of man. "there's more faith forget batapleBdid w." hence thd tribate of Wash- -, cay this deliberately without fear of that their domestic life was not one Crabtree: nn the Sonth bv the lands wonderful result? in dlaVtes, jciatu-.sonest doubt than half the Ington. who, j " it,o AVf hr rheunutlsm. obesity, ana;mia, ana soir " "- in a special order to.MCCCMfal contradtetlon. that the sweet bHssfal song. ' " " v. eds." Chemistry has Its violent the lands of Joe Dennett, containing f0rm of kidney and heart trouble. It army, so Sonth was not in rebellion, insnrree- decimated -- a in It was testified that white Mrs. gompatfbtea. aad motional aaaly- - hi tattered and . acres, this land will be ha alo proven valuable andchronic mu br)IlcnIal af,thma various varmlv commended the Catholics i "on or revolnUon. bach insmioae. Stewart was away, the doctor amusa rereaU general hygienic r( ifor their heroic defease of the Cana- - (ainlater aspersions do not, absolutely ed himself by vifitlag the henhouse sold subject to the life Interest of dieaw. As acan scarcely be measuM . Its efficiency laioa and Dolitiea. which bob but Mary Ann Hicks cannot, apply to a whole group of aad drawing pictures aad writing bigot wonld diaa border, without which the erasy. btaader-aear.'t- d to mated. who havo been Datlents at Dr. h ThcioA The purchaser will be required cause had been tort and onr Inde-- 1 sovereign States. A subject may messages to her on the eges. The Invalids' Hotel, In Ruffalo.N. Y , venture to compound. century bel. a free man never, and there was eggs were displayed so the wife aad execute bond with approved security Pierce'scommend tuts wonaenuny equipdeferred tor t 2 lily immediately after sale. Shallow draughts of the Pierian Beaid, what is there in Protestant no attempt to overthrow the ped Sanitarium, where tho above menher children could find them. tioned electric machines, This 2Sth day of March, 1911. spring Intoxicate the brain aad It was only an at- to give us such superior lag Government. current, and other most modern and The wife then sued for divorce. F. L. FELIX, "drinking largely sobers as again." alri? The moat to be said is that tempt of freemen and peers to withappiratns aro used for the cum charging cruel and Inhuman treat The treatment uf of chronic dNeaes. Master Commissioner. If eeeleslnstictsm has been an Incu- we are but a mere shoot from tbe draw from a compact made nearly ment. peculiar She told about the pictures Heavrln & Woodward; Attorneys. the chronic diseases that arobeen a lar to bus upon religious freedom, dog- main parent stem. Surely we don't an hundred years before, for tbe mu many vears women havo for and messages on tbe eggs, and tbe a blighting curse, In tno cures auecuti at tne in factor matism has been acquire such arrogance from con- tual protection and benefit of all granting the vallds' Hotel and Surclral Institute. Ohio Circuit Court, Kentucky. hut who is right aad who is wrong templating the debt we may owe. concerned, but which had degenerat- Cobrt sustained ber. In crectlne tho Invalids' Hotel, Dr she was en- W. P. Williams, Plaintiff, divorce. It decided that Jt9A.JUH.Wng JO do with rfeat of V. I'jorco s laoa u.is u maao it a gcnoi for oar numerical strength, to the ed into as intolerable menace, thus. titled to J7.SCC alimony and 1300 l nt l.mn nnt n hrwtiltfil Kl1i vs. Among his many sheer, beastly lust of that execrated In law and morals, absolving them turc. lvdrocele and varicocele are usual' one of JeSerson's monster. King Henry the Eighth, from its bands. This right to with- attorney's fees, whereupon the hus- G. L. Vogel, Defendant. aehtfrvemeou. cured In ten days, and tho patient !s abl By virtue of a Judgment and or to return homo. Tho terms are modera' i gratat one be ranked next to his who became the supreme head of draw when tbe compact ceased to band appealed o the Supreme Court Invalids' Hotel comdecision tbe latter sav?-"Ider of sale af the Ohio Circuit Court, and tho rates at tho tho examination ar 1 Tetart1oti of Iaa'ivaim5 l bis our church because no Pope, by fulfil! Its object, was believed by Jn Itthis low. In case.after nearly i0 years rendered at the March term, 1910. paratively of patients tho practice H treatment eplupb was Religions srrantlag a divorce from bis noble, many, both North and South, to be divided Into specialties. Each member of Freedom, which abhors all religious wifely, martyred, Catherine, would not only legal but inalienable, and, of wedded life, after appellee bad In the above cause for the sum of tho Faculty, although educated to pracborne to her husband six children, 300.00. with Interest at the rate of tice In all departments of medicine and leal. How, thn, could a lend bim&elf to that shocking liai- with all my heart I believe it still; there Is flaunted in the face of a 6 per cent, per annum from the 4th surgery, Is hero assigned to a special deDemocrat, wbo son with Jefferaonlan partment only, to which ho devotes hit Anne Boleyn. The su- for don't talk to me about indiseolu-abl- e virtuous wife, in tbe presence of her day of March. 190S, until r&ld, sub- entlro time, study and attention. N(fc must know this and, also, know as preme bad of Protestant religion unions, when I know no people children, a charge calculated to ject to the following credits: $30 only Is superior skill thus attained, but a matter of sound practical politics who added to his long and revolting has tbe right or power to surrender cause more exquisite mental torture paid August 11, 1909, and $39.15 also rapidity and accuracy In tho diagnosis of disease. that. In Kentucky, the Catholic vote career of wickedness, tne act oi a or delegate the authority to ... .. Specialists connected with aaa. tne - J that. foo aod a ag, by citing Arch-t- o bind posterity to a curse, and than any other which fiendish inge- costs herein, I will offer for sale by tuto at Buffalo, aro enabled to this Inst i pu- noios accurate'',nuity might devise: under the cir- public auction at the court house wilfully, wantonly, foolishly determine tho naturo of many chron c both North cumstances here, this Is cruel and btohop Bwkel who bad dead this is Just what door in Hartford, on Monday, the diseases without seeing and personally tmnge h. would b a setueleas thought tbe comlhrM BIIBdre4 ywtlt to apjKar and South their patients, 'ibis metln .. . ei.fLrt!(t ,,f pact had become, and It is inhuman of treatment within the 17th day of April, 1911, about one examining patients at a distance, by ma Ihlcal suicide would be to continue,,, of treating awnr meaning our statute." o'clock p. m.. upon a credit of six lias been so succesiui tnat tnero power a party which with all It I foK.ih la fftH him oniitv nt mn. Just what it may yet become. But, a cltv vlllaco In and twelve months, the following de- scarcelv that Is or a representedtho Unit tr handicaps, seems wholly Incapable tumaey and treason, bumwl his however this debatable and long de- SUN TO IJE niDDKX by ono not States scribed property, moro caes upon tho records of practice affairs of State bones and robbed bis sacred shrine bated question may be Anally deterof administering the ECI.II'SE O.V APRIL 28 A certain tract or parcel of land at tho Invalids' Hotel and Surgical In.ustly, wisely and economically I stitute, Such raro cases as cannot bo tbe climax of desecration, infamy mined, since war settles no princiin tbe town of Deanefield, Ohio treated In this way, which reqnlro surgiay how could he lend himself to and horror. On two days of this year the sun ples, we know the war itself was unoperations or careful Kentucky, .h folly aad ever again look a If such banqects, to which Protes- worthy of our times and religion and will be bidden from the view of peo- - county, Beginning atbounded as fol- calelectrical thcrapoutlcs, receive the at lows: a point in the or i nocrat squarely In tbe face? of tho most skillful specialists pride la Involved, do not warm that It hurled a chapter of shame nle in certnfn sections of the I'ntled eteen J. J. Huff's lot and the tho Institution. thero has been rapid I m no Catholic. Every environ- - tant States. One of the eclipses will spinning and reproach forever In mcdlclno by Bellamy and lot formerly - :it contributing to the formation its cuticles and temper Its bigotry, during recent years, Dr. Plerco has tbe ringing grooves of cur on April 2S and will be visible Kellv, one owned it is because that bigot has a cross "down kept up with tho times by continually Imhundred and eighty-fiv- e ' ' my character, proclivities and of change." Do Listen! "u hear to this country with the exception of proving his laboratory by skilled chemists rhinoceros. was Intensely ' por- feet North of the northern boundary and exercising caro that tho ingredients For fifteen hundred years Roman that heartrending wall of anguish the northern and northeastern his medicines Whatever I may have Catholicism was the only Christian borne upon the phantom wings of tions, the eclipse oxtendlng north as of the Illinois Central Railroad entering IntoFavorlto Prescription as well y and running thence Dr. Plerco' ' roed from books, all those books night? Don't you hoar? No, It was far as a line drawn through the as thClioMcn Medical Discovery" aro exreligion. Throughout those bloody tracted from tho best variety of native Protestant centuries, with a devotion and loy- not the moan of pine or shriek of cities of Philadelphia, Milwaukee, North two hundred and thirty-fiv- e m uncompromising feet to a stone; thence West one medicinal roots. Theo arc gathered w itli escaped I have tarature. and If gable, when evil spirits ride the an- Butte, Mont,, and Portland, Ore. The great caro and nt tho proper season of the alty no temptation could corrupt, a aad I trust I have) the sinister In- - courage and fortitude no terror gry storm, nor the shuddering voice eclipse also will be visible to Mexi- hundred and five feet to a stone; year, so that their medicinal properties thirty-may bo mot reliable. precepts. It co, Central prejudiced America, the western thence South two hundred and luence of extracts aro then made could overawe, hiding in caves and of desolation swept through vibrant five feet; thence East one hun- InThesetriplo refined glycerine and soluble pure bottled must have been by reading between dens of wild beasts, they clung to spectres portion of the West Indies, the east when restless hygienic and scientific the lines truths that all attempts to our sacred scriptures and precious haunt the "cities of the dead;" nor ern half of Australia, New Zealand dred and five feet to the beginning, in a World's Dispensary as manner. Tlni' established by being a part of the land deeded to tho Dr. Fierce is supplied with every known wade. Ignore or conceal, only em-- 1 traditions with the zeal of martyrs yet was It a poor, desolate mother's and tho Pacific Ocean, the path of W. R. Williams by J. A. Bellamy apparatus and means of cure, for Its aim somewhere, afiri totality extending from Auckland, Anyway, paaabed. Hasnalr U'hllr rnnnt broken heart, sobbing requiems as Is to avoid surgical operations whenever fnnaftv nf Australia, across the Pacific Ocean and L. O. Bellamy, his wife, and C. possible acmehow. I've learned that Catholl-- K t ther Wood ke it pours out libations of deep dis A. Kelly and his wife, Alice Kelly, Great caro Is exercised not to over Central America. clam has played too large a part In' beasts of prey. Catholicism has traction, at the tomb of her heroic almost to those w ho consult tho specially 19, 1903, of suffclent An annular eclipse of tho sun will September the affairs of mankind; that tbe stricken from the galled arm of dead. No, no; It was none of these of this institution that no false hopes may bo raised. occur on October 22, which will be thereof to produce the sums of mong world, especially tbe Protestant slavery more shackles than all other weird It laments. ey ordered to be made. Many thousands aro annually treated Invisible to the United States, but world, owe too much to its vast In- Influences combined. through corrcsondciica and at tliH And this re- was the disconsolate spirit of our The purchaser will be required to both tuto. Every ono consulting by letter Ins tl visible to Asia, Philippine Islands, fluence upon the Christian era, for minds me of another tempting lit- slain, wringing Its ghostly hands as execute bond with approved security or in person receives tho most careful and tbe Just and generous to evor rant tle repast to which the bigot Is cor- It wanders amid the dreadful scenes Australia, the northern part of New Immediately considerate attention. All communicaafter sale. a shadow upon hr name or fame. tions aro treated as strictly confidential. of frightful carnage, upbraiding and Zealand and tho Pacific Ocean. dially Invited. This 28th day of March, 1911. No chargo whatever Is made for conHut, owing to a peculiar Joalousy bewailing always walling the same sultation. Catarrh Cannot be Cured fifty years Three hundred and F. L. FELIX, of human nature. It is always best d Wrlto tho Invalids' notel and Surgical ago, when the tempor and spirit of cry of agony and reproach: Master Commissioner. With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as the Institute. Dr. R. V. Plerco, President, at that every fellow wallop bis own the appalling sacrifice to the cannot reach the seat of the disease. TJuffalo. N. Y. G. B. Likens and G. D. Black, At were far more unpropl-tiou- s times god of hate, and all for Jackass. Thus Justified, and rocent the Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional torneys, than now, Catholic influence hideous polltlt'Hl disclosures affording me. slavery In Great Britain naught all for naught! disease, and in order to cure It you unmitigat- abolished two Lord known, a most I'm aware that It serves the cause must take Internal remedies. Hall's without the shedding of one drop of ed provocation, I truftt a little blood, without the Interposition of of truth a poor turn to ascribe to a Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and FOR FLETCHER'S walloping will not be doemod either physical force or legislative religion crimes due to the spirit of acts directly on the blood and mucous oither undeserved or untimely. authority without even a statute. the times and committed in spite, surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not Mr. Johnson'H So, while I bell'-vArmod with the Christian panoply not becauso.of that religion. So long a quack medicine. It was prescribed Please Send It In Early. card of withdrawal, however exasppagos of Protestant history by one of the best physician in this If you over have anything importerating the clrcumsianwK" may have of moral suasion, the only shield, as the weapon of conrjuest worthy of any tell of the atrocities of the couutry for years and Is a regular pre ant to go In The aeemod to him, was a tactical politHerald, please do riots error, apt to do the- party ho enlightened religion, with hearts lull argument of London, such a line of scription. It Is composed of the best not wait until Tuesdays before bringical would consign us to eter- tonics known, combined with the ing It In, if you can sought to iMd far more harm than of charity and love of liberty, n few possibly get It humble priests went about appealing nal infamy, and we should bear this best blood purifiers, acting directly to us sooner. Tuesdays all the blatant blgotn could have are always Impulses of the slave- In mind when we sit In Judgment on the mucous surfaces. The perfect rush days with us, and the sooner dono a sort of hlunderhuB, maim- to the noble owner, and noiselessly effaced first, upon Catholic history. Whatever combination of the two Ingredients we get a matter, ing nt the breech while It mangled the better attenpart Saint Calvin may in at the mus7lo It In not of him I the distinction between Norman and the martyrdom of poorhave taken be- Is what produces such wonderful re tion we can give it. However, wo Saxon, then master and slave. These Servetus curing Catarrh. sults in Send for do not wish to leave out any mntter wIhIi to write some good Catholic peculiarly odious cause he differed from him on the testimonials free. of Importance up to the hour of goDemocrat muBt wallop him. It Ib distinctions were many di- Trinity, we know that whatever was F. J. Cheney & Co , Props., HENRY WATTERSON ing to press at 4 p. m. Tuesdays. that ProtoBtant bushwhacker skulk- to the Roman church and to a wrong was not Inspired by the goscourage refuse Toledo, 0. Only rush It to us as soon as posing In the livery of a Democrat, vine had tho moral pel of Him who said: "The Son of Sold by Druggists, price 75c. sible. roaming about trying to scare fools the mitre at the hand of William because ho lad bo often violate! this man is como not to destroy but to Take Hall's Family Pills for conlookwith hlH old ghoBt, whom I'm Wo guarantee Sutherland's Eagle save." WE CAN KUKNISH YOU stipation. ing for. I want to aee the shape of trust, some venturing oven so far ai Eye Salve to euro comnon sore With nil her faults and checkered many to charge him, upon the peril of his hlH alleged head Just how SCHOLARSHIPS FOR SALE. eyes in 24 to 36 hours. This seems despis- career, tho Church of Rome, at once The Hartford Herald washers ho has to wear In his Puri- soul, not to forget that these strange, but It Is backed by our Saxons were, the oldest, most learned, compact a ed and vanquished tanic hat. Of course he muBt he The Herald has a scholarship for AND THE prehistoric nevertheless, his fellow Christians. and powerful organization on the sale in each of tho following well guarantee. You run no risk and It show, and so dnrned only costs 25c. m Tho equality and brotherhood of face of the earth, must have irierlt known business colleges, viz: that one wonderB where and why he Weekly Courier -was ever dug up. Something wrong! man was a new doctrine brought up of the rarest and highest order, for Bryant & Stratton Business ColBuried in Ohio County. Maybo cobwebs In tho brain, liver from Rome, that appealed to the in- she could not exist on sophistry and lege, Loulavlllo, Ky. Tho funeral of Mandelino, the g fraud alone, and we pay ourselves a out o' gear, hats In his belfry, or nate manhood of the Paducah Central Business College, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. possibly tho fool doctors cut his Saxon and soothed his savago in- measly compliment, Indeed, to flat- Paducah, Ky. W, Hewitt Young, who died last wo ter ourselves that all tho argument bloomln' appendix bias. Rut, Just stincts as nothing else could, and If you are contemplating taking a week of brain fever and pneumonia Wo can rIro awn lihnrnl tho same, ho's a regular nightmare may well imagine with what trans- is on our side. If they believe their business course, Tho Herald can save at the homo of her grandmother, at own Nicholas Saints have tho power of omnipres- you money. combination rate with Daily that tousles hair and harries spine, ports of Joy ho saw his Rockport, Ky., was conducted from w a rantankerous nuisance In a con- elevated to tho papal throne and ence, an exclusive attribute of God. uuiiuikY If you have sore eyes of any kind the Center Grove church at 10 o'- Writo Courier-Journabo kissed by the as wo aro often told, let us not be sc stant state of eruption, fit for noth- hold out his foot to Coml Eye Salve. clock Wednesday morning, the Interuse Sutherland's Eagle ing on earth but what they call this noblest, haughtiest houses of Nor- ready to charge "Idolatry," when In ment being In tbe Park family ceme- pany, Louisville, Ky., for free mandy all all, the fruitful magic the next breath, with a deal of unc- It la good for nothing but the eyes. tery. "busted commercial fertilizer. sample copy of edition you however, for our pa- of tho Christian's only armor, "Mor- tion, we tell tho thrilling story of It Is painless and harmless, and Is Luckily, desire, but be sure to send Now, what about slav- Abraham with Lazarus in his. bosom positively tho best. If you don't say For Sixteen Years tience, ho has a funny side that al Suasion." money. Try your subscription order to the him. For a man ery In Protestant America, after not only hearing but replying to a so we will refund your Dr. Bells helps us to endure prayer even from the regions of tbe it and then tell your neighbor. Sold been used by millions of people has Hartford who recklessly tackles a windmill three hundred years of development with Herald NOT to everywhere. 25c a tube. m perfect and progress, with all the advant- damned. satisfaction. For coughs, the .Courier-Jonrnawith no better weapon than his Yet, wlthall, I'm no Catholic. Nol colds asthma, In fact all throat aad Sarnsonlan Jaw, Is a born hu- ages of an advanced civilization unmore furiously he der tbe benign, not to say superior, My very temperament precludes the bronchial trouble. m morist and tbe i DR. BELL'S ANTI-PAI- N fights he funnier he gets some- - Influences of our boasted religion? possibility, but, thanks to my for e Sabscribe for The Herald, f 1 a year. Jeffe'rsonlan (aHtmI and Extoml Pata thing like a skinned man In a bum- - It took a war without excuse or par- tune, I'm an 10 nest. Well. If the hoot-odon't xoott all over his grave. Td like to know just what a hoot-oIs for. After all. what taar we Justly Are bold agaiast the Catholics? tfcr boc essiaeatly moral, orderly, caltarcd. eharttaMe. progressive, ble-be- es wl Mtf-reiyte- g. ooooooooooooooo New Rays of light X-r- ay wl w pnbUe-tpliH- ed X-r- deep-seate- d ! Mr -. to-d-ay aat-fora- ss P- " v te Mon.-cy- erc-.i- l to-w- if accnr-iuu- i .- tr i . ex-W- ; ,i-- i -- i i -- bron-abo- """"" ut j over-eat- J . I i exlst-hiato- ry grt eon-setea- c. ! w r n well-balanc- ed ince -. aw . . . -- po-f- or bn a. i to-w- lt: after-treatmen-t, v ; pro-cro- non-'atbol- ; ! well-know- n right-of-wa- - j harp-strin- A j heart-breakin- J "Re-hol- off-ba- Children Cry m Why ry OASTO Rl A Not Read The- m i - Courier Journal? $ liberty-lovin- ld Journal BOTH ONE YEAB FOB ONLY $1.50. XjUUttUr-JUlUiHli. . .jii Ift Pine-Tar-Ho- nll-flr- od l. old-lin- Subscribe for The Herald; $1.00 a y'r !r t4st: f V I BTBTBTBTBTBTBBTBTBTBTBBHJiBBTjBBTMBBTBV'' panes smashed In numerous residences. M. A. H. Evans, wife of a wealthy farmer, had her hip broken by a gate being blown against her. She is In a serious condition. The largo tobacco barn of Colonel R. H. Bronaugh, at Crab Orchard, was demolished. Tho North Fork of tho Kentucky river Is higher at Jackson, Ky., than It has been for seven years. Tho Government gauge on the Jack son bridge shows a rise of 24 feet. Tho rise has caused quite a destruc tion to the timber interest, as a great quantity of logs and ties are getting away. "OJsBaB&BBBBTBBBlBBaBBTaSBBBBYQMK. bbtbtbtbtb1 When You Think Of the pain which many women experience with every month it makes the gentleness and kindness always associated with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle. While in general no woman rebels against what she regards as a natural necessity there is no woman who would not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong and sick women well, and &lves them freedom from pain. Jt establishes regularity, subdues lntlam. nation, heals ulceration and cures female weakness. free. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, All correspondence strictly private and sacredlv confidential. Write without fear and without fee to World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cure them nt home, send 21 one-cestamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing only, and ho will send you a free copy of his great thousand-pag- e illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, edition, in paper cencrs. 31 stamps. In handsome cloth-bindin- WHY MINERS ARE IDLE BUSINESS DEPRESSION Indianapolis, 6. A Ind., April general industrial depression is to some extent responsible for the fact that many coal mines have been idle while many others are only operating part of the time, according to retiring President Lewls.of the UnitLewis said It was ed Miners, fortunate that thero were no wagi contracts to draw this year, but that was npt the most serious condition confronting the organization. The encouragement of some district officials for the membership to disre gard the authorities of the International board, and to ignore wage contracts,, has eliminated the dis cipline necessary to the success of tho organization, he said. All strike matters were referred to the new International board, which convenes here April 4. Lewis will leave for his home nt Bridgeport, Ohio, He declared he would stand by his first statement and return to work in the mines. y. 3 i Blblo school of the First Christian Church, Hartford, Ky., which will entertain the Bible School Convention of the Eighteenth District, comprising the following counties, Breckinridge, Butler, Daviess, Hancock, 0, 1911. McLean, Meade, Muhlenberg and Ohio, at Hartford, April 18-1- WM07 ooArteeang TserWa? a nrrimAj j 'vy.cA fOSITQNS' tPurmruL lAwsi fysfvessjili&nhSstfnarfton STtrytrvryrArn J1tA"' rsV Bi.OAh BIBLE SCHOOL CO ION y And Christian Woman's U ' Board of Missions OF THE EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT posium (a) The Way and How of S. W. Bedford, Class Organization (a) Since Our Class Organized, (c) Our Best Booster.(b) Our State Aim for 1911 W. E. Frazee. Ten minutes each. Christina Edticntlonnl Session. 7:30 p. m. Devotional Exercises. 8:00 p. m. Address J., XV. Har- dy. TOMMY 7e.4 2 5t Z ow DRIED OUIJY STORM ?&& uns wi.x.ss,vy. P-- DIDN'T RELIEVE IN EFFICACY OF PRAYER ol Loss Estimated at More Than a Million. MI0DLESB0RO STORM-SWEPT KENTUCKY! Light and Power Company (INCOItrOKATKU) ii a " .. i - 'Ui: lesson had The Sunday-schobeen on the efficacy of prayer, and Of Kentucky, to Meet in Hart- the teacher had done her best to instill Into the youthful mind the beford Next Week, April lief that our prayers are answered. But doubting Thomas Insisted thnt 18 and 19. he knew better. "Why, Tommy, I am surprised to PROGRAMS OP THE SESSIONS hear you say you don't believe our prayers are answered," expostulatPd C. AV. IJ. M. Program Tuesday, tho teacher. April J8, 1011. "I know they ain't," persisted MORNING. Tommy, doggedly. , 10:00. Devotional Mrs. W. B. "What makes you think so?" Wright. asked the teacher. Hartford. Greetings "I don't think so; I know it," replied Tommy. "You know the an10:15. Object of Conventions gels brought a new baby to our Mrs. S. K. Yancey. 10:30. Fifty Years of Woman's house last week." "Yes, I heard about that," said Work for Women Mrs. T. F. Blrk-hea- d. tho teacher. "Now surely that was Song. an answer to prayer, wasn't 11:00. The Story of the Jubilee "It was, nit!" replied Torcmy. "Why, for six months disgustedly. Mrs. M. T. Henderson. Song. I've been praying for a goat." i 11:30. Work of the C. W. B. M. from the Pastor's Viewpoint Dr. M. "COW GENTLEMEN" SEEK FOR THEIR AFFINITIES G. Buckner. Announcements. Chicago, 111., April 8. Near Cir12:00. Benediction. cle, Mont., a thriving town where . AFTERNOON. meet, live three 2:00. Devotional Mrs. Jas. H. tho sky and earth "cow gentlemen" whose souls are Williams. mates. They have 2:30. Round Table "Why am I calling for their of the C. W. B. M.." Dis- appealed to a local city paper to a Member In finding their affinicussion by members present. Lead- assist them ties. Following is part of an apWalter Evans. er, Mrs. 3:00. The Christian Woman's peal received "We, the undersigned cow genBoard of Missions Mrs. Sarah K. tlemen, have arrived at the happy Yancey. stage of llfo In 'which we have de3:30. Children's Period. cided to take unto ourselves wives. Song by Primary Class. digThe Children's Part in the C. W. Women being scarce In these gings, wo appeal to your valuahlo B. M. 4:00. An Auxiliary for Hartford. paper for help, and trust that you can see your way clear to make 4:20. Benediction. known to some of tho fair ladles of NIGHT. tho East that their nrcsence Is very 7:30. Devotional Services. Kentucky's Conquest H. much desired In this womanless 8:00. country. W. Elliott. "We are plain citizens and are Convention Program prepared to make anyone desiring Wednesday, April 10, 1011. to come to a country where saddle 8:30. Worker's Conference. horses and sage brush are plentiful, m. "A Half Hour With 9:30 a. a happy home. the Master Teacher" J. B. Brlney. "Wo trust you are not suffering m. Opening Conference 10:00 a. from the woman famine there in Subject, "The 1911 Front Rank Chicago as we are hereabouts. HopStandard." ing that you can put us In right, wo 10:45 a. m. District President's remain, Very respectfully, Address G. W. Hull. "C. H. KEYS. Unfinished 11:15 a. m. "The "D. L. BOOT. W. E. Frazee. , Task" "S. A. BOOT." 11:45 a. m. (a) Determining the (b)' AnnounceDistrict, Banner Tho Ingredients are on tho carton. ment of Committees. contains Dr. Bell's 1:15 p. m. Committee Meetings. no drugs, and alof District ways gives 1:30 p. m. Conference satisfaction. Look for and County Officers. m tho boll on the bottle. 2:00 p. m. Business Session (a) Secretary's Report, Miss Elizabeth KILLS HIS WIFE BY Gilliam; (b) Committee Reports, (c) MISTAKE FOR A RAT Announcements. Newport, Kv., April C. In an ef2:30 p. m. Blblo School SympoReviews. "How fort to rid his homo of rats, Gransium years, to Conduct a Sunday School" Law ville Steward, aged flftv-eig"The accidentally shot and killed his wife Walter Obenchain. rance Weekly Bulletin" James. H. Wil- at Fort Thomas, Ky., a suburb, liams. "The Bible on Bible School last night. Steward Is a mato on a W. B. Wright. Methods" steamboat. Mistaking 3:00 p. m. "Teaching Missions In her location in tho room, Steward fired a shotgun, the the Blblo School" M.'o. Buckner. 3; 30 p.m. Adult Blblo Class Sym load tearing away his wife's head and killing her Instantly. Mines Flooded Idle and7, 000 Men Barns Down and Stock Killed. WORST FLOOD IN ITS HISTORY Mlddlesboro, Ky., April 6. An estimate of more than one million dollars has been placed on the damago from the flood at Mlddlesboro, Ky., and vicinity. Water from five to twelve feet deep overspread the bus-nesection of the town due to the cloudbust of yesterday evening, followed by a steady downpour all last night. The majority of the enormous loss falls on the railroads and the various mines throughout Yellow All trestles on the Creek Valley, Mingo and Stony Fork divisions of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad were washed away and the company has stated that it will be at least two weeks before traffic can bo resumed. Coal mines were flooded and 7,000 miners temporarily As far thrown out of employment. as known there were no fatalities. There is not a house in the business section of this city that did not suffer from the flood. At midnight the water became so high that the fire hells were rung and many of tho people, in arising to see the fire, stepped out of their beds Into the wnter that had filled tholr homes during the three hours previous. Every conveyance In the city was used to take distressed people from their watery homes to a place of safety. Great damago was done to the streets and sewers and the town Itself will prove a heavy loser. The damage to stock and crops will not be ascertained for some time. The windstorm In Montgomery county damage to the caused amount of $50,000. Telephone and telegraph wires are down and reports from all sections of the county cannot be obtained. Large tobacco barns belonging to Klrkpatrlck & Clay, Luther Mason and Charles Barnard were blown down and tobacco In the bnrn of Barnard & Mason was badly damaged. Barns In different sections of tho county wbro unroofed and tin carried for and shingles ml'es. One end of tho residence of the nprklev Brothers, near Stoops, was blown In, while roofs on residences of James and John Mason, near Grassy Lick, and the Gibbons residence, near SIdevIew, were torn off. Young orchards were badlv damaged, while the loss to the telephone system, will reach Into hundreds of dollars. Many Bheep and lambs were killed by failing trees- and timber. Presbyterian Church at The Sharksburg .and th,o residence of Mrs. Eva Knight were partly unroofed and a brick wall of the school buildings was. blown in. T. W. Berry's barn, the largest In county, containing 60,000 Bath pounds of tobacco, was wrecked, as was also the barn of Bela Sharp. A number of other ' barns wore blown down or badly damaged. Trees were uprooted, fences blown, away, hay ricks scattered andf window ss to-da- y, - Will wire your house at cost. Electric Lights arc clean, healthy and safe. No OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO home or business house should be without Tho Hartford Herald has adopted them tvheu within reach. a new rule In regard to Obituaries, O SPECIAL NOTICE O In regard to O RESOLUTIONS O OBITUARIES, OF RESPECT, &c. O ooooooooooooooooo O O O E. G. BARRA8S, MGR., It" ? jj jjjj! Thanks, &c, whether written at the ! lodges, churches or inthe behest of HAVE YOUR SUITS dividuals, and that Is, we shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles, except obituary poetry, which will bo one cent per word, straight.This Is tue smallIN YOUR RESI- est rate we charge for anything and UE.NCE OR PLACE OF UL'S- h of our regular rate. Is only neatRepairing and dyeing INESS, AND PUT YOURSELF The amount, In cash or stamps, IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH must accompany each article, or ly done. Six not bo printed. It will Ladies' work given special THE words average a line In ordi- attention. nary reading and every separate Hats cleaned and repaired. Long character or initial letter counts as TO ALL STATES. Work called for and dea word. The heading and the sigFOR THE COMPANY'S SPECIAL livered. nature both count one line each, Club rate SI. 00 per month. CONTRACTOR TO THE FARMERS, even If they are only a word or two. ADDRESS CALL ON straight poetry, obituary All W. O'BANON. through, one cent per word. Hartford Pressing Clifb, Local Manager, Our old rule in regard to Obitua- Resolutions of Respect, Cards of CLEANED and HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE PRESSED. one-fift- Distance Lines J. to-da- y: ries, &c. was 150 words free, balance a cent a word, but this did not prove satisfactory because the bounds were almost always overstepped, and we have been forced to adopt this new rule, which Is in effect from now on. Contributors will please remember. For tetter, ringworm, eczomn, running sores and all skin diseases, Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salve Is guaranteed to glvo satisfaction or you get your m money back. 25c everywhere. Poor. Mrs. Hlghup How was the new rector's sermon? Mrs. Blase Very disappointing. Ho was going to talk on "Revelations," and all the scandals that ho had to offer were about cities and people dead and gone centuries ago! Puck. Y. M. C. A. Bldg., Hartford, Ky. Hartford, Kentucky. j ! ! ! ! ! W. C SEXTON. ! ! Incorporated. Local Manager, Uenver Dam, Ky. Cletntei Promote HAIR BALSAM tha a PARKER'S Never Fails to Heitore Oray Hair to lta Youthrul Color. hair l&lUng. Cum MVp di?atc and brtauflel hlr. u luxuriant growth. niWssVSssVlAllsi HPSM'luauumilu iubu.S5&9 lf its MfyjySr diamond,a aIinK. mti WhO wntch, HtfHfl irJ3!t5l' ware, you can get ,4hK?3 "v5ffr9)j "le l)C6t iullty nt yyMtlwK SSETriffiH the lowest prices &?-!--JB-W IJIIiIo-Scho- ol THE LOUISVILLE JHlB EHHB. jewelry or silver- - gR-yfgS- liMjLDEST MAlLfPs! ORDER HOUSE IN THE SOUTH. lilv arv4 uju taalf m oanlnnf cluslvcly the Southern trade. Wrl'e OUT I ICC .UahtttlCU WiaiWfcliU lOl TIMES ' V Nature makes the cures after all. Now and then she gets into a tight place and needs helping out. Things get started in the wrong direction. Something is needed to check disease and start the system in the right direction toward health. Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with can do just this. hypo-phosphit- FOR 1911 miKitlTHIt, HKTTKH, IWIGKIt THAN EVKK The regular price of the Louisville Times Is $."i.00 a year. If you will send your order to us, you can get TUB HAUTFOIH1 UEItAM) and the LOUISVILLE TIMES both one year FOR OXLV $1.50. Tho .Louisville Times is the Rest Afternoon Paper Printed Anywhere. Has tho best corps of correspond- G. Lgftfc P. Box 2 6 toulivllle, & Co., Barnes Ky. ji.. Byarr Article Ouarantsed. yjJy'V Wo indniriy nbtaiii U. S. aud Foreign Plne-Tar-Hon- ey hablt-'producl- a t bend model, sketch Five-minu- te m o riIow.toSccurcTDnnX (Patentnand ' unreport on pntentnblllty. or photo cl Invention lor For Irre took, HAD IO write ht ents. es Covers the Kentucky field perfectly. Covers tho general news flold completely. Has tho best and fullest market CASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. Her Fault. professor was A certain Scotch left a widower In his old ngo. Not long afterward ho suddenly announced his lhtentions of marrying again, half apologetically adding, "I never would have tho.ught of It if Harper's, y Llzzlo haan't died;" neryes, feeds famished tissues, and makes rich blood. FOR SAIX DY ALLDUUOaiSTS It strengthens the reports. Democratic In politics, but fair to everybody. SEXR YOUR SUIISCniPTION RIGHT AWAY To THE HERALD not to TheLouls-villTimes. romptlTOttatnei In all ronntrlM OR NO rtK. RAOCMARKS, fTfannrt Copyright! Mtnd Hkttch, Model or l'iiolo. for Tki ". , Kind You Hava Always Boht FRII REPORT on pntrntabllltr. Patent ract- ICgtXCllMlTClr. BANK NlrlRINCH. bend4cnulntainp(oroDrtwolnvalnAtila toolta ,on HOW TO OBTAIN and SILL PAT. INT, Which one will pay. How to t a partner, patent law and other ralaabla Information. Sears the Signature of &&tfffi$fa hj " 8end 10c, nm of paper nl ' Sketch-Hoo- 'or oor k beautiful BtTinc Bank and Chlld'n Jfioh bank contalna a Good Lock fenny. SCOTT A .noWNE. 409 Pwl SI- - Ntw York D. Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salve Good SWIFT & CO. PATENT LAWYERS, D.-C- for all Skin Diseases. 303 Seventh St., Washington, .. A . .. 'VfciliBH VI ii,i -- ' TO-- iw ni' ii mi " jwjK "V W- - ' ,y ;.I..T7.) , nJipailP"Ti"1'n' '" 'wj.tiPyppWi r- - .iuiM"Ui 3l ' -- ril,jpwt'Wffvy y !TA " '''''n w wnwfapiymr I BWW r r t a r HospltaL The inquiry proved the MR. REFUSES elder Morton's dream a reality. On "LITTLE BROWN March 2 young Morton was at work OFFER A In McKeesport unloading glass supHE8ER MATTHEWS, FRANK L. FELIX. plies for Benjamin Morton, his unSome Notable Achievements In CDITOR8. cle, when he fell between two cars His Home Eleventh Hour Work. and bis left foot was crushed. Ev- Of Southerners loMake FRANK L, FEUX. Pub. end Prop'r. ery detail of the dream had been Is Needed in Memphis Of Conditions Inflicted By carried out. e ONE OF LANDSEER'S SPURTS. at the Hartford Entered ary "breaks." Alfred Morton, in Birmingham, by North. as mall matter of the second class. Uncle Sam. poem, entitled "A Father's wrote a One of the strongest arguments Prayer," which, with the letter tellApril 7. William The Masterpiece the Great Painter Washington, ing of his dream, dated March 26, APRIL 12 of defense of the Catholic Church WEDNESDAY Produced In a Few Hours Remarktold the comand by a man who never was and MEMORIAL TELLS GRIEVANCES 1911, was received here by the son, Jennings Bryan able Records Made by Some of by the citizens of mittee sent here never could be a Catholic appears who is convalescing. Matter if Music Memphis to invite him to make his NOTICE, DEMOCRATS 'on the second page of The Herald Some astounding feats In eleventh, could not home in that city, that he Democratic State Primary Elec- nrlw w - mi; jn. nf mm fit w, rjf. Claim They Are Not Given Iia nam is w,fc v mir BEAVER DAL iuua;i work, especially in the musical tion, Saturday, July 1, April 11. Our Town Trustees accept. The invitation was extend- hour ular contributors. Incidentally the Much Chance in GovernBryan by and artistic branches, havo been have been getting In some good ed at a luncheon given Mr. author takes the alleged political achieved by tho great artists of work of late. They have passed an the committee. Protestant fight against Ben Johnmental Affairs: FOR SALE, MemJudge James M. Greer, of ordinance taxing a restaurant $25, son as bis text, but he embodies in Sir Edwin Landseer bad promised a A good Country Campbell Cylinder a soda fount the same and a soft phis, Chairman of the committee, as picture for the spring exhibition or his argument a depth of thought, by a Press. Has been displaced AMERICANS "HOG" OFFICES drink stand $150 a year each. They toastmaster, presented SAY the Memtho British Institution In 1845. but on Will reflection and research that not only Cottrell. large have also passed an ordinance pro- phis Idea. He was followed by Sen- the day beforo the exhibition was befits the man but appeals to the sj11 cheap. For further particulars Correspondence of The hibiting stock (Special from running at ators Lea and Taylor and Represenopened all the hanglsg committee tf common sense and discernment of Herald.) address The Herald. large !n our town. tative Gordon, of Tennessee; Rep- had received was an empty frame, all lovers of freedom of conscience Washington, April 8. That the Mr. K. V. Williams, who has been resentatives Slsson of Mississippi; which was duly bung in the position and religious cult. The article Is a heavily-taxed "little brown broth- in the mercantile and drug business and Robinson, of Arkansas, and of honor. It takes something awful in the literary gem and well worthy of As the prospect of receiving a picers" of the Philippines are begin " shape of feminine headgear nowa- anybody's perusal. 6re for several years, recently sold Duke C. Bowers, of Memphis. They ture for the frame seemed to the comning to look upon the days to be a "perfect dream." his dry goods to Messrs. S. L. Ste- begged Mr. Bryan to come where mittee to be slight, a member thereof Ameri- vens and LIge Jacson. army of am They have "the people loved him, where he went to see the artist. He found! REPUBLICAN EDITOR President Taft was merciful to Landseer standing In front of a baro LANDS ON LOCAL ORGAN can officeholders in the islands with moved the same to Cromwell, where would always find friends." about as much favor as the Ameri- they are engaged in the dry goods the recently assembled Congress. Mr. Bowers said he felt sure that canvas. "That's the picture I promised," said His message was only a few hunWhat is the difference between can colonists viewed representatives business. Mr. WlllIamB has sold his Memphis could easily raise $2,000,-00- 0 the great man. pointing to the canvas. In length. of the British crown In the days be- brick property, known as the Hunt dred words if that wodld be any Induce HI have not touched it yet. but I wllV the editor of the Louisville Herald fore Independence was secured. Is block, to Messrs. Casebier & r, ment to have Mr. Bryan In his city. Hartand any other Democrat? t send It to the Institution, toplgbt.M Merely as a reminder of what he indicated In a memorial prepared who have been running a ford, Ky., Republican. Mr. Bryan replied that it was And bo was as good as hUTwbrd. A planted there, the early spring once Since you are asking riddles, for the benefit of the Secretary of hardware store and undertaking not a money consideration, and that few hours later the completed plcruro gardener erects little Elgns over the neighbor, we will seek to answer War, President Taft and the. Amer- business In Mr. W. A. Austin's If he looked at It in that light, he was delivered and may be seen today ground, all properly labeled, like you. ican Congress, and .published In the house. They will move their busi- would not be worthy of such an In In the National gallery. This wonderdanger signals on a skating pond. Party, which repre- ness to the Hunt block. Mr. Wil- vitation. He said he knew he had ful work of half n dozen hours was The difference In the case you Naclonallsta sents approximately 81 per cent of liams has sold his drug stock to Dr. friends In the South that would none other than the universally adPresident Taft has got a new con- mentioned Is about the same as that the mired. "Cavalier's Pets." , tingent of the Government family between President Taft and Champ of natives of the islands, having 66 Donovan & Co., of Bremen, Ky. tand by him, and that was why Leander, the faM6U3 painter. Is cathe 81 members of the Philippine They have enlarged their line ot they did not need him there; they pable of remarkably rapid work. TJpoa or Senator Cummins, of to deal with at Washington now. All Clark, assembly and 23 of the 31 provin- drugs and will occupy the same seeing him leave his rooms early to needed him more In the North because his political "better half" Iowa, and Senator O'Gorman, of cial Govern6rs of the Islands. stand. wag It worse?) deserted him New York. Suggesting that he should not be the morning with a canvas on his (or The memorial states that many We are perfectly willing to adRev. W. B. Wright, of Hartford, on one side of the country, he said back the neighbors of the great artist last fall. mit, however, that there is less dif- Americans In the Islands are "ani- filled his appointment at the Chris his home at Lincoln is almost In used to exclaim, "There goes Leander Aloff to paint his daily picture." Mr. McCreary says he Is In favor ference between the Herald and an mated apparently with the Idea that tian Church Sunday morning and the center of the country and only though this tay have been an exagafter and Intelligent, the Govcrnmrnt haa been establish- night and baptized one convert. of a platform cnnvntlm independent Denwcva-labout two days' ride to any section geration. It Is a well known fact that ed here exclusively for their Internot before the primary. But the than between It and a Mr. Phoclan McKlnncy, salesman where he might be needed to help on several occasions the academician major portion of Democrats of Ken- fossilized, antiquated Republican, est and benefit." and "that the Fili- for a Boston shoe firm, was at home fight for the cause of Democracy. produced a large picture within a tucky would rather see this opera- like some editors we could mention. pinos are not to be, nor ever will Saturday and Sunday. He promised to visit Memphis at Leander has a formidable rival ln tion reversed. neigh- be, Independent." Any more conundrums, Taylor & Bean shipped a carload every opportunity. tho matter of hasty work In Solomon Since the Congressional Investi- of stock Monday mostly hogs. bor? Louisville Herald. The Nortonville Dispatch Is a late Solomon. This urtlst painted an adgating committee upheld the ruling For Sale. size portrait of Israel candidate for Journalistic honors In mirable Itoouih Ohio County Man. of Attorney General Tom Johnson Loses Rattle. One White Mountain Grand Re- Zangwlll life Wlckersham within tho period of five the Hopkins county field. It Is a that the purchase by American suApril 10. After a frigerator, 30 Inches deep, 60 inches The Louisville Herald says: Cleveland hours. folio, all home print, and Senator A. S. Bennett, Secretary gar Interests of 53,000 acres of rich game struggle In which toward the wide, 90 inches high. Cost $100. In tho realm of music thero may bo too Initial number 1b crowded with of the Republican Central Friar sugar lands was proper, the end only his iron will kept him Been used but little. Will take $55. cited many Instances of extraordinarily State good news and ads. Committee, Is being mentioned In sentiment In the (elands for early alive, former Mayor Tom L. Johnquick work. Oscar Hammcrsteln's J. D. BAUGH. record of a comic opera In one act, son lost his battle for life, death 12t4 Beaver Dam, Ky. A depp veneer of black has re- connection with the nomination for Independence has grown with a words and music, composed In one stride. If The Fili coming to him at 8:47 o'clock tocently been spread over the white- Clerk of the Court of Appeals. OLATON. night. Is an exnmple. pinos have come to feel that the su-- 1 night. . wash of the Lorlmer case by later Mr. Bennett should decide to enter Ono of the most remarkable tilts of April 10. Sunday School at this gar trust Is dictating the Philippine Mr. Johnson was Mayor of Clevedevelopments. This nauseating po- the race.the man that beats him will orchestration ever written, the overgo some," for he Is un- policy of the Taft administration, land four times, and was twice Con- place is progressing nicely. litical scandal should be cleaned up "have to Mr. W. B. McDanlel, of this place, ture to "Otello." was scored by Rossini In only twenty-fou- r hours. at once, without further suspicious doubtedly one of the most popular and they are convinced that the' gressman from the Twenty-firtrust Intends that the United States Ohio district. He was a conspicu- Is on the sick list. men In the party. Sir Arthur Sullivan composed tho delay. Mrs. James Glasscock and little brilliant epilogue of the "Golden Legshall retain possession of the islands ous Democrat, and a disciple of daughter, of this place, were the end" In the sama space of time. Ho forever, IIKFLIN. Several Chicago girls have apHenry George. He was also a "The people observe," continues strong champion of the plied for positions as nurses with April 10. Sunday School was orstreet guests of Mrs. T. W. Daniel's family sat down at 0 o'clock one evening to compose the overture to "Iolanthe" , last Monday morning. at the U. S. Army on the Rio Grande. ganized at the Valley last first Sun- the memorial, "that all the prefer- car fare. ences and stimulus of the GovernMiss Jessie McDanlel, who has and did, not rise from bla desk until want to go to war," they ex- day. "We been on the sick list for the past the last note was written at 7 on tho plained. Tom Underwood, of the Little Harlln Nance, of this place, ment Is kept for foreign capital and IN FAMILY CELEBRATION, following morning, while tho ovcrturo Is mean has been very HI, but Is much bet- it Is not to be wondered at that the few days, Is able to be out again. HopklnsvlIIe New Era, LAUGHTER CAUSES DEATH to "Tho Yeoman of the Guard" occupeople feel a profound neglect and enough to ask, "Why don't they ter. Dr. J .S. Bean and wife, of Hart- pied blm no more than twelve hours marry?" Chicago, III., April 9. A merry ford, are the guests of relatives at both to compose and score. Mr. Felix Shaver and daughter, that It sees Itself In advance beaten Mary, of Hartford.vlslted his daugh- In an unequal economic condition birthday dinger, tendered her by her this place. It Is told of Donizetti that he wroto From a news Item It seems that a faMr. Robert Glasscock, of Clover-por- t, the Instrumentation of nn entire opera ter, Mrs. Whlttaker, of this place, and loses faith In the benevolence nine children, terminated Michigan lawyer has found a new of the Intentions of the Government. tally for Mrs. Ernesta Enehrlng, was the guest of his parents, within thirty hours. On the morning Sunday. way to break a will. One of his "In the practice of professions, It who laughed herself Into a state of Mr. and Mrs. James Glasscock, of in which Rossini's "Gazza Ladra" was Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Bennett, of clients spoke his will Into the trumto be produced not a single note of the Beda, spent Sunday night with their observes likewise that the natives exhaustion that resulted In her this place, last week. overture bad been written, and the pet of a phonograph and told his of the country are being relegated death. daughter, Mrs. Molllc Ellis, of this manager was In despair. He sought lawyer to put It away. The attorney Democrats Keep Promises. and that the Mrs. Enehrlng was given a place place, who has been very ill of rheu- to the background out the Indoleut composer, locked him was a little carelngg and let the The Maine Legislature, Democratbusiness Is controlled by Americans, at the head of the table at the home In one of the rooms of La Scnla and thing drop to the floor with a crash. matism, but is better now. and that, as In the case of the sur- of her daughter, Mrs. A. Boos. It ic In both branches, has just ad- declared he should have neither food Miss Fllydla Foster, of Nocreek, journed after a session lasting thir- nor freedom until the overture was veyors, there have been efforts to was her birthday. Hear that hen cackling out In the opened a spring school at Chapman's teen weeks, during which every completed. Rossini set to work with a deny to the latter the practice of the A Joke was sprung by tho youngback yard? Sounds rather discor- schoolhouse Monday. pledge that had been made by the will and to such purpose that profession in what relates to an of- est member of the family. Mr. and Mrs. Ves Shown, of this sometimes, dant and was written and rehearsed beOther members of the family re- Democrats In last fall's campaign but It really has a whole lot to do place, are visiting their daughter, fice of the Government. fore tbo evening performance. "The gravest defect of the present covered themselves, but Mrs. Eneh- was substantially kept. with reducing the high cost of liv- Mrs. Will Crabtree, of tho WashingMozart was another genius who fresystem is founded In the lack of rlng would burst out ing nowadays, especially since Con- ton neighborhood, this week. afresh until FIVE DRUNKEN MEN BURNED quently needed the spur of eleventh. confidence In the capacity of the na- she became hysterical. gress Is expected to pass a bill forMr. J. P. Foster and wife, of When phyTO DEATH AS THEY SLEEP h6ur work. Though at 1 In tho morning not a note of the overture to "Don eggs bidding the sale of spent Sunday with J. W. Fos- tives, who are prevented from de- sicians arrived Mrs. Enehrlng was veloping themselves. The central ax- dying. over three months old. ter and family here. Cairo, III., April 9. Charles Kel Giovanni" had been set down, yet Mole of the administrative organism rely and his father, Joseph Kelly, of zart finished It before he went to Our neighbor town, pf Fordsvllle .BUSINESS FAILURES IN table at his usual hour. Durvolves In such a way that It leaves GOSHEN. Utlca, N. Y., and James Thompson ing the long hours consumed by li'as a heW paper, the Argonaut, April 10. Mrs. J. S. Chlnn, who are dead from Sftl'TIf ATLANTIC STATES to tho FIllpinGs tt6 6pportunlty for burns received while t it Is suld that the muslcan's practice In the conduct of public af- has been very sick, Is Improving sleeping in a box car last night. A with Messrs. Webb Vllllam66n and him nwake by reading fairy J. R. Meador as editors. It is a The fourteen Southern States In fairs through means of direct con- slowly. fourth occupant of the car. James stories to him. sheet, and the aggregate reported total liabil- tact with the methods of action and Mr. Hood Harrison, of Beaver Ryan, Is in a serious condition frqm One of the fastest composers that gives Its mission as "Tho news of ities of $9,85G,031 as compared their difficulties. If It be consider- Dam, was the guest of Mrs. A. S. ever lived was Trotere. tbo writer of the burns. songs. Ohio, Tlreckenrldge and Hancock with $8,068,352 In 1910. Of these ed that the basis of the policy fol- Chlnn Sunday. Tho men, who were on their way verge Some of tho composer's feats on the marvelous. It is said, for Quite a crowd gathered ot Mr. from Memphis to counties." We wish It much suc- fourteen States Maryland, Dela- lowed In the Philippines Is the preptheir homes In example, that ho actually wrote cess In its field of labor. Sunday afternoon. New York, ware, Virginia, Georgia, Alabama aration of the Filipinos for tho ex- Will Stevens' entered the car after of "In Old Madrid" and had ercise of the powers of an Independ- All reported a good time. Those drinking heavily and accidentally Dr. Hooker Washington, the ne- and the District of Columbia redropped It Into the letter box within' Misses Ada Miller, set the car afire. The Kellys died eight minutes of liabilities, while ent government, It Is not seen how present were: gro educator who had his wool ported reduced the time ho had taken North Carolina, under the present system such a re- Clemmle Myers, Blanche and Ethel roughed up with a club In the hands West Virginia, and Thompson succumbed up his pen. This would be remarkable-merelmay be obtained. Richeson, Alice Chlnn, Messrs. Joe last night. as showing his dexterity and' of an Irate husband In New York a South Carolina, Florida, Mississip- sult agility, to say nothing of the labor of "For example.nearly all the chiefs Griffin, Calvin Moseley, of Hartford, few weeks ago, has purchased a pi, Louisiana, Tennessee and Kenthe composition Itself. Double Trnredy In Breathitt. property on tucky reported increased liabilities. of bureaus are Americans, as are and Wesley Stevens, of Render. magnlllcent residence One of Schubert's friends tells a Jackson, Ky., April 10. Anso Mr. Lee Chlnn, of Beaver Dam, Long Island and will have ns his Alabama made, perhaps, tho most their principal assistants and local notable gain, Its liabilities being agents. The best education would visited his mother here Sunday .af- White, who shot and killed Jason story Indicating that composer's raneighbors the richest people of that pidity of workmanship. Ho bad left Deaton here Sunday, died as compared with be that which places tho Filipinos ternoon. rich community. He's rich and can only $4G3,3G9 Schubert absorbed In Goethe's ballad' In contact, by virtue of the duties Rev. Virgil Elgin, of Hartford, of wounds received in the duel. It "The Erl King." X)n hi return In n few afford It. His neighbors, being also $1,128,532 In 1910. of their offices, with a knowledge of was tho guest of Mrs. J. S. Chlnn Is claimed that White was shot minutes he found the musician swift-lNumber. rich, can of course afford this sort 1911. 1910. the methods and practical difficul- Thursday and dined with Mr. Al twice before ho fired at Deaton. putting on pnper tbe- notes Inspired' of thing. Judge D. B. Redwlne, who Is hold-ln- e by tho poem, and within an hour there Maryland 55 54 ties In the public service. The same bert Ch Inn's family. ' Tho Republicans of Kentucky Delaware court here, has announced he had been composed that great song the 7 10 treatment Is not accorded to AmeriMr. Billy Chlnn, of Taylor Mines, special grand Jury world has admired ever slpre. Edwin 9 cans and Filipinos In the civil ser- spent Saturday with Mr. J. S. Chlnn. will Bummon have called a State convention to be District of Columbia.. 18 Tarrlsse in Chicago Tribune. 10G 94 vice. held In Louisville on July 8th to Virginia Mr. Herbert Chlnn and wife, of, to Investigate tho double tragedy. The Americans are promoted 44 nominees for State offices West Virginia . choose 22 more rapidly than the Filipinos In Hartford, spent several days last Nptlce. Deep, but Dry. G9 59 and formulate a platform. By all North Carolina the same office. The increase Of vtbek "with h'ls sick toother here. "Lincoln, himself a superb writer." Te clnelng convention will ha luld a college .. 28 2 means the Democrats should beat South Carolina Filipino employees each year Is not professor, "could not held the fith Sunday In this month MAXWELL. 56 50 them to It In tho matter of n State Florida apparent." at Clear Run Church, An organ ttand tedious writing In others. Ho March 10, 1911. Out prayer 101 convention to enunclato a platform Georgia 87 anco condemned for its tedlousness a TN A DREAM FATHER SAW meeting at New Bethel Is progress- will be furnished. Everybody In Greek history, whereupon a diplomat 62 71 of principles for our candidates to Alabama vited, choirs and singers especially. took blm to SON HURT rROVED TRtfE ing n'lcelv. task. 49 60 run on. It should be an asscmblago Mississippi c Tho author ot that history. Ur. Mr. and Mrs. Walter "Watson A rare treat for the speaks and not Louisiana 38 50 where Democracy President." saldjk diplomat "Is ono Pittsburg, Pa... Anrfl '9. Alfre'd Went to Owensboro Friday and re- public. 100 92 just one or two candidates. And It Tennessee of tbe profoundest scholars of the age. "Morton, of Birmingham, 46 England, turned Sunday. 39 should be held several weeks beforo Kentucky William Thum, a Socialist, a mil Indeed, It may be donbted dreamed on the 'night of February Mrs. Clemmle Calboon and Mrs. lionaire, and the inventor of sticky man of our generation whether any our State primary on July 1. has plunged 27 that hn saw his son In on acci- Marvin Wright aro very 111. Total 779 fly paper, has been elected Mayor of more deeply in the sacred fount 699 of The Hartford Republican is casdent and terribly maimed. Morton 1 Mr. Forrest Bell and learning." Herman Pasadena, Cal. N ing upon those papers which pubFor All Skin Diseases hod not heard from his son, whom Barr went tot Owensboro Wednes"Yes, or come up drier," Mid Ua lished Gov. WHIson's- - announcement Dr. Bell's Antiseptic Salvo is tho ho believed to be In the vicinity of day. ' coin. ft that tho nomination and election of best. It cremv pnow white Pittsburg, in two years. 'e xMrs. Florn Watson went to Judge O'Rear would be a calamity ointment pleasant to uso and every We cannot central thevtinnrau Tho dream brought him Into comWednesday. T" to tho State, to retract the article--, dux is guaranteed, r rice z&c. At munication with his son Wllilam, of others, but a good life enables ae t Miss Bettle .Hayden went to lepUe teem Cate. claiming that tho Governor never all dealer. VMl i aged '22, who Is at the McKeeBport Owensboro Saturday. m Hartjord Herald said It. The Republican shows lack of political wisdom. Inasmuch as O'Rear seems to be the Republican's candidate against the field. It should welcome the publicity of Gov. Will- isons opposition as me oesi possioie thing that could happen to Its candidate. We take it that the Governor simply made one of his custom- Bin FEAWOFARTIST 52M000 MBTWUIII post-offic- to-d-ay s I 1 K- the-worl- on to-b- ever-increasi- high-salari- Tich-eno- ) , moss-backe- d, few-hour- six-colu- ' st to-da- y V fifty-four- th tho-musl- c nerve-rackin- g k, cold-stora- st ' this-tas- k wlfo-kep- four-pag- e, four-colum- n the-scor- e to-da- y, y h ht y - -- muslc-lovln- ', . 1 , 1 Llver-mo-- I -- appreciate it Send The Herald the WEWSe wffl . S DD E FOR ill I We want Efi! to thank the ladies for their presence at our Millinery Opening Saturday. We certainly appreciate the many compliments received during the day, and feel well paid for our hours of labor spent getting out and arranging our stock. Our rush 'has Now a word of . already begun. warning. Easter comes late! V I Everybody Will Want a New Hat! So oblige us by coming early. We want to please you, and by you taming at once, we can better serve you. Thanking you again for your presence and anticipating an early call, we hope you will always boar in mind that it pays to trade with a house that saves you money jCQgM&1&l9 Hertford, a Kentucky- - ZROOXZESTGi-- I A ' . Ng...How About That Leaky Roof?... $ . ' Has the roof on your residence or out buildings been damaged or blown off by the recent hard winds? If so, ybu can't afford to leave it in this condition. Let us help you replace it by giving you special valRubber Roofing ues in our per square, nails and ceat $1.40 ment included. 2-P- ly CO t. Illinois Central Kallroad Time ble at Beaver Dam, Ky. Ta- fr South Bound. North Bound. A Guaranteed 14k Solid Gold a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. No. 1324:05 No 12212:28 p.m. No. 101 2: 48 p.m. Fountain Pen, only $1.00. Ohio County Drug Co. No. 1022:48 p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. J. E. Williams. Agt. k Miss Nella E. Smith, of South Carrollton, was In Central City a Flowers and Flower Pots for sale short time last week. 13tf by E. T. Williams, Hartford, Tnko your Produce of all kinds to Mr. W. M. Fair is in Louisville Schroader's Grocery and get the purchasing goods for Fair & Co. highest market prices for it. 13tf Hon A. S. Bennett, of Louisville, For Sale; Town property, vacant is visiting relatives in the county. y dwelling. lots, cottages and two-stor- If you want the Latest and Newest and Best in Spring Dress Goods, visit Carson & Co. Hartford, Ky. WANTED Two girls to help We are headquarters for Seed with cooking and housework. AdPotatoes. Prices the lowest. dress Dr. L. B. Bean, Hartford, Schroader's Cash Grocery. Ky. 13tf 13tf i ' You can And all the newest styles S. Bennett, Secretary Hon. Alvis' in men's and boys' Hats at Carson & of the Republican State Executlvo Go's. Committee, Louisville, was In town fAH persons owing mo will pleaso Friday. .call and make settlement. Mr. andMrs. L. T. Hammond and -E. W. FORD, M. D. f. 9tf ' Miss Ethel Hammond, of Horton, men, j Our stock K ' boys, ladles of Oxfords foris com- -, paid' The Herald an appreciated call and children Monday. Carson &. Co. plote. Mr. Wm. Vanover and wife, of Dra. S. W. Crowe and W. M. War- Owensboro, have been the guests of V den, Centertown, were in Hartford relatives in and near Hartford the . "Friday. past week. " ) Another big shipment of now and Judge L. Reid, Rockport; C. L. nofiby Clothing just received at Car- -' Elliott,1 city; Amos Shown, Hart " " Bon'&'Co'B. ford, route 3; S. T. Brown, Center-town- '; VAnsel Wilson, Horton; F, W. r1 Mrs R E Haynes and daughter. Acton, Hartford, route 1, were iiWornlrl n nlaasant Call Satur-- among- The Herald's callers SrJS ' -- Mr. M. F. Tlchenor, Centertown, was a pleasant caller Wednesday. A. C. YEISER & CO., J ' - - Wiz? 4- The Ohio Circuit Court will con traded Illness of stomach trouble. vene In court hall next Monday for He was 61 years old at the time of the April term. his death and leaves a wife and nine boys and two Mr. Sidney Dodson and family, of eleven children all of whom were at his bed-BiSunny-dal- e, girls Beaver Dam, have moved to when the end came, except Mr. where they will make their fuJohn "Taylor, of Hartford. The deture home. ceased was a farmer and a highly Leave your Laundry at my Grocery. esteemed gentleman. His remains Domestic finish. Work Guaranteed. were Interred Monday In the Taylor Called for and prompt delivery. cemetery on the farm. 'Phone 140. Iter's Grocery. All members of Hartford Lodge Just received a fine lot of Pound of Odd Fellows are requested to be Prints. In checks, grays, blues and light colors. Don't delay coming present at the regular meeting next Friday night, as there will bo work too long. Carson & Co. In the initiatory degree. A program Mrs. Ella D. Boone, of Philadel- will also bo arranged for celebra phia, arrived in Hartford Monday tion of the 92d anniversary of the and Is visiting her sister, Mrs. Felix, order, April 22d, at the hall here. on Walnut street. Please do not fall to attend. W. P.. HEDRICK. N. G. The Sunday School has been re organized at Marvins Chapel church, Mr. John C. Barnard, one of Unnear Sunnydale, .with Mr. Ernest D. cle Sam's veterans, who has been at Duke superintendent. Bowling Green the past few months Messrs. L. P. Loney and George taking a special course in a busiLewis, of Owensboro, visited rela- ness college, was In Hartford and tives in Hartford and the county the county a few days last week but Saturday and Sunday. for San left almost Immediately Francisco, Cal., where he will board Mr. T. S, Marks and family have the steamer Korea next Tuesday for moved from the Hardwick property the Philippines. He will land at on Mulberry street to the Barrass Manila, P. I., and his work residence on East Union street. In the civil service, In which he has For Sale, Farms All sizes, from served the Government eo faithfully 6 to 300 acres. We can please you In years gono bv. Mr. Barnard is If you want to buy land. ono of Uncle Sam's most trusted A. C. YEISER & CO., employes. Hartford, Ky. The basket ball games at Dr. Messrs. John J. and Lem H. Bean's Opera House last Saturday were the night between rival teams of girls of Louisville, guests of their mother, Mrs, Jenpl? and also of boys were very InterestT. McHenry, here flaturday and Sun ing and highly entertaining to tl day, large crowd present. The girls were befitting For sale garbed In pretty costumes , Old Papers, Lots of 'Em game, and the boys were also offlce. To go on the at The Herald In regulation athletic suits. shelves or under carpets or for blast- attired large Miss Winona Stevens was the uming purposes. Fiv6 cents pire for the girls and Mr. Ney Fospackage. tf ter for the bovs. In the young laBorn to the wife of Mr. A. K. An- dles' game the Crickets beat the derson, Clay street, last Friday, a Spiders by a score of 1C to 8, and fine girl. Mother and child getting the game of the Blues and the Reds along nicely, and as for Karl, "he's hoys resulted In a score of 20 all right." to 9 in favor of the former. Mrs. Paul Woodward, of Houston, Texas, is the guest of her parents IMPROVEMENT OF THE HARTFORD COURT HOUSE and other relatives In and near Hartford. She will remain .about At a regular meeting of the Ohio six weeks. County Fiscal Court In Hartford Mr. H. E. Mlschke and family last week, the magistrates appointhave moved from the Tweddell ed a committee to get estimates on property on Union street to the the probable cost of a much needHeavrln and Barrass property on ed addition to the court house here Washington street. at Hartford. The committee Is com Miss Stella Brlzcndlne, of Little posed of Messrs. W. S. Tinsley, C. Bend, Ky., who had been at the bed- E. Smith, J. S. Glenn and C. M. side of her grandmother, Mrs. Sal-li- e Barnett. The plan Is to build a Thomas, who has been quite HI, addition to the east end has returned home. oftbe court house, full width and Mrs. L. O. Bennett, Hartford, height of the present structure, route 3, Gertie and Janle Bennett, hallway continuing with the Beda, Ethel Davis and Elsie Ben through the middle. The two low nett, city, paid The Herald a pleas er rooms on either side would be ant call Saturday. made absolutely fireproof, for the Make a purchase and ask for storage of the county books and rec tickets for a chance on cither a Din ords, while the upper rooms would ner or Chamber Set, to bo GIVEN bo entered from the rear of the AWAY FREE; Saturday, April 2 2d, largo court room proper andalso at the Ohio County Drug Co. from a lower stairway, and divided Mrs. U. S. Carson and two chil up for the use of juries, witnesses dren, Masters Joseph and William and other Important purposes. The were the guests of Mrs. whole to be finished up In the most Carson, Carson's mother at Sunnydale substantial way. The pressing need for such an adfrom Saturday until Monday. dition to Ohio county's court house Mr. Marvin Taylor, of the Wysox Is apparent to anyone who will take neighborhood, who has been attend a glance at the present surroundIng school here for the past two ings. Thero Is at present no pro weeks, was taken ill and compelled tection whatever against fire, and a to return to his home Sunday. blaze of only a few minutes would Floral design book of F. Walker In all likelihood destroy the large & Co., of Louisville, and can furstacks of records which aro n con nish floral designs for funerals and stant and increasing part of the special occasions. county's equipment. Tho business nf the county and court Is constantE. T. WILLIAMS, ly Increasing, and this, of course, 13tf Hartford, Ky. necessitates moro room to provide Messrs. and McDowell Foglo The conDouglas D. Felix, who are attend- for the accumulation. veniences of our court house are at ing the Kentucky State University, Lexington, will arrive home Friday present very meager. The crowding to spend Easter with their parents has becom verv Irkfome. both to ofllclals and those who have busihere. ness In the courts. The risk of Mr. Arthur Davis and Miss Janic safetv and the lack of convenience Smith, of the Taffy neighborhood, Is becoming more apparent every were married at the residence of da". Mr. A. Grlgsby, In Hartford, last The cost of such an addition Wednesday, Judge R. R. Wedding would be very nominal compared to officiating. the lasting good It would do. and Messrs. L. R. Goodall and son, E. every public spirited citizen In the A. Goodall, Centertown; T. N. Dan- county should be In favor of It. iel, Olaton, route 2; G. B. Likens Notice. and Judge W. B. Taylor, city, and All persons having claims against were Owensboro, Wm. Vanover, among The Herald's callers Friday. Dr. Joe T. Miller, deceased, will pre-sothe samo to the undersigned Messrs. Shelby Rock, A. W. executors, at Hartford, Ky., on or Black, and Wit Johnson, of before the 3d day of May, 1911, Hartford, route ; J. C. Bennett, properly provon as required by law, Centertown, route 1; F. P. Salmon, or they will be forever barred. Hartford, route 5; and Dr. H. J. All persons knowing themselves Bell, city, wero callers at The Her- Indebted to said decedent will please ald offlce Saturday. com'e forward at onco and settlo Messrs. F. S. Tlchenor and W. T. their accounts and save cost. This April 3, 1911. Wlthrow, Smallhous; J. C. Barnard, D. G. MILLER, Beaver Dam; J. L. Lee, Olaton, ELIZABETH S. MILLER, route 1; Weaver Hocker and M. D. Ashby, Centertown; J. H. Monroe, Executors of the last will of Dr. Joe T. Miller, deceased. 14t4 Horton, and Fred Cooper, city, were among our callers Thursday. , For Sale. Mr. Simon , Taylor, father of "Whlto Plymouth Rocks. Good' Messrs. John and 'Ben Taylor, the layers. Bred from prizo winners. barberB of Hartford, died 'at his res- Stock and eggs for sale. idence near 'Birdseye, Ind. early MURRAY A. HUDSON, last Sunday morning, after a pro- - 12m3-- p McHenry, Ky. two-weeks er Mc-Hen- ooooooooooooooo BAPTIST CHURCH. O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Prayer meeting Wednesday oven ing at 7:30 o'clock. Teachers meeting Thursday ev enlng at 7:30 o'clock In the Baraca room. The Baraca banquet will be held Saturday evening, In the Masonic and K. of P. banquet hall. Sunday School session at 9:45. Dr. E. W. Ford, Supt. Morning worship at 11 o'clock and evening worship at 7:45. Pastor Bruner will preach at Render Friday evening and Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. o I Mikes Home Biking Easy de KW.IOmiO MTrrHORIST CHURCH. o I POWDER Tho only baking NO ALUM.HO Easter services next Sunday at 11 Sermon by the pastor on "Eternal Life." At this' hour the following anthems will be rendered by the choir: "I Am the Resurrection," "The Bells of Eastertide" five parts. Preaching also at 7:30 p. m. The a. m. public cordially vices. Quni Absolutely Pure mado from Royal Grapo Cream of Tartar powder LIME PHOSPHATE invited to all ser ooooooooooooooo MARRIAGE LICENSE. O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Arthur Davis, Hartford, route 5, to Mary J. Smith, Hartford, route 5. A. T. Fogle, McHenry, to Jessie D. Oliver, Taylor Mines. V. T. Garrett, Nelson, Ky., to Maybelle Randolph, Rockport. M. Foy, to Clemmle M. Leach, White Pun. Render, to Robert E. Millard, Anna May Deck, Linton, Ind. John M. Milan, Narrows, to Lilllo E. Maxwell, Narrows. C. W. Wallace, Cromwell, to Har riett S. Sanderfur, Cromwell. pr teily Meeting of A. S. of E. The Ohio County Union of A. S. of E. met In regular quarterly session at court hall, Hartford, last Friday and Saturday. There was a fairly good attendance and much good was accomplished. The wool and wheat growers each held an In teresting session. Tho poultry eom- nlttce reported ft pool of .1,260 chickens sold, the delivery to be made at Beaver Dam (Thursday). Tho price received was not given out. (Saturdav), aftprnoon, In he Prof. T. J. Smith, of Hartford College, mado n splendid talk on the agricultural Interests and urged a closer union of the farmers. The president, S. L. Stevens, was pres ent and presided at each session, while the secretary, Henry M. Plr-tl- e, was likewise at his desk. 20-fo- ot two-stor- y Another Hung .lilt v. The case of Com'th vs. Herbert King, charged with a breach of tho peace, was tried In Police Court jesterday. After hearing the evidence and argument of counsel pro and son, the Jury being unable to agree, were discharged and the case This case grew out of continued. episode, mention the For Sale. A carload of pood Northern White of which was made In these columns at the time. The Jury stood three Oats, at 50c per bushel. for conviction and three for acW. E. ELLIS. quittal. In a previous trial, tho 14t4 Tho Produce Man. Jury also disagreed. JUMPED TO II1S DEATH FOR THE GIRL HE LOVED Notice to Clod It ms. Ohio Circuit Court, Kentuckv. Owensboro. Ky.. April 10. The A. E. Pate. Assignee, &c, Plaintiffs, body of tho young man who Jumpvs. Order ed from a Louisville, Henderson Hinrlet Ford, et al.. Defendants. St. Louis passenger train, known as On motion of J. H. Patton, et al., the "Cannon Ball," shortly nfter 4 defendants herein. It Is ordered that o'clock yesterday morning at Maceo, this action be referred to F. L. Fea station ten miles east of Owens- lix, Master Commissioner of the boro, has boon Identified as that of Ohio Circuit Court, to audit and setEzra Martin, of Frederiekstown, tle the accounts of A. E. Pate, AsMo. signee, Ohio County Bank, and to Martin was enroute to Maceo to advertise and report on claims bo married at 10 o'clock this morn- against Ohio County Bank, assigning to Miss Eva Foster. All ar- ed, by Saturday, the Gth day of tho rangements for the wedding had regular April. 1911, term Ohio Cirbeen completed. He boarded the cuit Court, being the 22d day of train at St. Louis, but It Is not April, 1911. thought he learned that the train Given under my hand as Clerk of did not stop at Maceo until the sta- the Ohio Circuit Court, this AprU So 5th, 1911. tion had almost been reached. anxious was Martin to join the Copy Attest: young woman to whom he was soon E. G. BARRASS, to ho married that he hurried to the Clerk of Ohio Circuit Court. steps of the train, which was runPursuant to the above order, all ning at a rate of fortv-flv- c miles an parties having claims against tho hour. He had his suitcase, contain- OHIO COUNTY BANK, assigned, ing his wedding clothes, in his hand. are hereby notified to file snme with As tho houses at tho station came tho undersigned Commissioner, at Into view In the carlv dawn, MarMn his ofilce In Hartford, Kentucky, Jumped from the trnin. properly verified, on or before April It wns two or three hours before 22d, 1911. his bruised and mangled body war Any creditor falling to present his found bv men walking along the claim by the time named herein track. His body was picked up and shall bo deemed to have waived his removed to the railroad station right to any part of said assigned Tho Coroner was summoned and an estate. F. L. FELIX, Inquest was held, with a verdict to Master Commissioner, the effect that he came to his death 15t2 Ohio Circuit Court. by Jumping from tho train. A telegram was received from the young Subscribe for The Herald. 1 n year. man's father. Instructing that the bodv bo sent to Missouri for burial Martin was 34 years of ago and often visited Miss Foster at Maceo The young woman Is almost pros trated as tho result of the fatal ac cident. Police Court. Police Judge C. M. Crowe hid e civil suits on his docket to be disposed of when tho Hartford fifty-fiv- ff nt Police Court was convened In regu- lar session last Monday morning. Notice to Claimants. All persons having claims against the estate of S. F. Jones, deceased, are hereby notified to present same to mo, at my residence, one and one-ha- lf miles west of Centertown, Kentucky, properly proven, on or before May 1 1911, or they will bo forever barred. All persons Indebted to the estate by note or account must settle at once, as the estate has to be wound up. J. R. ADDINGTON, Admr., 13t4 Centertown, Ky. 2-- GROWN AND BRIDGE WORK For tho refined and dainty woman is what she demands now. Americans are on dentistry, and aro not satisfied with anything but tho acme of perfection In dental work. Teeth extracted with as llttlo pain as possible. Children given careful attention. Special attention to plate work and ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Work dono at lowest prices. to For Rent, front room in basement, 20x20 feet. Well lighted. Terms reason able. , For further particulars call on or address, F. L. Felix. A DR. H.J. BELL, Building, Offlce In Republican HARTFORD, - KY. jFmmtIQIR!1 llWW ''''' " VT'J)"WHItfVI. .ti'lCMlll"''1 y,'frff3?prr rTTp" .r-''ir- tf - r'f "5r - -- ff,; "W5& If The Hartford Herald fc AVTONKSUAY M. AIMUIj 12 II. & K. KAIMIOAD TIME TA- BLE AT HAKTFOnD, KY. . .Time tabic effective Sunday, Deo. 4tli,contnlns the 'following schedule: No. 112 North Bound due 7:20 n. in. Dally except Sunday. No. Ill North Bound due 3:10 p. m. Dally eveept Sunday. No. lin South Bound due 8:55 a. m. Dally except Sunday. No. 11.1 South Bound due 1:10 p. m. Dally except Sunday. II. i:. MISCIIKE, Agt. ooooooooooooooo tlUlYlti EXPLODED an BYJfflHLSITT In the Senatorial Bribery Investigation. REVELATIONS FAR - REACHING General Manager of International Harvester Company Is Accused. LOIU.MKIt CASE TO THE FBqXT Springfield, 111., April C Clarence S. Funk, general manager of the International Harvester company, before the State Senate bribery Investigation committee, exploded tho biggest sensation of the Lorlmer bribery case. Funk testified that Edward Hlnes, a millionaire Chicago lumberman, asked him, as manager of the harvester company, to contribute ? 10,000 to reimburse certain men who had put up the $100,000 "slush" fund to elect to the United Lorlmer William States Senaie. Funk further testified that Hlnes named Edward Tllden, a wealthy Chicago packer, as collector for this fund to reimburse the men, who, as Hlnes was quoted as having said, had "underwritten" the election of Lorlmer. Mr. Funk declared the object he had In giving this testimony was to save H. H. Kohlsatt, publisher of from a the Chicago Record-Heralpossible Jail sentence as tho result of Kohlsaafs refusal to give certain Information demanded by the committee last week. The witness said he had given Kohlsaat the Information In confidence upon which the Chicago publisher had based his editorial. The publication of the editorial, charging the use of money in Lorltner's election, resulted in Kholsaat being called as a witness. Funk testified he xoluntnrlly released Kohlsaat from the pledge of confidence. ocTho disclosures made by Funk at a special unexpectedly curred meeting of tho investigation comy mittee called after the arrival both Kohlsaat and Funk. of Kohlsaat preceded Funk on the rewitness stand nnd told of being pledge. leased from his According to Funk's testimony, Funk met Hlnes in tho Union League club, of Chicago. over, "Well, wo put Lorlmer down at Springfield, but It cost us about $100,000 to do It," Funk testified Hlnes told him. "We had to act quickly when the time came, so we put up the money. Now wo are seolng some of our friends, nnd If about ton of us put up about $10,000 apiece, that will clean It up." Funk Eaid Hlnes wanted the Har-- x ester company to put up nbout $10,000, but Funk refused to have an thing to do with tho proposition. He asked Hlnes why ho wanted the harvester company to help pay for the election, to which Hlnes replied: "Well, you pcoplo are Just as much interested as any of us in having the right kind of men at Washto-da- y, d, to-da- crtheless. It Isn't exactly the news- A UNIQUE IDEA OF paper or Its editorial policy that moths dislike. It's the Ink used In NEW CflLEHDAH PUN printing the type that makes tho moths stay away. That Is why, In bags and the absence of moth-proWould Simplify Memorizing of cedar chests, some housewives pack wrap their furs and woolens away Dates, But Churches Might ped In 'newspapers at tho end of the Oppose It. winter season and find that Is a sat isfactory way of preserving them against the ravages of moths. There New York, April 8. The opinIs nothing better than old newspaions of university authorities In pers for use under tho carpets for America are being sought by tho the same reason. backers of a new British scheme for the revision of the calendar. The plan as outlined is as follows: A BACHEI.OB OIUL'S O The first day of the year shall bo KKFIjKCTIONS O O a blank holiday, called "New Year's Day," which shall not count as a Oh, yes, man was mado In the Im da yof the week, of the month or of age of tho Lord, In spite of what he the quarter. This leaves 3G4 days for the rest of the year, a number looks like In .evening clothes. to tell which Is hard that divides exactly Into quarters It is dlfflcult optim of 91 days each and Into 52 weeks est to endure In a husband of seven days each. Each quarter egotism or rheumatism. ism, American women appear to be di would be divided Into two months of vided Into three classes the woman 30 days each and one month of 31 who belongs to a club, the woman days. This revision would make a calwho belongs to a dub and the wo endar In which a given date would man who belongs to Beelzebub. because your hus alwaxs fall on the same day of the Don't worry band begins offering frivolous ex week. "It would be of the greatest concuses for going out nights; wait un til he ceases bothering to offer any venience In many ways," says Prof. Harold Jacoby, of Columbia Uniat all. From little flirtations tall heart versity. "A single calendar would serve aches grow. A black band on a young man's you for a lifetime, and after a few coat sleeve has the same alluring ef years of practice with It you would fect on a woman as n "marked become so accustomed to It that you would hardly need to refer to the down" sign on a bargain counter. The day on which An English nobleman either mar printed form. American heiress and "does" the first of each month fell would ries an for her or marries a chorus glVl and soon be unconsciously memorized. "But there Is also a vital objecgets "done." The woman who Is "wedded to the tion. The odd day, which Is to be muse of suffrage"- must find it rath- called New Year's Day, really means er unsatisfactory not to be able to that the Sundays on either side run her fingers through Its hair and would be eight days apart. This of the weep on Its coat lapel now and then. would involve a violation and you At the altar every man exchanges Fourth Commandment, rosecolored spectacles for a magni would find tho churches against It. As soon as the clergy realize that fying glass. Life without love Is as flat and such a change would mean such a tasteless as a dinner without appe violation you will hear their proHelen Rowland. tite. tests." of ooooooooooooooooo will undertake to attain united action by tho States of Now York and New Jersey to prohibit storage of explosives in the upper part of New York' harbor. According to the Prosecutor's Information, there are tons of dynamore than thirty-si- x mite on storago scows within a few hundred feet of tho Statue of Liberty. Tho official Investigation of the explosion of FebruCommunlpaw ary 1 has been practically completed by tho Jorsoy City authorities, and tho findings will bo submitted to the grand Jury. Failed in Health mother died six years ago," writes Miss Ruth Ward, .of Jenjeyville, 111., "and left me to care for six children. I had never been strong; and this, with the shock of her death, was too much forme. "I failed in health. I was tired all the time and did not want to go anywhere, nor care for company. I had pains. the headache all the time and such bearing-dow- n very dear friend advised me to take Cardui, as it "A had done her so much good, so, I commenced to use it and now I am in good health." MMy -- Ji a i OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO POEMS YOU'LL ENJOY. O O O The Hcrold's Spcclnl Selections. O OO THE MARVEL OF SCIENCE. O O O O J M? CARDUI a The Woman's Tonic "V Write to: Ladies' Advisory Tom Jones was a drunkard, a horrible souse, He used to get full every night, But now he no longer desires to carouse, For the doctors have fixed him all right, They bored a round hole In the top of his head And took out a chunk of his Women's pains are relieved or prevented and women's strength is quickly restored, by Cardui,.the woman's tonic You yourself know best if you neea it, or not If you do need if, do not delay, but commence to use it at once. Every day of delay, only lets you slide further down the hill. Don't wait, then, but begin to take Cardui today, for its use, no matter how prolonged, cannot harm you and will surely do you good. Deri. lot Special Instruction!, andM-par- e Chattanooga Medidne Co., Chattanooga. Tern, book, "Home Treatment lor women," sent tree. brain; Now he boozes no more m m COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS .MEET AT HUNTINGTON Every Bottle Is Guaranteed. bottle of Dr. Bell's Is guaranteed to give satWhen the Grand Council of Unit isfaction In all throat and bronchial m meet at troubles. ed Commercial Travelers Huntington, in June, there is going to be the greatest aggregation of MOST BEUTIFUL WORDS IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE hustlers In that city, it has ever enat any time In its history. tertained A dictionary was offered In New The amount of advertising the city will receive by the meeting of this York aB a prize for the 25 most body will be lasting, and we under- beautiful words In the English lanHere are A lawyer won. stand that the business men are ral- guage. lying to the aid of the boys In their 21 of the words accepted from his efforts to make the meeting a suc- list: Melody, splendor, adoration, elocess. We trust the boys who travel will not be disappointed In their ef- quence, virtue, Innocence, modesty, forts to pull off the greatest meeting faith, joy, honor, radiance, nobility, love, divine, heaven, ever held In that city. It Is due the sympathy, purity happiness, Order of Commercial Travelers of hope, harmony, West Virginia, for everybody to do and liberty. The prize Is most appropriate. It what they can to help them In their desire to make the coming meeting will enable him to discover the word the "very best ever held," and. we chaste, which, together with Its usuprobably beauty, e business al concomitant, believe the men of thnt thriving city will think constitutes the most beautiful term language. St. as we do about tho matter. One In the English feature of the meeting Is to extend Louis nn invitation to the outside merTell Your Neighbors chants and buyers, In order that When In need of a cough medicine they, In a social way, may see how It to use Dr. Bell's the boys treat their friends when Is the best. Look for tho bell on the they come to see them. m Eery P'ne-Tar-Hon- ey wide-a-wak- Post-Dispatc- h. y. bottle. Itnrkiuhc or Kidney Pains. STATUE OK LIBERTY IS If you have pains In the back, uriIN CONSTANT DANGER diznary, bladder or kidney trouble, ziness and lack of energy, try Moth8. Declaring New York, April tho pleaser Gray's Aromotic-Leathat the Statue of Liberty Is in alant herb remedy. As a System regdanger of destruculator it has on equal. At Druggists, most constant tion from the accidental explosion, Samor by mail, SOc. Ask by, Proseple Free. Address The Mother Gray of dynamite stored near cutor Pierre Garven, of Jersey Citv. Co., Le Roy, N. Y. 14t4 No i f, to-da- y. It more easy to call up her mental face; they are more sure how she will act under given circumstances. croolc, THE FAMINE DISTRICTS Marriage is almost always fraught one of the As a porch-climbwith some surprises to the student best; of character. These surprises are But he's given back most of tho Of China Mothers Throw Away loosely described as changes; but swag that he took change In character Is so rare an Their Children in StarvAnd promised to pay for the rest; occurence, more especially In woFor the doctors pried open tho back men, that It should never bo re- ing Desperation. of hi skulJ garded a3 an explanation unless And scraped off a tumor or two; London Spectator. others fall. Washington, April 6. The UnitHe's a confidence man now, nnd Is An Easy Test. This fleeces a gull ed States transport Duford, bearing In ono Shake Allen's Foot-Eas- e By methods artistic and new, the relief supplies to the starving people of China, arrived at Shang- shoe and not in the other, and noSam Brown was a gambler. Ho hai Just the thing according-- to n cablegram tice the difference. used to go broke received by the officials of the Amer- to uso when rubbers or overshoes Playing faro or stub on tho wheel, and your shoes become necessary, ican Red Cross. But he can't touch a card now It Advices to the State Department seem to pinch. Sold everywhere, seems like a Joke from Shanghai and Nanking de- 25c. Don't accept any substitute.' When one thinks how he once scribe pitiful tales of the suffering Sample Free. Address, Allen S. Olmused to deal; sted, Lo Roy, N. Y. 14U of tho starving millions. For the surgeons did something beMr. Dostlck, f missionary, writEvidently on Impostor. hind his left ear, ing from Pochow, says the suffering "Did I understand you to say that So he couldn't take chances poor have reached the extreme of man was from Kentucky?" again;; A few months ago they misery. "Yes." Now he sticks to sure things, such were living on wheat bran. With "You must be mistaken. Ho Isn't as shoving the queer they have turned from Kentucky." this exhausted, Or robbing tho Overland train. to cooking leaves of trees and even "Yes, I am sure I heard someOh! science is surely a wonderful simple dry wheat chaff. where that ho was." Barefooted children, all but nakgraft "No, you're wrong. He's been ed on freezing cold days, pitifully here 10 minutes and hasn't boasted If the halt they tell us Is true; ' ' If you're caught with tho goods on, screaming: "I'm hungryl I'm hun- about It." street gry I" present a common just say you were daft, Can't Do Without It. And declare your propensities due scene. Herrln, III., April 1, 1911. Mothers, no longer able to pro To a wart or bunion inside of your Mr. F. L. Felix, Dear Sir: I envide food for their offsprings, throw head; Then the doctors will take you them away, probably in the frantic close check for Herald. Cannot do will force without it. Thanking you for all hope that compassion apart, And when they get through, you'll some one to rescue them. Men, a past favors, I remain as ever, farmYour friend, few months ago able-bodibe cured or be dead W. F. CHAPMAN. Either way you will get a fresh ers, havo been reduced to rags, shivering with cold and facing starva-start. J tion. Park Bridge. In the "Many have perished streets," said Mr. Dostlck, "but one Be Yourself. Insist on yourself: never Imitate. of tho saddest cases I have heard of Your own gift you can present every was that of a man who died last moment with the cumulative force of week near irie. Ho was so overa whole life's cultivation, but of the come wlt,h hunger that. In tho last adopted talent of another you have moments, he picked up clods of dirt only on extremporaneous, half posthem Into his mouth." session. Thnt which each can do best and crammed OF "A deaf ear must be turned to uono but his Mnkcr can teach blm. pleadings by those tryBOURBON POULTRY Where Is the master who could have these pitiful taught Shakespeare? Where Is the mas- ing to render assistance," continues CURE tho missionary, "because ter who could have Instructed Frank- the Washington or Bncon or New- amounts within reach are but a down the throat ol a saplnl lin or chicken, destroys the worm! ton? Every grent man Is unique. Do drop In the bucket.' " life. laves the IffTSSpwU and tew drops chick's drinking In the A that which Is assigned to you nnd you water cores and cannot hope too much or dare too MAItRIAGn AND lilBKHTY PREVENTS DISEASE much. Emerson. A COUHKCT SUMMING UP er to-da- y, ed ho takes morphine instead, Except when he's using cocaine. PITIFUL SCENES IN Bill Smith was a burglar, a regular 'ir f 9 paw ONE fiOP GOVERNOR FIXES DATE OF FIRST ELECTROCUTION Help For the Electrician. If you nro ever puzzUd In working with electric wires ns to which Is positive and which Is negative or whether tho current Is alternating there Is no ington." Tllden, company. Of Course He Denies. Chicago, III., April C. Edward mado a complete deHlnes nial of the charges contained In the testimony given before tho Senate bribery Investigation committee at He assorted ho Snrlncfleld had nover told C. S. Funk a "slush" fund had been used for Lorlmor's election and that he nover knew of any such fund existing or having been used. to-da- y. named by Hlnes as the handler of the "slush" fund, is tho president of the National Packing Frankfort, Ky., April 8. The first man to be put to death in the electric chair will be Shav Penman. Ho will dlo In the Eddyvllle penitentiary on May C. Gov. Wlllson has fixed that as the date for execution of the court's order, and "Kentucky's new method of putting to death condemned criminals will be given Its first trial. The death chair will be ready at that time, It is stated by the prison commission, and It Is 'regarded as unlikely that the Governor will grant a commutation of the sentence. Penman was convicted In Lincoln county for assaulting a child and after threats of mob violence, was tried and given the death penalty. The Lnw's Regular Course. Albany woman dying An aged without kln.left an estate of$17,5GG which in Its progress through tho courts has dwindled to $3,353. The law In this caso appears to havo taken Its regular course. Are You Like This? Tired all the time, not much good for anything, hardly able to drag around, just all run down. If you are, we guarantee our L will help you. It has helped many people around here who were in this condition. Now look here, just try one bottle of VINOL, and if you are not satisfied that it did you good, come back and get your money. It wijl be returned without question. That is a fair proposition and shows our faith in VINOL, and that we do not want your money unless you receive benefit. We know what we are talking about because we have sold VINOL for years, and have seen how much good it has done among our customers. VINOL is not a patent, secret nostrum, but an honest, tried and true body builder and strength crea-- ' tor of world-wid- e fame, delicious and easy to take. Come in today and start your cure at once. You s take no risk. T?or Sale by Hartford Drug Co., ' VI-NO- simpler method than the use of a potato. Cut the vegetable In half and Insert the ends of the wire Into the fresh body. About the positive wire a green stnln will at once appear, due to dissolved copper. If the current Is alternating 'the ends of both wires will stains. be surrounded by dark Chicago Tribune. On the Dock at Ostla. Cresar's wife snorted. "What's tho use of being above suspicion when they dig into your trunk Just tho same?" she cried. Indignantly mid' Herewith alio the customs charges. Good Imitation. I '. hear you Maggie Lady-Bu- g were on a regular toot lapt night! Yes, I was. I Willie Love-Bu- g slept in a garage on an automobile Liberty comes In such different ways! For women It come. most often through marriage. Nino women In ten havo more space after they are married for the exercise of their wills than they had before; therefore we can see more clearly what they really are. The most tyrannical husband cannot rob a woman of her authority over her Tho children and her household. man Is harder, tho mean woman i meaner than ever she was. Usuallv a 'married woman has 8 more marked character than her unmarried sister. Her friends find For the treatment of White Diarrhoea Inchlcb and Blackhead and other diseases In turkeys BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS HO EQUAL One SOc bottle makes 1 2 oallona of medicine. Sold by Z. Wilbur Mitchell, Beaver Dam, Ky. GILLESPIE BROTHERS, W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. AN OLD ADAGE SAYS. ..BUCKSMITH1NG.. . ii "A light purse Is a heavy carse" Sickness makes a light purse. The LIVER Is the seat of alae teaths of all disease. Work horn. Prompt Application. Physician First of all, you must stop worrying. I Patient Very, welj, doctor. won't give a hang whether your bill is paid or not. Horseshoeing A Specialty ii Tutt'sPills go to the root of the whole mat" ter, thoroughly, quickly safely and restore the actloa of the LIVER to normal condition. & V HARTFORD J Kentucky. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Hon- ey ' r - FOR FLETCHER'S The mere fact that moths cannot .. read Is no reason why they should detest newspapers, but they do nov- - Subscribe for Tho Herald. 91 a year. TO FORESTALL MOTHS USE FOlt OLD NEWSPAPERS Children Cry Children rCry C ASTORIA (Iacorporated) solid flesh to the body. ,, .. Take No Substitute Subscribe for The Hartford Herald. CASTORIA FOR FLETCHER'S Give tone to the system and For Cougha'and Colds. U 'll "mwyff )innnnmiinmw.n1ij)i w'jj n iwymi) mf " 'II " ')l'"l J' 1 OiNNER EPISODES. Odd Happenings That Helped to Spice the Meals. THE WORM THAT DIDN'T TURN It 8polled a Funny Story For a Wo- A STUDY OF NAPOLEON- r- " FREAK SHADOWS. RELIC OF ANTIQUITY. Mental Changes of the Fiery Ccrtlcsn Shown by His Chlrography. M )W , I J 'I' t man Whoso Pet Horror Is Anything That Wrlogles A Distracted Scientist and a Gastronomic Calamity. At n dinner nnrt.v ono nlzht mv host and 1 were In the midst of un Interesting conversation when 1 noticed, a movement In the laco centerpiece which lay under a pot of crowing tulips. The lace was pushed nslde. and straight" toward tno wriggled a fat red earthworm. If 1 have a pet horror It is for' anything that writhes. My host was nearlng the point of a funny story wheu I caught sight of that strango intruder on a dining table. lie reached the end of the story and laughed. 1 believe I laughed, but to this day I cannot; tell what that story was about. 1 sat watching the gymnastics of thnt lively specimen of fish bait. In forty seconds It was duo to tumble Into my Jap. There was no waiter near. The reptile was hidden from my host by a soup plate, tub man at my rigut was ubsorbed In conversation with a woman besldo him. The worm had almost reached the edge of the table when 1 had un Inspiration. I turned a red wineglass upside down, for the waiter was approaching with a napkin wrapped bottle. "Have you turned White Itlbboner?" asked my host. "For tonight 1 have." Where my voice came from I do not know; neither do I know how 1 ever sat out that meal listening to a host who tried his level best to entertain a dull guest and watching a frantic Ushworm try to break Its way out of Jail. Somehow growing plants on the dining table have gono out of favor In our bouse. A dear distracted old scientist I know keeps his wife on tbo anxious seat every moment when they dine out. She is prepared for any ridiculous thing be will do. No ono ever possessed Uncr breeding or gentler manners tbau the good old professor, but his (Its of abstraction are likely to descend on him at any moment. Ills itvlfo tells of one notable experience. "Ono night." sho says. "I lectured John all tho way home from a dinner. I was trying to make him understand that pato shells were intended to bo eaten. If It had been a caterer's meal I should have thought nothing about It. but our hostess was a fine cook, and sho had Just announced proudly that wo wero having some of Iter own puff paste. Everybody ate the pates except John. With the greatest care lie Kcoop"d out tho creamed chicken and left the shell. Ho was horribly distressed over it If I had only known, my dear.' he said, 'that the thing was Intended to . be eaten, that it was really food and sho made It. I should have shown my appreciation." "Remember It next time, then. 1 said. "A week later at another dinner JTnhn mm seated onnoslte me. I glanced at him curiously after the dessert came on. for lie seemeu to ue In ihn rlirnrci of n chokiuir lit. Imag ine, if you can. my horror. lie was trying to masticate tho paper caso oi a charlotte nisse. There was oniy ono thine I could do call him to order nt nnn would Imvn dona a child. I could not sit by cnlmly and watch him Wiol;r tn donth. Dinners are frequent ly stupid affairs, but that ono was not after I had explained tbo situation to a tableful of people. Fortunately Johns Is so brjlllant that his absontmlnded-nesis considered a natural adjunct Interesting and exhaustive studies have been made In France of Napoleon's chlrography. When a young mau Napoleon did not bnvo a bad hand, although, like some other great men, ho could never learn to spell. When ho was an artillery officer his wrltlug was simple and legible, as his life was simple and direct. Hut when the Corslcan cfaptaln Bonaparte distinguished himself at the siege of Toulon aud became the French General Bonaparte his wrltlm; took on what has been called "a furious Illegibility." Curiously enough. ' from that time there seems to bavfc been a gradual degeneration until, profoundly discour aged and utterly humiliated, ho scratched an undecipherable, misspelled scrawl of Rtilimlssloti to tho prince regent on July 14. ISIS. It Is said that tlila change from a simple to a confused writing began at n certain date namely, with a report, skillfully garbled, of the part ho took In what Carlyle called the "whiff of grapeshot that spoke from the steps of St. Itoch on the 13th Vendemairo" (Oct. G. 17031. The culminating eccentricity of his tortuous strokes' of the pen was exhibited In tho letter I. This showed plain ly tho mental changes of the man who would unhesitatingly declare war against the first comer, who would di vorce tho wife be loved, who would propose a kingdom of Haiti for Louis XVIII., who would freeze nearly a million men upon the steppes of Russia. This letter P .became of strango and abnormal form. It was excessive ly developed. For twenty years tho great general used this extravagant nnd. according to the Investigators, ac cusing letter, especially noticeable In his later unroyal signature, NP. Harper's Weekly. FORETOLD BY DREAMS. Two Remarkable Cases In Which Sleep Warnings Came True. "I dreamed that tbo ship wa3 In a heavy sea, that a big wavo came over her bows, pressed down upon her, and then she rolled over on her starboard side and disappeared." This Is not un extract from a story. It Is evidence, given on oath, during tho Inquiry at London Into the mysterious disappearance of tho Waratab, tho vessel which, on her second voyage, mysteriously disappeared In July, 1009, and has never been heard of since. And so impressed was the passenger with tho vision that ho left the vessel at Durban, from which point she continued on her III fated voyage. Thus ono more was added to tho extraordinary coincidences In which dreams have figured. Tho third Lord Waterford was nblo to verify a story of an extraordinary dream coming true. Talking one day with the landlord of the Inn In the village close to Curraghmore. a man rushed up and said there had been a murder on the hills. "Then It must be the little one." said the landlord, at which Lord Waterford. not unnatural ly, became very suspicious. Tho laud-lorproceeded to explain that In tho night be dreamed that two men had come to the Inn and that the taller of the two had murdered the shorter with a very curious knife. He told his dream to his wife, who laughed at him. But. to his horror, tho men he had seen while asleep camo to the Inn, and one used the curious knife to cut up his food. They left, nnd soon afterward news of tho murder arrived. Search was made for a tall man auswerlng to tho landlord's description, and one was quickly arrested. In prison he confessed be bad murdered his short companion. Pearson's Weekly. A Peculiar Phenomenon That Has a 8lmple Explanation. In tho crude oil producing regions In California there ure scores of largo ponds of this material. After belug pumped to the surface the petroleum is emptied Into depressions In the earth, where It remains for u time. Later the crude oil Is placed In barrels. In large metal cans or else In big reservoirs. These oil ponds nro known as "sump holes." There' Is one peculiar thing about these "sump holes," and that Is In the way of producing what are known as These are real "freak shadows." shadows, but notwithstanding this fact they are decidedly "freaky." If the sun Is brightly shining and a per son standi for a few moments on the margin of tho "sump bole" so that his shadow falls on the surface of the petroleum and he then quickly changes his position the dim shadow remains Just where It was originally cast. In other words, the "shadow does not follow the substance." This bay seem like a paradox, but'lt Is true. The Instant a person shifts his position his shadow Is again cast In ii new place, yet the former shadow The longer a remains unchanged. person stands In ono particular spot the longer will the former shadow bo visible. Hundreds of experiments have been made along these Hues, nnd every time the same results have been produced. The simple explanation for this phenomenon is that under tho hot sun gas Is. being constantly generated down In tbo body of tho petroleum, and It rises to the surface In tho form of little minute bubbles. So very small nro these bubbles that they nro scarcely visible to tho naked eye. Millions of these wee bubbles are rising to tho top all the time, when tho bubbles break nnd tho gas Is liberated, passing Into the air. Both the gas and bubbles nro so very supersensitive to the temperature that even one's shadow cast for a moment across them Is affected. Tho temperature Is lowered. Whenever the substance quickly changes position the shadow remains until the rays again warm up that spot and tho shadowy outllno slowly fades away. Of courso tho "freak shadow" may bo seen for only a very few seconds. Scientific American. A The Seal That fs So Often Used on Legal Documents. A most absurd thing connected with legal business Is the little piece of rod. NyNx?cx!cas?y green or blue papr or danb of sealing wax which we often place at tho end of n signature to a deed, will or other Important document. It is a very small thing In size, but one to which a great deal of Importance Is frequently given. It Is n relic of antiquity, and no plausible excuso can bo Invented for continuing Its use. Some of the more progressive states have practically abolished Its use by legislation, which deprives It of any technical legal significance. In others. however. It Is still used with all seriousness and solemnity, and an almost magical value Is given to It by dignified Judges that is little less than ridiculous A man died years ngo leaving part of his estate to another to enjoy while ho lived, with I he privilege of devising It at his death to others whom ho nilsht select by a writing under his "hind anil Keal." A writing was executed so devising the property, but It was contested by others Claiming the property upon the technical ground that the paper contained no seal after the signature nnd the devise was therefore void. A Io Philadelphia Judge closely scrutinized tho signature and nfter carefully listening to the arguments of lawyers decided that at the end of the signature there was an extra scroll or flourish made with tho pen with which tho signature was made and that this was sufficient In law to constitute a seal. Case and Comment. Business failures In the United States for tho week ending March 30 wero 2U0 against 233 the previous week, and 232 In the like week last year. THEY ALL ilfiKI It ro si h - Tho Kind You Ilavo Always Bought, and which has been, in uso for over 30 years, has homo tho signature- of and has hciMiinadcunuVr his pcr-,-Z Bonal supcnlsion sineo Its Infancy. X7&cc&4 Allow no ono in deceive you in this. but All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Experiments that trlilo with nmlendiniKertho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. i 1 Castor Oil, PareCastoria is harmless goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ngo is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays Fevcri.shncss. It cures Dinrrhwu and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. CASTOR What is substitute for a I A GENUINE Bears tho Signature of ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over TMCCCNTUH COMPANY, TT MUIIRM TttT, 30 Years. HtW VOK CITT. If, Every City and 0 Flno Watch and Jewelry Re- HA It I) VI C K, o v i: X S II () Hartford, Like Town in the Union. ceives It. Z It O Rq. u. ft I SOLD BY pairing. w.sv t, liiaui. iwtiujjiiuu . . it tut FLAME OF PAIN. to renins." I Itl . mood happens to seize him. Ono night after playing bridge wo niea out 10 uio dining room, where wo wero seated about tho table for supper, from tho corner where my husband sat came gales of laughter. Ho had turn-fe- d conjurer and was making everything disappear, from salt spoons to n renter rteonnter. When things wero fouud it was in tho most remarkable places. a nrnetr inter while searching his clothes for soiled handkerchiefs that is a regulation Monday morning tasic in our home I heard something rattle runt. From an lnsldo in iiia rii-pocket 1 drew two silver forks, three xuujr teaspoons and a salt spoon, with various Initials. nri.ro mnrL-iv-i Kono of tbo stuff came from our side- board. My husband was out or town, nnd i nnent n few1 nerDloxcd hours. An idea suddenly dawned on me. I wrap ped up the silver, .put on my nai miu went straight to the hostess of our last card liarty. 'Thank goodness!' she cried. 'I have nearly had nervous prostration over tho loss of these tiiitim, Snrvnntthnvo. been suspected. 1 hired a man to go over the garbage dump, and tho whole bouse nos ueuu turned upside down In our search. If it had been my own silver It would bornot havo been so bad. but It was anyrowed, and I couia not dupllcato it where In town. Walt till I sea that husband of yours!' The story got out. and sometimes in fnoerJdss mood Insists on counting her .sliver beforo my better half goes home." Isabel .uoraon uu la New York Tribune. a the funny man at a party when the Mv husband." said ono woman, "Is hnti j - No Stop. ,. Ticket Collector Wo don't stop here, sir. Montague Swank (who has Jusl where? Ticket Ktren'up a ticketl-St- op Lon-Ao- b Collector At the pawnbroker's. M. A. P. The Shock That Comes With the Bite of the Electric Ant. When you happen to sit down to rest or take notes near a colony of electric ants some wandering hunter is sure to And you nnd come cautiously forward to discover the nature or the Intruder and what ought to be done. If you nre not too near tho ant town and keep perfectly still ho may run ncross your feet n few times, over your legs and hands and face, up your trousers, as if taking your measure and getting comprehensive views, then go in peace wituoui raisiug u umim. If. however, a tempting spot is offered or some suspicious movement excites him a blto follows. And such a bite! I fancy that n bear or a wolf bite Is not to be compared with It. A quick electric flame of pain flashes along tho outraged nerves, and you discover for tho first time how great Is the capacity for sensation you are possessed of. A shriek, a grab for the animal and a bewildered stare follow this bite of bites as one comes back to consciousness from sudden eclipse. This wonderful electric ant Is about s of an Inch long. Bears nro fond of It nnd tear and gnaw Its home logs to pieces and roughly devour tho eggs. larvae, parent ants and tho rotten or sound wood of the cells, all In one spicy add hash. The Digger Indians nlso are fond of the larvae and even of the perfect ants, so I havo been told by old mountaineers. The Cowboy's Handkerchief. They' blto off and reject the head and "Dave you ever wondered why the eat tbo tlckly acid liody with keen cowboy pictures by painters who have relish. Thus are the poor biters bitmado a study of western Ufo depict ten, like every other biter, big or little. tho man of the plains with bis red In the world's great family. John baudanna halfway down on his chest Mulr in Atlantic. instead of fitting snugly around his Too Smart to Be a Lawyer. neck?" queried a ranch owner of CaliB. Davis Noxon was ono of the ablest fornia. "I'll tell you. When a cowboy starts lawyers In central New York. A young on a long rldo over tho plains ono of man entered his office as a student nnd his principal annoyances Is having to was given Blackstono to study. At the wlpo dust from his eyes. Ills heavy end of a month he asked Mr. Noxon gauntlets make It Impossible to uso what ho should read next. "Do you his bands, and be ties, bis handkerchief understand Blackstone?" "Yes." was loosely around bis neck and when his answer. "Read Kent." was tin. oroccasion requires uses It to clear his der. In another month be announced eyes. It is the most convenient place that ho had finished Kent nnd "Whnt to carry the handkerchief whllo riding next?" "Have you read Blackstone nnd a horse." Washington Post. Kent?" "Yes." "Do you understand them?" i4Yes.' "Well." said Mr. NoxThey Help the Justices. on. "you had better go at some other Each United States supremo court business: you aro too smart to bo a Justice has a body servant assigned to lawyer." Boston Herald. him, and tbls servitor Is u soro trial to many. The body servants, now called Always Busy. "messengers." deseend from Justice to "And you are really settlement Justice. Several ure old men. Their workers?" Interrogated tho housewife usual attitude toward their particular as sho banded oach of tbo wanderers Justices is that of tutor toward pupil. a wedgo of pie. They dictate In all matters of etiquette "Yes. mum," responded the dusty and are generally bothersome. But spokesman, with u low bow. "wo work thcro's no gettiug rid of them. They're every settlement wo come to."-C- hlan institution having precedent-S- an cago News. Francisco Argonaut The Way Ho Took It Her Scrap Book. Kindly Landlndy (to the now boardbook, Mrs, er) now did you find your bed. Mr. "Do you keep a Bcrap Rowdy?" asked her friend, Mrs. Mc- - Inlate? Mr. Inlato (taken aback) Oh. Guffey, apropos of nothing In particudnsh.lt, ma'am! I was not as bad as that-Lon- don lar. "Well. In a sort of way." said Mrs. Rowdy. "1 keep a diary and whenNothing Lost ever Mr. Rowdy and I bave a tiff I "I bear she doesn't llko mo with a make a note of it"-Jud-gc. mustache." "Going to shave It off, I s'pose?" Great Error. "Oh, no. She never" liked mo." Kan"My hero dies In the middle of my sas City Journal. latest navel," said the young author. 'That's a grave mistake," replied tho Neither should a ship rely on one editor. "He"; should not die before the imall anchor, nor should life rest on ; single hope. Eplctetus. leader does." Atlanta Constitution. three-fourthTit-Bit- s. and Plain Engraving. People with kidney ills want to be is Eyes Tosted and Lenses Ground ." cured. When one suffers tho tortures C of an aching back, relief Is eagerly In our Shops. sought for. There are many remedies that relieve but do not cure. i, We have a complete Lens- - k Here Is evidence to prove thatDoan's ? Grinding Plant and two y. iIdnoy Pills euro, and the cure Ie Graduate Opticians and can lasting: C. Weathcrholt, High street, J. give porfoct results. "Two years Cloverport, Ky says: ago I did not think It possible that I Don't buy Glasses from specould ever bo well again, in fact, 1 tacle peddlors who travel uad settled up my affairs. I cannot Icscrlbc the misery I endured from from city to city. vains through my hack. Whonevor Wo havo Skilled Worknion and I stooped, tho pains became so sharp really seemed as If someone .hat It the vory Flnost and Hest wore thrusting a knlfo into my kidneys. I was often very dizzy, dark Machlnory and Stock and are 3pots floated before my eyes and I in a position to rondor good had to grasp something to keep from ailing. My joints became swollen service. o twice their natural size and I lost Wo pay cash for old Gold and weight rapidly until I was almost a Silver. skeleton. Tho doctors' modlclnes or ho many guaranteed kidney cures O n o ii s x a .w o 'ji o i. n v ii that I tried, did not help me and finally It was my good fortune to hear about Doan's Kidney Pills. I Im- SUTHEUD'S EAGLE EYE SALYE mediately procured a box and I was Good NnthinE hut tho Eyes gratified with tho results received. Before I had taken tho contents of tho second box, there was a marked Improvement and I continued using this remedy until I was completely Building Supplies. cured. I am now as well as any man county and I give Doan's KidIn this ney Pills tho credit." If you need building maFor sale by ah dealers. Price 50 terial, call o;i us. We have Co., Buffalo. Bents. Fostor-Mllbur- n New York, solo agents for tho United Rough and Dressed Luniher, Doors, Sash, Moldings, Floor-ing- , States. Remember tho namo Doan's Ceiling, Finish, Siding, tnd tnko no otlior. Lathes, Shingles, Columns, to-d- . & LIBERTY SPECIAI l'OU MUX. HATS CO. HAR.TFORD ItAltllKIt Xi. li7l.S make the season of 1911 nt noopor Bishop's stable, three miles east of Island, on Green river, on " Will Headquarters for Mondays, Tuesdas and Wednesdays of each week, and at Center-tow- n the othor three days of eac week. He will stand at $10 to Insure a living colt, money due when colt Is foaled or mare transfered. Care taken to prevent accidents 'nit not lesponslble should any occur. F. M. ALLEX. . Centcrtown, Ky. 1 The rim Yiiim THRIGE-A-WEE- K WORLD The Larg- Without a Rival in Its Field est, Cheapest and Best Newspaper Published at the Price. Read in Every Country, Thrlce-a-Wee- k English-speakin- g It has Invariably been the great efedition fort of the of the New York World to publish the news impartially in order that It may bo an accurate reporter of what has happened. It tells the truth, Irrespective of party, and for that reason It hns arliltved a position with the public uulqu among papeis pf Us class. The subscription eeason is now at hand and this is the best offer that will bo made to you. If you want the news as It really Is. edisubscribe for the Thrlce-a-wee- k tion of the New York World, which HA&TFOKD, KY. comes to you every other day except Will practice hla profeaalon in Ohio and ad Sunday, and Is thus practically a dally sluing cauntlea and In the Court of AppeaJj Criminal practice and Collections a apeclatty, at the price of aweckly. OtTcelnth'HeraM balldlnc THETHRICE-A-WEE- K WORLD'S regular subscription price is only $1.00 C. U. BAKKXTT. C. . lUtTH. per year, and this pays for 166 papers. BARNETT & SMITH, .We offer this unequalled newspaper and THE HARTFORD HERALD to HA2LTZ0SD, KY. gether for one year for $165. Will practice their profeaalon In all the Court . The regular subscription price of th and adjoining conntiea and In thr Coar olOhli o I Appeals. ColleetloBi a apecIalUr. two papers Is $2.00. Will make the season of 1911 at m barn In Ccntortown, Ky. He will stand at JS to Insure a living colt. Money due when fact Is ascertained Rubber Paper and Metal or mare transferred. Caro taken to Roofing. Ridgeroll Cresting prevent accidents but not responsiand Guttering, House and ble should any occur. Pedigree. Description and Roof Paints, Lime, Paten HAGLR DISPATCH was foaled Plaster, Cement, Common and April, 1903, Is 1G hands high, dark Fire Brick, Screen Doors and bay with best of feet and legs, long mane and tall, fine stylo and action. Wire. Ho Is by the renowned saddlo and harness stallion, Red Eagle No. 28, he by Red Squirrel, No. 33, ho by Black Squirrel, No. 58, he by niaek West End Union St. Eagle, No. 74, lie by King 'William, No. 57, he by Washington Denmark, No. G4, ho by Gaines Denmark, No. Gl, ho by old Blnck Denmark, tho 4 ProtoBaionul Curda. mile race horse, he by Imported Hedgeford. J. M. PORTER, EAGLE DISPATCH'S first dam Dell Habram, by Old Dispatch, No. 4480, he by Onward, No. 1611, he by BEAVER DAM, KY. Will practice bin protmlon In Ohio and id Georgo Wilkes, No. 519; second dam olnlngcountlei. Special attention given to by Don Pedro. bnalnui entrusted to hlcre. Your patronage solicited. F. Ji. ALLEN, PRANK L. FELIX, Centertown, Ky. kagm: dispatch, Trotting; Stallion, B an Bros., Hartford, Ky. Attorney at Law, Attorney at Law, TIio Pine Young .Tuck, lUiACIC ItATiDV, Attorneys at Law, Will make tho season of 1911 at my barn at CentoVtown, Ky., nnd will stand for $8 to insure a living colt. Jloney due when fact Is ascertained br maro transferred. Caro taken to prevent accidents but not responsible should any occur. F. M. ALLEN, Centertown, Kjr, Ht8 lift A .tO .tauti. V ;awvatiiiA mjUKjf--- iiiry&ir-t-nTi.i- 4t r qnv m migiliiiw " "3.4W J yf.yi tsjlttsl The Hartford Herald WEDXKSDAY APRIL 12 mmmh II mmI nJ Va JL VI X.A "W ginijwiiz: TKic - -i tfmBHwn -- " i -- " i aHBBMBiBiA re i - i - CZrxivxci KKJAM.MJ5 r SLa V WW Jft A JLJkWV VJLTA ti-i-ir- f AM. JL MAAA anA Was jtv - i iimmmmmmhm i " m. ft Wft l CEXTKRTOWN. April 10. Misses Belle Daltboll, of Sacramento, and Katherlne Robertson, of Moorman, visited Mrs. Dr. Smith here a few days last week. Mrs. J. B. Maddox entertained quite a number of young people at her homo here last Saturday night In honor of her nleco, Miss Maybln who visited Render, of Matanzas, them last week. All present reported a nice time. Mr. J. A. Bllbro and wife spent Sunday In Hartford, the guests of S. A. Bratcher and wife. Mr. C. E. Smith, of Hartford, spent last Saturday night and Sunday with W. P. Render and family at Matanzas. Robt. James has moved with his family to Matanzas to reside. Esq. J. C. Jackson and wife spent with Eugene Stroud inRt Snndav near Rough River and family, schoolhouse. Is on the Mrs. John Glasscock sick list. Mr. C. M. Swain, whose Illness we mentioned some time ago, Is Improving. Mr. C. T. S. Overton and wife vislast ited relatives at Smallhous Sundav. Mrs. Lena Taul, of McHenry, visited her daughters, Mrs. A.R. Plum-mand Miss Laura Taul, here last week. er Some of The To the Well Dressed Men Offered Smartest ClothesCountry. HnP Ever mm nl -- v j-- v W ard Women of this I I ummmmmmmm You will see them ia Our Store how and a little later you'll see them on the men and women who know what good clothes are. m I I any man, woman or child who wants to look at them. One thing you'll be .impressed with when l Every Department SjSfrS&SffiS 11.. . 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 .1 ! 11 vou look at them ana mat is tne inorougn way m wmen we nave prepared to supply every need of every human being in the community, in the matter of wearing apparel, not only a great variety of attractive Fabrics, Colors, Patterns and Weaves, but the new style creations in Skirts. Waists, Ladies' Tailored Suits, Men's and Boys' Clothes. - We'd like to have you know that your entire list of necessities can be amply supplied here, and that your interest will be watched as closely as our own. M i m t NORTH rKXTBIlTOWX. April 10. Farming has been delayed to some extent on account of recent rains. Quite an Interesting prayer meeting and Sunday School Is being carried on at the district schoolhouse. Mr. Jno. T. St. Clair shipped a lot of hogs to the market at Evans-vlll- e Wednesday night. Mr. Prank Ross has been on the sick list the past few weeks. Mr. Clellan Ashby and family have measles. Mrs. John Flelden Is now about convalescent. a few Mrs. Mary Benton spent days last weok with her son, Mr. T. II. Benton, near here. Mr. E. Bennett, of Hartford, was In this vicinity Wednesday. n, Mr. Rufus Ross, of South has rented a farm from Mr. K. Boss and has recently moved to the place to raise a crop. Is the Miss Mattle Kcrkendoll guest of relatives near Hartford. WE MAKE SPECIAL FEATURES OF ..MILLINERY, DRESS GOODS, AND TRIMniNQS... Queen Quality Shoes and Oxfords fFORifl07UTEN-KING QUALITY SHOES. LIBERTY BRAND HATS; r ".: J Hart Schaif ner & Marx Clothes FURGERSON-McKINNEY SHIRTS piiini).iiANi. April S. H. D. Burch, Jr., son of H. I). Burch, Sr., died recently at the home of his parents He was a prominent farmer of the Trlsler neighborhood, but on account of bad health, he and Ills family were spending the winter with his par ents. His remains were interred in He the Pleasant drove cemetery. had been conlined to his bod for two months and bore his suffering with patlerico. A few days before he died he called the family to his bed and told them he was happy and requested them to meot him In beav-eHo leac a wife and one child. C. W. Daniel has moved Into the house with J. O. Sanbach. The widow Burden lias moved liack from Orajson county. Elbert Ford has been appointed postmaster at Fiiedaland. Quite a crowd of organized farmers from this neighborhood attended the rarmors' 1'nlon at Dundee on Saturday, the 1st Inst. Claude Park, of this place, was elected County Organizer for Ohio county. Elmer Millor is furnishing tho organized farmers fertilizers w'thouf charging thorn any commission. Kit. C. Bjers Is also furnishing fencing wire tho same way. n. FOR MEN These lines possess every element of the season's latest styles, and you are sure of for the money expended, and we've provided an immense variety of each line for you to choose from. We believe they are the best lines for our customers to wear, and that's what we are here for. We do the best we can for our trade along every line. It's quite natural that we should know more about merchandise, the quality, the workmanship, the style, than the average man not in business. Apart of the service we render is to put this knowledge at your disposal, to give you the benefit of it; to use it for your interest. Give yourself an opportunity to reap some of the benefits of this service, and see the largest display of Spring and Summer Merchandise in this country. I UJ P1 turning Thursday. Mrs. Lena Patton spent Wednesday and Thursday with Mrs. J. L. Patton, at Ralph. Miss Gertrey Raymon had a number of her friends to dinner with her Saturday, It being her 2 1st birthday. ADAISUIlft. T-- r Q April 7. Mr. Ollio Taylor and wife, from near Owcnsboro, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Westerflleld, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. John Raymon, wife and i daughters Zoda and Susie, spent Sunday at Mr. Jim Orcer's, near Bells Run. Baughn and family, Mr. Tone who moved to Morehouse, Mo about a year ago, have returned to Kentucky to live. Thoy are now at Mrs. Baughn's father's, Mr. Robert McCALL PATTERNS MIdklff, near here. Celebrated lor style, perfect fit, simplicity end reliability nearly 40 years, feold In nearly Mr. John Oreer, who has been every city and town in the United States and sick. Is some better. Canada, or by mall direct. More sold than any other make. Send for free catalogue. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. PaMon spent McCALL'S MAGAZINE guests of Saturday and Sunday tho More subscribers than any other fashion magazine million a month. Invaluable. LaU of Mrs. Patton's parents, Mr. and est styles, patterns, dressmaking, millinery, " plain sewing, fancy needlework, hairdressing, Mrs. J. H. Miller, near Dundee. etiquette, good stories, etc. Only BO cents year (north double), Including a free pattern. Messrs. C. L. and Cicero Patton Subscribe today, or send for sample copy, Wednesday, rewent to Owensboro WdNDEHFUL INDUCEMENTS E. F. BARNES & ERO., Imirjr , Kentucky. I mw. Don't knock your town! Don't refuse to advertise! Don't patronize mail order houses ! Don't fail to give us your orders for all kinds' of job printing! Oon't forget to stand by your to Agents. Postal brings premium catalogu. home paper, and it will and new cash prise offers. Address Hcciu. co as to :u w. j;t st new tori ni stand by you! iirii- ii DON'T - -- We Ask You to take Cardul, for your female troubles, because wo are sure it will help you. Remember that this great female remedy ii iiri t "" - X y m lli JOB PRINTING. . "" 'J The kind that makes you look good in the eyes of the wholesale 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 VCARDUI has brought relief to thousands of other sick women, so why not to you ? For headache, backache, periodical pains, female weak ness, many have setd it Is "the beet medicine to take." Try It I NEATLY DONE- T And promply delivered by the HARTFORD HERALD. Everybody m any kind of business needs Printed Stationery Note Heads, Crds. .Envelopes, Statements, Etc nowadays. Prices the lowest; work the best. Call or write us. T5he HERALD. Hertford. Ky. Sold in This City Subscribe for Tito Herald, Herald; $1.00 a y'r FOIIYSHCWTTaB Subscribe for The The Herald Only $1.00 a Year f 1 a year. SUBSCRIBE NOW! m&