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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, June 21, 1911.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, June 21, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911062101 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, June 21, 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. a LLy THE HARTFORD HERALD E 4 Subscription 1 Per Year in AdvanccI I Goof the heraldl of a Kohj World tit Nell orf All Satiwi luniwag atl Hj Rut All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed B7th YEAR HARTFORD KYir WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1911 PTO25 It ENTRIES TO THE- PRIMARYP CLOSE Drawings by Lot for Po t tt on BallotJ11sitlonsp A SPLENDID Glim OF MEN i Mr Likens Withdraws from the Race for Secretary- of State OFFICERS ARE INSTRUCTED The following Is the order InI which the names of the candidates will appear on the ballot for the Democratic State Primary July 1I FOR UNITHD STATES SENATOR Thomas IL Paynter Ollie M James FOR GOVERNORI ILJames B McCreary William Addams FOR LIEUTENANTGOVERNORI Edward J McDermott James P Edwards T G Stuart FOR TREASURER 1 1Thomas S Rhea FOR AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS Ruby Laffoon Henry M Bosworth I FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL Jl James Garnett O H Pollard t SECRETARY OF STATE JjFORC F Crecellus FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION Barksdalo Hamlett- L C Llttrell RS Eubank FOR COMMISSIONER OF AGRI CULTURE LABOR AND paPr JJH STATISTICS 3T W bwmhn B F Hill G T Wright FOR CLERK OF THE COURT OF APPEALS Robert L Greene- J Morgan Chinn Under the primary rules a blank line will be left under each of the offices In order that voters so de siring may cast a ballot for some person other than those who have formally entered the races The entries to the Democratic pri mary to be held July 1 closed offi I clally at 12 oclock Thursday night but three hours before that time all I aspirants for the various nomlnai tlons had drawn lots for and been awarded positions on the ballots It nay aspirant was dissatisfied there was no Indication of the fact during the brief session of the subcommit tee 1The two aspirants who perhaps r were best pleased with the positions lf drawn by them were Senator Thom j as H Payntor who seer s lndorso t meat to succeed himself and lj J Morgan ChInn ono of the aspirants I for the nomination for Clerk of the t Court of Appeals Senator Paynter r- f I drew first place on the ballot while I Mr Chlnns name will bo the last In the list of aspirants for nomin i ations and as these twp positions tire regarded as the most valuable 1on the ballot both were naturally elated over the outcome of tho drawing All the asplrants wlth the f exception of Henry M Bosworth who seeks to be the nominee for State Auditor and Edward J McDermott for Lieutenant Gov l ernor wore present at the dra- wingiLUccns Withdraws The withdrawal of Mr Likens ofII Hartford from the race for Secre l tary of State leaves aspirants for I two of the places on the ticket that J i j of Secretary of State and State i Treasurer without opposition Fol lowing Is the card of withdrawal IsI iF sued by Mr Likensm r To the Democrats of Kentucky a Considering the short time I would have to make sje nvaBBt 1 with i ii other Important matters demanding my attention I deeid i not to make I n fight for the nopiBaUon for Soc l retary of State In the coming pH x mary I am profoundly thankful for Hho assurances to support fr mI friends In all parts of the State I willingness and zeal with which so many loyal friends pledged their Buppqrt has su4de 1It difficult for ffieto refrain t sn pushing ray M i I t claims further I feel however that the gratification of my political ambition Is a small matter compar ed with the Importance of Democrat- Ic supremacy In Kentucky thlp year and that I dan render as effective service in this campaign by exerting my very best efforts In support of the candidates who may be nomInat- ed July 1 From the time these nominations are made until the final election I shall cheerfully and vig orously support the ticket and hope to see a great victory for the party that I love Again assuring my friends that their support Is genuinely apprecl t ed1 am Faithfully yours G B LIKENS Letter to Officers Following the drawing of posi tions and the closing of entries the subcommittee held an executive session at the close of which Secretary R G Phillips was directed to send a letter to the chairman of theI counties and legislative districts of the State rehrttreto the conduct ofI the primary Henry R Lawrence chairman of the subcommittee said It was the purpose of the body to have the primary conducted In suchI a manner that none of those defeat J ed for nominations July 1 would have cause to complain He saidI the letters that would be mailed toI the various county and legislative district chairman bv Secretary Phillips would fully inform them of the duties to be performed bv them as well as by the election officers MITCHELL IS MARRIED OTHERS OUT OF JAIL Clarence Mitchell who way shot several weeks ago at Livermore by William Potter a negro the being shot to death later by latterII gry mob has fully recovered and he has since married Miss Ruth I English a well known young lady of Livermore All the men arrested and placod in jail under indictment as being implicated in the mob have execut ed bond and been released from custody Judge Blrkhead will likely call a special session In July to try the cases COURT THINKS ATTORNEYS FEE ARE MUCH TOO HIGH The Court of Appeals Friday af firmed the Davless Circuit Court In its decision in the case of Shlveloy against the Davless County Bank antitrust Company TJse affirmation of the decision rendered by Judge Blrkhead means that the attorneys Ben D RIngo LaVega Clements and J R Hays who secured for the general credt of the Dalvess County Bank about 573000 which the holders of theII mortgage certificates issued by bank were claiming as belonging theII them are allowed the sum of 1600 for their services for which they sought to collect 5000 When the claim was presented In the Davless Circuit Court the affi davits of about ten of the represen tative attorneys of ticcIty were filed stating that they thought the claim a just and reasonable one Judge Blrkhead thought otherwise and entered an order allowing the attorneys the sum of 1500 for I their services The Appellate Court has affirmed his TEACHER declslonII MAN WHO SHOT TIER A I Louisville Ky June HPosIt- ive Identification of her assailant was made today by Miss Hallle Wetherby the pretty Mlddlotown Ky school telcherwho was shot on the night of Juno 7 when s1 eII picked out Thomas O West among seven men grouped before HospitalI Treas Acclldent Wetherby while she was out driv ing with Lee Hlbbs a friend It is pupposed that West believed her to- pe another young woman with whom Irltls he lad been keeping company morning the accused man Was arraigned in Magistrate Dor Beys Co1rton motion of County Attorney Bullltt Wests Bond on which be Was held amounting to 5000 was raised to 20000 1The Hon William Addams who- aI a candidate for gubernatorial omlnation in the Democratic pri I mary July Itwas born near Mays liek September G 1850 1 1 0 h LARGE GOBS OF- EXfRAVAGANCE1 Seen in Hitchcocks Lav ish lExpenditures WASTEPAPER BASKETS AT 35 I i I D sks and Tables at 298 and I 320 Other Things in ProportionjjI DIFFERENT WITH EMPLOYEES 1I By Tavenner Special Washington f Correspondent of The Herald Washington June 17Thlrty five dollar wastepaper baskets 298I desks and 320 tables were some of the little economies effected by Postmaster General Hitchcock in furnishing his red room and I brown room offices These and other striking examples of Repub lican cuttothequlck economy were revealed In testimony taken before the House committee on expendi tures In the postoffice department- Mr Hitchcock sanctioned the ex penditure of 7500 In refurnishing three rooms 4000 of which went I to furnish the Postmaster Generals private office alone Circassian walnut furnishings especially design ed and maufactured to special or der and specially designed carpets I and draperies furnished the nucleus of this expenditure All supplies were bought without subjecting the lucky dealer who se competitionIHe11II secure an order upon the treasury purIchasedI for American royalty 330 brought I In two arm chairs 98 produced tII table 295 purchased a second desk and 1W a third A wardrobe of to hang coats In cost 26G One rug was purchased at 483i75 Another davenport in Circassian walnut with pillow cost Uncle j Sam 365 draperies In onq room j 600 Parquetry flooring In one room 282 Telephone table S04 Table with black marble top 641 One bookcase 195 It cost the people 352 to scrape the wood I work In the private office preparn tory to neW finish Three hundred and twentytwo dollars bought nI DotenDunton decoration on theII walls of the private office Such was the measure of olrI Hitchcocks economy In matters pertaining to his own personal comfort In matters concerning the employees of the Government the railway mall clerks for Instancehe follow ed entirely different lines of pro i cedureMr Hitchcock flpujed It out onaI day that by making three moll clerks do the work of four he could I make a record for economy The already overworked railway mall clerks were driven beyond the limit II of endurance Conditions in to West especially In the Tenth divisI- Ion I became Intolerable Open rebellion I broke out on the Pierre Tracy line the men refusing to do the extra work Imposed upon them Ten men were suspended Then five of them were reinstated but refused to return to work without their associates This aroused the whole Northwest The clerks met In mass meeting at St Paul Minn They are now forcing the Postmaster Gen eral to relent In his plan to econo mize by overworking the railway mall boys Strango Jydrkinga of the Hitch cock economy bump caused the Postmaster General to pay the full year salary of 5000 to A W Law she Third Assistant Postmaster General while the lutte sojourned In New Mexico recuperating his health and looking after the Interests of the Republican party but performing no Government service i Whatever Still another example of Hitch cock economy was his apIJolntmrntII of a pseudO lame ion of four of his Intimate friends and staunch political supporters to- go on a sort of Holy Grail conquest at the Governments expense The commlBslpn investigated time recorders in every large city in the country managing to disburse In xpeueeti 197024 The average amount spent by 1 each of the committee for subsistence was between nine and ten dollars a day Indicating that Mr Hltchcocks friends had health appetites Transportation expenses for each man for a period of less than two months averaged 300 Among many Items of expenditure charged to and paid by Uncle Sam appear barber fees bath charges telephone bills shines news stand charges In fact almost everything possible In sucH a category except laundry cigars and flowers The Hotel Willard In Washington the Astor in New York and kindred hostelries were employed to shelter the Government emralssaries Porter fees averaged 60 cents The commissioners always purchased Pullman tickets and cab fares are rthlkly sprinkled among time vouch ers Sometimes the commissioners toIgellier I ed pleasure loving Government committee How gratifying all this must be to the discharged postal clerks whlln they sit and figure out how much thq Government Is saving on them The Dick Fowler HiIngs 300 Paducah Ky Tune 17The Btenjner Dick Fowler at one time the fastest boat on Western waters was sold at public auction here for 500 being bought by Ralph Emerson I owner of the Cottonblossom ia floating theater The Fowler was sold to satisfy a debt of 1400 owed the Morln TNI company of Mount Cliy Ill The boat was built soy oral years ago at a cost of 3o000 SEA RURIAL FOR TilE DEAD OF FATED MA1N1 In expressing approval of the plan for a sea burial for the Maine Secretary Meyer Is fortified by reasons of sentiment that should appeal peopleIck and the examination of the hull tile Chattered remains of the old battle ship must be removed from the har gTof Savanna To lot curiosity seekers prey upon It or to preserve t ill for exhibition would be an act of desecration With the explosion of jthe Maine perished 259 of the crew When It sank they went to their death with It What may bo savedII of It should never be profaned for the gratification of gaping crowds of sightseers 1Th Maine Is sacred to the mom ory of the min who died when 1 It went down What more fitting endI for the ship once burled with her dead than again to take her to sea and in tho words of Holmes glutI liar to the god of storms CUTS WHEAT IN MORNING USES FIOUR IN KVKNIN I OvtenslJdro Ky Juie 17RerI- s a record never before equaled In Kentucky that was established bv Emmett Haynes a successful farm er today 9 a m cut wheat crop 11 a m threshed wheat crop 3 p m delivered load of new wheat to mill Ii p m wheat ground into flour 6 p m flour from the wheat that was cut at 9 a m made into bread and eaten for supper The wheat was delivered at Brnno fords mill and C W Bransrfod says that It Is the earliest delivery of wheat In twentyfour years MAN AND MULE ARE- KlL1FD IIV LIGHTNING Owonoboo Ky Juno now ensboro and Davless county were visited by a terrific wind rain and hall storm this afternoon resulting Iin the death of one man by light ming the killing of a span of line mules wrecking several wheat barns and doing much damage to wheat that Is being cut However thousands of farmers throughout the Green River district arn preparing to spend the Sabbath dry in set ting out tobacco plants Not over 150 per cent of tlw tobacco crop has been planted and tbli is the Prst rood season in a month Riln con tinues to fall tonight Riley Walden 30 years of age while riding a mule to Kit under shelter before the arrival of theI storm was struck hv llebtnlnc and Instantly killed His clothing was torn to shreds The mule also wasI killed Theetreet cars and electric light plants were put out of commission for naif an hour by the lightning 1u MINERS WIN OUT I IN WAGE MATTES Will MoreII Receive40000MoreNext 1 J II IN THE DISTRICT NUMBER 23 Attorney Yeaman of HenderI son Decides Important II Case Submitted Him I CASE WAS LONG DRAWN OUT Henderson Ky June 17 Attor nay James M Yeaman sitting as an arbitrator for the miners and oper ators of Southwestern Kentucky i has decreed that all outside men in eluding engineers firemen pump men night watchmen blacksmiths and special repair men shall receive in the next ten months 40 000 In wages more than they have been receiving This Is according to a contract entered Into March 16 1910 but as the miners declare was not filled by the operators The contract will expire next march The I I payIfor the pay they were entitled to for for eight hours Robert Roll the president of DlsI trict 23 United Mine Workers of America In speaking of the decision I Thursday night had the following to say twathe time I went Into officeI IFrom 1910 I have been determined to stand by the contract made by the operators and the miners of Southwestern Kentucky Several times since being president of Die trlct 23 United Mine Workers of America I have had to take Issue with members of the organization or- t which I am president but fortune always favored me and I succeeded In convincing the miners that I was I right I At the time of my election I was under time Impression that everyman within the jurisdiction of the United Mine Wokers was getting theII scale of wages as specified by theII contract which was entered Into March 10 1D10 but after having served a few months I made the dis covery that some of the outside men Were working twelve hours for 1 70 when they should have been re I hourID Stew art Miller of Owensboro who IsI commissioner for the operators who are parties to this contract and told him that some places the operators were not complying with time contract He then asked me to state In i what cases and I informed him that some of the outside men werei underpaid as above stated I Ho Informed me that the operators were doing now what they hind been doing for 13 years find said to me that It we wanted to change we would have to walt until the con tract expired j Wo failed to agree on this sug gestion and I told him that It made no difference If they hnd been doing It for 13 yearsHhnt they lead been Violating tho contract all the time I that It would not be neccessary for us to get Into the next joint conven tlon to pet that poln In the contract as It was already there and all we need now Is to get the operators toI comply with the contract I Mr Mlllor rifuspd to agree with me and I trlnd to pet him to RlroII with prhltrntlon and ho declined that also saylnsr that there was nothing to arbitrate and that we would have to wait anllI come Into the next joint con vention After fourteen months I succeeded In getting him to apron I to arbitration and this decision Iis the outcome This means that the wages of the minors who have been working twelve hours per day for i the sum of 170 will get an In crease to 225 per day or In other words this means thousands of dot lars to the outsldo coon during tho remainder of tho period contracted for 4 I IIt wo are entitled to 2114 cents per hour for ten months of this contract which have yet to be worked out why are wo not entitled to the t same for the time which wo have already worked 7 Robert Roll and C C Barnaby appearsd for the miners while the operators were represented by D Stewart Miller of Owensboro I Faculty nt Fonlsvllle Prof W C Shultz of Narrows has been elected as principal of the Fordsvllle High School for this year Ho was graduated this year from the University of Kentucky and is splendidly qualified In every way for the position Other teach ers have been elected as follows Mrs I S Mason primary department Mrs J H Loyd eighth and ninth grades Prof Russell Cooper first assistant Miss Grace Whlttlng hill second assistant fioos Into Insiirniicc Prof I S Mason of Fordsvllle has resigned his position as princi pal of the Fordsvllle Graded School to accept the position of Supervisor of Agencies for the New England Mutual Life Insurance Co Prof Mason has done splendid work for the Fordsvllle school and It Is regretted that he did not stay with that Institution He Is well ac quainted with the Insurance busi ness however having followed It before with much success being thoroughly capable and reliable Onto Changed ICOllrt term of County Court an order was made changing the date for Esq Jacksons court at Centertown Court will hereafter be held on Saturday after the third Monday In each month PREPARING FOR MEETING OF TOBACCO GROWERS a eiPreparatory to the holding of district convention of the Green River Tobacco Growers Association which Is to be held In Owensboro Thursday July G county meetings will be held at the county seats Saturday June 24 At the county meetings delegates will be selected to attend the district convention and Instructions given as to the changing of the bylaws and consti tution of the Association The committee appointed at the last district convention to draft a new constitution anil bylaws has been hard at work and will have several now clauses to be Inserted Iin the constitution It Is not known just what action will be taken on the proposed change but the officials are In hopes that the changes will be made The hoard of control of the Association will hold a meeting i on the night of July 5 I RUSTLING CATTLE THIEF GIVEN PRISON SENTENCEi i narbourvllle Ky June 17SamH- olland charged with the theft of twentyone hundred toad of cattle from farmers In the Chenoe Valley nell county was tried In the Clrcut Court end received a sentence from one to flee years In the penitentiary I For pomo time nn organized gang of cattle thieves has been operating In the Pine mountains and prlvat detectives have been employed In the case for several1 weeks past Cattle have hen rounded up In the 1 Pine mountains and driven across tt- he Cumberland mountains to thE hip Sandy Valley over a hundred miles away where they were Ills posed of III r II Of Sunday School Union of the Ohio County Baptist Association to meet with McGrady Creek church June 27 1911 930Devotional led by Elders r- r Jr A Armstrong or W C Taylor 1000Why have a Sunday j SchoolElders Birch Shfelds and t G H Lawrenc- e1030Readlng minutes and reports of Schools 1100 Sermon by Eld A B Gardner 1200 Dinner 100 p mHow to Manage the Opening and Closing Exercises t Eld W H Morton or Herbert Gra pain130Ifow to mnnnco Lesson PerlodElIl Claude Chick and j W R Oldham 200Hard questions answeredI 230The Outlook speaker to be announced OOBl1slncPII and adjournmentI Nelehhorlnp schools especially are expected to be well represented F W F VRD Chmn W M FAIRjSfegy r Subscribe for TnVfiartford Herald- a P l PAGE TWO THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1811 It SaITe Thisge and ITtToii TJixtll TIirsday Jiui aa 1 l Stop Look ListenCOME EARLY j1 t I Heres a Stupendous Opportunity that Comes but Once in a Lifetime WHEN CENTS COUNT AS DOLLARS At the Store of I1NINEL0 XX5OOOC XXXXXXXXXXXXXX cocoaCJ 1 Gilt Out This Coupon c I To every lady who will signc0 r this coupon cut It out and pre tj 1i K sent It In person at our store we Q tt O will give a beautiful Swiss Km tJ g broidered or Hemstitched Hand O O kerchief Absolutely Free 8 No Handkerchief given away on u i the Opcning Day or to Chldren W 1 TO LADIES ONLY YrOName 10i Address i 2o oooeo ooooaoooooooooooo the and this will apply Men and Hat bIand as well and wear and for the Not would of this We treble by Its not the Big we its the You cant overlook this 22t FREE I 1 I J i i 1 ampled and extraordinary t sensation of the business world ir I the unusually drastic smashing of ev 5 I Inlticent price and profltdurlnij S theso 9 which will be the J i i pAt I I e Suitings Cheviots in i and diagonal weaves at In we have the most II complete line of Staple and K Dry Goods ever brought t to and they are go at that will aston ish pass Ill this to get what you want r at the price you want to pay Ladies Skirts In of New Spring Mixtures A of H select from Sale I r only lot of Skirts in desirable t weaves Sale InIIt One lot of Skirts i f II i i II One lot of Walking I Skirts in best weaver1 i 11 and colors sale price I I I I The Most Sensational Remarkable OpmTHSTWENTIETH CENTURY QCCCOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOJ S Jil TICHENOR ncHENRY KENTUCKY m END SALE Grand of MER ii- A MIGHTY 15000 c OF SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE i At prices that will your former of money saving EventsI 1 decided to make this Sale greatest iin our in or i der to do so we are going to make a GENUINE BARGAIN SALE and Reduction of prices in every of this These special cut prices It every New Spring Garment Women every Millinery Department every pair New Spring Oxfords Slippers and Spring arrivals Dress Fabrics as hundreds other articles fancy for home many merchants attempt kind believe we can business offering SPECIAL PRICES Profit want Business afford opportunity I BEGINNING THURSDAY JUNE NO I i Midllcltonryis thei 1 lOOCOOOOQOOOOOQOQOOOCQOOOOOl and fruity IIDcFancy McHeury prices youDont tunity a variety number styles IIto III llOlle It Ladies and CHANDISE knowledge 1We have history store New both RESERVE Withevery 100 purchase this Sale a chance on 2000 in Gold to to be Given FREE on Saturday July 1 the last day of the BIG SALE HH 198 239 348 448 GREAT SEASON Display SPRING MONEY SAVING EVENT WORTH dumfound department proposition during WVVWVVt i Staple and Fancy i Dry Goods at PricesII i that will Grade of Prints at Good Grade of Brown Domestic at i Best Grade of Bleached iiat I One of Corsets at One of Corsets will go at 5c1 5c 6cww Corsets 45c90c MillineryWe kinds of La dies ReadytoWear Hats Ladies Furnishings Ladies Vests Sale price you want in this line piice from Sale a I i 7c UnderwearAny garment 19cp Mens Suits I 1000 value Sale 1200 1800 value Sale price 81500 values price 2000 values Sale price 748 848 9481 1348 Apron Checks good grade at Dress Ginghams at Percale in allcolors at Lawns and Dimities at Lawns and Dimities at tw w I 60o Value SaleI price 150 value Sale Ipr 250 value Sale price 1200 value Sale price 6c 9c I 12C 7 1 c1 9 c1 Rugs 39c 8gc 198 998 Mens Underwear- One lot at 22o One lot at300O-no lot at 89c Mens Shirts One lot at 44c One lot at890Boys Clothing The best linobe found inoludingknee count Dont miss our cloth savinginever visited Embroideries i 5c value sale price lOc value sale price i 40c value sale price 60c value sale price n 32C 12c Table Linens 28c 48c Dress Goods Volle119100 Voile790100 Diagonal Serge in all colors 75c Danish oloth10c Matting 2Jo Matting 9c 20c Matting 14o 25o Matting 19c 30c Matting 23o Mens ShoesI1 lot of mens fine shoes 300 value close 8198 1 lot of Mens Fine Shoes in Patent and Gun Metal 350 value close at 210 I Mens Pants Mens 8150 pants11944 200U 129 II 400II 225 U 50II 350 eI 600 375 44 750t 500 JI I r Read tl Wait WatchCOME EARLY I LDAYSL 1 jrocoooocoocococooooocococoo 11 I Notice to the PtlblicII1 This Is positively I sale Wo have single item advertised and moret 5 We place our personal guarantee forc5 that these prices are correct andcI I you Wo dont say how long 5 theyll lust at these prices HnwtHt I over you cannot duplicate theseIvalues at any time exceptjj I during this saleC I t TICHENOROOOOOd90000000000COOOOOOOOOt3 to for in our of to our in to of staple f a our Big to i days f fact lug i oppor price price I Best lot line all price and i j 150 other I FREE III = 6 I COCOCCXXX CCOCOOCXXXXXOOCOOi Dont Pail lto BttenjllI LIFEg c away Wo have no IntentIon of retiring from business therefore we will cheerfully exchange or refund your money If purchase proves unsatisfactory Our goods are new so you may rest assured you will not get shoddy shop iithat articles of us cxx oooooooo Oxfords Wo have a complete line of oxfords for both men and wo men that we are going to sell in this Sale at the following prices ion LADIES I 139A I fAlot atlG9iphelotat I 198 i iron MEN A lot for189 25A8278AIIEMKMUKR Lots of other great values to bo sacrificed In this I great sale IJo wise Como early ami Ket the plckDout coniutr this genuine slaughter or seasonable j J MercliHwllse with the little Uillend t IJargnlnSales fbUt1moralng1I Y I Sale Opens ecineSday1X1e 22 And Continues for 9 DAYS ON LYI J I ostlrc Xo Goods Charged at these Prices Bring tho Cash Avoid the Credit Store If You Havent the Money Borrow ItXvUl Pay You lodo soGET IIUSY EVERY ODrr i I STEP LIVELY AND COME Youcannot Duplicate thcsp Prjcea Anywhere t I 1 I 1 I TICHENOLFo- r 4 Every 20 Purchase Railroad Fare RefundedIirsJ f n 7J iA 4- N fdy i 1- ttt I WEDNESDAY JUNE Si 1011 THE HARTFORD HERALD IAGE THKEEL NOTES TAKEN ON r EVE Of BATTLE BeforeStonevvallJacksonsit Last Fight HOW THE GENERAL APPEARED TAs He Reconnoitered andVlew ed Scene of Impending Struggle SCENE AS GEN LEE SAW IT jJ t brllk f trating the vapors of tho valloy Rising as gorgeous as did the Sun of Austcrlltz which prpduced such i an impression upon the Imagination of Napoleon it should be remember s f ed by the people of the South for a Its rays fell upon the last meeting In this world of Lee and Jackson I Below and but a tow hundred yards distant ran the Federal line f of battle I was In the rear of How ards right There were the lines of defense with abattls In front and I rearIof the line seen The soldiers were In groups in the rear laughing and chatting smoking and probably en gaged hero and there In IndUlg1 I cards and other amusements ed in while feeling safe and com I i fortable awaiting orders In the rear of them were other parties 1 1driving up and butchering beeves The remembrances of the scene aro t as clear as if it were only a Pew I II years ago So Impressed was I r Nvlth my discovery that I rodo rapidly back to tho point on the Plank road where I had left my cavalry and back down the road Jackson was moving on until I met Stone t wall himself General said I If you will 0ride with me halting your column here out of sight I will show you tho enemys right and you will per ceive tho great advantage of attack F Ing down the old turnpike instead t of the Plank road the enemys lines being taken in reverse Bring only w the courier as you will be In view i I from the top of the hill Jackson f assented and I rapidly conducted him to the point of observation t There had been no change In the d picture To the remarks made to him T while the unconscious lino of blue t j was pointed out he did not reply once during the five minutes he was t on the hill and yet his lips were moving While talking to the great god of battles how could he hear what a poor cavalryman was say ing Tell Gen Rodes said ho sud denly whirling his horse toward the courier to move across the old Plank road halt when he gets to the old Turnpike and I will join him there One moro look upon the Federal lines and then he rode rapidly down the hill his arms flapping to the t Whosedead oxi4j uable personal reconuolssance sav 1 ing the lives of many soldiers and that Jackson was indebted to me atI I that moment at least Perhaps I might have been a little chagrined at Jacksons silence and hence com upI l jon his horsemanship Alasl I had looked upon him for the lasttime Gen FItzhugh Lee Shot Stonewall Jackson Gaffney S C Juno lSACter living the life of a hermit in the forests near here for about 40 years Wild John Starnes died to I wellIthat he was the Confederate soldier I who accidentally shot Gen Stone wall Jackson Whooping cougli is not dqngerou i +I when the Cough is kept lloose and I It expectoration easy by giving Cham I berlalns Cough Remedy It has k been used In many epidemics of this r disease with perfect success ForI I sale by all dealers m fr A 1tWltEnE IS DIOiENES AN HONEST LITTLE GIRL J JI New York June 160no little gtri cried today because Uncle Sam4 dY dnot want to collect duty from her But she was only 9 years old andhas yet opportunity to learn tlitasmuggling is one of the greats tIt feminine pleasures The lit l jte mYwho pined to pay was Ade line Earrydau3hter of a proml nent ChQaioVlawyer With her- r mother MrEdwaidBarry and Bier old r Bier GeraldineI little Adeline arrived on the Prinz Fried erlch Wllhclm The little girl carried a doll prob ablyas big as herself She had bought it in Berlin When she went abroad her grandmother gave her 20 The doll cost 19 and Miss Adeline still had 20 cents residuary estate On the dock she went up to the customs man In uniform displac lag two dimes Please take this I hope it will be enough she said What Is it for asked the cus toms man It Is for my now dolly proudly announced Adeline and sho displayed her prize But you do not have to pay any duty on It explained the Inspector TUFt to relieve her mind ho took one of the dimes and put a customs mark on tho dolls foot as a mark of Uncle Sams approval Im going to keep the dime as a souvenir said he It will be a re minder of the only person I ever met who really wanted to pay duty 000000000000000O WHITE lOUSE WHITEWASH OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Several of our readers have ask WhlteIwash It space again Cut It out and put it in your scrap book- Government Whitewash Slack oenhalf bushel unslacked lime with boiling water keeping It Strainland ofIonehalf pound powdered Spanish whiting one pound clear glue dis solved in warm water Mix these well together and let the mixture stand for several days Keep the wash thus prepared hia kettle or portable furnace and when used put It on as hot as possible with a paint or whitewash brush Hero Is another recipe for white wash It Is slmpller easier made but not so good Slack one hundred pounds quicklime and add water up to sixty pounds To each quart of this mixture add five parts of water Add to this ono pound of salt dissolved In warm water Stir well and apply hot 100 Reward 8100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least qne dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages and that is Catarrh Halls Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity Ca tarrh being a constitutional dlaeasere quires a constitutional treatment Halls Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system there by destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the constitu tion and assisting nature In doing Its work The proprietors have so much faith in Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure Send for list of testimonials Address F J Cheney Co Toledo 6 Sold by druggists 75c Take Halls Family Pills for consti patlon PLOWED UP TOBACCO AND PLANTED TO CORN Lancaster Ky June 1GWhlie the rain of over a week ago was worth thousands of dollars to Gar rard farmers the drouth remains practically unbroken as no down pour has occurred since All crops are showing the had effects of the dry weather and tobac co prospects were never worse the extensive growers of the Paint Lick section having plowed up their to bacco fields and planted to cord Oats are damaged 75 per cent meadows and grass are burned out and wheat In North Garrard where they did not have rain throughout May is cut short onethird Pota toes are also very unpromlslngthere being no moisture to form the tu bersthough the acreage in the coun ty is very large Hemp and corn as yet are not much damaged The uniform that has at tended the use of Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy has made it a favorite every where It can always be depended upon For stile by all dealers m Wily If flies are full of deadly germs Which are described In fearful terms If that be so then why Dont all these causes of disease Upon his little flyship seize Why dont they kill the fly Of Tile Best Remelltjt j Suth1oriandcreamy snow Wbiteointmenttl and would not Injurethe eyes of a babe Guaranteed 12fcc m i VITAL GOOD ROADSr FACTS r Showing the Great Sav ing in Their Use VAST AMOUNT OF COMMERCE Which is Raised anc Hauled Over the Roads of the Country STORY FOIL FARMERS TO IlKAD There are In the United States n little more than 1150000 miles of roads Of this mileage only 170 429 miles are improved or 82 per cent of the total according to statistics gathered by the Government office of public roads The improv ed roads are those surfaced with gravel stone or with some special materialThe most striking feature of these statistics is the enormous extent of unimproved roads in tho United States An expenditure of something like 3000000000 would be required to convert the common earth roads of the country Into good gravel roads That this desirable few will gainsay and lis it Is becoming necessary un modern conditions and the re lations now existing between pro ducer and consumer Is also quite generally admitted The Increased cost of hauling over unimprovedI roads is an Immense tax upon the farmer and those who purchase his products and is a restriction of the crops which can be raised and moved to certain localities Interstate Commerce Com I IThe finds that 265000000 tons mlscelIlaneoushauled to depots for shipment In Ithe thoIbaslsunimprovedIroads jcost would be 432400000 If the hauling could be reduced to one half the present average or 11 Vj cents a ton the resultant saving would exceed 2000000 a year That such a saving is reasonable Is indicated by the experience in other countries and in localities where improved roads are found The cost of hauling on such improv ed roads Is placed at 8 to 10 cents wleelandmated save 40000000 more In I tho administration of tho countrys roads or leave It for some other useThe rapid Increase In urban pop ulation has greatly multiplied the demand for perishable products of the dairy truck farm and orchard and the value of such products de pend in a large degree to their speedy transportation from the country to the city For this and other reasons the auto truck and similar productscarrying motors are taking the place of the horse and cart and tho farm wagon Public sentiment In favor of bet ter roads is rapidly spreading to each farm and hamlet As a result of tho awakening our 2000000 of earth roads can not much longer re main In their present condition American farmers cannot afford to pay on an average of 23 cents to haul a ton a mile when 10 cents would suffice If the highways were ImprovedElIzabethtown News Shako Into Your Shoes Allens FootEase the antiseptic powder It relieves hot tired ach- Ing swollen sweating feet and makes walking easy Takes tho sting out of corns and bunions Over 30000 testimonials Sold every where 25ci Dont accept any sub stitute Sample FREE Address Allen S Olmsted Le Roy New York 22t4 PREVENTION OF LOCKJAW GENERAL TREATMENT Health officer Landis of Cincin nati 0 has issued the following anent the observance of Fourth of July and incidentally he said it refers to all cases where lockjaw is threatened Wounds of this character will be come more and more frequent as we approach the Fourth of July and the duty of the medical pro generalpublicihetease with which tho danger edit bo averted Any accident resulting In thq breaking of tho skin may tat ttbefoundatlciifforan attacfcVf lock JawFreiftJiently be wburia Is deep e1rthab iit appears to be and In Its depths may bViT portion of the fire Works causing the wound Properly It treated none of these wounds should cause lockjaw Free Incis ions should be made under a general anesthetic and after all of the for eign material has been removed the wound should be swabbed out first with carbolic acid and then with alcohol As the germs of lockjaw canot live in an open wound no at tempt should be made to close it A light antiseptic dressing changed dally Is all that Is necessary In the way of local treatment An immun izing dose of tetanus antitoxin 1 500 units should be given In all cases Where the above Instructions have been followed lockjaw has never occurred If you or your child Is wounded demand this treatment from your doctor I 00000000000000000O FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 0 O W 11 Wright Pastor O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Preaching every Fourth Sunday morning and evening Bible School every Sunday at 930 a m- Communion service at 1030 am Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 oclock Instead of Fri day as heretofore WHEN THE MAINE JIVKS- UP HER SAILOR lHun Havana Juno lGThe steel fore mast of the old battleship Maine which weighs about ten tons has been shipped aboard the Ward Line steamer Dayamo It probably will be taken to Governors Island N Y The work on the wreck was ham pered by heavy rains but on the ar rival of Col Wm M Black and Col Mason M Hatrlck the United States Army engineers In charge all will be in readiness to resume pump Ing operations These probably will continue until the removal of an additional ten feet of water when In teresting developments may be ex pected the present water level mere ly revealing such portions of the ship as were visible on the morning after the explosion The Cuban authorities have mne1n preparations to receive nil bodies ag fast as they are recovered They will be taken to Cabana fortress where they will be placed In coffins and remain under military guard until the exploration of the wreck has been completed The bodies will their bo removed to the collier Leonldas for transfer NorthTwo hundred and flftvnlne brave sailor boys went down In the awful Maine explosion The Only Thing p cCould Do My goodness I cant under stand how she could give up her child They say It has really been adopted by a family that lives in the countryYes see she found a flat that Just suited her and they would nt allow children in the building OFPARTICLES OF DUST MAKE LIGHT Tho diffusion of light through tho atmosphere is due to thousands of millions of dustatoms floating in it The finest dust floats highest and Imparts the tint of blue to the heav ens Were it not for dust tho sky by day would appear black and the moon and stars would be visible All shadows would then bo inky black Everything would appear differently It Is not the light we see but simply reflections caused by motes of dust as when a ray of sunlight enters a dark room through n hole In the shutters Millions of dust particles catch the light reflecting it back and forth from one to an other so making tho atmosphere luminous The appointment of William T Vernon a negro as Assistant Su perintendent of Schools for the Five Civilized Tribes of Oklahoma has aroused a storm of protests and the President Is being urged to recon sider the selection So TiredIt may be from overwork but the chances lire Its from an In active LIVER With a well conducted LIVER one can do mountains of labor without fatigue It adds a hundred per cent to ones earning capacity Itcan bokeptlnhealthfulactlon by and only b- yTnttsPills TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE r UTEEAIEA LE EYE SLYE- Good F Pithin but the CXt3 t L PaleFaced Women complexionsdarkout expressions you need a tonic The tonic you need is Cardui the womans tonic It is the best tonic for women because its ingredients are specifically adapted for womens needs They act on the womanly organs and help to give needed strength and vitality to the wornout womanly frame Cardui is a vegetable medicine It contains no min erals no iron no potassium no lime no glycerin no dan gerous or habitforming drugs of any kind It is perfectly harmless and safe for young and old to use Take CARDUa M 343 The Womans Tonic V After my doctor had done alt he said he could for me tt writes Mrs Wm Hilliard of Mountainburg Ark I took Car V dui on the advice of a friend and it helped me so much Before taking Cardul I had suffered from female troubles for five years but since taking it I am in good health- II think there is some of the best advice in your book that I ever saw Your druggist sells CarduL Try it Tensfor A Professional Cards J M PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice his profession In Ohio and id olHnK counties Special ettentlon Rhea to I hnnlnennentruittit to his care FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice his profession In Ohio and af lining counties end In the Court of Appeal Jritnlual practice and Collections a specialty Office In the Herald building C If BARNBTT c E sunn BARNETT SMITH Attorneys at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice their profession In all the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In thr Coup Appeals Collections a specialty Have your old STRAW HATS I MADE NEW AteHARTFORD PRESSING t CLUB G I Ladies und WORK GUARANTEED Culled for and delivered Club rate 100 per month Hartford Pressing Club Y M C A Bldg Hartford Ky tttttr far you than lets of commission mtrtlitils I jcriishIj pi SAOEL SONS tray 4LauinillcIJ d PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Cletniti and beacon the hItPromote a luiurlint J1h OrmyHairGuru taaogSOC I I f Rhuumatlsm More than nine out ofevery ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of the I muscles due to cold or damp or chronic rheumatism In such cases no internal treat ment is required The fret application o- fCnanlberlans Liniment i IIis all that is needed and it is cer tain to give quick relief Give it a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain and soreness Price 350 large size sac DR BELLANTI PAID For internaland External PaineI iI Subscribe for triiq Hartford Hernia l A V zJ- r u OILLESPIE BROTHERS W H J F GIILESPIE PROPRIETORS II LACKSMITHiNG IAnd i Y I RBDalr Work HorseshoeingA HARTFORD j i Kentucky HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONEI PlACED IN YOUll HESl UENCE OR PLACE OF UCiJ NESS AND PUT YOURSELV IX DIRECT CONTACT WTM TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR THE COMPANYS SPKChYL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRESS J W OBANON Local ManagerHartford Ky W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Beaver Dam Ky ESTABLISHED 1858 c If iu a ring a diamond a watch covn get the best tluality at i the lowest prices I from the OLDEST MAIL ORDER HOUSE i IN TilE SOUTH Nor almost half a century we have served ex f cluslvcly the Southern trade Write today for our tree llluatrated catalogue Address P C P Barnes CoJ Ii Every fox Article 26 Louisville KyII f R6liTeRtMhtered lortuI jn rr olobf PENTSWhichT nerpatent Uwand othrr vtfubls tafonnmion DII SWIFT CO PATENT LAWYERS 303 Seventh St Washington D C Dr Bells AntisepticSalve Good for all Skin Diseases i Subscribe for The Herald 100 aVr V A c ra- r DNEBDAT JUNE ai 1t I PAGE Fours THE HARTFORD HERALDW1 oJ The Hartjprd Heraldl i HEBER MATTHEWS FRANK LFELIX r EDITORS l rRANK L FELIX Pub and Propr Entered at the Hartford postofflc6 as mall matter of the second class WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1011 I d NOTICE DEMOCRATS Democratic State Primary Elec lion Saturday July 1 I I At last account Miss Canadian r ii Reciprocity was still waiting at the church The CoxFranks combine against Judge ORear has now become open secret I It Is a popular practice now tot swat a fly both at home and In theI baseball field They are talking about pension ing teachers which Is all right But why not pension old and disabled editors also As an acceptable summer drink j k carbolic acid seems yet to be a pop r j jj J andJI I The Elizabethtown News wants to consults a medium whoknow If a man Is a seersucker Why cure of the greenest shade j primary just a week iwa fllris B r arDont forgets t It I inc Ullof men W selectl from and you couldnt miss It anyII way you vote I ThQ rarr have cclul oft fpraIse for the EvansvIlle Couriers big aviation meet and demonstration which took place recently It wasII a grand affair for which that popu lar paper deserves much credits t Ijj Corn growing on tUos big dump pilesstain lrtot Hartford Is get t tins aibnK nicely The piles ot crushed rock on the side of the street have not yet been jut In cold i still hopeful arestorage but drivers Between tho fly that refuses to wipe Its feet before entering thoII residence and tho loafer who around a house and ejects his sputa I to tell whichI on the floor It Is hard Is the worst nufsance or menace to I health J Swat the house fly Is tho gen and oth eral advice from physicians ers The admonition Is good but If some scientist will come along and c tell us how to make our aim so t good that wo will kill a fly at every t swat wo will be under lasting ob ligations r I E Mr Franks says If Judge ORear gets the nomination for Governor the death knell of civil liberty will be sounded In Kentucky Judge ORear should be so ItII 1 the Democrats will expect Franks to help them defeat this of civil liberty T foeII During these exasperating days i individualsiJ need more attention than mans faithful friend the horse It Is ordlInarmaster that neglects this patient helpless creature London doctor has discoveredI t- I t- IAthat flute playing Is good for con sumptives Probably hes right We I that would ex can imagine nothing asperate a consumptive more completely and make hint jump up outl of bed and chase the player a mile to get him out of the neighborhood Tho city council of Central City I has passed an ordinance exempting ofl1hoI plant that may locate there Such nn ordinance as that would be a good thing for Hartford Why couldnt our city council do the same thing We certainly need I manufacturing plants here and some eort of Inducement ought to be offered I to get them Our natural facilities are all rIghtwe simply want to attract the attention of capitalists and get them to take no+ tlce I While In Louisville last week and Btter a copference with ft number of friends from dlrferenf parts I of the State Mr 0 B Likens Issued a card declining to enter the pri mary as a candidate for Secretary- of State This was a disappointment to many of his friends who earnestly Insisted that he could win the nomination and be elected How ever considering that there only re- maIned fifteen days to canvass and a term of Circuit Court In session f and the further tact that the npmj nation would be followed by a strenuous campaign Mr Likens thought It would not be best to nI s x ijfjoi nomfi county who attended the conference i with Mr Likens were Judge C M Crowe Hons H P Taylor and F4 L Felix One thing Ohio county Democrats should appreciate andI that was the solid backing given their candidate by the Democrats oft the Second Third and Fourth Con gressional Districts The Louisville Times has declar ed war on the Third House at Frankforta matter advocated in Tho Herald some weeks ago There are few greater menaces to the pub illc welfare and Important legislative I measures than this Third House af fair whose baneful but powerful In Jfluenco Is often brought to bear up on legislation In the most Insidious II manner Such Influence Is most al- I ways the force of money and ofI nevertheIlessI oerIthrownThere aro few things more dis gusting and disheartening to a local merchant than for some erstwhile customer to call on him for repairs Or supplies which came up short on an older which said customer j had placed with a mallorder house j There Is seldom anything gained by f buying from a mallorder house Such goods are usually shoddy or short In some way It Is the f county merchants to whom you look j favorsjwhoI I i and State governments end to them I j be given your jradj Arid patronage I A 11 J There Is rumor of a strong undercurrent J of sentiment among some t farmers hear Hartford which Is growing Into an open protest against alleged violations of the iI prohibition laws of Ohio county as evidenced by rdrattt lilfiiifitlog9 I from Iillylll lira colored suburb ofI Hartford CitlzeM see much to make them b tVlcve that liquor Is being iluor sold or peddled In partiesThey SUEI gested that a maskless day rider club be organized to promulgate a i few hints just as a starter PARTY RULES GOVERNING DEMOCRATIC PRIMARYr i To Be Held All Over Kentucky On Saturday July I 1911 Information concerning the Dem ocratic State Primary Election to be governIsameI I requested to carefully low IFIrstThat a primary election purposes be held un inleachI tween the hours of 6 oclock a m and 4 oclock p m standard time SecondAll Democrats who areI legal voters of the prlclnct jhereln they offer to vote and all Indepen dent voters who believe In the prin ciples of the Democratic party and desire to see those principles succeed who will feel In honor bound after participating In said primary to support the nominees thereof and all young men Just arriving at majority who Intend to nfllllato with the Democratic party and are legal voters In the precinct wherein they offer to vote are Intltled and Invit ed to participate in said primary subject to the provision of Section Three of this call IFifthIt shall be the duty of theI officers In each precinct at the close of the polls to then count theI ballots anounce the result and cer tify the same to the respective Coun ity or Legislative District Commit tees except that in counties containing cities of the first class they shall certify such result to the City and County Executive Committee saidI Committees shall within three days thereafter canvass and tabulate said vote and forthwith certify the same to tho State Executive Committee at its headquarters within ten days thereafter rrth certificate of the precinct offi cors shall show In detail the number of votes cast for each candidate and the report of tho County or the Leg Islatlve District Committee of the City and County Executive Commit tee In the counties containing cities of the first class shall show in de tail the number of votes cast for each candidate I Wlnfred RIng a young white man from Livermore charged breach of peace Is the only prison er now in the McLean county Jail r 4 t- tt ailllr Jli tt 7 d 00000000000000400p BAPTIST cHuncir e o 0 J W Brimer Pastor 6 00000000000000Prayer 0 lingat 8 oclock f LTeachers meeting Thursday ev ehlng at 745 V Sunday School at 945 Dr E W Ford Supt- Idorning worship at 1045 oclock note the change In time and evening worship at 8 oclock The pastor would be glad to See theI members at these services espec tally at the morning hour the definite decision In regard to the next year will be announced and doubtless some things said that every member shoud hear Saturdalafternoon j day at the same hour Roll Tant Wednesday at 2 p m June Hi I Miss Flora Roll and Mr E Yontz were united In marriage Lj the home of the bride in ville Ky The musical programII preceding the ceremony GreerlandTo the strains of Mendelssohns Wedding March John H Wallace I of Louisville and Grace Duncan of I Greenville the little nephew and cousin of the bride came down the fern clad stairway preceding the bride The children were prettily t dressed In white and carried baskets I J pink and white flowers I jOf Following was the bride looking lovely In a dainty white dress and icarrylng white roses Advancing to a green bower she was met by I the groom and Dr Henderson who t In a beautiful and Impressive ceremony j I pronounced them mand i wife The bride andgy i tndfli left tot a Western trl I I Thay ill be athome at JHuOeton ICy after July I11 I Mr and Mrs 0 6 Roll entertain ed Tuesday evening July 13th In honor of their daughtW Flora The reception rooms and hall were arI tlstlcally decorated lit green with I touches nf white find pink The diningroom Will rendered 10ublI attractive by the brides cake In Its Idress of white and green surmounted by kIssIng doves and pink roses resting under a canopy of green and white 5 I ITho sentiment of the occasion was carried out In the cakes and ices the latter of which were pink hearts surmounted by cupIds To the Voters of OhioCounty I am seeking the Democratic nom- Ination for Commissioner of Agri culture I am a Democrat and have served the party to the best of my nblllty since I have been a voter 1I am a farmer and believe this office Bought In fair division of favors go I Ito a farmer It Is closer to rural Ute than any other State omce unless It be that of Public Instruction and I think can be made yet a greater force In ameliorating conditions that surround country life I pledge the Democracy my utmost effort In Its behalf If I am named for the office and untiring labor in behalf of tho whole people If I am elected I stand for better farmers and bet ter farming better soil and better seed better schools and better roads better environment social and physical In a word rural pro gress I earnestly ask your aslst ance In the contest Sincerely yours D F HILL To my friends In Ohio county I want to state that Judge B F Hill of Henry county Ky Is my broth er and I would appreciate it as an act of kindness to me If my friends would render him their votes and assistance I am In the same Congressional District as the voters of Ohio county and am a neighbor Very truly yours W B HILL A Serious ChiOKe The examining trial of Mont Daugherty of near Cromwell who was arrested last Wednesday brought to Hartford and lodged In jail charged with unlawfully and fellonlously having carnal knowledge of and sexual Intercourse with Cora Daugherty an Infant female i under the age of 16 years was call ed last Saturday and not being ready for trial was continued to next Monday June 26th j IThe warrant of arrest was issued j by Judge R R Wedding upon an affidavit made by Labe tUnes a near relative The arrest was made by Sheriff T H Black and In default of a 2600 bond tho defendant was placed In jajl to await the examining trial- island Ky Store Robbed Calhoun Ky June 17The general store of W T Howell at Is- landI this county was entered by robbers last night and a quantity of merchandise stolen together with J8 In money The store is situatedI directly finder the exchange of the er- II W Jr M I CompaaIapdI glass front without awakening the jnlght operator The police are ln vestigatlng tjje robbery I O O F Itciinlon and Ilejiubllcan Convention fxmlsvillo iyJuly 11 1011 For the above occasion the illi- nois Central Railroad Company au thorlzeq rate of one fare plus 25 cents for the round trip from all stations Half fare for chlldrCti five to twelve years of age I Tickets on sale July 10 and 11 1911 return limit July 12 1911 Round trip from Deaver Dam 340 I J E WILLIAMS Agent Hits Judge ORear Hard ORears candidacy Is one of the most unfortunate things that ever happened to the Republican party in Kentucky ORears political Propaganda means personal violence instead of statute law Judge politicaljdlctator ters of Kentucky will soon show him that they stand for no Diaz stunts and will ram a few law abld jing Ideas down his throat not with bayonets but with ballotsMaya ivllle Ledger Republican THE REPRIEVEARRIVED FIVE MINUTES TOO LATE Los Angeles CalifJuno 16 Five minutes after he had been executed J by a Mexican Insurgent flrlni squad orders reached Cullacan from the sparetheos Federal commander Gelgo Red4ormer governor of thebI sinaloa revealed the T 5 tSday together with the Intl matlon that two days before his ex dIUte great cross of lh6 military or der an honor which only four men Iin Mexico ever received When Sin aloa surrendered the Federal om cers were promised protectton but he declares this was violated At ter Marelbs eyes were bandaged Redo blild ho realized the officer In JchaYge of the firing squad was nerv otis and raising the bandage gave his instruction as to how the exe HeIthenjI am ready FRANKS ACCUSES OREAR OF SEEING OR AMOS Shows Pocketful of Affidavits That Orear and Dr Amoss Had Confcrnce Dispatch to Louisville Herald Bowling Green Ky Juno 17 Time June 9 1911 Place Room 23 Henrietta Ho tel Princeton Ky Characters In play Judge E C ORear Doctor D C Amoss Liveryman R W Perry ExSheriff M U Lamb Mayor John C Gates bystanders sympathizers and hangers- on I With this plot and these charac ters Ed T Franks of Owensboro unfolded a play tonight that he feels sure will put Judge ORear on the blink Mr Franks arrived In Bowling Green early this morning and went to Morgantown In an auto ac lover by B S Huntsman and iC J Meredith where ho spoke to a good crowd It was here he first unfolded his plot on which he am pulled tonight in his i speech here I He read affidavits from R W Perry a liverman of Princeton and M U Lamb ExSheriff The pur port of the affidavits was that Lamb and Mayor Gates had made an en gagement to take Judge ORear out for a drive They went to the Hen rietta Hotel and found him In room twentythree In consultation with Dr David A Amoss recently ac quitted of the charges of being king of the nightriders I Perry avers that ho went to Judge ORears door and knocked land it was slow in openings After a while ORear came to the door and opened It Perry saw Dr Amoss therein I The reading of the affidavits ore ated a sensation here I FIntt May Recover There has been a decided Im provement In favor of Harvey Flatt who was seriously wounded In Hay ItI the colored suburb of Hartford at an early hour Sunday morning June 11 by his brotherinlaw Wll llm Taylor At the time of the shooting it was thought he could survive but a abort time and not withstanding Flatt Has two bullet boles In his heads ope In his arm and one In his leg the chances are very much In his favor for recovery Ir hit fwfi 1iJImJ4IITur1 A 0 ek H iOOOOc OOoItf I NII i I r It o 11 J AHOTDAYAnd we Whether you are pioking raspberries lin the White Mountains or dream 1x ing dreams in the valley of the Wy oming or sweltering in town youll G be glad ybubought one of these cool 4tt stylish and fashionable FeatheroI I weights Nobody ought to be with 1 out comfortable clothing it is all 4 here everythingiii the light weights and iicxtto riothings and the price j 3doesntstand in the way We have fitted many Why not you Ia IItenslve as we coming are sure with from perfect our WeII a 1 II =i assortment we will fit c IIsatisfactorily Come here for in Suits Coats yourlaiicoolers Hose Thin Underwear Hats etc Dont bring much money you wont need it ii sar il CARSONXoorportcod CO Ii I 6r CLOTHIERS HARTFORD i I WJ r H wwH a IWiniMM QJM a 0flF0 rrt HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY I II It SPECIAL CASH PRICES 1 bbl Patent Flour50048 lbs Patent Flour 130 24 Ibs Patent Flour 70 r 50 lb Can Pure Lard 550 lO lb Pail Pure Lard 125 51b Pail Pure LardO 65 l 2 gals White Flake Syrup 75 2 gals Santee Syrup h 70 2 Cans Best Table Peaches t ri85 2 Cans Good Table Peaches 25 1 doz Pie Peaches 85 a- i b- a 1 I 3II A- SHOE 1 4r j Greater 1Q een Quality variety cnow than laterierhajtwtyleat aces+ 1 t on the safe side select JSfO Wl- j I C 3 77 styles sizes and widths J tEP BARNES BROj Beaver Dam Ky 1 M J t1 1 t jiiInjii SUBSCRIBE NOW TT- t J WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 lafiTHEr HARTFORD HERALDPAGEFIVE ii Half Price Millinery 1 11tc Believing as we do that it is not good busi ness to carry over millinery we will put on sale Friday and Saturday our remaining i stock at exactly ONE It HALFI PRICE I J Every Hat marked in plain figureComeI look them overdivide the marked priceI by two you will have what the Hat costsJJ you Plenty of new MidSummer styles III 1 that will please you and at a price that will I certainly interest you Dont fail to them and bear in mind that it paysseeII A trade with a house that saves you money II I i h I Hartford Kentucky III j j t FARMERS Attention We will offer for the next two weeks at 25 per cent dis I count the celebrated James Oliver Disc CultivatorsL Moline Cultivators J IL Case Disc Harrows and man I We also for the faother farming implements are agents i I mous Deering Mowers and Binders Now is your time to l supply yourselves with implements We want to clean up these lines Watch our ad from time to time Yours truly I i DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO INCORIORA- TEDUNDEE KENTUCKY I I wsl H Illinois Central Railroad Time Ta t Jble at Beaver Dam Ky North Bound South Bound I pmII i No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm- tJ No 102248 pm No 131855 pm Y J Eo Wllllame Agt Prof C C Justus of Beaver Dam gave us a pleasant earl Thursday j Several responded to my other request for settlement Did you 23tf E W FORD M D M Miss Mary Taylor left last week for a sixweeks stay at Chautauqua N YMr A C Wakeland McHenry gave The Herald a pleasant call Fri day Mr WD Luce city was a pleasant caller at The Herald office lt Saturday Miss eGrtrude Wright will leave Monday for a visit to friends near Beaver DamI Mr W Cowlllnsand wife of 6 r- 4 Eddyvllle are visiting Mr and Mrs M T Likens Mre Ernest Woodward returnedMMa home Friday after a weeks visit IItI f r Pleasant Ridge I DrZ H Shultz former Supt of Schools now of Pleasant Ridge Was In the city dayDont tall to hear Hon Ollle James at the court house next Sat urdey i at 1 oclQck p nb- ForSaleTown property vacant lotauepttifw And lvp story dwelling 1 AV C1 YEISER CO VHrtford Ky j S I Mrs H P Taylor has returned from a few days visit to her daugh ter Mrs Woolfork Barrow Hon John J McHenry Louis ville spent Sunday with his mother Mrs Jennie T McHenry city Mr JF Vlckers Owensboro ar rived in Hartford yesterday to spentJ a day or two with old friends v Hon Ollie James speech at the court house next Saturday will be a i corker Dont fall to hear him Misses Margery Ellis Louisville and Annie Dudley Winchester KyI are visiting Mrs Rowan Holbrook cityIMiss Nora Wedding left Wednes day for a visit with her sister Mrs George Lewis who lives near OwI ensboro i Mr John Woodburn President ofji the Bremen Deposit Bank Bremen Ky was In the city Thursday tin I businessjli Mrs Lucy T Wedding arrived Monday at the Commercial Hotel j I from herhome In the West to spend her Bummer vacation In Hartford j i Mr W H Barnes went to DawJ son Springs yesterday where he will I I spend a few days for the benefit of his health i Mr S L Whittaker and sons Charles and Carrdll of Heflln gave 1TheHartford ThursdayII J Mrs A I of Otfenqboro tare here for an extended visit wlth MrB Taylors par j enj Man4rMrs W B Render j Mrs 3 E Dqke who was taken BUddfenly quite III last week Is Im Iproving It was first thought she had suffered a stroke of paralysis Preaching at Goshen Sunday at 11a m by the pastor Pray meeting this evening at 8 ocloc conducted by Prof W R Ilsdrlc- FOR SALKlA new plarfb5 Will take a good horse or cow Iii trade Call on or addresst 1 C D CHICK 24t4 Beaver Dam KyI For Sale Forms All sizes froml 6 to 300 acres We can please you if you want to buy land A C YEISER CO- Hartford Ky Mrs Josio Duke Dundee Is at the bedside of her father Rev G J Bean who is seriously 111 at the residence of Mr J H B Carson city a You cant afford to miss the j speaking at the court house next Saturday at 1 oclock if you are In terested in the political Issues of the day Old Papers Lots of EmFor sale at The Herald office To go on shelves or under carpets or for blast lag purposes Five cents pep largo package tf 1jmanj accepted a position In tho mechanl I cal department of the Hartford Republican 1 II Miss Mary Taylor city went torIr Louisville last Wednesday and from I there to New York Thursday where I she will spend several weeks at the Chautauqua Mr Guy Forrester has resigne- his position as linotype operator o the Hartford Republican and goneI Ito Earlington Ky to work on the l Bee force IIr E W Ford son and laugh wcnItot will visit relatives and friends for about ten days Mlsa Winona C Stevens left Thursday for an extended trip to the Eastern cities and the seashore She was Joined at Louisville b a party of friends DIRingoI day and will remAin until Circuit I Court adjourns Ho Is accompanied I by his son Master Ryan I Mrs John T Rocker of near Mc Henry who was stricken with pa- MIralyels some weeks ago is gradually growing worse and when last heard from Monday she was very HI Mr Delmer Bishop son of E T j Bishop who was stricken with pa ralysls last week Is very ill at the residence of H L Brown his r brotherinlaw of near Centertow- y I IIr Fred Woerner tho shoemaker fIleft Monday for his annual vacation j which1 this time will Include Louis vllle Ky Cannellton and Tell City i Ind He will be gone about aII monthjj Messrs T S Brown H L Brown I land J E Curtis Centertown Win Jn1 iHImes city and J H Loyd Fords jvllle were among The Heralds caUI era Monday I I S J TIchenors Great Bargain 1Salo begins at McHenry tomorrow Thursday morning Read his ad on page two of The Herald week tlcular for bargains bargain particulars or thisjj Mr W H Moore who has ben I on the sick list for the past weekI I is improving He was threatened with a stroke of paralysis on the left side He was able to come toJ the shop I J Messrs yesterdayII J Jroute 1 L J Iglehart Esq J C Jackson J R Addington and A F I b Chapman Center town and Albert Cox Hartford route 1 were among J The Heralds Callers yesterday j J Heber Matthews senior editor ofr I The Herald left Monday afternoon t for Cerulean Springs Ky tQ attend the annual midsummer meeting of the Kentucky Press Xssoclatlon 1In session there four days this week The Herald has Just Issued from Its Job rooms several thousand nag o to circulars announcing the great Bar jgaln Sale of Sf J Tlchenor McHen j ry to begin tomorroW morning 22 Remember M1uisdayI I tOjIhisj last week He was accompanied by his slater Miss Hattie Glenn who f will take a summer course In the preparatory to teaching In Hartford College this year j There seems to be a dearth Int marriages In Ohio county There has been but one marriage license Issued from the Ohio County Clerks office during the past two Weekse that being Harrison RRymondMQ- 1Henryto II ulaDaug 1rtylcHenry r e IRtk1 adisonwilLe JULY 1 18 19 20 21I 22 Special Train Service on M H Eat Reduced Rates SecretarylA big class Initiation of 100 members is being arranged by the Woodmen 1 of the World and will be held at Livermore on Sunday July 2 Col J H Brewer and other officials of the order will be present Quite number of members of the local lodge will probably attend Head S J TIcluMiorH advertise ment found on page two If Its bar gains you are after This Mammoth Sale will begin tomorrow Tliurs tiny morning and last nine days Sir Tichenor never does things by halves and you may rest assured It you miss this bargain solo you will regret It Mr Sidney Williams left last Sat urday night for Graysvllle Tenn whero he will attend the marriage a of his brother Mr D W Williams of Graysvlllc to Miss Sadie Thomas a of Soddy Tenn Mr Williams lleft Hartford about three years ago and has an excellent position as mana get of a store In Oraysville Prof Tool H Pile of Hardins Washingtond pr1nvato secretary to Congressman DenII Johnson This position was formerly held by Rogers Gore of Hol1JenI vllle Ky who was forced to resign on account of the critical Illness of his witsMr W Fenean chief engineer for the L 8 N R R Co ar rived in Hartford Monday and will remain a few dos in attendance at court Mr Feagan was accompan Ipd by his wife and son Mastery Lawrence Feagan who will visit friends In Hartford for a week or ten days SCHIUFTKRS FIOATIXO STT IMO is lying at the Hartford wharf tit yourvant photographs have them made now We have done work onII the brfafln this county for ber of years and you know anumI can do for you in the picture Give us a callTHE SCHUCETERS Mr J H Loyd wife and daughjjj 1ter Miss Ruth Loyd ofFordsville have gone to Bowling Green where they will remain the next month or I laughnter Miss Ruth will attend the sumjj mer Normal to better prepare them for their school work the coming scholastic year 1Captain Wm E Bennett Jr lath jU S infantry Fort Lawton Seat tie Washington arrived in Hartford yesterday to spend a few days with whoLiliad recently been very Ill He came In answer to a telegram announcing Ibis mothers sudden and what was then thought to be very serious 111 ness The Kentucky Board of Phcrma at Its last meeting appointed jCy James H Williams of official referee for Ohio county and he has accepted It will be his duty to pass upon all applicants for druggist registration and report to the State Board Those interested In the matter will please take notice accordingly Messrs G I James Owensboro Henry Ralph Esq Jno Graham G B Foreman Henry Carter Hiram Babbit and G W Powers of Nar rows Messrs Virgil Wm H and Romey Renfrow J W Thomas J H Wilson Mark Renfrew and Gus St Clair of Dundee were among those who attended the trial of the water cases here last week WANTED Two good white girls Ione as maid to elderly lady and to andilaundress In a family of three Also white boy to take care of horse and do outside work on a small place In a suburb of Louisville Good wages to right partlesroferences required Apply to Miss Barbaroux 16 Eastern Parkway Castlewood Ky Dl1se iamio Rqwo tiled at her home near Centertown Monday ijJnornlng about 9 oclock of conc sumption Her remains were In cemeteryfatfuneral services conducted by Rev H P Drown The deceased c was thp youngest daughter of Wll son Rowel who preceded her some years ago Meesra Heavrjn Woolwerd attorneys for Robt Rablnson who Ii r was so seriously Injured at the Broadway Mines In this county received a telegram from the Clerk of I the U S Court at Louisville Thurs Eyans ment In favor of tho Coal Company and awarded their client a new trial The suit Is for 15000 and was tried at Owensboro last May Mr Frank G Foreman who recently i resigned from the Naval Acodemy at Annapolis Md has ac cepted a position with the Manchester Steamship Co of Philadelphia- and 1 will sail on next Thursday or Friday for Antwerp in the Interest 1 of the company Before leaving Annapolis Mr Foreman was given splendid recommendation by the Chief of the Marino Engineering- nd Naval Construction Department Word has been received here that Mr W O King of Chicago brother of our townsmen Messrs John and Dan King will leave with his faml IeEuropej Ie firm of W O King fc Co have done j IIWindIII IIHollAndII goes ter this department of his business While gone Mr King and family will visit the principal points of InII terest In the United JlngdomiiI A number of young people most charmingly entertained by wereII Jennie McIIenry Monday the lawn at her beautiful homo here The guests were invited to meet Miss Ann Dudley of Winchester Ky and Miss Margery Ellis of Louisville In whose honor the entertainment was given Games and refreshments enlivened tho evening and the charming hostess and herI young friends greatly enjoyed their delightful pastimes Mrs McIIenry takes a lively Interest In her young friends and is greatly loved by them all Mr L S Smith who had been suffering from chronic stomach trouble took suddenly worse some ten days ago and died last Thursday- at his residence In the Goshen neighborhood His remains wero Interred in the West Providence church burying grounds Friday Mr eSmith was one of Ohio countys best citizens and will be greatly missed Ho leaves a wife and one son A M Smith cashier of the McHenry Deposit Dank a Sirs Mary Williams Dead thoiresldencestreet yesterday morning at eight oclock of diseases Incident to old age After funeral services con ducted by Rev Couch her remains will be Interred In the Bells Run cemetery tomorrow morning at 11 oclock Mrs Williams lips been in feeble camoIfourfor111 and sank rapidly until the end cameThe deceased was 70 years olll jam had been a member of the Dap earsIVII hI Closed July Itli The following merchants have agreed to close their stores all day July the 4thon account of National HolidayBarnard Co Carson Co Fair f Co J Rosenblatt fOLEnllONlYANnT u OrXlOJOG 2OOOOCOOOOOOOOCX5SOOOOOOOO I g Some of Our O Best Effortsg Are used in providing the 8 best clothes to be had for g little men from 3 to 1 71 years old The d and Best materials are put into our Suits 8 for Boys c We Take Special 8 Painsr to get the boys interested in this store g The boys of today are the men of to g morrow Mothers if you are interestedII 8in a Suit for your boys bring them to uSt r c we can satisfy you p Suits s I g 2 250 3 350 4 5 i r v R 750 850 110 8- lIE P Barnes Bf0 i oI t txxxx oocc oocooocooocooccocoooooooooooockxboooooooo 4u M t JUNE 2l 1911- o HERALDWFINESDfZPAGE SIX THE HARTFORD L The Hartjord Herald WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1011 6 M H E RAILROAD TIME T1 DLE AT HARTFORD KY Timo table effective Sunday Dec 4Uirontntns the following schedule 411 No 112 North Bound duo 720 a nt Dally except Sunday No 114 North Round duo 340 p m Dally except Sunday No 115 South Round duo 855 a m j Dally except Sunday No 113 South Round duo 140 p m Dally except Sunday II E M1SCHKE Agt CONFESSES LOVE FOR AN ACTRESS in a Fool Letter to His WifeII THE UTTER GOT A DIVORCEI On Submitting it to Court Tens All and Asks for No Mercy TRULY A DAFFY DOCUMKX t Chicago June 1tMrs Gertrude t Seohausen wife of Oscar J SceI 1Lr StanllardIIGlJlett and submitted a remarkable letter to throb among the musty flies of the divorce court Her wrote the letter to her husbandI love for another woman and the let ter read In court secured a divorce for the wife Here It IsIt Gertrude DearI am hopelessly in loveso completely so thorough ly and so sincerely that I am unfit for anything else on earth until you know it Tho affair Is just five days old today but I feel that it has gone on for months I first laid eyes on her Wednesday evening when she came out to sing Before she opened her mouth Iii was spellbound It was not her beauty That Is not as great as I many other women I had seen Later It was not her voice many are betterbut when she got through I table where I wasarose from myi tt eating and went over to her I have seen her twice since ati t home the next night and Fri IAday I felt so ashamed at the feel I Ing that overcame mo that I could not talk to herjust lookand then she said Do you know I saw you In that crowded restaurant standing out above all tho other i people I stammered I could not I singAnd I then this woman who had for four years made concert tours and been the cynosure of many eyes broke down and poured out of her I Iwhole being the love that I was not i free to declare to her It Is awe Inspiring supernatural I love this woman so unbounded- ly that I would cheerfully give up- I all I have In the world for her L She Is not an unsophisticated girla matured woman even q- l divorced and making her ownv way earning money handsomely 125 per week She can have no designs on me Until Friday sho did not oven know my name I told her I was married that I was made to come to her asked her begged her to send me away Buti the floodgates were opened I loved you the moment I saw you she said I will love you forever If I never get you no matter who you are what you are I love you now and alwaysS But It does not matter what she was I love her now so that I can seo nothing else do nothing else Gertrude dear forgive this bru tality e please forgive mo as much as you can dear Think I for me Do what you will with mo anything but let mo have her t Write mo and score melash mo I have got It coming I am scarlet and yours Is tho duty to Impose the judgment Your lovesick faithless BOYLE l I have forgotten In all this ramble y to tell you her name I will do so It is Klare Do Vine 1 1I10 FURTHER nEf1YIX LORIMER HEARIXfl fi Washington Juno 17Tho Sen I ate Lorimer committee decided to day to adhere to Its purposo of be ginning the taking of testimony on Y Thursday June 22 V telegram was received from Judgo Klbrldgo 1 Hancey counsel far Mr Lorimer saying It was uncertain whether be c fNp r could bo there at that time but the committee decided against any further postponement It Is probable that former Gover nor Yates of Illinois will be the first witness as ho has asked to be heard as soon as possible PENITENTIARY STRIPES NO HINDRANCE TO LOVE Carthage Mo Juno 10Thel- ove that caused Miss Ethel Fas kens stenographer to Secretary of State Roach at Jefferson City to carryon a secret correspondence with Harry Van Warlnga while he wasa convict In the Missouri Pent tentiary culminated tonight in their marriage hero at the home of her father G W Faskens Street CommissionerSince o three weeks ago 1Ieenllmuchthe girl at prison chapel where ho led the orchestra A Jealous suitor for her hand disclosed the corrcsi pondenco between the couple and Miss Faskens was discharged by Secretary Roach In her pique jhe announced she would wed Van War ingaVan Warlnga a native of Amster dam Holland was sentenced from St Joseph Mo to two years in the I penitentiary for selling a mortgaged I cornet He said he was Ignorant of IIthoII ried the parents of Miss Faskens when they eloped Miss Haskens Is very proud of her husband and refuses all offers of sympathyShe IIherII There are as many good men Insldo time penitentiary as outside of ItIIII I ooooooooooooooo0 THE AGE OF A HORSE 0 100000000000000000 I To tell the age of any horse I Inspect the lower Jaw of course ITIio six front teeth the tale will tell I And every doubt and fear dispelI Two middle nippers you behold e Before the colt Is two weeks old Before eight weeks two moro will come Eight months the corners cut the gum I Tho outside grooves will disappear From middle two In Just one yearI IIInII j bare U two the middle nippers drop At three the second pair cant stop When four years old the third pair goes At five a full now set ho shows The deep black spots will pass from view At six years from the middle two The second pair at seven years At eight the spot on each corner clears From middle nippers upper Jaw At nine the black spots will withdraw The second pair at ton are bright Eleven finds the corners lights time goes on the horsemen know The oval teeth threesided grow They longer get project before Till twenty when we know noImore a A Is ClinrmliiK Woman one who Is lovely In face CormI mind and temper But Its hard CorI a woman to be charming without health A weak sickly woman will be nervous and irritable Constipation and kidney poisons show In pimples blotches skin eruptions and a wretched complexion But Electric Bitters always prove a godsend to women who want henlthI beauty and friends They regulate stomach liver and kidneys purify the blood give strong nerves bright eyes pure breath smooth velvety skin lovely complexion and perfect health Try them jOc at James H Williams m The ChiirrliH Prime Duty What is the most Important mission of tho church asked a Topeka preacher of tho members of his congregation I Comfort the women and ralso enough money to pay tho pastor a I good salary replied one businessman Lightning Picked Pockets Lightning played a queer freak it killed Joseph Greenlee a IWhen farmer northeast of Hbpe picked his pocket Silver change feetIalongIWlthling to tho young man Is the occasion of speculation Columbus Jnd Cor Philadelphia Record j I A Sad BIqw Cholly says his European trip was completely spoiled I As to how1 Seeing n careless porter lost a- label oft his suit case I I 1 U INFAMOUS OUTRAGE UPON KENTUCKY CITIZENSHIP Was Oov Willsons iConduct iin Allowing Negro Murderer v to Escape The Glasgow Times says In 1903 Henry Shepherd a peace officer and white man was shot and killed at Cavo City by Luke Ray a negro desperado ho was attempting to arrest Tho killing was in cold blood and was brought about through the simple reason that the officer attempted to do his duty Ray promptly disappeared Shep herd was burled and thorothe matter rested for some time Finally 1 It was learned that Ray was in the United States penitentiary at At lanta under conviction for passing counterfeit money and that his time expired May 28 1911 The sheriff of Barren county thereupon filed the necessary requisition papers with Governor A E Wlllson of Kentucky and made preparations to bring Ray back to tho scene of his crime for trial on a charge of murder There appeared to bo some unaccountable delay In the matter the Barren county officials out landabundant precaution made Inquiries In Frankfort concerning the requisition papers Finally on Sat urday night before the negro was to have been released on Sunday morning and entirely too late for his apprehension the requisition pa pers were all returned to the sheriff of Barren countyunhonored with out the scratch of a pen giving any reason whatever for tho Governors astounding conduct Nor hums the Governor seen fit to offer any expla nation to this good day The murderer has been released from tho penitentiary bnd has again disap pearedThe killing of Shepherd was one of the most coldblooded and cruel crimes over committed in Kentucky the officer having been shot down white attempting to arrest the murderer on a train Undoubtedly Ray would have been hanged had he ev aC1tlonly without excuse Without a word to the lawofficers who were stand Ing ready to do their duty and wore urging him to do his ho deliberately allows a murderer to walk out of the clutches of the law a free man- IC this statement Is correctand- the Times hns It from tho sheriff and other officials of Barren county that It IsGovernor Willson should be impeached and removed from of lice T No Danscr In taking Dr Bells PineTarHoney for coughs and colds It contains no habit producing drugs Look for the bell on the bottle m FIRE DISCLOSES WEALTH IX A CHURCH STEEPLE Newport Ky Juno 10One thousand dollars in cash and ap proximately 1800 In solid silver cutlery were found late yesterday afternoon in the steeple of Corpus Christi church when that structure was found ablaze Fireman Sam Purcell climbed In to the steeple to use n fire extin guisher on the blaze He succeeded In puttlneg out tho blaze and later began an examination of the damage done He found a sack of coins the cutlery two gold watches and a necklace hidden In one corner of tho Interior Later ho reported the find to Rev Father Mathias Lleck pastor of the church Father Lleck said that ho could not account for tho presence there of the treasure and that an exam 1 nation will be made It Is supposed that somebody stole these valuables and hid them here aGood Circuit of FnirsI Arranged The following arrangement of fourIfairsdaysHenderson July 25 five days Providence August 1 five days Union town August 8 five days 0UNPRECEDENTED WHEAT CROP K IN PROSPECT Washington June 10A wheat crop the like of which has never been harvested will bo gathered in the United States this season tt conditions indicated by the Govern ments June crop report eon tlnuA throughout tbo estimate season Agricultural experts the crop this year will amount to 764201857 bushels an increase of 68 848857 bushels over that gathered last yearr IOt winter wheat the indicated EJi yield is almost 480090000 bushels and that of spring wheat 284000 000 bushels While winter wheat will probably yield less to the acre than the average for five years spring wheat will show an Increased yield of two bushels over 1910 and a slight Increase over the flyoyeai averago yield The condition of the spring whea crop on June 1 was a full poInt above the tenyear average while winter wheat was below tho average but bettor than In 1910 at this time p 000000000000000O POEMS YOULL ENJOY 0 0 0 O The Heralds Special Selections 0 00 00 rIlE BLUE AND THE mAY By the flow of the Inland river Whence the fleets of iron have fied- Where the blades of grave grass quiver Asleep are the ranks of the dead Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Under the one the Blue Under the other the Gray These in the roblngs of glory Those In the gloom of defeat All with tire battle blood gory In the dusk of eternity meet Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Under the laurel the Blue Under the willow the Gray From the silence of sorrowful bow ers The desolate mourners go Lovingly ladened with flowers Alike for the friend and the foe Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Under the roses the Blue Under the llllles the Gray So with an equal splendor The morning sun rays fall With a touch Impartially tender On the blossoms blooming for all Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Broldered with gold the Blue Mellowed with gold the Gray when the summer callcth ISo On the forest and field of grain With an equal murmur falleth The cooling drip of the rain Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Wet with the rain the Blue Wet with the rain the Gray Sadly but not with upbraiding The generous deed was done In the storms of years that are fading No braver battle was won Under the sod and the dew Waiting the Judgment day Under the blossoms the Blue Under the garlands the Gray No more shall the war cry sever Or winding rivers be red They banish our anger forever When they laurel the graves of our dead Under the sod and the dow Waiting the Judgment day Love and tears for the Blue Tears and love for the Gray F M FINCH iThe Great Swatter I The Ahkoond of Swat had Just swatted one of those big bluebottle flies that everybody tries for Ill show them whats swat ho said having thus reestablished his right to the throne S Pretty RigI If they keep on increasing the size of the National House of Representatives I II agree with you It will be as big as some of the members feel Granulated Eye MIls Can bo cured without cauterizing- or scarifying by the use of Suther lands Eagle Eye Salve ta guar teo it to cure 2 Go everywhere m A Hot Day Trousseau The bride was beautifully gowned Irish crochet yoke and collar and 1ln rogress girdle Holrego Neb I Subscribe for TIe Hartford Herald I A few years ago flying machines were hardly thought of nor was Scotts Emulsion in summer Now Scotts Emulsion ias much a sum mer asa winter remedy Science did it Ail Draa- fetrtDrBeflsTheThrHoney i For Coughs and Colds 1 The Fountain HeadofLife Is The Stomach- AA who bit a weak and impaired stomach and who does not properly digest hit food will soon find that his blood has become weak and Impoyerished and that his whole body U Improperly and Insufficiently nourished Dr PIERCES GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY makes tho stomach atroai promotes the flew ef digestive trices restores the lost appetite makes astlmllatlon perfect Invigorates the liver and thbootipurifies and enriches It Is the great IIleotllJfallel ileahbultdcr and restorative nerve tonic Ifmakes atronA la body ectlvo lit mind and tool In merTbllII Dlicovery Is a pure glycerio extract of American medical roots absolutely free from alcohol and all injurious habitforming drugs All its ingredients are printed on its wrappers It has no relationship with secret nostrums Its every ingredient it endorsed by the leaders in all the schools of medicine Dont accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this timeproven remedy OP KNOWN coMrosmoM ASK YOUR NEIGHBORS They must know or many cures made by it during past 40 years right in your own neighborhood Worlds Dispensary Medical Assooiatin Dr RV Pierce Pres Buffalo N Y 11 The farmer and his wife were about to sit down to a cold supper when they saw some old friends driving towards the house The good wife was equal to the occasion thanks to her New Perfection Oil Cookitove She had it lit ina moment and her guests hardly were seated on the porch before a hearty hot mealwas ready for the table sausages and eggs and long rashers of streaky bacon and rolls just crisped in theoven and the hostess herself as cool Jand neat as if the had not been near the She never could have managed it with an oldfashioned range The New Perfection is the quickest most convenient and best cooker A 1 tAt f New Model 27 marlin The only gun that fills the demand For a trom bone pump action repeater in 2520 and 3220 calibres Unexpected Guests freshcoffeeand kitchenj REPEATING RIFLE Mad wilL I had 3 bexrs with t ifIt2d3buracr riom CM be hid will or without Shaam opruaes fitted wih w J MWiirtTTVrbtrol or afor do KrvUrg circuit la the ratueacy oftJe CompanyIncorporated w at Shoots highve locity smoke less cartridges also black and low m pressure smokeless 0 fwecellent for target work for foxes geese woodchucks etc Its erdraIv fwtntii thtgmck Booth worbnf pump the wellmining Sptclal SumSM btrrtl i tie nodrra solid sop tad aids grcfor for rapid accurate faint iarnucd safety sad coQTeniene It hw Uu down tonnraction ud tar Bud free lilht ibeM cort extra oo othei riflei ci thete calibra Out 135page cttalo dMctlbe lh full TJZtMt liDo Sent for three stomps postage Write i4r n r cz Willow Street Ze7zitri7 arms La NHenCoae TIKENTUCKY Lih1 and Power Company M INCORPORATED E G BARRASS MGR Hartford KyWill wire your house at cost Electric Lights are clean healthy and safe No home or business house should be without them when within reac- hHARTFORD 4HERALDS Clubbing RatesFO- RYEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS The Herald and Weekly CourierJournal 150 U Uand Weekly Louisville Herald 135 U Uand Daily Owensboro Messenger 350 Uand Twiceaweek Owensbpro Messenger 175 U and Twiceaweek Owensboro Inquirer tc 175 and Daily Owensbpro Inquirer 325 r4 4 and Kentucky merLouiville J 25 4 jIand Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer t 150 150I 1 45and Thriceaweek New York World 165 and Twic awcck St Louis Republic 150 N- t m and National Magazine Monthly 150-t tt and McCalls Magazine =Fashions 130 Address THE HERALD Hartford Ky Hartford Herald Only Ifi Per Year JA I c ii iIITW jI i 1WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1011 THE HARTFORD HERALDPAaESEVER i r HUSBAND COMESI IN FOg DEFENSE At Boston National Con ference of ACUITIES AND CORRECTIONS Man Does Not Always Deserve Blame in Family DifficultiesKIf DEFEND SOUTHERN CHIVALRY Boston June HThe section meeting of the National Conference of Charities and Correction here at which the recreant husband and father was the topic brought out defense for the husband by a num ber of the women speakers who have Investigated the problem in their re spective States Two papers read by Joseph C Logan secretary of the Atlanta Associated Charities and William H Baldwin of Washing ton laid heavy blame upon the de serter Then Miss Minnie F Lowe of the Bureau of Personal Service Chicago was the first to stand up lfor the man Admitting that the breaking up of the home Is a serious matter she declared that some men without education r other advan tages are really nothing more than overgrown boys wanting womanly care which they do not get She shifted the blame back to social conditionsThe Is largely with the women supplemented Mrs Cathe rlfte L Van Wyck of Milwaukee Often they do not know how to cook or how to keep a home In my city we have sent an expert house keeper who can speak several lan t guages Into the homes where the were discouraged with never nights sleep with a break rrmen of rye bread and coffee and the same and this expert has saved as many as five fami lies In a week t It is a fact that the way to a mans heart and conscience is through his stomach Lot us help them In their homes The deserter had another defender I in Miss Eugenio Gelach who said Women need lessons in pleasantry They are inclined to tyrannize over those near them es f pecially their husbands f l a Thus emboldened by the women speakers a few mon arose to defend their kind C C Stahman of St Louis deplored the fact that the women care so little for cooking and l 80laters F B Sanborn told of two historic cases where prominent men deserted their wives and added that hej favored the settlement of the deser tion cases out of court It has only been in recent years that the South has had to take knowledge of the fact of women In Industry said A J McKolway ev Representative of the Na pal Child Labor Committee in an r utSress before the conference this morning Prior to the last census the number of women antichildrenJ em ployed In industries butslde of agriculture In Southern States was com- parativelY insignificant Following the Civil War there was a rapid de velopment of the public school sys tem in that section which gave the means of employment for thousands of educated and cultured women of the South who had been left In direst poverty The women teachers of jto South formed a teaching force inferior In all that makes the teachers life successful and her In fluence enduring to that of any other section The census of 1900 shows that In Pennsylvania alone there were r employed in other occupations than agriculture 101218 children under 16 years of age more than those of North Carolina South Carolina Georgia Alabama Florida and Mis sissippi combined and there were 10000 more children under 16 years of age employed In Plttsburg alone than in all of the cotton fnc- h sot all the Southern States 1 1 cotajjblned Even today fuser wo ixffin over 16 years of age are employed I In the Southern cotton mills I fthan In the New England mills A JhlJe nearly all the Southern States have a provision that the rningsof a married woman 1 controlled by herself alone that w4nlva reluctant and delayed rec cinitl riot her presence in Industry Alab ima FlorHa Georgia entucky Lontalana South Caroll R and Tennessee all have qmnlQyers tow Kreqnjrlijfor female employ g Texas simply prohibits the em 1 h t ployment of women in barrooms and North Carolina has no provis- Ion for the distinct protection of women in industry A RELIGIOUS DISCUSSION 1JETWEEN TWO PREACHERS What promises to be one of the greatest religious debates that has been held In this section for years Is scheduled to take place at Val ley Grove about seven miles south of Owensboro July 4 to 8 both dates Inclusive Rev S B Wardrip of Panther Davless county representing the Methodist church affirms That the Scriptures Teach That Sprinkling and Pouring of Water Upon a Proper Subject In the Name of the Father Son arid Holy Spirit Is Bap tismRev Mr Nance of Corydon Hen derson county affirms That the Scriptures Teach that Water Bap tism to the PenltentDellever Is For In tho Sense of In Order to Remis sion or Forgiveness of Past Sin Rev Mr Wardrlp will take the neg ativeBoth the reverend gentlemen have reputations as debaters of great ability and this debate Is looked forward to with great Inter est by members of the two denomi nations throughout all that section of Davless county and It Is expected that recordbreaking crowds will be In attendance put KILLS MAN WHO MADE FUN OF HER GLOVES Mrs Nannie Kyle Then Commits SuicideConductor Was- Her Victim Milton Ore June 16Because- he poked fun at her new gloves yesterday Mrs Nannie Myrtle Kyle aged 32 years murdered Conductor JOe Harper of the Walla Walla Val ley Traction Company here thfs morning Then she killed herself After the double tragedy the Coro ner found pinned on the wall in Mrs Kyles home the following noteNannie Myrtle Kyle was born in Harrodsburg Mercer county Ky February 1 1882 At the age of 16 she was married to Fred Kyle of WestonMrs Kyle who had been living In Milton several years and who got a divorce decree from her husband three weeks ago retaining custody of her 12yearold child went to Walla Walla yesterday When she returned home she was greatly ex cited She said the conductor Har per had insulted her by making fun of her gloves Mrs Kyle met the Interurban car In charge of Harper when it arrived in Milton at 7 oclock this morning She fired three shots into his body and then fired two shots into her brain Both died soon after tfar perwas married and leaves a 5 yearold son There is one medicine that every family should lie provided with and especially during the summer months vizi Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It Is almost certain to be needed It costs but a quarter Can you afford to be without it For sale by all dealers m Something to Do Every man can find work if he uses his brains Andrew Carnegie said In an after dinner address We should all be like the piano tuner I once met out West Why said I to hImtor we were In a wild unsettled country surely piano tuning cant be very lucrative here I shouldnt imag ine that pianos were very plentiful in this region a I No sir therere not said the piano tuner but I make a pretty fair Income by tightening up barbed wire fencesSt Louis Globe Democrat It is worse than leesto take any medicine Internally for muscular or chronic rheumatism All that Is needed is a free application of Chamberlains Liniment For sale by all dealersmSuspicious Bank President Whats the mat ter Bank VIce President I was Just thinking I sat next to bur cashier in church yesterday and I dont quite like the way he sings Will they mIss me when Im gone The woman of today who has good health good temper good sense brightI eyes and n lovely com plexion the resultot correct living and Bpod digestion wins the adml rntlon ott flwprldJt vorfr dteea Urn Is faulty Chain etloina Stomach and Liver Tablets will correct It For sale by all dealers m Ii iiJI THE JAYS WHO MAKE A TOWN Constitute Its Progressive Citizenship MAN is HIS OWN ARCHITECT The Location of Enterprises a Matter of Thrift and Personality PLACE WHAT PEOPLE MAKE IT Any place Is Just what the men who live In It make It Dont sit around and damn your town A town Is just as good or just as bad as the people who are damning it A town is seldom the result of virgin natural conditions In any event It was man who caw the nat ural advantage and frequently It was some one individual For Illustration There Is no natural reason why Cleveland should have been the oil center of tho world There are no oil wells In or about the community So tar as oil Is concerned and na a ship ping point It Is no better than a dozen and one other towns It was simply John D Rockefeller He wanted to live In Cleveland and his individuality his personality brought the oil to him There Is no reason why Boston should be the shoe market of the world There are no hides there They are all shipped from the West Simply some man who knew how to make shoes on a large scale wanted to live there and his success en couraged others to follow In his wakeThere Is no physical reason why Chicago should be the meatpack ing center of the world It could as well have been St Louis Simply old Phil Armour wanted to live thereIn nearly every town you visit you hear some resident say Aw this aint nothln but an overgrown country village The resident of any town that makes such a statement wears whiskers and boots at heart Of course If your town Isnt sporty enough for you why you can movethat aint the towns faultIf you get too sporty youll have to move anyhow- It aint the sports that make a townIts the Jays The man that gave the light for the sports on the Great White Way was a jayThomas A Edison a Jay telegraph operator from Indian apolisJohn D Rockefeller who in a money way Is the Ideal of every sport was a Jay from Rich ford New York Russel Sage who loaned money to the sports for years was a Jay he started by Jumping Into a coun try Store William Dean Howells Americas foremost literary character will take more pride In telling you of the days when he set type as a Jay printer on the Sentinel at AshtabulaOhlo than his literary success of later yearsthe days when they used shoe pegs jo space the type and about a printer getting drunk and AGE NO BAR Everybody in Hartford is Eligible Old people stooped with suffering Middle age courageously fight IngYouth protesting impatiently Children unable to explain All In misery from their kidneys Only a little backache first Comes when you catch a cold Or when you strain the back Many complications follow Urinary disorders Brights dis easeDoans Kidney Pills are for sick kidneysAre endorsed by thousands- W H Pendleton of Owensboro Ky says Our child was troubled by weakness of tho kidneys from in fancy There was an inability to control tho kidney secretions especially at night causing much annoyance Nothing proved of benefit un til we began giving the child Doans Kidney Pills They soon stopped the difficulty and there has been no recurrence For sale by all dealers Price 50 cents FosterMllbur Co Buffa lo New York pole gents for the United States- Remember the name Deans and take no other 1 r using a plug of Star tobacco for a cut Nearly every man In art science literature industry and commerce here in America today either Is or was R Jay- Cincinnati Is the supply center of the South Years ago at the wan Ing of the river traffic it was about to give place to Louisville and Mom phis In the Commerce of that terri toryThe citizens of Cincinnati got busy and built the Cincinnati South ern Railroad This road was the dream of a- jay They called him n Jay dreamer but his dream saved tho town You hear people of the Far West In mercantile industrial artistic and scientific pursuits saying If we wero only In Chicago we could do or get so and so In Chicago you hear them say If we were only In New York When In New York you hear them wishing for something In London or Paris Chicago New York London and Paris are all the results of their cit hens taking the conditions and material at hand and doing the best they could with themjust as we can all do There you are Any place Is just what the people who live in It make It If anv of the towns that any of us live in are not to our liking why lets get busyits all up to us The process In the Improvement of nnv town Ia1 to ret rid of the Pen plo who are damning It FAMILY HONOR AVENGED BY A 15YEAROlD BOY Kills Man Who Was Indicted for the Alleged Ruin of Sister London Ky June 1GJesse Barker the luyearold son of Wil liam Barker of Lily nine miles south of here came to London at 4 oclock this afternoon and surren dered to Sheriff Scovlllo on a charge of having shot and killed William Edwards a prominent stock dealer at the homo of his father last night The boy refused to be IntervIew- ed No arrangements have yet been mndo for the examining trial It Is clalhled by tho Barker fami ly that since a sister of the Barker boy became a mother about a year ago and Edwards was Indicted Ed wards had continued to visit the Barker home against the wishes of the family and that he was shot last night at 10 oclock while talk Ing with the Darker girl and after he had been asked to leave Edwards was shot with a shotgun at short range and his head was al most torn off Edwards had been married but divorced He was shot by his uncle D S TIpton a promi nent farmer on the streets of London live years ago over the divorce suit with his wife and his life was saved by a skillful operation I We Dont Have to Tell you what It is for Its name tells Dr Bolls PlneTarHoney Is the best cough medicine and several million people already know It Look for time bell on the bottle in AN INSTANCE OF LUCK WON 5101111 FROM ml When A V Morrison a business man arrived here tonight on his way to San Francisco he found a telegram waiting for him at time Ho tel Alexandria It had been there more than a week When ho open ed It he read You win Sunstar winner of tho Derby Draw on me for 10440 and attach your ticket No C937 to draft Letter follows Thus Morrison learned that 1 put Into a pool on the Derby while he was In Vancouver B C had won him a small fortune The no tification was from tho Secretary of the pool and Morrison sent the draft ns requested Morrison says ho bought the ticket merely because n man ho was with tool one Morrison should have had Ticket No 60TG but an Impetuous Englishman who rushed Into the ptore wHl It was being written said he could rot walt n1vn Mm mine said Morrlcon any Ill tako the next ova And he dlflosfngeles Cal Cor New York Suns Dont Get All Run Down Weak and miserable If you have Idney or bladder trouble headache pains In the back and feel tired nil Otter and wnnt R pleasant herb rem pdv trv Moth or O rays Aromatic Leaf Aa R SjlSrn yernlatnr It has no equal All dnitreltts 50o Ask to fitly Sarane FREn Address Toe Mother Gray Co LeRoy New York 23t4 u nbscribo for The Hartford Herald TYPICAL TARIFF STORY OF A HAT Illustrating Noted Pro tective Principle THE MATTER APTLY SET FORTH Showing How It Comes Home to Every Wearer of a Hat THE rXDEKWOOD WOOL TARIl This IB n hatIt is a wool hat The material grew upon tho back ot- a sheet Wo do not wear woolwe wear things made of wool Wo do not buy woolwe buy things made of woolThe cost of the wool In this hat was only a few cents The wool would not weigh more than a pound and In tho raw state It cost about twentyfive cents In addition there was a tariff tax of eleven cents making a total of thirtysix cents The hat cost tho wearer a It cost the retail merchant perhaps 4 Of this 4 which the charged something manufactureI added on account of the tariff on hats The remainder was the ordinary cost of manufacturing and the profit of time manufacturer The foreign manufacturer of hats cannot sell us hats because ofI the tariff on hats the difference 1 gives tho market to the domes tic manufacturerHow get cheaper hats By taking off the tariff you will say Which tariff The eleven cents on the wool or the 1 on the hat Suppose wo take off the wool tariff of eleven cents That will make the wool In the hat cost the manufacturer cloven cents less But will that enable the foreign manu facturer to sell us a hat Not un manIIUfacturcd blIforeBut will not the domestic manu facturer reduce his price eleven i cents since ho gets his wool much cheaper thntI Run along child and find whether the cat will eat the outI if you leave the cover off the buc- ketDallas News The Democratic caucus In the House may not have followed same line of reasoning but It theI arrived Hi much time same conclu sionThe Underwood wool tariff It adopted will cut the duty on the raw material In half at the same time that It Insures a continuance of a sufficient amount of revenue Un der existing conditions it Is difficult to see how n more workable plan could be evolved It still leaves practically untouched however the matter of cheaper hats and clothes Iin which some ninetyodd million wearers are chiefly Interested The best that the wool hill can do If It Is made Into law will be to pave the way for a lower cost for the finished product Like the Canadian reci procity measure It Is far from providing adequate relief but It marks a most satisfactory first step toward the time when a Democratic Con gross and a Democratic President can complete time workLouls ville Times lIllloiisncMH and Constipation For years I was troubled with biliousness and constipation which made life miserable for me My appetite foiled me I lost my usual force and vitality Pepsin preparations and cathartics only made mat ters worse I do not know where I should have been today had I not tried Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tablets The tablets re oncelstrenpurify tho stomach liver and blood helping the system to do its work naturally Miss Rosa Potts Birm ingham Ala These tablets are for sale by all dealers r mI WHY WOMEN LIVE LONG AS COMPARED TO MEN Not because women naturally j want to have the last word but because they require less oxygen than merit and so can stand more heat and more rarified air because they suffer lees from anesthetics and are also more likely to survive choking because rigidity of the thorax fInd hardening of the nrter ies begin earlier In men than in women because they have more power to endure suffering and re AAt 8 sist disease and because in general women arc physiological misers while men are physiological spendthrifts are the main reasons given by Dr A H Stewart In the Medical Record why there are more females than male centenarians The weaker sex Is the more tena cious of life There are about 4 000 persons over 100 years of age In tills country as reported by the census of 1840about 2600 women and 1400 men Statistics of other countries show about the same ra tio In every community there seems to be moro widows than widowers and perhaps an explanation of this phenomenon may be found in the more pronounced tendency to longev ity among women than among men Another point which the learned physician does not discuss Is the question whether till womans In dimtrlal and economic efficiency Is urolonped to a later period In life than mansrnMton Globe Almost EviMytlilni Favorable Well says the man with time anaemic whiskers now that tho Supreme Court has dissolved time Standard Oil Trust you or I can organize n competing company and go Into the oil business Sure says the man with the undershot chin You bet your life Im nil ready to launch a competing company all except the lit 111 matter of rnlslng about a billion dollars capital APPEAL TO PREACHERS- IN SCHOOL MATTER DeclopillgIBetter Educational Facilities The Louisville CourierJournal saysThe Rev Dr E Y Mulllns who Is an active member of the Rural School Development Committee of tho Commercial Club has prepared an appeal to be sent out to the min isters of time various denominations In the State urging them to take a more active Interest In the improvement of rural schools Dr Mulllns prepared this statement at the request of the Rural School Develop ment Committee Before It Is sent out It will be signed by several of tho leading ministers of LouisvilleI The letter In part Is as follows This Is not a case In any sense of mixing politics with religion for all parties are Interested In educa tion alike and surely our Christian ity demands education for Its prop er expression There Is no con flict between the denominational In terests In education and the develop ment of the common school system of the State Indeed wo must nun Irate If we are to have a wealthy citizenship The minister Is a teach er and leader We appeal to you to cooperate In this great movement Will you speak or preach to your people on the subject urging them to lend their Influence to such movements as may bo necessary to bring about better conditions If necessary wo suggest that your church building might be used for educational meetings In which the needs could be presented then you yourself might he able to give some time to educational meetings Wins Fight For Life d It was a long and bloody battle f for life that was waged by James II ft Mershon of Newark N J of which he writes I had lost much blood from lung hemorrhages antI was very weak and run down For eight months I was unable to work Death seemed close on my heels when t began three weeks ago to use Dr Kings New Discovery But It has helped me greatly It Is do Ing all that you claim For weak sore lungs obstinate coughs stubborn colds hoarseness la grippe asthma hayfever or any throat or lung trouble Its supreme f0c m 100 Trial bottle free Guaran teed by James H Williams m Defined A prisoner was brought before n l police magistrate In p country town down South The courts knownmedge of law was rudimentary and of English still less The Judiro look around and found that his clerk was not present HIre officer snld he whats It Ithe charge against this man nitwiT replied the policeman I wIvesI lc1 at time 0- cer evidently surprised by such ignorance Whv officer he spit thats not bigotry thats trio lometry nnnt 1 XPt with n Cutet t- inen i r rolls rnlteTarHqa q has been used by millions of pcone- r I flxteen year wh n steady increasing demand Look for the bell on the Mottle m i PAGE EIGHT THE HARTFORD HERALDWEDNESDAZ JUNE 21 1911 i Occooooooc HON oooooooeecooooocOOQOOOCOOOOOOOOCSOCOOOOOCOoboO 0LLIE 1- ti JAMES ll- r llt II 38C Congressman from the First Kentucky District and candidate for United States Senator willspeak at the Court 8 I rI 1 I House in Hartford at one oclock p m next Saturday 1 IIS EVeRYBODY COMB DONTOCOC0C000 P7UL TO HER03COO000300COCCCOOGGOOO000u0 HI7fiOOCC10- 0003COOOCu03000OC03COG00COCAC00C0AC0300C The Hartford Heraldl WEDNESDAY JUNE 81 101 tt A Delightful Outing With their beaux friends sweet hearts and families the employeesI of tho Williams and Taylor Coal Companies spent an exceedingly pleasant day at High View recently as the guests of Mr Guy State ler assistant general manager of the above named companies and wifeAll the annoyance of preparing the excellent dinner and supper was spared the guests as the amiable host and hostess took this burden upon themselves the only require ment made of the guests being to V come eat and be merry Nothing was lacking to make the day a pleasant one Dainties of all kinds including chick were In abundance It en ham mutton which some one i said the host himself barbecued r Ice cold lemonade coffee soda pop for the kids Ice cream and cake f delicacies too numerous 4 and many other to mention I Several kodaks were also among those present and tho pictures tar ken will long be cherished as last- Ing mementos of a day full of brightness and geniality unmarred albythe rush and roar of trade amid the picturesque shades of one of Kentuckys most bewitching forest scenesThe ladles were treated to boat Tides In the afternoon while many of the youngsters enjoyed delight ful plunges In the river There were In all fiftythree guests present Conveyances were furnished gratis to everyone I BestII asth ma croup or any throat or bron I BellsIPineTarHoney you do Look for the bell on the bottle m I SuedIKy 17Sult1- 11S been filed In the Hancock Court at Hawesvllle against G G Wat son town marshal of Lowisport for a balance of the tax money he Is alleged to have collected and failed L TreasurerLsons sureties are made codefend 1ntsII t Dont be Annoyed With skin troubles chaps pimples black heads eczema or sores when ono 25c box of Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve will cure you Try It at I once m titiII 4 I IIKPL1N Juno 19Mrs Nettle Crowe and little son Virgil of Owensboro are visiting her aunt Mrs Ann Hol I placeIMr Otis Carson of Beda dlned RowanfSundayMrs Oma HIggs who has been 111 for several days Is no bettersMr and Mrs Willie Wells oftNuckols spent Saturday night with Mrs Lottie Heflln herell Miss Eva Thomasson who has been visiting Miss Pearl Bradley of Owensboro tho last week has re turned home and reports a pleasant visitMiss I Lea Rowan Is on the sick listMiss Clara Kills of Owensboro visited her mother from Wednesday until Sunday at this place The carpenters who are working on the W O W hall at this place are progressing nicely I Mr and Mrs Robert Rowan and little daughter Rosamond spent Sunday afternoon with his mother 1lereII Ira Ellis and wife spent SunI3 3slaywith J W Foster and family DUKEHURST June 19Most corn in this secII lion Is looking fine but Is needing I rainII A lot of tobacco has been set buttt owing to dry weather the farmers have a poor stand wheat harvest In this section Is w about completed h Miss Lena Combs Is visiting friends at Fordsvlllo- Messrsp E D Murphy and Gro I l A jA1 iV S ver Murphy of near Dundee visited Adolphus Murphy Sunday Mrs A A Murphy of this place visited Adolphus Murphy and family Saturday night and Sunday Mr Leslie Combs went to Hart ford Saturday Miss Gertrude Durbin Is visiting friends and relatives near Sulphur SpringsMr Adolphus Murphy son and daughter Audra and little Truman went to Dundee Saturday A Dreadful Wound From a knife gun tin can rusty nail fireworks or of any other na ture demands prompt treatment with Bucklens Arnica Salve to pre vent blood poison or gangrene Its the quickest surest healer for all such wounds as also for burns soils pores skin eruptions eczema chapped hands corns or piles 25c at James H Williams im HKAVKR DAM June 19The delegation that visited Hartford from this place last week for the purpose of locating a county high school at this place succeeded So Beaver Dam will have a county high school and any one In the county having passed the eighth grade can enter the schoolOur and the county pay tho school building Is a beautiful brick structure located In the northern suburbs of our town Wo have a healthy town no saloons and good churcches and a good faculty Prof O L Shultz being president Anyone looking for a location to edu cate their children would do well to visit our town before locating else whereMr J A Tucker who has of late been in the mountains superintend ing mines Is visiting his home this week He will go soon to superin tend mines near Greenville Old Mr Obedlah Liles living on the farm of Mr Hiram Miller died last Friday and was burled at Mt Zion church Saturday Mrs Z W Hood of Kansas City Mo Is visiting the family of Mr Dlllle Smith Mr Yewell Taylor and wife who have been teaching in Florida are visiting his father Mr Rick Tay lor Work Will Soon Start After you take Dr Kings New Life Pills and youll quickly enjoy their fine results Constipation and In digestion vanish and fine appetite returns They regulate stomach liver and bowels and Impart new strength and energy to the whole system Try them Only 25c at James H Williams m r HKNNETTS June 1C Mrs Sam Roach who has been sick for some time Is no hotter Mr and Mrs Alfred Wallace were the guests of their parents Mr and Mrs Frank Black near Hartford Saturday and Sunday Farmers of this community are very busy cutting wheat We are needing rain badly The lodge meeting at Bennetts every second Saturday Is very successful Miss Clara Patton is on the sick list Get the Best For skin troubles sores ulcers ec zema chaps black heads pimples and all eruptions Uso Dr Bells th9besteverywhere m MYSTERIOUS DROWNING IN A TUB OF WATER I Glasgow Ky Juno 17Wlth his head partly submerged In a tub of water and lIfo almost extlnt Louis Jolly 35 years old was found at his I home at Wisdom ten miles fromI hero late this afternoon Ho died after being found Jolly was the son of the late G W Jolly and was a wellknown farmer of that section The family thinks be suffered an attack of apo plexy and fell his head striking iIn the tub There Is no known reason why he shopld have attempted sui cide For a burn or scald apply Cham berlains Salve It will allay the pain almost Instantly and quickly heal the injured parts For sate b1I all dealers m I oooooooooooooooO CIRCUIT COURT NOTES 0 000000000000000 The jury trials ordinary docket have been disposed of as follows GuBtavus St Clair vs M H E R R Co continued J W Glasscock vs C L Smith continuedJ I Condor vs J V Stlmson Co verdict of jury60 for plain tiff Thomas Bond vs M H E R R Co continued- E D Murphy vs M H E R R Co c passed- J W Thomas vs M H E R R Co verdict of jury200 for plaintiffJ Vertrees vs L N R R Co verdict of jury48 for plain tiffC L Porter vs J M Whltehouse dismissedsettledHIram L N R R Co verdict of jury260 fpr plaIn tiffThomas Cook vs M H E R R Co verdict of Jury for defend antA F Graham vs M H E R R Co verdict of jury600 for plaintiff Dardwell and Barnard vs Amer lean and Adams Express Cos Ver dict of jury160 for plaintiffs W I Iglehart vs J B TIchenor ontrialThe following named gentlemen have been empanelled as petit Ju rors for this week in lieu of the Jurors who served the first week vizH R Bennett J E Maddox J S Bennett Albert QuIsenberry J W Loney E K Smith B E Eu daley Geo T Shultz Alex Carson E E Rhoads Porter Henley A V Rowan B W Acton Warren Taylor A A Carter J H Black C R Chinn Frank Black C L Elliott O R Tinsley and John Chinn Court will likely adjourn tomor row or Friday Taxes Due Your taxes for tho year 1911 are now due Please call at the Sheriffs once and settle Prompt ness In this matter will bo greatly appreciated 24t4 T H BLACK S O C tFor Sale Brand new 100 No 5 Under wood Typewriter used by owner mly one month Large discount for ash Address Mrs Mayme L Bar ass Beaver Dam Ky 24t4 For Sale White Plymouth Rocks Good layers Bred from prize winners Stock and eggs for sale MURRAY A HUDSON 12m3p McHenry Ky Child Drowns In Tub Calhoun Ky June 17Tho one yearold baby of Mrs Andy Row land was drowned In a tub of water at its home near Delaware The child had been left alone while the mother was busy about the housework and was playing near the edge of the tub when it lost Its balance and fell in being drowned before the frantic mother could rescue It Will Open Monday Our new stock of goods consist ing of Groceries Hardware Queens ware Cuttlery c are arriving rapidly and will all be In by the last of the week and we will bo open and ready for business next Mon day Our motto Is Quick sales small profit prompt attention to business courteous treatment and satisfaction guaranteed Your pat ronago solicited LIKENS ACTON r A 8 of E Notice All locals of the American Socie ty of Equity are urgently requested to send delegates to the county un ion July 7 and 8 loll There will be much Important business to come before tho body and aJull delega tion is urgently called for 24W HENRY M PIRTLE Secy Leave your Laundry at my Grocery Domestic finish Work Guaranteed Called for and prompt delivery Phone 140 llers Grocery FINAL END COMERTO JAMES PROCTOR KNOTT LebanonKy Junei 1Itsquietly end as peacefully as he had spent his declining ypare death t iRi came to former Gov James Proctor Knott at his home In this city at C05 oclock tonight The disting uished KentuckIan has been In poor health for several years past and end was not unexpected He was 80 years of age and h1 death was the result of a genera breakdown One week ago to da iGov Knott was taken slightly III the result of the warm weather the day before However ho rattle and on Monday had sufficiently re covered to be able to sit out on his front porch Early this morning he suffered severe choking spell and from tha time he gradually grew worse until the end- WEST NOCUKKK SCHOOL- IMPROVEMENT LEAOUI3 Program tot Friday evening JuneI 23 1911 Opening song Rollcall Read Ing of Minutes Opening nddrpss A C Porter Declamation Dora Bennett An explanation of Tho Golden RuleO D Carson Solo Charlie Foster Old business Appointment of committee to ar range program Recesa Song Recitation i Ima Ruby Reading Bessie Renfrow Recita tionKathleen Stevens Debate Subject ttesolved That Wood row Wilson was right when he said That Ministers of the Gospel and Public Officials ought to be Bach elors Affirmative O D Carson P D Tweddell Oscar Buchanan Negative Robert Davis J P Fos ter A C Porter New business Paper Criticism Reading of pro gram FILYDIA FOSTER Secy JOE L KLANDFORD IS APPLYING FOR PAROL- The Owensboro Messenger says Joe L Blandford who will have served a year on a sentence of two and a half years In the Eddyvllle penitentiary on July C for embezzling about 15000 from the Bank of West Louisville will make application for parole before tlfb July meeting of the Board of Prison CommissionersBlandford a number of years was cashier of the bank at West Louisville but left that place very suddenly which caused an Investi gation that showed the cashier to be short In his accounts in a sum that approximated 15000 Later Blandford returned to Owensboro and surrendered to the officials He was then tried and was given a sen tence of two and a halfyears In the penitentiaryBefore the trial of the case Blandford filed a statement asking that the court defer the trial of his case In order that he might Instruct his young sons In business so that they could provide for their mother and sisters Blandford has hadI rather an easy berth in the peniten tiary as ho was In charge of the li brary and a part of tho records there and It Is stated that he has made a model prisoner and that his conduct since ho has been confined In the institution has been oxemp lary CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK Nod For the refined and dainty woman Is what she demands now Americans are uptodoto on dentistry and are not satisfied with anything bat the acme of perfection in dental work Teeth extracted with as little pain as possible Children given careful attention Special attention toplate work and ALL WORK OUARAN TEETh Work dome at lowest prices DR H J BELL Office ili ReplbllCuihllk- llugjHARTFORD KY I IiIf I III El I llilliI eee ee eee e e 1flfl OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO A1InDyI I eeeeeeeeeee eeee OFFER FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION A SELECT LINE OF PowdertThe best makes and all popular odors iiiI Toilet SoapsElThat are refined in odor and do not roughen the skin Perfumes and Toilet Water iThe best makes of Violet and other popular odors Cigars Imported and Key West The best known brands Tooth Brushes J kind that retain their bristles III m IiTheI 8 lEI I IIBEDA June 19We have had a fine rain Corn Is looking well The farmers can finish setting tobacco now Wheat crop good Mr Hiner Umphroy arid mother visited Mrs Sallle Bennett Sunday Mrs Etta Rowan of Heflln vis ited her parents Mr and Mrs W wasEtaken suddenly 111 and has not been able to return home yet Miss Emma Park of Hartford and Miss Lois Park of near White Run visited Mrs WC Bennett FridaySenator A S Bennett called at W C Bennetts Monday morning to see his cousin Mrs Etta Rowan Mr Robert Davis of Hartford was In Beda Monday Mr Ney Rowan who has been at the bedside of his sick wife returned home Monday Mrs Bernice Rogers and children + 1 Number one Clover and Timoth Hay mixed Number one Clover Hay First olass Feed Corn Corn Chops Corn Feed Meal Alfalfa Meal Crown Alfalfa Feed Acme Horse and Mule Feed Bran and Ship Stuff npuro wheat product ir Best Northern White Oats Ij j v Lime Owensboros Best PatentI Flour Clifton- Madisonvilles Best Patent Flour Bob White- lrvingtons Best Patent Flour None Such Hartford Mill Cos Best Patent Flour Cream of Har rof Beaver Dam are visiting her parents Mr and Mrs B M Bennett Sunday School at this place is getting along nicely Mr J W Benton has been quite sick tho past week His son Malon of Owensboro came home to walt- onhimSucess to The Herald Nail Case Affirmed A telegram was received here Thursday afternoon from Frankfort announcing that the Court of Ap peals had affirmed the decision of the Misses Nail vs the City of trlltdInglvhrgItheof 750 for Injury to their real dence property by lowering North Main street Fr Salej+ + + + + + r+ + + + IjBarrel wTARRena g + + + +j + + + + + +3 w+ vest and Cream of Wheat Madisonville Bolted Meal Quail Brand It CompanysUnbolted German Millet Seed Fancy SouthernFancy Whipporwili Peas 11nStock and Poultry Remedy and Hog Powder Every package guaranteed Minors Fly Oil for Stock Minors Disinfectant Fluid Chicken Feed Cracked Corn 2 sizes Wheat Atlas Chick Feed Atlas Hen Feed sizesOysterJones Pure Animal Matfcen Fertilizer made by the Jbl Fertilizer Company of LouS vine Ky r WF J LISr1i JL Px odtlc Man HARTFORD KENTUC A t h t