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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, June 28, 1911.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, June 28, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911062801 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 28, 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. k jy- y jQ m THE HARTFORD HERALD l Subscription 1 Per Yetzrt in Advance I Come tie herald of a ifohj World the 1ree 19rJjl Mm Lirimiy at1 itJ But All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed a7th YEAR HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1911 XO 26m k GREET SPEECH OF OLLIEI JAMS p At the Court House Here Last Saturday WAS REPLETE WITH FINE LOGICJ Reviewed the Characteristic History of the Two Leading Parties A SUMMARY OF WHAT HE SA I Hon Ollie James Congressman from the First Kentucky District and Democratic candidate for United States Senator spoke at tIleI a court house in Hartford Saturday to a fair sized crowd A number of ladles were present Owing to theI recent rains and the fact that theI farmers were very busy that day the attendance was not up to the standard of such occasions ThoseI who stayed away however certnln ly missed a magnificent speech Mr James was Introduced to the audience by Prof Ozna Shultz Prof Shultz Is a speaker of no I small note himself and he did the occasion ample justice Mr JamesI said it was gratifying to speak in a county where Democrats have to fight for supremacy He praised the voters who stick to the faith through many defeats and much difficulty I Principle in politics Is the great Idea not men the speaker said Re publicanism cannot thrive In de feat Its leaders must have offices If they keep tho faith Mr James reviewed the conflict ing history of the Democratic and Republican parties Democratic l leaders have written the most pro 3gressive and beneficial legislation t intojtlielawft ot omvcountrjt Leg Islatlon to regulate railroads was t enacted by Democrats over the t combined opposition of Republicans I Election of Senators 6y popular g vote was and Is a prime Democratic It principle and gets Its advocates in Democratic ranks Republican of itliceholders have grown rich in of lice from the emoluments of graft and their work in making laws fo the benefit of the rich and them I selves The Morgan Guggenhef m syndicate In which Ballinger wa whitewashed Is an illustration of 1 their methods Republican leaders have stood In solid opposition tot popular and beneficial measures l simply because those Ideas were advocated I by Democratic leaders It 4tnow costs 1359 per capita under extravagant Republican measures to run our Government whereas In VJfthe days of John Quincy Adams it 1 1cost fifty cents por capita tfTlIe1 tariff said Mr James Is but a name for extortion under Repub tilican guise When the g o p leaders go after the peoples money they get It by a tariff or a subsidy The r SIncome Taxn Democratic doc trine originated In the laws of o comY to give stance for the benefit of the gov ernment under which they lived Millionaires of this country pay no k tithes to keep up the Government under which they grow rich Wealth tytshould pay Its Just tribute to the support of the Government which ry makes our country glorious Ten per cent of our population now ownI unCI der a benign Republican admin idIstration ed Mr James cited the Instance i Kentuckyitried tp veto an amendment thejj ed Federal Constitution evidencing j 00the ignorance and blundering meth ods of our present chief executive The speaker said that a list of thett achievements of the Democratic par V ty is sufficient to make every Democrat t hold up his bead In pride The lib r rrf chief difference between a stand i patter and an Insurgent said Mr4 James Is that tho Insurgent wants t = t jto steal moderately and the stand Patter wants to take It all The tariff Is a tax paid by the people The Republican leaders have thought that the judgment day would never comp In politics but 1 It Is here and they are squirming j in their efforts to escape Repub llcan leaders promised to revise the I tariff downward ThP first day they J f met forth purpose the halls pf y j Congress wero crowded with lobby ists for special interestsa suggestive assemblage The revlsets began with an average tit 46 per cent tariff and ended with an average of 47 per cent This was the way they revised the tariff downward The hand of monopoly should be taken from control of the price of those tools which cultivate American soil The products of our country should not be handicapped by a senseles- and exorbitant tariff which falls upI on the consumer Big criminals who thrive under our trustmade laws are allowed to flourish in high places while Government officials bunt the little offenders to earth in eager and vengeful fashion They should all be brought to justice alike Eight millions of our peo ownDThey deserve the same privileges under a free Government JIB their more affluent brothers but they do not get It on account of the unequal laws which exist Mr James closed his splendid ad dress with an appeal for Democracy and for an active participation tIn the primary election next Saturday which Is to choose the chieftains who shall bear our banner to vie tory He spoke of his own candi dacy for U S Senator and said he anted tho commendation Well done thou good and faithful ser want exemplified In the returns which will show what the voters think of him In promoting him from the House to the Senateour high est lawmaking body tie promised the same devotion to duty in the future that has characterized h1 actions in the past He thanked the ladles in beautiful terms for their presence and said there is no pub lic question which does not their Interests Mr James address was replete with logic and a sprinkling of humor and heightened his well known prestige as a national character THEM SECRET MARRIAGE WAS AT LAST REVEALED Xhe nunierous frlondspt MrOtto C Martin were greatly surprised last Wednesday afternoon when I they read In the Louisville Even Ing Post of his secret marriage to Miss Lena W Coppage of Leitch field which took place at Jefferson vllle Ind on the 17th of last May At the time of the marriage Mr Martin was a student In the law de Unir versity and It was arranged for hisI bride to meet him In Louisville She Steilsa Rogers and the trio was joined byII Hon Alvls S Bennett and the tour went to Jeffersonville where the marriage took place There were no objections to tho match but it wasI decided upon for the novelty Mrs Martin is the daughter o Mrs Lula Coppage widow of the late W H Cappage who was for merly deputy sheriff of Grayson Co She Is one of the most popular and accomplished young ladles of theI Grayson capital She Is well knownn here having visited hero last year Mr Martin Is one of the promising young attorneys of the Hartford bar and Is to be congratulated upon his choice They have the best wishes of all who know them Mr Martin went to Leltchfleld Thursday and brought his bride to Hartford whore they are at homo to their friends psi WAS CAUGHT AND BOUND IN A SHEAF OF j WHEATI I Lebanon Ohio Juno j conscious and almost suffocated Carl Wleftol aged 4 son of James Wleffef was bound In a sheaf of wheat in his fathers harvest field t this evening by men working behind jjI IIYoungIII tho machine and bound with binder twine with the wheat He was soI severely cut and bruised the p YSI1I clans are doubtful as to his recovtt I ery The sheaf had been Idle for almost I half a day and the youths dISIcooredI i I his body had added to the sheaf whet It was picked up by George Sparks a harvest hand I Lynching Is Paid For Newark O Tune 24Tho ad mldistrator of the Ethorlngton estate 4 today accepted 3730 In full from the Licking County Conimls slbnersl for the lynching of E1V nVtcl1ttn this cltv tart July The Etherlngtori family tiled putt for jj- I 5000 I b PAYNTER IS OUT OF THE CONTESTI James NovvOnlyCandfdate e for Senators CONDITIONS AT LOUISVILLE Given as ReasonClaims They Would Render Success Doubtful COMMITTEE TO KEEP illS FEE Senator Thomas H Paynter an nounced late Saturday night the he had withdrawn from the race 10 the Democratic nomination for Unit ed States Senator before the primary to be held July 1 The withdrawal of Senator Paynter has announced shortly before midnight in a state ment In which he gives as his rea son for quitting the race a condi lion which has arisen IB Louisville which renders my success at least doubtfulThis Is taken to mean that th announcement of Mayor W O Head j for Olllo James Senator Paynters opponent was regarded by Paynter as indicating that Louisville will go for James sSenator Paynter had paid his en trance fee in the primary and his name will appear on the ballot as aspirant for Indorsement for Scan fighttThe money that Senator Paynter paid in 2000 will not be returnedI to him 1 Senator Paynter teas elected Sen ator to succeed J C S Blackburnl at the legislative session of 1900 ban 1 overwhelming majority Ho has a long and splendid record In pub lie life having been Chief Justice congressItIman I by Senator Paynter announcing his withdrawal Ills COld of Withdrawal To the Democrats of Kentucky j In December last almost In the middle of my term as Senator the 1 Democratic Committee ordered aII primary in which was Included the j question as to who should be theII Democratic candidate before next General Assembly to succeedI me In the Senate Congress waII I then In session At the close of that session an extraordinary session I was called and now continues If the weather had permitted my pub lie duties would not have allowedI wafs necessary to bring to the attentio- of the Democratic voters my candl dacy as should have been done Last summer during the time I had intended to canvass the State I four members of my family wor I stricken with typhoid fever whic ethe necessitated my remaining at homeI for eight weeks after which myII public duties called mo from dUrjIngportunity to canvass the State j Notwithstanding this I have no doubt I could have won the nomi conluItlonI i I ful In view of that condition I am inclined not to incur the and necessary expense legltlmatoII perfecting such an would be required to meet the pros ent situation f nm unwilling that j j my friends should Incur such an expense or that they should attempt to overcome that condition by the extraordinary effort that night be required III have ever been willing to meet and in the past have overcome I many In order to achieve mY1Ime I I the present condition of affairs I Iin After the primary an effort will have to be made to Insure n Demo cratic Legislature As this obser vation play be misconstrued wilt add that I believe the Legislature Will be Democratic I merely der I sire to say that In view of the pros aIII1uded1 legitimate expenses above thttII to aid to assume the burden of that which must follow In the event of I my nomination I I have but one regret In reach Ing this conclusion and that is the disappointment my action may bring to many of my friends whose loyalty and confidence I deeply appreciate My name will continue on the ballot but I ask my friends to cease their efforts In my behalf and to abstain from voting for me for I now withdraw from the race I desire to express the hope that the primary election for State offices may be conducted In such a way as not to result In dissensions in our ranks In view of tho promising outlook for a national Democratic lmpors tance the supremacy of Democratic party be maintained In our State In conclusion I desire to thank my friends for their confidence in me and their efforts in my behalf I shall ever appreciate what the Democrats of Kentucky have done- t for me and especially am I grateful rto the Democrats of Northeastern Kentucky who In the past have given vane their cordial and loyal support T H PAYNTERI HERO OF THE SEA ENDS LINK WITH PISTOL UULLET Seattle Wash June 24Capt- DHBTart1s formerly of the Rev enue Cutter Service who won tame and igold modal from Congress fore whalersiandwho MorganGuggenrheira enterprises in Alaska shot and killed himself today in a room In tile Seattle Athcletlc Club On an envelope found on his desk bo had written in a trembling hand Tired sect worn out He had been reading Kiplings Short Stories and had lain down- r the book at The City of Dreadful NightAt the time of his death Capt Jarvis was vice president and active head of the Northwestern branch of I r h CompanyIfnJarvis married Miss Ethel Taber a niece GreenIGAYE OF Till AND PEPPER I Wooster 0 June 24A mob otII i masked citizens of Trail Holmes county last midnight caught Mich ael Heilman of Fredericksburg I this county tied him to a post gave him a severe whipping then ap CollowlnJI I intoltheI I chased him out of the village I I Hellman suffering from his wounds ran 10 miles toward his home town and sank exhausted by the roadside Ho was found later and taken to the office of a physlII clanHellman regained consciousness crltln cal condition He said he recoK1I nlzed one man In the mob Until Sunday Heilman was n res ident of Fredericksburg working at brick plant For several weeks had been paying attentions to the mother of several children Frel1erlCksburg1the be ordered to leave town Hell jto followed her to Trail Tho woman has fled INDIANA FARMER KNOCKS I HIMSELF IN THE mUD IFowler i Ind Juno ny given before the 23Testlmo1 day indicated that i retired farmer whose body was found in a cistern at his home this J morning committed suicide The Coroner said he was not ready to j return a verdict but he wns of thejj hlmsH1Inaxe and then dropped into the els tern Larsen quarreled with his wife last night sect loft the house the Coroner stated he had found butII basis for suspicion that Mrs Larson 1 had n part In her husbands death 1 and surveillance of her movements i by the authorities was removed A S of E Notice The wheat growers of Ohio county are requested tQ meet at theII court house In Hartford on Satur day July 8 1911 Important bus oftondlanceBALMAIN Chmn ITUMimic mine explosions will be a I AidItotheInjured burg September 16 PittsIII I i KENTUCKY BOY- AOMITS THEFT r Of48OOOFromBattleship Georgia I HE SPENT MONEY LAViSH- LWhile in New York and Atlanta Where He Set Em Staring IS NATIVE OF RUSSELLVILLE Buffalo N Y June 22Ed- ward Valentine Lee the paymasters clerk who when arrested In this j city had in his possession ix more than half of the 48000 littleI1 I I alleged to have taken from the safe of the battleship Georgia In Havana harbor February 11 was taken be fore United States Commissioner Keating today and charged withI i embezzlement He admitted hisII guilt waived examination and was held for grand jury Indictment Before his arraignment Leo toldI j Government officers that he hadI embezzled 2300 some time before i his disappearance from the Georgia and had doctored the books Then learning that an inspector was on tour he took all the cash from theI paymasters safe and went to Atlanta He formerly was of Russellvllle KyThe Department of Justice and the Navy Department are wrestling with the problem of procedure In the case Lee was paymastersI clerk on the warship and It Is a question whether ho should be tried by courtmartial or turned over to the civil authorities Hud n iota Time on Money He Stole New York June 23Edwarcl Valentine Lee who was arrested at Buffalo yesterday for the theft of 48000 last February from the pay masters safe on the battleship Geor theImoneyStates Government A month or so LeeICarmichael created a great deal excitement In New York and otII Its where he was looked upon another Money Spending Angel In Atlanta ho opened the eyes of the people when ho entered a tailoring establishment and ordered clothing to the amount of 900 and he was j tlpIping hotel employes chauffeurs i etc I I i When Lee came to New York he I was heralded beforehand on account I I of his doings in Atlanta and ij proved to be more of a spender llClI l than there Ho brought with him a large touring car and a private HOIIIlanllI er employes of the hotel wero great ly enriched by his visit to the me j tropolls After spending a few days here he left saying he was go outIofI IIiII that he had Is it sailedIIII Russellvllle Ky June 23J11Iward Valentine Leo who It Is re j ported has been arrested In Buffalo IN Y on the charge of embezzle ment Is a native of Russellvllle and is the son of a widow His I family connections are of the beat I and his social standing was the highest Ills business career began here a few years ago when ho was I made a bookkeeper In one of the local banks i Hello Girl Weds Him Buffalo N Y June 24EII1 ward Valentine Lee the pay clerk who was arrested here on Wednesday on the charge of having embez zled 48000 from tho battleship Georgia in Havana last Februaryi was takon from the jail this mornII Ing under gtfard of a Federal Mar shal to tho city hall where he se cured a marriage license The prospective bride accompanied him She give her name as Audrey F Kelsey 22 years Old of Washington He gave his ago an 25 years and his home as Russollvllle Ky The wedding took place at Trln Ity church in the presence of I United States Marshal two theIII v U service men and a clerk from the United States District Attorneys office Lee was later returned to the Jail and refused to discuss his wedding Lee tonight in Jail under ques tioning denied he was married Word comes from the girls pat ents in Washington tonight that they bitterly opposed her journey to Buffalo on Thursday to aid Lee She was a telephone operator there LeeYnitely that she did not accompany him in his spectacular flight when he spent money like water In fact the Washington detectives admit that they were tipped to the man by the brother of n Toronto girl of whom Lee became enamored and on whom he lavished much of his stol en wealth Lee has been remanded to jail in default of 10000 ball to await the jurylwhichWhen arrested here the police found on him 26800 They do not believe he has say mono hidden for his expenditures were lavish On a visit to Buffalo In March It 1Is now known he posed as an anent buyinglcavalry r50 tips to taxicab drivers One taxicab drivers commission on Lees spending during n tour of the town niter dark amounted to 100 SHE WAS STILL ASLEEP WITH ROTH LEOS BROKEN Hamilton 0 June 24Wlth both legs broken at the ankle Ruth Bacon aged 14 years a somnambu list living with her parents Mr and Mrs Frank Bacon of Kahn avenue East Hamilton was found early this morning beneath her win dow by her father the girl having walked out of a secondstory window She was still asleep and sobbed piteously Mamma 1 will get the kindlingThe barking of the little girls pet flog which stood over the child licking Its face first attracted the attention of the father HEAD OF THE MORMONS DEFIANT TO PROHEKS Washington June 23The air between Washington and Salt Lake City Is full of gingerly remarks touching on the attempt of the getISugar Trust inquiry If Mr Smith doesnt speak up pretty quickly says Chairman Hardwick there will be a United States Marshal or n Sergeant at JArms of the National House sent to Salt Lake City with papers that will fetch the head of the Mormons to the District of Columbia whether no i lor KilledIson of Mr and Mrs Joseph W WITii countrI terday morning Bunnle was riding n horse to the field when It became frightened throwing him His foot being caught In the gearing he was dragged to death Dr P T Wllllsof Cromwell the family physician was summoned by telephone but It was soon found that Bunnle was beyond all human aid or medical skill The Herald joins numerous friends in the profoundest sympathy for the parents In this their saddest bereavement A Wnft of Other Days The Princeton Leader of Friday says This morning the Loader office had the pleasure of a call from He her Matthews of the Hartford Her ald on his return trip from Ceru yearsIago Mr Matthews was a resident of Princeton and worked for Capt Al ten on the Banner He played in S the string band along with Hugh Mayes at the same time that Char ley Joseberger blew tho bass lid t dle The general appearance of our i city he thinks has Improved wonderfully U Dividend No a As per order Ohio Circuit Court June term 1911 I will at my office jln Hartford Ky on July 1 1911 pay a 5 per cent dividend on all claims properly verified and filed against tho Ohio County Dank as signed Same being dividend No2- I A E PATE Assignee Ohio Co Bank L k tfm t ivrmign PAGE TWO THE HARTFORD HERALDWEDNESDAY JUNE 2 ItJl BIG BROTHER TOCONTINENTi Such Has Been Your Uncle Sams Job 1 Bur IT HAS ITS IDRAWBACKS For Some of the Recipients of Favors Dont Seem toII Reciprocate I A PLEA FOR TRADE RELATIONS Playing Big Brother to American republics has Its difficulties Peacemakers are blessed but their motives I are often misinterpreted Sometimes too they get mixed InII other peoples affairs Take our own case We undertook to help Cuba got Into a war with Spain I and emerged with Filipinos and nntllraperlalists on our hands We tried to help various Central Amer- Ican f republics preserve their right to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness and find ourselves hated by the revolutionists we crushed and to be investigated by the revo lutionists we helped Now we are doing it all over again with Mexico Our Big Broth erlng however has one singularity I AVe seem more eager to protect pac ify and admonish our neighbors i than to trade with them We are ready to fight for the Monroe doc trine but we let Europe furnish the capital merchandise and transportation for the republics facing the I JapanIto court those facing the Pacific We need common sense In our trade relations with American re publics quite as much as they need our big brotherly attention And common sense would In the first place move us to disabuse our I Southern neighbors of the impression so zealously encouraged by our European rivals that wo want to get more territory Nothing could be further from our purpose If possible we are too disinterested As long as we are champions of republicanism wo ought to champion F republics If we must play the part of policeman We ought at least to care for the welfare of the folks at home South America Is grow ing rich The possibilities of Its commerce are almost Incalculable and yet while we stand guard over the continent our merchants Ignore Its markets and our shipyards pre Ter to make coastwise schooners to Intercontinental steamships The situation in Mexico ought toe enforce this extraordinary situation We have been the Big Brother to nearly every American republic on the two continents We have fought one war and have been ready to light at least two others for the sake of republicanism Whether our motives were wholly altruistic or notC Is of no Importance The really Important matter Is that having played protector we ought to play the trader Satisfaction In our role as peacemaker will certainly not be lessened by the proper attention to our trade balances As long as wer guarantee the republics of Central and South America their Independ ence we have every right to expect that they will give us n fair propor tion of their foreign tradeEWe have talked about the Big Stick we have practiced being Big Brother Now let us be Big Cus tomer and SellerWorlil ToDay I l Illllonsness nut COllstllatlllnt For years I was troubled withe biliousness and constipation which made life miserable for me My ap petite failed me I lost my usual d force and vitality Pepsin prepara tions and cathartics only made mat ters worse I do not know where 1 1ishould nave been today had IInot tried Chamberlains Stomacha and Liver Tablets The tablets re tlievef the ill feeling at once strengthen the digestive functions purity the stomach liver and blood helping the system to do its work r naturally Miss Rosa Potts firm ingham Ala These tablets are for sale by all dealers m rVICTORIES OF SCIENCE I ARE TRULY WONDERFUL f Louis Pasteur tx French chemist l is the man of all others to whom the civilized world owes Its health and Its absolute certainty that the great epidemics of the pastcholera the piijguo ship fever smallpox was if conquered by an earlier genius cannot recur It Is he who discov eyed the mtcroparasitlc origin fs disease or the germ theory as H is popularly called upon which almost the entire sceHcb of preventive med Jclne Is founded 4 and which has ih shown the way to many of thef greatest triumphs of the art of cure It is as certain as anything can be iin the domain of what has not actually happened that were it not for the development and practical application of the truths established by Pasteur the world today would beI mourning the loss of millions omen f In every country of Europe and America from the ravages of the plague the loss of money alone would have been Incalculable while the paralysis of thought and of en- terprIse Involved would have halted human progress for long years to come Cholera would long since have burst the confines of Russia and spread over Euprope and tray cling on ships from Europe in the East and from the Philippines and continental Asia In the West 1 it would have entered our land on both coastswith such results as the statistics of the past may suggest to us and taken its toll of those who had withstood or survived the plagueGood Housekeeping GIRL GROSSES THE SEA TO WED A KENTUCKIAN She Had Never Seen Man Wanted to Wed Girl from Old Home Baltimore Md June 23Readyt- o marry a man twice her age whom she had never seen and whom she accepted as her future helpmate upon the recommendation- of her friends In Germany Miss Elizabeth Graf of a village near Bremen Germany arrived In Baltimore on the steamer Cassell and was met at the pier by George Eg ger of Junction City Ky who will marry her- When she stepped upon the pier the girl was recognized by her fu ture husband by means of a photograph and the short courtship was started before the eyes of the 500 Immigrants who arrived on the North German Lloyd liner Egger came to America twenty two years ago and has never been to the fatherland since that time He went to Kentucky and has pros peredAbout a year ago the German who Is now 43 years old began to pine for a German wife and the mall began to carry letters to his home in Germany telling his rela fives of his desire The correspondence resulted In the recommendation of the pretty little Graf girl who Is 21 years old and soon letters were exchanged by the pair About- a month ago the agreement was made between them and photographs were exchanged They provI satisfactory and Miss Graf made preparations for her long trip to AmericaWhen she arrived she was greeted by her husbandtobe and they hurried from the pier to take the train for Junction City where thoI marriage ceremony will be perform 00000000000000000O FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 0 O W IJ Wright Pastor O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Preaching every Fourth Sunday morning and evening Bible School every Sunday atI 930 a m- Communion service at 1030 am Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 oclock Instead of Fri day as heretofore It Is worse than useless to take any medicine Internally for muscular or chronic rheumatism All Is needed Is a free application Chamberlains Liniment For sale by all dealers m Agree Crops Will Ho Small Henderson Ky June 23Moat tobacco growers In the stemming district have abandoned hope of planting more than 20 percent of a crop this season After today tobacco may bo planted but the chances are that It will be caught by frost THE NEW cOOnWIIAT- SIIE HAD BEEN USED TO The young wife after a dozen trips to employment offices had at last found and engaged a cook who was at least clean and polite NowMary she said Impressively when the Installation In tho kitchen had been duly madeI want you to do the very best you can for my husband Is extremely particular about his food and apt to be cross everything is not perfect Mary smiled sympathetically- Lor Miss that wont worry me replied with large tolerance Men is all alike about cotta My old mans been agrowlln about my cookln for twenty years House Keeper WAS KNIFED BY r YY- HIS YITI OWN CHIEFS j I During Three Campaigns Says Bryan HE ACCUSES THE KNOCKERS IWho Call Him Wrecker- Of Being Judases of Their PartyII STRIKES OUT FROM SHOULDER J Charging that the Democrats whojj are now attacking him and accusingI I him of trying to wreck are in the same class with those who have in the past proved treacherous to the party W J Bryan in the current issue of his Commoner turns a broadside on his critics and throws light on what he says is some past political history Mr Bryan makes the sensational charge that when ho was three times a candidate for the Presidency he was knifed not only by leaders of the party but by committeemen who were presumed to be conduct Ing the campaign in his behalf Mr Bryan denies that he is attempting to dictate and says I Mr Bryan has never attempted to dictate to the Democratic party and has no desire to do so but as at member of the Democratic party Mr eXIepressi I tlons and upon public men and this right he expects to continue to cxJ ercise He will not be deterred from discharging what he regards as sacred duty by abuse but he Is aItI customed to abuse His body po litically speaking is scarred all over by the knives that have been wielded by the representatives of plutocracy inside of the Democratic party and outsIdeilI an1IEInI meet treachery within the party asti well as assailed from without He has had to conduct his campaigns through commItteemen some ofe whom were in league with the oppo sition and in secret correspondence with tho enemy He has had tot meet false and malicious misrepre t sentation on the part of papers subsidized by the predatory Interests atIEtackedI t times by Innuendo by those pretending to support the ticket and hee has seen the platform repudiated Immediately after the election by papers who professed to support It during the campaign He has had to oppose distinguished members of his own party when those members attempted to Insert weasel words in the platform and make it ambigu ous and uncertain He has had to contend with timid politicians who professed friendship only out of fear of their constituents and only so ong as that pretended friendship would help them But he has found the heart of the party sound He has found the rank and file of the party true ToII this multitude of Democrats uhcor rupted and undefiled he owes what ever strength he has He Is Indebted to them for the honors which have come to him and he will spend tho remainder of his days guarding their Interests as best he can He I Is In a position to speak with freejj dom and ho will be free to speak He knows the record of the public men of the countryDemocrats and Republicansand this knowledge is at the service of the party He Is In favor of harmony when harmony means honest straightfor ward Democracy but he is opposed to a harmony that Is built upon I false pretenses and used for tho purpose of deception He believes that the Democratic party must de serve to win In order to win andII he believes It is better to opposell evils in tho beginning than when they are full grown He asks no one to accept his opinion but he has no reason to doubt that tho factsII which Influence him will influence I others when they are known He expects differences of opinion even among friends and he knows that honest differences of opinion do not keep men from acting together when they agree In purpose but be knows that people who differ In purpose cannot be expected to agree on plans Tn other words Mr Bryan is a citizen of the United States and ex I regpons1b11ities Is a member of tho Democratic party I and ho expects to live Pit the responsibilities of the position The fact that he has been the partys candidate does not deprive him of the freedom to think and to speak 11C lon the contrary his responslblllt the greater because of the coat lIs reposed In him He asks no and he will show no favors jto those who are Identified with those who are engaged in exploiting DemocracyIndividually and through The Com moner he will exert himself to the utmost to secure to tho country the blessings of Democracy applied to Government and to secure to tho party the power and prestige which can only be earned by fidelity to public interests w I Theyll Know VI understand you have bought sonfe expensive gowns here In Par- Is Yes but whats the usq Few people know whether a gown Is ex- pensIve or not cusItome 1 SECRET OF 1HEMAINE STILL BURIED IN MUD Work Going Qn But No Developments of Importance Expected Soon Havana June 1iNo further developments of Importance in con nection with the uncovering of the wreck of the battleship Maine are probable within the next ten or twelve days said Gen W H Dix by tonight following tho complete circumnavigation of the wreck in a by a board of American officers who are supervising the work minute examination was made of all portions of the ship now exposed view survey convinced tho board IThIs further exploration is possible It will be necessary to re- mOVe masses of mud aggregating hundreds of tons on the spar deck hnd almost completely filling the Interior spaces of the illfated ves selThe water level in the cofferdam tonight stood at ten feet below normal which Is somewhat higher than this morning owing to a cessation pumping and consequent slight percolation of water The principal result of thq Investigation of the wreck today was the discovery that the deterioration of the steel structure Is very great The portolns of the illfated war ship now above the water Include the whole of the aftersuperstruc ture and most of the spar deck aft the port turret Thus are revealed the 10Inch guns pointed aft with tho tampions still In their muzzles all of tho engineroom superstructureand con fused masses of Iron forward and apparently what formed the upper part of tho bow section Everywhere the ironwork exposed if not shattered by tho ex- plosIon has been so corroded as to be reduced to mere shone making It highly probable that the plan to re- paIr and float any part of the ship must be abandoned because of complete structural degeneration- No trace of bodies has been found In the decks or supertructures The whole Interior of the wreck Is so choked with mud that it is Improbable that any attempt will be made to enter the ship soon Dont Experiment irisCough When Dr Bells PlneTarHoney has been used by millions of people for sixteen years with a steady in creasing demand Look for tho bell on the bottle m Expecting Too Much Sunday School TeacherWhat Dont you want to go to heaven when you die Little Emma Well you see our family couldnt think of living in one place the whole year round I In a statement Monday night Postmaster General Hitchcock said he believed many railroads were be- Ing overpaid for carrying the malls and that a saving of approximately 9000000 a year can be made without doing Injustice to any line He holds out hope of onecent letter postage A Charming Woman Is one who Is lovely in face form mind and temper But Its hard for a woman to be charming without health A weak sickly woman will be nervous and Irritable Qonsti patlon and kIdney poisons show in pimples blotches skin eruptions and a wretched complexion But Electric fitters always prove a godsend to women who want health beauty and friends They regulate stomach liver and kidneys purity the blood give strong nerves bright eyes pure breath smooth velvety skin lovely complexion and perfect health TtythemGOc at James H Williams im t t IJ r ROOSTER CHOW- SINTHESEATEE Democrats Gain Control of Senate by 39 to 18 DRAMATIC ENDING OF THE DAY Waterloo Comes In Vote to Recommit Wool Bill PENROSE SHORN OFHIS lOWE Washington June 21The Democrats tonight gained control of the United States Senate They passed- a motion offered by Senator Gore of Oklahoma referring the House woolen bill to the FlnariceCommltte with instructions that It be reported back not later than July 10 by a vote of 39 to 18 The passage of the motion was made possible by the votes of sixteen Republicans thirteen of whom were insurgents One Democrat Myers of Montanavoted against the mo tion although his Republican col league Senator DIxon voted for If Before the vote was taken Senator Penrose chairman of the Finance Committee and Republican Leader announced that if the George Gore motion was passed he would take it as a notification that the Republi can party Is no longer In control of the upper body of Congress By the passage of the resolution the entire tariff question is laid before this Congress and chances for early adjournment fade into obscur ltyThe vote indicated also that tho Presidents chances for securing a vote on the Canadian reciprocity bill unamended by some other tariff bill are greatly lessened Some of the results of the revolutionary action of tonight briefly stated are For the first time demonstration was afforded of the fact that a com bination of Democrats and progres sive Republicans can control the Senate and Intends to control It on tariff legislation Through Senator Cummins the progressives served notice that they Intend to attempt tQ revise the en tire PayneAldrIch tariff act before adjourningOnly linking reciprocity with either the farmers free list bill or the woolen schedule of the House Is It likely to pass By voting a lack of confidence in its greatest committee despite the protests of Chairman Penrose the senate has reached the point of emancIpation achieved by the House in March 1910 when it deposed Speaker Cannon from the Rules Committee by a Democraticinsur gent combination Unlike the famous House revolu tion the motion Initiating the re form camo today from n Democrat In the House it was the resolution- of Representative George NorrIs an Insurgent Republican that deposed he Speaker The vote on the Gore resolution lame as a dramatic close to one of the most Intensely exciting days In the history of the Senate The motion had come without warning at the conclusion of n speech by Senator Root defending his amendment- to the reciprocity measure As soon as the blind Senator had sent his motion to the desk It became apparent that to preserve any appear ance of consistency the progressives would have to vote for It Before he debate had progressed very far however It was seen that the support of the progressives was based largelY on their opposition to reciprocity and their certainty that by securIng a report on tho woolen schedule by July 10 they could string out discussion of the recIpro- cIty measure until the occasion offered for a motion to amend It by Joining on a Democratic tariff bill In this way they were enabled to avenge themselves on tho President whoso pet legislation is reciprocity and to preserve their record made during the debate on tho Payne bill In 1909 when they demanded lower duties on wool To counteract the dpuble Joy of the progressives was the double woo ot Mr Penroso until 8 oclock to nIght the most powerful1 man in the Senate and able to speak for Its greatest committee The passage of a vote of distrust of his committee whIch took out of his hands the sacred right of pigeonholing leglsla tionI was one rebuke and ono sorrow but the Implied menace to rec proclty was a second Satirically Senator Cummins quoted an Interview with Senator enrofe In whichl he assured the d President that reciprocity will spoa r bo passed and without amendment But double Insurgent joys and double Penrose woes Were as noth lag io the single sweeping remark a able Democratic victory That the motion insuring a vote on tlie wool en schedule this session should come from tho other side that Its logic should be so irresistible as to force the support of thirteen progressives and three regulars and that before its might the entire Senate organi zatlon should go down to defeat V were sweet realizations to the Sen fttermlnorlty Without delay Sena tor Williams put the progressives on record in the forthcoming tariff struggle by saying that the Democrats will be willing to consent to certain amendments of the woolen bill and the free list bill In order to Presidentter July 10 these concessions will t be formed and conferred upon The Democrats are confronted by a plain proposition To assure ac tion on the House woolen bill en tirely a Democratic measure they must run the risk of having amend ed the reciprocity bill the project of a Republican President and the outcome of negotiations In which a Republican Secretary of State took part Feeling that in the House and on the floor of the Senate they had fulfilled their pledge to support reciprocity and declaring their in tentlon of supporting reciprocity In the future the Democrats voted for the Gore motion Shake Into Binges Allens FootEase tho antiseptic powder It relieves hot tired ach ing swollen sweating feet and makes walking easy Takes the sting out of corns and bunions Over 30000 testimonials Sold every where 26c Dont accept any sub stitute Sample FREE Address Allen S Olmsted Le Roy New d York 22t4 Arkansas Man will Sue Kentucky Evansville Ind June 23James- L Stiff of Rock Springs Ark came here today and employed an attorj x ney to bring suit for 150000 dam sages against the State of Kentucky for allowing Arthur Miles slayer of c his sister to escape from a hospital for the insane at Hopklnsville Ky He claims that guards at the hospi tal were bribedIGetAll Run Down Weak and miserable If you have kidney or bladder trouble headache pains In thoback and feel tired all over and want a pleasant herb remedy try Mother Grays Aromatic Leaf As a system regulator it has 1 no equal All druggists 50c Ask today Sample FREE Address The Mother Gray Co LeRoy Newt York 23t4ii Ten Twins In Eight Years Gulfport MlssJuno 23A Miss Isslslppl woman claims the worlds record for twins having gjven birth to five pairs a total of ten children within a period of eight years The woman who thus displays her unal terable opposItion to race suIcIde Is Mrs J D Plgario of GulfportII OONJ EXPERIMENT You Will Make No Mistake if YoiL r 9 Follow This Advice Never neglect your 1idneys If you have pain in the back uri nary disorders dizziness and nerv ousness its tlmeto act and no time to experiment These are common symptoms of kidney trouble and f you should seek a remedy which is recommended for the kidneys Doans Kidney Pills is the rem edy to use It has cured many stubborn cases in this vicinity Can Hartford residents demand further proof than the following1 testimonialt Mrs R A Smith Wilson street + Earllngton Ky jays I am glad to publicly recommend Doans Kidney Pills My kidneys were badly disordered and the pains in my back were so acute that I could not stoop without suffering IntenselYIThe pain often extepded into my I sides and became more severe if I t stood for a short time I had dizzy f spells and many times was obliged to grasp something in order to I steady myself I also suffered tromII i terrible headaches and some daYlp 1 could scarcely get out of bed ly can safely say that I spent more jAIclnot obtained scarcely any benefit On a friends advice I procured a box begantheir t In less than two weeks t For sale by all dealers Price 50 t cents FosteHfl urn Co Buffa t theUaiteil s StateeJt i the name Doananr I andsI t f t t d s- x ttI I ne 4 errpa Td + I Mw v naf raj 4h NHS y Sj r 4 WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1011 THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE THREE V AA NEW NATURAL- WONDER IN IDAHO Great Cave Discovered Which Will be PRESERVED BY GOVERNMENT II For Public UseA Cavern L Rivaling KentuckysI Mammoth Cave if tONE OF NATURES CREATIONS I As a result of an Investigation of a mammoth cave near Kuna byII United States SurveyorGeneral A Utter and other prominent en gineers of the State it Is probable that the caves jvhlch is said to be one of rare beauty in its formation will be set aside by the Government for the public use This is the recommendation Which will be made by Mr Utter In speaking of the cave General Utter said The entrance to the cave Is a hole which drops down through a level plain and down which a wire ladder had been plac ed The cave Is a series of apart ments about seven in all The first room In which we found ourselves was about 30 feet high To the north of this there is a tunnel about three feet high opening Into an apartment 150 feet long and about 40 feet high and with a long shelf or balcony running about It U was on this balcony that the JKdy of a man was found some time ago and It is apparent that he had climbed on top of It and was work InS to dig out through the top when death overcame him w The most beautiful formation in yjhe cave is an arched hallway as- A finely and smoothly constructed as though human hands had been at work there and which runs forward about 250 feet It is 20 feet high and about 30 feet wide The floor ing of the archway Is covered with I a fine coating of sand At one end of the hall the partv came upon an opening of about a I l foot by 18 Inches Sir Hartson wets the only one of the party of sufficiently f small stature to Jet through opening and he went ahead1 1the 300 yards when he came to a point where the passageway was clogged with sand i The party started to explore southward toward the river They had gone about 100 feet when a strong breeze of wet damp air was felt and the candles were blown out The river is five miles away and General Utter Is of the opinion that there is an opening all the way to the river but the ground was so soggy and the opening so choked aip that the party did not make further explorations In that direc lion The cave Is tin extremely beau tiful place said General Utter and is the result of the formation when the lava rock cooled off The rooms In the cave are huge laVa bubbles BO tospeAk anti there Cr tis no reason why the cave should Irnot be made into one of the most delightful curiosities In the world From the fact that there Is a strong wet breeze blowing from one direc tion and a hot dry breeze from an other It Is apparent that there are two other openings in the cave one to the river and another to the plalnlandTdaho Statesman The Rest Remedy For all kinds of sore eyes Is Suth erlands Eagle Eye Salve It Is a creamy snow white ointment and would not Injure the eyes of a babe Guaranteed 25c m t S FATHERS DAYt IJUTS liE DOESNT REALLY NEED IT Mothers Day is observed on the second Sunday of each May and it Is now proposed to dedicate the third Sunday in June to father Somehow though the father move ment is not meeting with encourag ing response Probably that is be t cause father himself Is opposed Mother knows she is deserving of honor and Is willing that It shouldj lr be paid Father is ready In most f cases to lead the procession In bon j or qf mother but when It comes to I Vinaklnpa fuss over himself he balks e Isnt used to that sort of thing c r and It Isnt In his nature His bus iness Is to provide for mother and f the Wood and he Is just as willing to provide glory 6s grub Submlt ting to praise would be to him like a confession of dependence and he 1tent ready for that yet Serious and sentlmental bards dp not build u t rhymes ground father thertleave that to the Jackpot jlnglers Neither i are there ofienlng songs about y him he gets Into the ballads dc caslonally along with the sawbuck and the stovepipe and he enjoys theI company very much He Does not want to be sobbed over Ho wants to be let alone He is willing tq lot his bowed back and silvered hair bear their own testimony of hisI worth but will certainly not sup port a movement to set apart an an nual day In his special honor H thinks that such recognition as Is due him ought to be spread equally over the 365 days In the year Havorhlll Magazine nETTER OF TilE TRADI AS TIlE INDIAN SAW I Green McCurtaln once chief of the Choctaws had a very high opinion of the business astuteness of white men No Indian can get the better of a paleface Chief Mc Curtaln said to a Guthrie reporter during the recent Oklahoma investigation And when two palefac- eget bargaining together then it is like cutting diamonds with dia monds Two Oklahoma paleface- once hunted in my camp They spent the evening with me and over the flre and the firewater they be gan to barter and traffic and to make deals and dickers Finally Bill said Sam lets trade horsesmy bay for your roan Its a go Same agreed The trades a go Shake on it partner They shook hands Then fitt said with a loud laugh Sam Ive bested ye this time My boss is dead Died yesterday I SamSoaDied this mornn And whats more Ive took his shoes off C 0- o KENTUCKY NEWS NOTES 0I o rJ On account of not having enoug men ready the new military com pany at PInevlllo was not mustered into service in the Kentucky Nation al Guard Only thlrtv men appear ed and the law requires that more than fifty men must compose a com pany when it is mustered into ser viceOn account of the demand for th report of McKenzie R Todd State Inspector and Examiner In which he discusses the condition of the of fices of County School Superintendent Prof Ellsworth Regensteln Superintendent of Public Instruc tion is having printed 30000 copies of the report which will be sent over the State It was not stated at the time but the real reason Gov Cox revok ed the last month of the Jail sen tence of James Morris of Jackson county on Wednesday was because the wife and children of Morris were in destitute circumstances and they had to live in the Jail with him till his sentence was out The men who served as for the Burley tobacco poolsolicitorsjj I arc at last to receive pay for their work Checks for the Franklin county solicitors have already arrived and will be turned over to them as soon as they call at the of fice of the Burley Society The continued drouth has prac Ically ruined gardens In county Irish potatoes one SimpsonI principal crops of the county is an entire failure Corn is suffering greatly from the dry weather The Court o fAppeals will adjourn for the summer this week probably on Saturday and will have the dock awaYjOneville murderer John Frank Montgomery a young farmer twentysix years old was struck by lightning and In stantly killed about dusk while out In an open field at Judson The young man was leading a horse and mule The horse and youth were loth struck dead r a LUCKY ADVANTAGESOF REVENG- The frequent and unsuccessful andIdacy of certain men in va rious places for public office reminded George Scotty Dore of a story f his old friend Hogan clockIaidcessful In disposing of tickets in the shop where he worked but he ran ip against trouble when he can assed his neighbors Dropping in at a neighbor- house he tried to sell a ticket the clockIts onI a fine timepiece and itll luk folne on yer whatnot er man tel pays Hogan cajolingly GWantheold clock doesnt run replied the Well neighborI ing front completely well perhaps yez wontWin It and yeUhayo the laugh on the other fellow who d esII Subscribe for The Hartford Herald 1 t c N ooooooooobooooo I 0 OLD KENTUCKY TOO 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO sh1I Whilst the big fellows at w I recIIprocltyI selves like Hans Breitmans wife a devil of a set as indeed some of them are we here In Kentucky are ofeour own to attend to that may not be wholly without Interest In Kentucky as elsewhere the Democrats seem to be playing In good luck the Republicans In bad luck The tables are distinctly turn dayTf thefas in crops and commerce JThere are good and bad years flush times and hard times seasons of 1 plenty and seasons of famine TIs ia long lane that has no turning Democracy t appears to have reachedI separatingsi Hell from the Iron Works and theI dear old donkey whisks his ears and towardsj provenderIon j wayl Hoopla But enough of this Turning from the Democrats sweet and smiling J RepubIIIcansold hardscrabble betwixt the coon I and the blllygoat The same old choirtf rednosed angels and woolyhead d cherubs singing Heap a sight o trouble On de ole mans mln Up went dc price o votQ The pamo the selfsame Xlgger ntheWoodplle How could It be otherwise Re publicanism socalled In Kentucky Iwhere It Is not a purely fungus growth Is alien to the soil and cli 1sh sue was to keep things in shape and line for the federal appointments to b1theirthefiendi I Republicans will have to face two ways ride two horses going in op witheI the agility of an ORear and the j j persuasive powers of a Bradley this j will be found hard to do six days in the week impossible on Sundays i Ij The row going on In the Republican camp is as sawdusty as a hoss show and rather funnier than a clrIj cus tragedy With each it Is a case of bedam If I do and bedam If I dont Which recalls a story Ill shoot him says Binks Why says Jinks Because he Insulted me says Binks What did he calllI you says Jinks He called me a Sonofagun says finks Hold on says Jinks dont be rash What are the facts 1ORear looks to a gentleman up a tree to be in the lead He deserves jto be He is a type of the political gamester of the time He plays dike a professional Something of I I leanIIngsPaternalist along with the disregard I for law characteristic of the Centralization illustrated by theII theItobacco I j tlons of latterday Republicanism I His friends argue that Judge ORnar can catch the people both ways acoming and agolng HeIi can they assure us rip with old cantherliIdesI suchare opposing Judge ORear andanticipating the Prohibition Issue which they mean to project they are a projecky set into the bOdyIguardI Carrie ONatlon basis Poor Carrie They wont let her oldII even In her grave Truly It Is derful how we apples swim when the other fellows ox Is gored I faEfor ORearit does love a straight fight What we expect to do to him when the time comes will vitalize a wooden Injun or a door post and cause a flood of foam to flow from an empty keg of soda water I Yet gently Jones gently The wise re porter never blabs his Items Suf I ficient unto the day and dont let It be too long between smokes I Seriously and of a verity nnd for a fact we are so sure of carry fallsReIpUbllland shortsleeves for the Democrat FrankfortIDancel shakeJ1erISkldsljocratlo year prelude to next year i when in the nation Democracy will come to Its own again Kentucky is and always baa been a Democratic State+ Neither ofthe two trials which through DemocratlQ lii t factionlsm the people gave theRe publicans in 1895 and 1907 com mended them as capable of the best government This time we will try LordiIonl Let It be a fair primary The Courier Journal let us repeat Is playing no favorite or favorites And God bless you all boyslMr Watterson in CourierJournal I OUR SCHOOL SNOWING COULD UK MUCH BETTER Frankfort Ky June 17Dur 19091910Theredren enrolled in the city and rural schools of this State Of this num ber there were 22021 white male children 22563 female children a total of 44584 white children and 4618 colored male children and 5453 colored female children making a total of 10061 colored children or a grand total of 54645 children who attend the city schools yearjdistricts there were in attendance 78469 male white 76 854 female white or a total of 155323 while children and 7615 negro males and 7974 negro fe negroIlchlhlren rural schools These figures were prepared by Prof L N Taylor of the Depart ment of Education and the report shows that of the number of chil dren enrolled only 45 per cent were in dally attcndonccc at school Based on the census figures the percentage of children of school nail attending school was 3115 per cent In the eity and 29 per cent In the rural districts 1manDO YOU ALWAYS TREAT HOMi MERCHANTS FAIRLY Did you ever send to Chicago Cora bill of hardware and find when It came that you had forgotten 50 cents worth of nails Did you send Ito Chicago for them or did you go Ito the hardware store and buy themDid you ever send away for an ad jVertlsed special value In lumber and sash doors and find on receipt of the housejforgotDid you send nway for the bnlanre or did you go to the local lumber missingItion for charity from some land pro motion company a thousand miles away or from a mall order house In Chicago New York or San Francisco If you have tried It you know It wont work But you dont hesitate to go after tho real estate man the grocer tho hardware dealer or the lumber man hero at home when you have some little money raising scheme to put through And gener ally they come across without a murmurIn words do you play fair with your friend the local business man Or do wou use him as a convenience and send your money and your real trade elsewhere Every dollar you spend at homo adds to the wealth of this community Every dollar you send away detracts wthI0calyou will keep your money at home Iin every case where you cnn get as great value here as elsewhere Give our business men a chance Hancock Clarion w r250 SNAKES TAKENFROM FIRM WELL Fayetto Mo Juno 23George Potter a farmer living west of here cleaned out a well on his farm yes terday During the work 250 snakes were taken out Three varieties of reptile were klllI ed These were black garter and spotted house snakes HEALTHINSURANCE The man who Insures his life Is- WID for his family The rasa who insures his health b wise both for his family and himselfYou Ensure health by guard Ing It It Is worth guarding At the first attack of disease which generally approaches through the LIVER and manifests Itself la Innumerable way TAKE Wills SOTIERUHDS EAGLE EYE SIUT Good fjf toothing hut the Eyes t rJt Failed in Health RuthWardchildren I had never been strong and this with the shock of her death was too much for me I failed in health I was tired all the time and did not want to go anywhere nor care for company I had the painsAhad done her so much good so I commenced to use it and now I am in good health Take CARDUIJ 44 The Womans Tonic Womens pains are relieved or prevented and womens strength is quickly restored by Cardui the womans tonic You yourself know best Iif need it or not If you do need it do not delay but commence to use it at once Every day of delay only lets you slide further down the hill Dont wait then but begin to take Cardui today for its use no matter how prolonged cannot harm you and will surely do you good Wrtie la Ladles Advisory Dept OutUnoow Medicine Co Chittinooca Term for Special Instructions and a47aae book Home Treatment for Women sent free f Prntpionul Cards J M PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice ht proleulon In Ohio sad ad Dining countle Special attention given to a- baarearullc 1 to hi care FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice blr profwlun In Ohloinrtai1 lining eountlei and In the Court of Appeal Jrttulnal practice and Collection iceclaltT Office In thr Herald building c M BARNETT C It IUITB BARNETT 8 SMITH Attorneys at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice their profession In all the Court ol Ohio and adjoining counties and la thr Coot ofAppeali Collection anpecliltT Have your old STRAW HATS MADE NEW At I HARTFORD PRESSING i CLUB as Ladicsiuld gents clothes also YORK GUARANTEED Called for and delivered Club rate SI100 per month Hartford Pressing Club Y M C A Bldg Hartford Ky WE BU- YWOOLHiDE ANOFUR 1 11 Beit Pe kj To we ualetter for JOB this atecols or commiuun macbtats Rclticace soy beak la Uwutillc We fotiish Wool Digs Free to our sLifpen Write lor price list TiSABEL SONS xiniusd LwisTilfe IT I PARKERS HAIR BALSAM C7ruu i and tcaatifiel the hair Promote I luxuriant growth yllalrCurt talliesHeand Rhoomatism More than nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of the muscles due to cold or damp or chronic rheumatism In such cases no internal treat ment is required The fre4 application o- fCnamberlains Liniment is all that is needed and It Is cer+ taro to give quick relief Give U a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain anti Boreness Price aSCI large size sac DR BELLS ANTIPAIN got Internal and External Patna Y roo = L II I GILLESPIEI BROTHERS W H GRIESPIEPROPRIETORSJ I I BLACKSMITHING And Ineoairt HorseshoeingA HARTFORD Kentucky IIIl T 011 HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IX YOUR RESIDENCE OR PLACE OF IlUS INESS AND PUT YOURSELF 1IN DIRECT CONTACT WTH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR TilE COMPANYS SPKCIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRESS J W OBANONLocal Hartford Ky W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Deaver Darn Ky 1 II litIB58lit 5 o sr a I Q jj 7 If the lowelt prices YI from the OLDEST MAIL J ORDER HOUSE IN THE SOUTH For almost half a century we have nerved ex cluslrely the Southern trade Write today for our free Uluatrated catalogue Address Ca Pa Barnes do COot Pox 26 louisville KY I I ra Every Article Ouaraoteedjj r- efEIlaered wPNECw IM exrlnilTcrr BANK HlrtmHCIl tnvalnablebook i TllowtoRetapartuerpatent4wand DSWIFTCOPATENT LAWYERS 303 Seventh St Washington D C t Dr Bells AntisepticSalve Oood for all Skin Diseasesib Subscribe for ThexHerald 100 a yr J 1 JUNE itliItPAGE FU1lRff t THE 8f1RtrFnRTHEP nWEDNESDAYd 1 c v f pppo xxxxxx V NYIOJWV Vll hWWMI7IVJvVV V1IMVMf1NV WVVVVVVV ti VV IIrl Democratic Eiecti fI f j Ip Every Precinct in Ohio County NEXT SATURDAY JULY 11911 l 1 1EVERY DEMOCRAT SHOULD BE ON HAND I aroooocacacl caoooooc oeaocoooccooooooccoooeoooooo cocoocoooooacococoooocoooooooo of The Hart ord Herald HEBER MATTHEWS FRANK L FELIXc EDITORS PRANK L FELIX Pub and Propr the Hartford postofficeEntered at I classIas matt matter of the second 4 WEDNESDAY JlXK 28 1011 NOTICE DEIOCnATSIt Democratic State Primary Elcct tlon Saturday July 1 1 Remember the date far the prl j mary next Saturday July 1 1911 Democrats of Ohio county dont forget the Primary Election next Saturday Go to the polls and make your choice I I t Hon Ollle James requests The Herald to say for him that he hopes I the Democrats of Ohio county will vote at thegive him a handsome Primary next Saturday regardless e of the fact that he has no opposition I r Democrats of Ohio County GIeetjj ing It is highly important thatII every Democrat in the county go to the polls next Saturday and express l his choice for a standardbearer forII each of the officers to be voted for next November I 1 Let the Democrats of Ohio coun ty remember that there will be a State Primary Election held all overII Kentucky next Saturday July 1 to 11 11omce11 should takeand every Democrat part in It Ee on handII Democrats no matter how busy are you should at least take an or two oft and go to the polls your precinct next Saturday and jIyou your choice of men for the State offices to be filled this The polls will be open from a m till 4 oclock p m The assertion of Senator Paynter that he withdrew from the Senato rial race mainly o naccount of condi tions in Louisville supposedly be cause Mayor Head had declared for OIllo James apparently reveals aI string left hanging behind by theI Whallens who recently asserted that they had withdrawn from IOIlI tics Mr Head was made I the Whal1ensIy The Madlsonvllle Hustler came out one day last week in a mammoth illustrated edition of 26 pages besides its regular issue In it were described in detail and by y dozens of fine pictures the various industries and enterprises of Madl sonvllle and surrounding country and her sister city of Earlington It was a great stroke of enterprise and aptly sets forth the progressive ness of that splendid section of countryWhether or noAdams Is made the nominee of tho Democrats for Governor he has at least put the newspapers of Kentucky under obligations to him for the pace ho has set in the advertising line for all future State candidates It Is e really the best and only way of reaching the voters enmasse Mr Addams Is a shrewd business man and he quickly saw the advantages of placing his claims before the people in the most available channel the newspapers I In Its last Issue the Hartford Republican arises to criticise the mode of drawing for position on the Democratic Primary Election ballot andl Jntlmates that a top line ticket was arranged Of course there is nothing In the accusation for It wasI all done fairly as the junior editor of The Herald can testify for he was present and witnessed the drawing for positlpns on the ballot But of all the papers In the State the Hart fordRepubllcan Is the very last which should have anything to say about i top line methods remembering the Infamous tpp line ticket that was pulled offby the Republican f bosses in OblcCcbuBty some few years gowbt h Jt endorsed A preserved specimen ott can be seen at this pice any day 4 o THE KP A AT CERULEAN- SPRINGS The fortysecond annual meeting the Kentucky Press Association at Cerulean Springs Trigg countIi Ky last week was perhaps the most successful and enjoyable In Its history It was certainly beneficial In many ways to all the editors who attended It seemed that eerIthing conspired to the enjoyment oft the occasion and nothing transpired- to mar the completeness or the 1mn port of the meeting No better place could have been selected for occasion than farfamed CeruIi lean Its sunkissed high altitude and shady grove swept by coola breezes surrounded by magnificent country landscape basking beneath cerulean skies affording a setting at once Ideal and inviting This was not the first visit of the Asso- cIation to Cerulean and those who had previously been at the Springs were not surprised at the splendid plans for entertainment provided by- Mr and Mrs T O Turner the owners of tire hotel and the efficient clerk Mr Thomas Gunn It Is a great place for meetings of any kindThe Eastern and Central Kentucky contingent of editors boarded an Illinois Central train which started at Louisville and which was provided with every convenience I and comfort The editors were pro vided with two of the latest pattern steel coaches recently put in commission J by the I C people and which are a marvel of construction and comfort Electric fans waft J breezes through the aisles and the magnificence of the Interior fur nishings is heightened by the latest patented devices for comfort and safety The cars are of allsteel construction and form part of the I roads new equipment Mr Egan i Mr Harlow and Mr Bower of the iI Illinois Central management went with they party and nothing for comfort I and enjoyment was overlooked I Mr John Lawrence of the CadIzI Record chairman of the Entertaln ment Committee arranged a proI gram which kept the leisure hoursII of the editors delightfully occupied The ladles of the party were given especial attention in this arrange I menteThe Louisville dally papersI the Cadiz and Hopklnsvillo papers the American Press and Kelloggs Auxiliary were all dumped Into theI laps of the editors free for perusal Each had splendid accounts of theI occasion The business sessions of the Association were well attended J both by editors and regular guests at the hotel and were very profita ble and Instructive to all concerned Thursday was set aside as Hop klnsvllle Day and right well was it exemplified A large delegation of Hopkinsvilles business men ac- companIed by the fairest specimens of the citys womanhood came on a special train and proceeded to givet the editorial contingent royal enter talnment Large boxes of costly bonbons were distributed to the la dies fine cigars to the men and ex quisite boutonnlers for all The re ception was held In the large danc- Ing pavilion of the hotel locatedI high up on the side of the hotelI hill and It was a season of Incipient oratory and hearty felicitations The Third Regiment Band of Hop klnsvllle accompanied the home del egation and furnished splendid I music throughout the day On the evening of Thursday a re ception was given the editors and ladles by Mr and Mrs W N State who lire near the hotel This was an elegant affair in all respects Light lunch cakes punch and other soft drinks were served and the air of the surroundings bore the breath of a royal Kentucky welcome The spacious parlor hall and drawing room were throdfted with delighted guests who bore Joyous testimony to the splendid hospitality of genial host and hostess At the latter end of the AssocI- ations proceedings tie following of ficers were elected for the ensuing rear Col W B Haldeman of- oLoalavilf8Tlmee Presidentl Ed 6innlck of the Shelby County Record Vice President SJ C Al cookof the Jeffemontown Jeffery Forthr Roe iap Mr Tort Law once r+ the Cadi Record was cbpVen chairman of the Executivei t Committee and Mr John B Gaines of the Bowling Green TimesJour O nal was made a member of the Executive Committee The time and place of the meeting next year will fixed at a future meeting of the Committee The meeting of the Association came to a close Friday morning J with a short session at which reso were adopted expressing for courtesies shown to the H members by the Illinois Central C L N Railroad Companies- the Cerulean Springs Hotel Company the business men of Hopkins A lI1e and Cadiz the Third Kentucky Regiment Band W N Stice Mrs Stice John S Lawrence and Mrs Lawrence T O Turner and Mrs Turner Thomas Gunn the retiring omcers the dally press and the Cadiz Record James lcurtLikens Dead T Mr James Henry Likens died at the residence of his son Mr G B Likens last Sunday afternoon at 330 oclock of cholera morbus and complications After funeral services conducted by Rev J W Bru ner at Bethel church Monday afternoon his remains were burled in j the Bethel cemetery in the presence a large circle of friends and rel j ativesThe deceased who was a member lot the Concord Baptist Church wasI 75 years 4 months and 21 days old he having been born February 4 1836 J The deceased leaves a widow Mrs Mariah Likens two daughters I Mrs Bernie Felix and Mrs Frank Black and three sons Messhj G B Likens M T Likens Dave Will LI kens and a large number of rela j lives and friends vV Mr Likens worked all Saturday morning on his farm five miles northeast of Hartford and afterI dinner came to town to hear HonI Ollie James speech After the speaking he mounted his horse and started hone but taking suddenly ill he stopped in at his sons and gradually grew worse notwIthstand- Ing nil was done that medical aidI or loving hands could do for him ooooooooooooooooo O BAPTIST CHURCH 0I O J W limner Pastor 0 000000000000000Prayer ing at 8 oclockJ Teachers meeting Thursday even ing at 745- Sunday School at 945 Dr E W Ford Suptii Morning worship at 1045 and ev ening worship at 8 pm- D Y P U meeting at 7 oclock The services will be short through the hot weather Let every mem ber seek to be present Sunday morn IngI CERALVO June 261Mrs J H Richardson Kuttawa visited her daughter Mrs Larkin Baker last week Mrs J M Everley is spending a few days with her son Mr Will Ev erley at Nelson Mesdames Emma and OllleFul kerson spent several days at Clea ton last week Mrs P A Mtllner has returned home from a visit to her daughters at Livermore Mrs Price Hallows Louisville Is visiting relatives here T O O F Reunion and Republican Convention Louisville Ky July 11 1011 For the above occasion the Illinois Central Railroad Company au thorizes rate of one fare plus 25 cento for the round trip from e all 1statlonslIal tare for children live to twelve years of age Tickets on sale July 10 and 11 1911 return limit July 12 19111 Round trip from Beaver Dam340 JJE WILLIAMS Agent BOY SHOOTS HIMSELF WITH 23OALIBER PISTOL Georgetown Ky June 22rrJohn Perry the 10yearold son of Mrs Jerrie Perry of Stamping Grounds accidentally shot himself with a tWentr two caliber pistol used for shooting young rabbits While Rtooplng the pistol dropped from hfa rocket and discharged piercing fhls lungs He may possibly recover I A ooooooooooooooooolELECTION OFFICERS C- oooooooooooooool List of Election Officers for hold- Ing Democratic Primary Election July 1 1911 East Hartford W L Combs T Smith Judges L P Foreman Clerk J Y Hagerman Sheriff West Hartford E P Barnett R Brown Judges JE Bean Clerk L Taylor Sherif- fUedaJ N Hudson F C Ben nett Judges W H Park Clerk H BaIrd Sheriff Sulphur Springs Tlce Baker John Foreman Judges Albert Cox Clerk W T Bean Sheriff Mngnn Ronda Miller J W Muf tot Judges Leo Miller Clerk J C Magan Sherif- fCromwellJ A James H T Porter Judges T C Pirtle Clerk E Cooper Sheriff Cool SpringsJ S Taylor G W Shultz Judges W P Bennett Clerk J N Berryman Sheriff North Rockport J E Maddox Joe Henrdriekr Judges J L Brown Clerk J L Southard Sheriff South Rockport Charles Williams Alfred Bennett Judges J T Jackson Clerk J R Harrel Sher lIT SelectT G Wilson Basel Stew art Judges J S James Clerk C W Ranney Sheriff Hose Branch B N Davis J B McDanlel Judges G J Hoover Clerk Thomas Daniel Sheriff Roslnc W W Hatler A W Al ford Judges J B Monroe Clerk John W Miller Sheriff East leaver Dam John Chinn W B Taylor Judges K V Wil liams Clerk J Burch Taylor Sheriff West Denver DamW R Chap man W H Austin Judges Sam W Taylor Clerk R H Barnes Sher iff Mclfcury John B Render L W Hocker Judges S J Tlchenor Clerk J B Herndon Sheriff Ccntertown T M Hatcher J B Maddox Judges George Vincent Clerk Alvin Ross Sheriff Smalllioiis Sam Morton Ray Ad dlnglon Judges Clint Iglcheart Clerk W 51 Addinglon Sheriff East OIdsll1cS C Roberts John J Smith Judges J D Coop er Clerk Ed Soper Sheriff West Fordsvillc J P Gilmore Bob Owen Judges R L Godsey Clerk G D Black Sheriff JEtimvlllc Jas C Haynes Joe Rhoads Judges P R Kelly Clerk Sol Phillips Sheriff Shrove A R Stone Walter Walker JudgesT E Butler Clerk Mark Clough Sheriff Olntou T W Daniel Henry Fe lix Judges W B McDaniel Clerk Horace Daniel Sheriff Bufonl Seth Riley Owen Ma gnu Judges J D Holbrook Clerk W M Moseley Sheriff Bortlett J L Massle JH Hamilton Judges T C Park Clerk Clarence Patton Sheriff HelllnRobert Rowan Rufus Williams Judges L E Charlet Clerk J W Foster Sheriff Cerolvo D R Helsley W H Morris Judges Jesse Everly Clerk Alvis Fulkcrson Sheriff Point PleasantA B Tichenor W M Bell Judges L L Patterson Clerk Will Coffman Sheriff NarrowsJoe Shultz Labo Tru man Judges J B Reflfrdw Clerk Lon Phillips Sheriff RalphR P Kirk Leo Ralph Judges J L Patton Clerk Robt Taylor Sherif- fPrentls0zna Shultz Terry Tich enor Judges John Cooper Clerk J W Wilson Sheriff Herbert W P Taylor A L Knott Judges Virgil Miller Clerk B B Spurrier Sheriff ArnoldW C Leach H CJJ Keown Judges P L Alford Clerk 1 J 1 T Renfrew Sheriff Rcnderi Claude Baker W L Porter Judges Guy State er Clerk L E ferret Sheriff Officers should all be present and open polls at 6 oclock nB LIKENS Chmn County Com r T tFor fihlo Farms All sizes from 6 to 300 acres We can please you if you want to buy land XP YEiBERcQ Hartford Xy J J 11IfW V Odd li IPkNTIi 8 I 8fJI You no doubt need summer Pants 8Maybc you have a good coat and vest d oand need a stylish uptodate pair of 8 Pants to complete a suit This store is after your business and the Pants 8 you need we have We have been sell 8 ing to this trade for more than twenty years the famous 8 1I I fYYYYYYYYYYYTTTII j8 rant0 AAAAAAAAAAAAAA c TROUSERSAnd we know what they are and we 8know that they will please any man 8 who wants good pants at moderate cost 8 200 250 300 4PRICED AT I 00 500 and 600 The new Tanand Gray Fancies full peg s tops 3inch hems Every new feature that the style originators deem to be 88correct is found in the makeup of R Crown Trousers CJ Boys Knickerbock p er Pants 3 to 17 years ol1we show in 88ql1itca variety of styles at a nice range t of prices Now priced at per pair 8t 50c 75c 1 100 1 125 and 1 150 J S Th I 6tames Bro BEAVER DAM KY I HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY l SPECIAL CASH PRICES 1 bbl Patent Flour 500 48 lbs Patent Flour 180 241bs Patent Flour 74 50 lb Can Pure Lard 550 lOlb Pail Pure L rd 125 5 Ib Pail Pure Lard G5 2 gals White Flake Syrup 75 2 gals Santee Syrup T 70 2 Cans Best Table Peaches 35 2 Cans Good Table Peaches 25 1 doz Pie Peaches 85 W S iFltE 3 a ajF 0 T 00 BEAVER DAM June 26Mr Otis Stevens sold his farm to Mr Solon China of nearI Sulphur Springs and has purchas- d the farm near Union schoolhouso belonging to Mr Benona Stevens of 311 Paso Texas Mr Stevens went Vest early In life and settled in El Paso where be accumulated a con siderable fortune He came back some years ago and bought the arts that I ho spent his childhood lays on and erected a very fine brick evidence for the purpose of spending the remainder of his life there but his business had grown so in El Paso that he had to return to that citV and will likely not be In this county anymore only as a visitor Mrs Laura Austin who has been lying in New York some years with her daughter Is in town ylsUJtfg her son Mri Claude Austin Mrs Shelby Taylor of Crowley i f 0 La and Mrs Dan Kelly of Green ville are at the bedside of their sister Mrs Lizzie Taylor who has been confined to her bed some daystwith fever Our doctors report a good many cases of fever and flux in our town and vicinity but none as yet are Very serious 1 Two threshing machines are runTiLning near our town and the new wheat Is coming in The Beaver Dam Milling Companyis paying 80 4centsThe recentsbowerlave revived the crops cbMslderabJy and enabled tdelikransplantingtheir 1 aBaleTown vacantJets1 dwellingA v Hartford Icy 1 Subscribe for The Herald f1 a ywtz 0 14 Ij3v HallrJee Millineryl i Believing as we do that it is notgood busi nessto carry over millinery we will put on sale Friday and Saturday ourremain ing stock at exactly ONE HALFh PRICEJr Every Hat marked in plain figure Come look them over divide the marked price by two you will have what the Hat costs you Plenty of new MidSummer styles I that will please you and at a price that will certainly interest you Dont fail to see them and bear in mind that it pays to trade with a house that saves you money tJ o DJEALERS I Hartford Kentucky FARMERS Attention We will offer for the next two weeks at 25 per cent dis count the celebrated James Oliver Disc Cultivators Moline Cultivators J L Case Disc Harrows and many f other farming implements We are also agents for the fa- mousi Deerln Mowers and Binders Now is your time to supply yourselves with implements We want to clean uj these lines Watch our ad from time to time Yours truly r DUNDEE MERCANTILE COICORlORATED L DUNDEE KENTUCKY I wiw w l r 1lI I Illinois Central IialiroailTimo In bio at Beaver Dani Ky North Bound South Bound No 132405 am No 121 1135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm No 102248 pm No 131855 pm J E Williams Agt Several responded to my other request for settlement Did you 23tf E W FORD M D Miss Rebecca Shultz of Liver more Is the guest of relatives In Hartford Mr Ed Ashby of near Center town Is very 111 and Is threatened 1 with paralysis JudgeyH Barnes who has i been spending a feet days at Dawson Springs returned yesterday j I Miss Elenor Petty returned home reJatlves1at+i i Mrs E W Cooper of Nashville- is visiting her parents Col and Mrs C M Barnett t Mr McDowell Fair and little daughter Blllle of Soddy Tenn r arc visiting relatives here i Dr N Barnett anddaughter of SCaneyvllIe Ky visited relatives In Hartford and vlnclnlty last weekIi Mrs Lum Frazee of Lilac Gray son county visited Mrs M L Heav rln city from Wednesday until Saturday FOR SALEAA new piano Will take a good hoia or cow lu trade Call on or address C PO CHICK I 24t4 Beaver Dam Ky k Sirs 4H Ross and little daughter Norma of Centertown gave The Herald a call while in town Saturday Leave your Laundry at my Grocery Domestic finish Work Guaranteed Called tor and prompt delivery Phone 140 liens Grocery Mrs Dr E W Ford son and daughter who have been visiting Relatives at Fordsvllle returned home Friday Mrs Jennie T McHenry Mrs Geo W Feagan and little son Law ronco city gave The Herald a pleas ant call Monday Mrs Chas E Rogers of Elkton and her two daughters Corlnne and Dorothy are visiting her parents Capt and Mrs S K Cox Mr Connor Ford was called home last week from Bowling Green Ky on account of the death of his Mrs Mary Williams taunt s Flora Taylor and Corinne Woodward left yesterday for Louis yule where they will visit friends and relatives for a few days Miss Mary S Dean representing Saye Colleges Lexington Ky was a pleasant caller at The Herald of lIce while In town yesterday Miss Winnie Slmmerman returned Monday from Louisville where she had been visiting Mr and Mrs I P Barnard for the past ten days Miss Holbrookaccompan ied Miss Margery Ellis to her home at Louisville Wednesday morning Miss Holbrook wljl Visit In Louie vllfe a few days before returning horse ro VOTE FOR- t WILLIAM ADDAMS For Democratic Nomination FOR mCOVERNORPRIMARY 11911 Mr J E Bean made a business trip to Sulphur Springs Monday morning returning Monday after noonRay J S Chandler wife andI daughter Miss Ada of Auburn Ky i are the guests of Judge and Mrs C I cityI Alexander mention lof whose serious illness has been made In these columns was no bet ter when last heard from yesterday Mss Lou Ella Napier of Owens boro who has been visiting her un cle and aunt Mr and Mrs J W ITaylor of Beaver Dam returned home yesterday I Remember Cleve Her is head quarters for everything In the eat jlng line Telephone your orders All goods delivered promptly Satlsfac tion guaranteed Mr J T FcllX who hadbeenvis iting his son Dr C W Felix andI other relatives In Olaton end vlclnl jty for the past few weeks has re turned to Hartford Mr R E Lee Slmmerman of the low firm of Glenn Slmmerman returned the first of the week from ja several clavs sojourn In St Louis on legal business Capt Wm E Benentt Jr of Se attle Washington who had bee 11 visiting1 relatives In Hartford and vicinity for the past week left for home Monday morning Mr E M Woodward and wife went to Louisville last Friday where Mrs Woodward will be treated by l specialists at the Jewish Hospital1 for the next two or three weeks ttMrsI Georgia R Wade and daugho Iter Miss Marlon Wade of Nashville Tenn arrived In Hartford las Thursday and are visiting Mr andI Mrs G B Likens on Clay street Miss Laura May of Lowlsport Ky and Randall Hunter and wife Pleasant Ridge were among those from a distance who attended the funeral and burial of Mrs Mary Williams There will be the regular Moth odlst services at the court house next Sunday Preaching at 11 a m and S p m Sunday School a 945 a m Prayer meeting this evening at 8 oclock Judge John B Wilson and family went to Prentls yesterday where they had been summoned on ac count of the tragic death of Master Bunnlo Wilson his nephew an account of which appears in another column Professors H E Brown and A E Ellis C B Shown W R Carson 1 Supt Henry Leach and Mss Anna Eliza Keown are attending the meeting of the Kentucky Educational Association In session at Owens boro Miss Margery Ellis cf Louisville anellMrsley of Winchester who is also vis iting Mr and Mrs Holbrook will remain for a few days I IFOn HAM at a bargain one 12 IandI10horsepowervery little Call on or address JAMES P TAYLOR 26t4 Beaver Dam Ky P SAlso have one twoseated trap nice for family use Will trade for horse or sell A C Yeiser Co real estate agents have sold what Is known as the Dr E W Patterson place In East Hartford to Mr Jeff Ralph Consideration 900 cash This firm also sold what Is known as the Charlie Howard farm to J L Bur ton Blucher City 111 Considera tion = 1700 This farm Is located about six miles north of Hartford byfireGeorge Hickey of Dukehurst ily bad Just finished dinner when the ire was discovered By the help forhims 0 r tinguished with only the loss of the roof of his kitchen A defective due Is thought to have been the cause of the fire Mss Mamie Martin and Mr Crowe Pate were married at Denton 111 on June 7th Mr Pate Is a brother of Mr A E Pate and Is well known here He formerly re sided at Deaver Dam but is now making his home at Benton SCHR KTKKS FLOATING STl DIO Is lying at the Hartford wharf If you want photographs have them made now We hove done work on the boat In this county for a number of years and you know what we can do for you In the picture line Give us a call THE SCHRCETERS In the case of the Common Wealth vs Mont Daugherty before I CountyJudge RR Wedding tho defendant by his attdrney W H Barnes waived examining trial and In default of ball was remanded to Jail to await the action of the next brand Jury Mrs Mary Williams mention of whose death appeared In these columns last week was not burled un til Sunday The corpse was held awaiting the arrival of her son Mr Clayton Williams of Globe Arizona Another son Mr Albert Williams and family of Denver Colorado arrived Thursday Miss Gertrude Wright left Mon day to visit friends at Beaver Dam During her vacation she will also visit friends and relatives at Daw son and other points before return Ing to Hartford In the fall to resume her position as manager of Dart CoII The case of the Commonwealth against Will Taylor charged with shooting and wounding Harvey JFlatt with Intent to kill was con tlnued indefinitely when called for WednesdayIWhen is rapidly recovering is able to appear as a witness the case will be redocketed oppositetThe Herald office recently sold to Dr E W Ford Is being prepared for an office where he expects to move by July 1 The rooms up stairs may be used for the carp of the sick It he can arrange with the proper parties The dining room and kitchen will be on the ground- r floor Tho examining trial in the case of the Commonwealth against EcY Johnson charged with cutting and wounding Josh Crowe In suddec heat and passion was held before Esq J C Jackson at Center town last Saturday After the evidence and counsel pro and con were heard the defendant was acquitted on the grounds of selfdefense I In the case of Commonwealth vs Elmer McKinney charged with obstructing a private passway over his land near McHenry the Jury found for defendant In a trial in Judge R R Weddings Court Monday The Commonwealth was represented by County Attorney C E Smith and the defendant by Messrs J P Sander fur and McDowell Fogle Rev J W Bruner has accepted the call of his Baptist people here to remain pastor of the Hartford Church for another year all re quirements being met Rev Bruner Is very popular with the people of all denominations In this vicinity and his earnest and unselfish laborr in the Masters work have greatly endeared him to the people Hia decision to stay is very pleasing to Hartford people all of whom have learned to love him as a devoted and able minister It Take Notice I will be on the market to buy both pooled and unpt oled wheat it- car lots Sacks for rent or sale W E ELLIS The Produce Man 26tf Hartford Ky ooooooooooooooO BASEB- ALLoo000000000000 0 0 By Our Sporting Editor Beaver Dam won from Livermore Hartford Saturday score 9 to 7 lat 7 Livermore 6 Hartford has now won C and lost 1 gamethe first team McHenry beat Beaver Dam Sun day 5 to 2 at McHenry Ament was the candy kid in tho ninthBarnett started the good work in andIThomasI past first and then Aments home run broke up the game Freeman was there with the stick and he made a beautiful catch in the fourth Captain Buckley of LIvermore made the greatest catch on second that was ever seen In Hartford Dont knock a ball In left field If you dont want to go out for Frank Gentry Is sure there with the goods John Taylor played the whole game at shortstop without gettingI a chance at a ground ball but caught seven popup files Bell landed on the ball In the first Inning for three bases Old man Hunter played a fine game at first- Thomas made a fine running catch in the sixth Payne pitched a fine game but lostA Pottys melodious voice helped Hartford to win the game Allison Barnett Is certainly pitch MostlyoungI air after such support his team gave him In the first Inningmade four runs but should have been a shutout but nfJprthnt they only made Huh two I soresIthe first game and caught a good game In the second LIMe Wnkolnnd was there on stealing base but had a had day at second Made one nice play on Manager Freeman who tried to steal second Caught the throw with one hand anti put his man out Tle Beaver Dam boys rooted for tho Hartford team but our old friend Jim Taylor must have been sick for he failed to show up The Hartford team only loot ono catchers glove five fielders gloves one hat and two new balls The finder will please return same toi 0 CLUCTT PCAOODY d co MKCS I Dr Bell and get a tooth pulled free Owen Hunter knocked a ball In I the seventh that hit foul but had It hit fair he could have made a home runRob Roy will play at Hartford Saturday Game called at 1 oclock Adaburg will play at Hartford Saturday Game called at 3 oclock For 15c you can see a double headder Saturday I Hartford and Island will play at Centertown the Fourth of July and Centertown will play the winner First game called In the morning and the other in the afternoon at toclock I IAnd the mighty Bell went down Saturday on three strikes Rickard pitched a fine game for Livermore up to the ninth and their the first batter up got a threebase hit and the next a single and then the great homerun by Ament Captain Buckley of Livermore Is In a class by himself at second Sir Moseley Is some pumpkin when It comes to catching behind the bat- Kelly Is all right on third If ho could only keep his eyes off the girls Her could not come back Missed two flies and caught one out Innlnilanll lineItoBeaver Dam June 2GThe Beaver Dam base ball team was defeat ed by McHenry by the score of 5 to 2 The feature of the game was tho pitching of Peters and Reynolds in a pitchers battle Peters struck out IS men and Reynolds struck out 10 men These teams havE played two games Beaver Dam won the first game 9 to 6 The next game will decide the championship Both teams played good ball As the hall was wet It was Impossible to handle It with any certaintyA A Sof K Notice All locals of the American Society of Equity are urgently requested to send delegates to the county un ion July 7 and S 1911 There will be much important business to como before the body and a full delega tion Is urgently calledl for 24t4 HENRY M PIRTLE Socr For a burn or scald apply Cham berlains Salve It will allay the pain almost instantly and quickly heal the Injured parts For sale for all dealers nr 4oor onto 41 to t r A P 11ff rTIll JMi i of Qw NEGLIGECOAT t Do ii t Not lh J Know i Ih I A Good Shirt w WhenII 1 See One i t orvo t f Good dressers andpeople WHO DO I j KNOWvalues look no further when f mshown Cluett Peabody makes i mCluett at 150and Monarch at m 1 100Our Collars are made by theme mand Corliss Coon Co They area m pure linen and have good buttonholesaa They last well even with the miserable jj g g laundries tthat butcher up our linenss u fib Deperzd on b i BARNARD COii10 HARTFORD I YI0wttatictttMU liiiiHit HtOCfOOO f If f IE yaaa y tThe Hartprd Herald WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1011 ntt t H n 8 E RAILROAD TIME TA RLE AT HARTFORD KY vTimo table effective Sunday Dec 4thcontalns the following scheduler No 112 Xorth Bound due 720 a m Dally except Sunday No 114 North Round due 340 p m Daily except Sunday No 115 South Round duo 855 a m Dally except Sunday No 113 South Bound due 140 p m Dally except Sunday II E MISCHKE Agt 000000000000000o RAMS HOHX WRINK- LESoooooooooooooooo 0 H God alone knows how much has been lost when a man dies without ever having done anything toward making the world better than ho found It The truth We hate the most Is the one that hits us the hardest Dont be In a hurry to go securi ty for the man who takes no news paper and keeps three dogs will make the pull all the hard remember your troubles and JIt your blessings J the easiest thing for a fool Is to tell how little he knows 1The man with his head In the will often be found standing II 11cloudshis feet on some other mans neckThe man who has a business fort which he cannot pray sometimes t makes too much noise In church The man who does wrong Buffers but those who love him suffer more i A man with a bad memory needs good legs we reach heaven or not it itWhether what we lovewill be determined by h not by what we know If there Is no sunshine In your religion dont be surprised If no body wants It We would all read the Bible If we were more anxious to moreI It tplls us to do The sounding brass and tinkling cymbal business Is still being work ed for all It Is worth d nrsixRss END TO MUSIC IX Goon YANKEE DOLLARS There Is a business end to music Yesterday afternoon the German band was playing Just before dinner selections from the Fatherland It was Just too late The Kaiser had gone And the square responded not at all to the appeal There was not a copper flung from a boarding house window And thenyou could Ace Inspiration In the band masters eye They had the card up their sleeve The German band start ed wlthThe StarSpangled Banner and went on to Yankee Doodle Heads peeped out from blinded win dows Then It was Dixie and the doors opened After that It was John Browns Body and Hall Co lumbia By that time the doorsteps were crowded with the strangers within our rather dismal Blooms bury gates and the German band fonrifi nioomsbury blossoming In good American dollarsLondon Chronicle MERE PLEASANTRY I A 1OPlLAR PRACTICE Having exploded a dynamite bomb under the carriage the howl Ing mob seizes the occupants as they attempt to flee The man they tie hand and foot first rubbing soot upon his face nnd daubing paint grotesquely over his garments They fling him Into an empty box car and allow him to I be carried to unknown parts by a freight train The sobbing woman they thrust into a waiting automobile and rush away with her to a deserted house Into which they push leer then lock a the door going away with demoniac shrieks of laughter And what are these do you ask Are they Turkish brigands or Malay pirates or Black Hand Men or what None of these 0 friend This Is simply a merry friendly wedding custom In our enlightened civilized landChicaga Post CHAINED CONVICTS CRUSHED r IN HULL PEN COLLAPSE Four convicts were killed twelve i seriously Injured and fourteen con victs and three guards slightly In- Jured recently in tho collapse of a a bullpen near Waterville NtC In tho heart of tho Smokies the only remaining mountain pass to the EisL v The convicts were all ne groes wjjpiwnro being worked in connectioo with the construction of the tranpcohijnental railway t Capt J Ile HoJdn of Raleigh who wi In charge of the prisoners T t i nilyp 7 t went down with them and had to be dug from the debris Ho suffer ed painful injuries Guards J E Nichols and Ed McKenney were slightly injured The bullpen was built entirely of heavy logs and the weight of the roof caused it to collapse The structure slid down the mountainside without warning for sixtyfive feet A special was sent from New port Tenn with physicians and nurses and coffins for the dead to the scene The Injured were taken to Newport under guard and the dead will be sent to Raleigh where the State penitentiary is located The fact that every convict was burdened with ball and chain ren dered the victims helpless and is responsible for the great number of injured WHEN WITTY WAITER AND JOKING ACTOR MEET Scamp Montgomery who plays the bus driver In Get Rich QuickII Wallingford says ho went Into a quick lunch place the other day and asked for chicken pie says the NewJJ York Teleghaph- Oh youre a pirate eh hejj saidNo j Scamp replied merelyI a t church member who Is pious 1 Who makes these pies Scamp I asked when the order was placed before hImII forgot his name said theII waiter but he was a crusty old felJ lowEWhy dont you go on the stageE Scamp asked frowning The stage would never do the waiter said Im going to be a chimney sweep Chimney sweepwhy asked the actor Ian I Well the waiter said I thinks that Job would soot me Scamp certainly was mad He ex amined the pie closely Say he called to the waitercomedian whats the matter with this pie Oh any answer would do said the man In the apron chickIfenWell say friend came from I the walter you wouldnt expect toII find In biscuit IIouII he finished be went to the cashier to pay his bill Whats the name of the fellow I who waited on me he asked I Tester she replied Well hes too fresh said ScampI FO too said the girl Hes my husband I S100 Reward 100IThe readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science hastt been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh Halls Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure nott known to the medical fraternity CaI tarrh being a constitutional dlseasere quires a constitutional treatment Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken internal ly acting directly upon the blood and thereIIbyt disease and giving the patient I strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In doing ItsI 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 fo I list of testimonials Address- F J J Cheney Co Toledo O I Sold by druggists 75cITake Halls Family Pills for constl patios A Wonderful Man I My husband has never spoken across 1 word to me You lucky woman I How long IIlave you been married Nearly two weeks The uniform that has attended tho use of Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea RemII edy has made it a favorite every where It can always be depended upon For sale by all dealers m 1000 III Prizes The publishers of the Dollar MagI azine will give 1000 in prizes to the person who sends them theI largest number of words con structed from letters contained In IIdallyII FInIIIshellSet will be awarded dally to eachII person sending 25 or more This Is a popular plan of introducing a popular publication Fa full particulars of tho contest address j THE DOLLAR MAGAZINE1 Somcrvllle New Jersey 203 He Could- I I shy cajvnt you mace clothe- English I Sure styletgen t tJemanB suit two sizes too large around alIII JJp I Subscribe for The Hartford Herald A GLIMPSE INTO MAGICAL FUTUREI As Foretold by WizardI Thos A Edison STEAM POWER NEAR THE ENDDI And Traveler of the Future Will Largely Scorn Earth Crawling LIGHT METAL WILL RE KIN What will the world be like a hundred years hence None hut a wizard dare raise the future and what wizard can do it with so sure a hand as Thomas Alva Edison who has wrested so many secrets from Jealous Nature Ho alone of all men who live has the necessary gift of courage and foresight and he has not shrunk from venture Already Edison tells us the steam engine is emltI Ing Its last gasps A century hence it will be as remote and antiquated as the lumbering coach of Tudor days which took a week to travel rom Yorkshire to London In the 2011 such railway trains as survive will be driven at incredible by electrlcty which will also bo the motive force of all the worlds machinery generated by hydraulic wheelsJJ Rut the traveler of the future will largely scorn such earthcrawl ing Ho will fly through the air than any swallow at a speed of two hundred miles an hour In colossal machines which will enable him to breakfast In LondonJ transact business In Paris and cat his luncheon in Cheapside The house of the next century be furnished from basement to with steel at a sixth of the resent costof steel so light that it will as easy to move a sideboard as it Is today to lift a drawing chair The baby of the twen tyfirst century will be rocked In a cradle his father will sit In a steel chair at a steel diningtable and his mothers boudoir will be sumptuously equipped with steel furnishings converted by cunning varnishes to the semblance of rosewood or mahogany or any other wood her ladyship fancies Books of the coming century will all be printed leaves of nickel so light to hold that the render can enjoy a small library In a single volume A book two Inches thick will contain forty thousand pages the equivalent of a hundred volumes six inches In aggregate thickness would suffice for all the con of the Encyclopaedia Rrltan nlca And each volume would weigh less than a pound Already Mr Edison can produce a poundweight of these nickel leaves more flexible than paper and times as durable at n cost of five shillings In a hundred years time the cost will probably be reduced to a tenth More amazing still this Ameri can wizard sounds the of gold as a precious deatbknellII fewryears to live the day Is near when bars of it will be as common and as jI cheap as bars of iron or blocks of j I steel We are already on the verge of discovering the secret of transmuting metals which are allII substantially the same in though combined In different pro portions Before long it will be an easy matter to convert a truck j load of iron bars into as many bars j of virgin sold In these magical days to come t thero Is no reason why our great liners should not be solid from stem to stern why we should ride in golden taxicabs or notII tute gold for steel in our room suttee Only steel will betho more durable and thus the cheaper in the long run And In the world of manufacture the changes of the next hundred years will be just as revolutionary I Where We have now a score of ma chines each responsible for a stag I of manufacture one will suffice I Before long says Mr Edison I without a twinkle in his eye and certainly without his tongue In his cheek we shall have a machine in putrcloth thread buttons anti so on and from the other end draw suite complete to the last stitch arid ready folded for delivery 1AlI our present marvels of phony telsogrnphv are but blind frronlnpc iin the dark compared with the light that shall flood the post century The Brlnn of tall spilt bojible to sit in his armchslr and conv rn v wltji lots Bon at the Cape or wJtK a A J i friend in Melbourne as easily as across the hearthrug and not mere ly to listen to his friends or stiaa voice but to see each of them as clearly as if he were in the same room MAKING SOUNDINGS FOR Dell AT UNIQNTOWN Evansville IndJune 23Survey boat No3 and poet arrived at Union town Ky several miles below here todaywhere the Government engin eers will make sounding for a dam to be built there The surveying crew has been working above New burg Ind As soon as survey boat No 3 gets through at Henderson Ky wherea dam fs to bo started this year it will go to Case vllle beGlocated 000000000000000O POEMS YOULL ENJOY 0 n 0 O The Heralds Special Selections 0 00 00THEHE WERE SEVEN MEN There were seven men and one was a fool And one was the boss of a country school The third was a man with n won drous brain Thefourth was a crook and the fifth insane The sixth was a preacher the seventh a knave And they all were bound for the selfsame grave The fool as Time whirled its weary way- Becamo a professor honored and gray The schoolmaster worked from his low position fluid became n national politician The brainy chap llost his mind the crook Became a priest with his cowl and Book Anfl the crazy man recovered his mind While the knave took to saving his fellowkind And only one stuck to his trade of the seven The preacher kept preaching of Hell and Heaven There were seven men there were seven minds There were seven humans of seven kinds And none who had known in their early days These men who travedel their seven ways Would have thought that tho crook would R parson be Or the knave would take up humanity But you never can tollnnd the moral Is here Dont accept things always as they appear For under the gristle and skin and hone Is something that works in a way ofits own And you never may know the saint from the knave This side of the edge of tho com mon grave Baltimore Sun The Unmans Home Companion The July Womans Home Companion contains the first of a series of articles describing intimately the girlhood of some of the most famour women singers The first article IP on Lillian Nordlca Other artist IWho are to be Included In the series dare Mary Gardner Bessie About Emmy Destlnn and Schumann Helnk July Companion contains a IThe of articles which convey in formation of value to housekeepers In the summer season Among these are articles on How to Cook Summer Vegetables and Good Salads for Summer These articles in addition to numerous contributions to the fashion household home dec oration and handicraft departments usefullandber which are varied and entertain ing TraveleFather said little Rolio what lis meant by a Sabbath days Jour ney nemany cases It means twice around the golf links In the cure of consumption concentrated1easilydigesteclaouriahment necessaryFor Scotts Emulsion I been they standard worldwide treatment for consumption Alf Duaih of W I Pw P UpPPI Jfc Poor Weak Woman At sheiIt termed wilt endure bravely end patiently Btfonie which a strong man would give way under The fact b women are more patient than they ought to be under such trouble Every wosaa ought to know that the may obtain the most experienced medical advice free of ctarff and in altclult cvnfiJtact and privacy by writing to the Worlds Dispensary Medical Aiiociation R V Pierce M D President Buffalo N1 Dr Pierce hasbeen ohietloonsulting physician of the Invalids- Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo N Y for many year and hat had a wider practical experience in the treatment of women diseases that any other physician ia thIcouatryrHis medicine are worldtamota for their astonishing efficacy The most perfect ednor devised for weak and dell cate women Is Dr Pierce Fororko Prescription IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG SICK WOMEN WELL i The many and varied symptoms of woman peculiar ailment are fully set forth ia Plain English in the Peoples Medical Adviser 1008 pages a newly revised and uptodate Edition of which clothbound will be mailed fret on receipt of 31 one cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only Address as above fe Y A Welcome Change Smoke curling jip from the farmhouse chimney as the men are coming in from the fields gives a pretty suggestion of a good sup per and a comfortable home But it also means a hot tired woman working hard over a blazing fire Your wife can escape this with a New Perfection Oil Cookslove A New Perfection keeps a kitchen many degrees cooler than any other range yet it does all a coal or wood range can do It saves time labor and fuel No wood to cut no coal to carry no ashes no soot With the New Perfection oven it is the best cooking device you can uLUUU ere N J1l ft OiLCookStovc marlinREPEATING RIFLEs The only gun that fills the demand for a trom bone pump ac tion repeater in 2520and 3220 calibres GI Made path12nd1 3 baroaewibitutqoe blue easer lled 3trcatuet lop which it hued with drop lUbea towel rub etc Deafen rraywhen t or writ tot dodo lire cvcular lo the Deamt aitacr ol aLe CompanyIncorporated Shoots highve i locity smoke less cartridges also black and low 0pressure H 9 safe Powerful to use in settled smokelessIIcellent for target work geese woodchucks et- cttuddr ftatmtt tHeqveL taootli worUat umodoftJ the wu liD SpcioISmeeu Steet barrel I the norn wild top ud old Vdortor rapid icorrile filing IncwMed Jet and comtmience It hat uledowo coortraclioo tad lotru utaa howl ahC these eat extra on other rife ol theca ebbs Hknja1Iastreetteeu1 KENTUCKY L1Eh1 and1 Power CompanyIt INCORPORATED E G BARRASS MGR Hartord= Ky ElQct1ioLiylttshome or business house should be without them when within reach HARTFORD HERALDS Clubbing Rates1 FOR YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS The Herald and Weekly CourierJournal 150 and Weekly Louisville Herald 135 e and Daily Owensboro Messenger 350to uand Twiceaweek Owensboro Messenger 175a aaand Twiceaweek wensboro Inquirer 175U and Daily Owensboro Inquirer 325 f 125aUand Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer JSO asand Bryan Commoner n tv 1 150 At I and TTmceaweek Netit York World 165u 150at 1 150aand McQlls MagazineFashJons 1 130 Address THE HERALD Hartford Ky Hartford UamTMnly 1I Per Year f jof 7q Tana w+ rgXrtf 4 WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1911 THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE SEVEN oooooooooooooo GREAT HOPKINS CQfWTY FAIR 1Yliaison qe9 J U LY 118 1 19202122S- pecial 1 Train Service anMH Eat Reduced Rates C C GIVENS Resident J A FRANCEWAY Secretary 0 O O f O O H i HERE IS THE GREAT CHANGEE OFAA LIFETIME Y Entire Coursein State University WUhojit Cost Letter to Supt Leach Young ladles and young men here Is a chance of your lifetime In fact the following proposition Is one with which mighty few people were ever permitted to meet If you let It pass unimproved you will feel the effects of your failure for many years to come even so long as you liveRead the following letter received by Supt of Schools Henry Leach and before you sleep go and tender- S your application for an appointment Here Is the proposition State University of Kentucky Lexington Presidents office June 15 1911Dear Sir We find that you as county school superintendent of your county can select 10 students who will be received at this university on eptember next each of whom will be given free tuition 1free room rent In the dormitories free fuel and free lights and any student who remains during the full nine months will be entitled to traveling expenses one round trip from the university These appoint- mentso will be good each year so long in the university as the students remain In making these appointments It will be necessary for you to hold ex aminations as was formerly the rule In making these appointments you should be careful however not to send us students who are not prepared to enter our school- If after making the above appointments others should apply let us hear from you and we will see If further arrangements cannot be made We want to place the beno fits of this university within reach of every student within the State e seeking a higher education and we hope that you will see that your county Is fully represented We enclose a number of appoint ment blanks which you will Issue to your appointees Direct all communications to Ezra L Glllls Registrar State Uni versity Lexington Ky Yours very truly W T LAFFERTYChairman Now you will observe that all you have to pay In order to enjoy the benefits of the school Is the expense of your board which Supt Leach h tells us can be had for not mor- eIthan 250 a weed and the books Any person who has the go about him might go to Lexington without a t a dollar and pull himself through a course in the University There are courses in mechanical and electrical engineering agriculture and other departments in which professions there are constant demands for men capable and the day that one has completed the course be may be landed In a good position probably for life at a good salary This is certainly a great offer and there should not be found a vacancy In the appointments within forty eight hours after this matter Is presented Wins Fight For Life It was a long and bloody battle for life that was waged by James B Mershon of Newark N J of which he writes I had lost much blood from lung hemorrhages and was very weak and run down For eight months I was unable to work Death seemed close on my heels when I began three weeks ago to use Dr Kings New Discovery But It has helpod me greatly It Is do Ing all that you claim For weak sore lungs obstinate coughs stubs born colds hoarseness la grippe asthma hayfever or any throat or I I lung trouble its supreme 50c m 100 Trial bottle free Guaran- teeL by James H Williams m t V h FEDERAL COURT DECIDES SHAKERS NOT TO DISSOLVE t Louisville KyJune 23The So- cietyi of Shakers or Shaking Quak J CountyJf This d iell6n waiJr chedlrithe i Petferal jCburt the morning when Judge Walter Evans passed on the case of Mary E Porter and Charity Hilton against Logan Johns and others The plantlff had asked for a sale of the property consisting of 3600 acres of thebest Improved land in Logan county Charity Hil ton 90 years old and blind wasper suaded to leave South Union by the Porter woman and suit was brought to recover her Interest in the colony property The court holds Charity Hilton may return to South Union if she so wishosand will be entitled to care and protection there ooooooooooooope O COUNTY FAIR DATES IN 0 O KENTUCKY C- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Allen Scottsvllle Sept 1416 Anderson Lawrenceburg Aug ust 1518 Barren Glasgow Sept 8730 Boone Florence Aug 31Sept 2 Bourbon Paris September 49 Boyle Danville August 24 Boyle Perryvlle August 1618 Breckenrldge Hardlnsburg Aug ust 2930 Butler Morgantown Sept 2123 Bullltt Shopherdsvllle August 2225 BrackenGermantown August 2326 CallowayMurray Oct 1114 CampbellAlexandria Sept 59 CaseyLiberty August 2325 Carroll Gallatin Owen Sanders Sept 69 Cumberland Burkesvllle Aug ust 1518 FlemingEwing August 1719 FranklinFrankfort August 29 September 1 GarrardLancaster July 2628 Graves Mayfield Sept 2730 Grayson Leltchfleld Aug 1518 HardlnElizabethtown August 912 HartHorse Cave Sept 2023 JeffersonFern Creek August 1619 Jessamine Nlcholasvllle August 2931KentonErlanger August 2326 Knox Barbourvllle August 30 September 1 LaRue Hodgenvllle Sept G7 LaurelLondon August 2225 Lewis Vanceburg August 912 McCrackenPaducah Oct 36 Monroe Tompklnsvllle August 30 September 2- MercerHarrodsburg Aug 810 Montgomery Mt Sterling July 2529 Nelson Bardstown August 30 September 2- PendletonFalmouth Sept 2730 PulaskiSomerset August 29 September 1- Robertson11t Olivet Sept 68 Rockcastle Broadhead August 1618 Scott Georgetown July 2529 Shelby Shelbyvllle Aug 2225 Spencer Taylorsvllle Aug 811 SimpsonFranklin August 31 September 2 Union Unjontown August 812 WayneMonticello Sept 58 WebsterProvidence Aug 15 WoodfordVersailles Aug 24 NEW KIND OF PATRIOTISM AFFECTING A HOUSEHOLD A class In one of Bostons cultur ed schools was discussing the subject of patriotism and the teacher called on each pupil In turn to tell of some article they posessed that would illustrate love of their country Wo have a fine largo flagpole and a handsome flag at our house said one girl Ive got a gun that my uncle us ed In the Civil War when he fought to preserve the Union called out a brighteyed boy My father was killed In 1862 In a big battle and my mother has his picture hung In the parlor He wears the uniform of a captain In the Union army was the next answer hors had similar references to thpaJt their family had taken in upholding the Union In the Civil Wartbut finally a boy was reached who had no answer to make Can you not think of anything you or your mother has that would show love for your country The boy looked dejected for a moment and then his face lit up 3t1 vrnthuflainri Yes he refilled 5 Imr mother has a noW union suit Llpblncotfs tI k BUMPER WHEAT CROP- THROUGHOUT WORL Surpassing All Previous Yields Indicated by Reliable Statistics Washington June 23A bumpe- harvest of wheat In British India estimated at 369000000 bushels surpassing all previous yields and a record area sown to spring wheat in Western Canada where 90 per cent of the dominion wheat is sown I giving rise to seemingly extravagant estimates of probable yields are the features of the worlds review of May agricultural news announced by the Department of Agriculture today In other respects foreign agriculture In general made average seasonable progress- In Argentina the great wheat and flaxseed exporter of the southern hemisphere tho autumn sown crops have entered their first month of the transequatorlal winter In vig orous condition and on probably largely Increased areas The recent ly gathered corn crop there turned out badly and little or no surplus will be available for export The corn crop of South Africa also Is re ported damaged by drought and there practically will be none for exportThe United States funlshes about 18 per cent of the total interna tional trade in wheat Including flour according to a statement to day of the Department of Agricul ture In recent years the worlds wheat crop has averaged slightly more than 3000000000 bushels annually of which about 8 per cent Is exported from one country to an other In the form of flour and 17 per cent In the form of wheat mak ing a total of about 25 per cent of the world wheat crop which enters International trade The United States exports about 12 per cent of all the flour that Is shipped from one country to anoth er and about 12 per cent of the wheat LATE SENATOR ELKINS ESTATE OWES W VIRGINIA Elkins W Va June 22A mo tion for judgment against the Da vis Trust Company former Senator Davis Elkins and S B Elklns Jr as executors of the last will and tes tament of the late United States Senator S B Elkins has been filed by Prosecuting Attorney H G Kump at the Randolph County Circuit Clerks once The motion alleges that the late Senator was a defaulting taxpayer and that he has forfeited to the State of West Virginia the sum of 37504340 in the year of 1909 297773 In the year of 1910 and by his executors 341910 90 in the year 1911 making In all with Interest added tlie collossal sum of 1087097 which the Prosecutor claims must be paid over to the State of West Virginia by the execu tors for the Senators failure proper ly to list his property for taxation The motion states that in the year 1909 alone the Senator failed to make mention of some 3730434 worth of property owned by him that should have been assessed InI the State claiming that this property was never taxed At all It will be remembered that this suit Is very similar In its nature to the one brought against the exec utors of the estate of the late Sena tor Johnson C Camden also of West Virginia which was only set tled by a very close compromise Whooping cough Is dangerous when the cough is kept loose and expectoration easy by giving Cham berlains Cough Remedy It has been used In many epidemics of this disease with perfect success For sale by all dealers m 0 o TANG SLEEP OF GIUL MEDICAL EXPERTS IJU FLED Vandalla 111 June 23Miss t Hazel Schmidt daughter of former Alderman eQorge Schmidt whoso 65 days of constant sleep has baffled tile skill of the best known physi dana In Chicago end New York hertownF I Jt d done half hours She Inquired what t month It was and asked to see the dally newspapers She was unable to read owing to her weakened condition and remarked that she sup posed the newspapers were full of her case She was given nourishment and fell asleep again An Lour later she again awakened and remained conscious conversing with her mother and father for nearly two hours Members of the family are almost exhausted by the constant vigil they have maintained at her bedside They had begun to despair of her re covery till her awakening today Two weeks ago she revived suf ficiently to recognize her parents sheDawakened and asked for a bowl of broth She swooned again before It could be preapred The family has received a hun dred or more letters from physclans requesting permission to treat the girl Physclans generally have ad obstrucr tion of the brain Their Inability so far to find the affected nerve center has prevented an operation ooooooooooooooooo 0 FROM THE 23 SAMS 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 1 My wife Is my boss I shall not deny 2 She maketh me to lie down behind the Lad when swell company comes and she leadth me behind ler up Main street 3 She restoreth my pocketbook fter she hath spent all of Its con tents for hobble skirts and theater tickets and she leadeth me up the main aisle at church for her now hata sake 4 Yea though I walk more than half the night through dark rooms with a crying baby I will get no rest for she Is behind me her broomstick and her hat pin they do everything else but comfort me 5 She prepareth a cold snack for me then maketh a beelino for and Aid Society supper She anoint eth my head with the rolling pin occasionally My arms runneth ov er with bundles before she Is half done with her shopping 6 Surely her dressmakers and milliners bills shall follow me all the days of her life and I will dwell In the house ot my wife forever Urich Mo Herald Ills Two Silver Weddings Mr and Mrs Samuel D Hend rlckson on Thursday celebrated the twentyfifth anniversary of their marriage It was the second time that Mr Hendrickson had observed a similar event He was married to his first wife 31 years and two years after her death he was wedded to Ms present wlfeAtlantlc City Review BNATOIl GOHKS CHICKEN YAHN APTLY HECOUNTED Senator Gore of Oklahoma Is given credit for this story told on his recent visit to a Methodist con vention at St Joseph It Is related by the Rev Mr Williams pastor Of the Baptist Church of Pleas ant Hill who happened to hear It According to Senator Gore there was an accomplished hen with a brood of chickens five roosters and five pullets The chicks ma tured and went their various ways while the mother hen busied her self with a new brood In course of time Methodist ministers came Into the vlclnty of Chlckenvllle to hold A conference and as might be suspected the I five young roosters fat yellowlegged and extremely tender were feasted upon by vari ous and sundry preachers The young pullets left behind were met by the mother hen a few days later My children she asked where are your brothers They have entered the mlnls ry they replied Bracing herself from the shock of disclosure a llook of resignation spread over Biddys countenance as she replied Well my dears perhaps It Is all for the best They would not have made very good lay members anyway I There Is one medicine that every family should be provided with and especially during the summer months Vlz Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It is almost certain to he needed It costs but a quarter Can you afford to be without It For sale by all dealers m l ollajrtLu Kentucky Barboursvllle Iy June 3Thef- irst case pf pellagra brought to tho attention of the medical authorities of this section has just resulted fatally to Mrs Johnson The case has been unt er observation for over n year Ill the authorities called In carpe as to the Jagncsls of the case DmCDU rll n wiwtlitW ttltiJat t t V c A PLAN TO GET ANEDUCATION At Home With Little Cost Attached ALWAYS READ GOOD BOOKS Keep in Mind the First Prin ciples of Speaking and Writing Well Mans TO KNOW HUMAN KIND A Nebraska boy writes us that ho is unable to attend school and would like us to suggest books that he can study at home for the pur pose of developing a vocabulary spelling and learning the rules ol grammarTo with grammar does not teach us how to speak correctly or how to write correctly It Is simply some rules by which we determine whether we are speaking or writing Incorrectly As R mat ter of fact we speak the language we hear at home and write the lan guage of papers and books we read There are three books within the reach of every boy which he ought literally to devour whether for the purpose of acquiring a cor rect style or obtaining Information The first of these Is the English Bi ble which laid the foundation for our modern English language The second Is Bunyans Pilgrims Prog ress and the third Shakespeare We refer now to the plays of Shakespeare not to his sonnets Ev ery boy no matter what his future life Is to be should be thoroughly acquainted with these three books and the boy who masters them Is a pretty welleducated man better educated than many of the boys who go through college without master ing them There is no better way to learn spelling than the oldfashioned spelling school of which there should be one in every neighbor hood Every neighborhood suffers a loss that does not have it These three books supplemented by a course in the spelling school will lay the foundation for a good style Then If he will follow It up by reading the very best books espec ially those that are timetried such Scott nnd Dickens and our own Ins American authors such as the speeches of Abraham Lincoln Charles Sumner Wendell Phillips and writers of the New England school and master them he can not help having a good style It may not be their style but It will be the style adapted to him and the expression of his own person ality We have too many books now that are tilled with trash books that are great sellers for a time but have no lasting Influence It is a good thing not to read n book until it has been out at least two years and If It continues to be read after five or ten years you can safe ly buy It In agriculture get the best books In everything else get the best books and then master them until you are thoroughly saturated with their teaching Above all things digest and assimilate what you read Remember Bacons saying Read Ing makoth a full man conference- a ready man and writing an exact man Conference Is here used In the sense of conversation or dls4 nisslon Cultivate by all means the art of conversation You will never meet a person who can not teach you something Every man whether he goes to college or not should learn to know both man and men He should know humanity and then he should so understand all classes of men that ho Is able to get their viewpoint If a man docs nil this ho will be nil the better forgoing to college but he may be a better equipped man than many who do go Go to college If you can but the fact that you can nut need not Under you from being a man among monWallaces Farmer ONIBURNS INDICTED AT WITH CAPTIVE McNAMAUA Indianapolis June 17Detect- ive W J Burns and James Hos sIck a city detective of Los Angeles Cal were Indicted on charges of kidnaping John J McNamara secretary of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers from this city and McNamara was Indicted on charges of conspiracy to dynamite by the Marlon county grand jury today In all tho grand jury returned light Indictments but named only the three men In the charges y Three of the Indictments are against McNamara who is In jail In Los Angeles where he was taken after being arrested in this city on April charginghimIndustrial work of the Peoria Pekln Union railroad at Peoria III and the other two are said to be for storing dynamite In this city The other five Indictments are against Detective Burns who Is un der 10000 ball to the local grand jury and Detective Hosslck of Los Angeles who has not been arrested ONLY ONE LEFT AND HE QUITE A FAILURE Little Ethel had been playing quietly on the porch one afternoon unnoticed by her father and a friend who were discussing the re cent financial panic When the guest had gone and bedtime had come Ethel was unusually silent and thoughtful And when she knelt to say her prayers a pause followed the usual petitions In behalf of papa an mamma an Aunt Mary an Uncle John an Rover an Bridget Finally with great earnestness she resumed An now God please take great care of yourself cause If anything should happen to you wed only have Mr Roosevelt an he hasnt come up to papas expectations We Dont Have to Tell you what It Is for Its name tells Dr Bells PlneTarHoney Is the best cough medicine and sev eral million people already know It Look for the bell on the bottle m p 441 SQUAUE FEET OF STIIAWHEKKY SHOUT CAKE Masslllon Ohio June 23Four hundred and fortyone square feet of shortcake furnished a colossal pice de resistance at a recent dinner for Inmates of tho Masslllon State Hospital for the Insane The bakers of the Institution proudly assert It was the biggest shortcake on record and just as de licious as big It was twentyone feet square and composed of two fragrant browntinted layers from between whlcch bulged luscious ber ries picked from the hospital gar densFive hundred quarts of berries and several hundred pounds of flour were used In making the cake The service of seven men was required to lift the gigantic delicacy from the cavernous ovens specially constructed and convey It to the dining room tables where 1800 patients and hospital employees strove to outdo each other in gastronomic achievement 1OWDEU T1JUST DEALT BLOW DUONT COMPAN YWAS HIT Wilmington Del June 22 The United States Circuit Court or the district of Delaware today handed down a decision declaring the alleged powder trust which Is dominated by the E I Dupont De Nemours company a combination In estralnt of the Interstate commerce In powder and other explosives In violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust law that It attempted to monopolize and has monopo lized a part of such commerce In violation of Section 2 of the same law and decreeing that the combination shall be dissolved 0 No Dnimer In taking Dr Bells PineTarHoney for coughs and colds It contains no habit producing drugs Look for the hell on two bottle m Wlilttlor Uioimlit To Date Maude Muller had just refused he Judge Marry a fellow who may lose Ms Job any moment on the recall he sniffed Not much Herewith she smiled on a farmer Instead The woman of today who has good health good temper good sense bright eyes and a lovely com plexion the result of correct living and good digestion wins the admi ration of the world If your digestion Is faulty Chamberlains Stom ach and Liver Tablets will correct it For sale by all dealers m Itotli Date Hark Dancing is one of the oldest artsPaying the fiddler Is quite as an dent uGranulated Eye Lids Can be cured without cauterizing or scarifying by the use of Suther lands Eagle Eye Salve ts guar tee It to cure 2 Be everywhere m 0 Worth Thinking About EveAdam I want you to remember one thing AdamWhats that tt- EveTRt when I an looking the eyes of half the world are upon you Subscribee for The BiraIi4I a Tsar 1- rc kl fir fi y kvh tqtiit awcr rt yL SzrR + xv WEDNESDAY JUNE 98 Iftll THE HARTFORD HERALDPAGE EIGHT = t The HarrroydrIerai it WEDNESDAY JUNE 28 1011 c GEORGE FIFTH ACCLAIMED KING t By Millions of His Loyal z Subjects I j MOST MAGNIFICENT PAGEANT 1 In the Worlds History Was Carried Through With Great Dignity onmiI i TIm AGONY IS NOW ALL London June 22That one su1 prenio hour of glory and solemnity in every English reign came to George V today when he was crowned In Westminster Abbey with most profuse magnificence and 1 acclaimed King by millions of his loyal subjects on the return Journey to Buckingham Palace It was a leaden day with lower Ing sky but leaden days and lower- Ing skies so long as there is no rain mean good luck In London There was only the faintest sugges tlon of showers at Intervals These drove no one Indoors and producedtt no umbrellas while the sun shone now and then t No untoward Incidents marked 1 the climax of the great desires of 1 the United Kingdom and the over seas dominions Everything movedJ with nicety under the arrangements of the Duke of Norfolk Earl Mar shal There was no flaw In the hand ling of the troops and the police by Lord Kitchener a Knight of St Patrick since Tuesday so tonight all hats are off and only good wishes are expressed for Englands young and vigorous King and but regard and homage for his gracious Queen Xo scene of such splendor or sig nificance had ever before been wlt J nesscdt In the historic Abbey where Englands Kings have been crowned I since the day of Edward the Confes sor The display of gowns by the wo men and of glittering uniform and official costumes by the men at thett coronation In Westminster Abbey spectaclett furnished a dazzling j All the ladles apart from thej court cosII peeresses were arrayed In tumes with white feathers In their hair Many wore tiaras There was a treasure of precious atones never before collected In one place and costly enough to buy the ships of the British Navy The ladles In waiting to the Queen In the Abbey were four Duch to Into ef esses each attired carry fect a color scheme of shot goldI One wore gold with shot gray with pearls another gold shot blue and topaz jewels a third gold shot cerise with rubles a fourth gold J hot green and emerald ornaments Princess Mary wore a short white trock and a long royal violet train suspended from shoulders with gold cord assets bordered with ermine and gold braid The great state pageant was carried through with dignity and Im pressiveness and made a deep Impression upon all there privileged to witness it and it was accompanied l y an outburst of loyalty throughout the kingdom that might appear sur prising at a period in the worlds lilstory when thrones no longer appear to be established on the sur est foundations The remotest suburbs of the great city and every village in the land xavo evidence of devotion and loyalty to the throne King Georgo V crowned today with impressive ceremonies In West minister Abbey is the sixth ruler of the House of Hanover son of the late ling Edward VII and grandson of Queen Victoria Ho Is 4G years old this month The Crown placed on King Georges head today Is of solid gold studded with precious stones c of Inestimable value Including 3 OOO diamonds 300 pearls and bung dreds of rubles emeralds and sap phires The Queens crown contains the famous KohINoor diamond with Its legend of bringing good luck What King Vowed I do solemnly and sincerely In the presence of God profess testify t hand declare that I am a faithful member of the Protestant Reformed ChpTcb as by law established In England and I will according to HJetrjife Intent of the enactments wliteS are Intended to secure r Vretessucceselont to the theJJ of Tny realm uphold and maintain the said enactments to the bestof Wypower according to law 4 Taft to1 George President Taft sent the following cablegram to King Geqrge On this auspicious occasion I take sincere pleasure In extending to Your Majesty cordial felicitations In the name of the people of the United States and In my own and In expressing the cherished hope that under your guiding Influence the British Dominion may nourish and prosper- I assure Your Majesty of my best wishes for your personal wel fare and that of Your Majestys family and for the continuance of the friendly relations existing between Great Britain and the United States I WYSOX June 2GWe had a modeately good rain here last Saturday which was badly needed Most peoples gardens were drying up Bro Karrater of Illinois preached at Wysox Saturday night He had an appointment for Sunday but did not flit It on account of rain Mrs Leslie Davenport is sick Mr Edgard Taylor has secured our fall school Little Ruby PIrtle infant child of Mr and Mrs H E Hill Is sick Mr and Mrs Barney Lewis vlsit cd Mrs Lewiss parents at Paradise Sunday Miss Eflle Berryman of this vicinity has secured Oakland school News reached us a few days ago of the death of Mrs Lum Davenport of Alabama She was a daughter of Aunt Kitty Brown of this community and was formerly of this county Aunt Kitty Is get ting old and has been In very feeble health this spring May God bless her and comfort her In her bereavement Do You t-heBest It you have a cough cold asthma croup or any throat or bronchial trouble and use Dr Dells PineTarHoney you do Look for the bell on the bottle m ADAUUHG June 23Wjheat harvesting IIs anxiouslylawaltlng Taffy spent Sunday with Mrs Dr Patton and family Mrs Amanda Moseley who has been visiting relatives here the past few weeks has returned to her home at Livermore Tuesday afternoon while trying to drive a horse out of a cornfield Percy Phillips the small son of Chas Phillips was kicked in the forehead Dr Edge was called and It required nine stlchcs to sow up the wound At last accounts he was doing nicely Miss Gertie Mitchell Masonvllle who had been visiting her uncle and aunt Mr and Mrs W A Helm here has gone to visit relatives near Bells Run a few days after whichI she will return home Mrs Myrtle White and children are visiting relatives at Fordsvllle Mrs Clabe Crowe and daughter Sallle Taffy spent Tuesday with Mrs John Raymon Mr and Mrs C L Patton will go today to Mr J H Millers near Dundee for a few days fishing In Rough river Misses Ada and Gertrey Raymon will start Tuesday for Owensboro to attend the Kentucky Educational Association S A Dreadful Wound From a knife gun tin can rusty nail fireworks or of any other nature demands prompt treatment with Bucklens Arnica Salve to prevent blood poison or gangrene ItsI the quickest surest healer for all such wounds as also for burns bolls sores skin eruptions eczema chapped hands corns or piles 25c at James H Williams m CKNTKimnVX Juno 2GEsq Jacksons courtt convened here Saturday with about HO cases on the docket Attorney C E Smith of Hartford attended court here Saturday andII MondayMr C Hill of Smallhous was In town Saturday Mr J L Brown of near Rock port visited relatives near Center town Saturday and Sunday Educational division No C metro Saturday and made contracts with the teachers of this division forschoolsMr ck mldth the depot agent of this place has returned from a visit to different parts of Tennessee We are planning on our now bank starting In business soon Get tho Best For skin troubles sores ricers eczema chaps black heads pimples and all eruptions Use Dr Bells Antlioptic Salve and you get best Wo guarantee It 26o a box everywhere m A FARM HAND HEIRS FORTUNE of In a Will Bequeathing 150000 Estate 4 WAS AT WORK BEHIND PLOWie When News Was Receiv edGets It From- Grandfather WILL BUY A RED AUTOMOBILE Barren Plains Tenn June 21 Dear Milton I wIlt drop you a few lines to let you know grand father is dead They went through the papers at the Bank and they LL found a will leaving you his entire estate and bonds The best they could make It out Is about 150000 d hundred and fifty thousand dollars And you ought to come right away and see about it as it is important c Sincerely your cousint1 WALTER WALLING I Springfield Tenn The above letter was the first In timation that Milton L Mason 25 had that his dally grind as a hired hand on the farm of W D Wright between Barlow and LaCenter In to Ballard county was over and that his experiences as a child of misfor tune would give way to days of prosperous plenitudetiMilton was plowing near the big road where the mall box was when this news blew to him out of a clear sky and It was some time before he arose from his scat on the beam of his Oliver 40 and finished his furrow Then after he took out that night he told his employer that he didnt think he would farm anymore and showed him his letter As Mr Wright didnt think It would maintain a proper balance to keep an heir to a fortune working at 28 the month and found he concurr of ed According to the story told ba Mason his grandfather Oslras D Walling cattle buyer real estate dealer farmer and speculator suc of cumbed to an attack of appendlcl tls In a sanitarium at Nashville ontI Juno 1C Eightyseven years of ago Oslras Walling was more or less of a miser and his grandson an orphan had been his sole compan Jon since Masons mother and fath er died Their home at Barren Plains Tenn a small village near Springfield In Robinson county was as unpretentious as those of their humble neighbors- I knew ho had some money and I expected a little when he died but not that wad said Mason uOf course he said In ansswer to a question my head kinder whirled when I got this letter and I suspect anybody elses would If they had been a hired hand on a farm and knew hard work was over withThe first thing Im going to get Is a big red automobile ho con tlnued Ive seen a lot of them In Paducah and I must have one of them things A S of K Notice All locals of the American Socle ly of Equity are urgently requested to send delegates to the County Un jon July 7th and 8th 1911 There will be much important business tome before the body and a full delegation is urgently called for HENRY PIRTLE Secy I WHERE Till LIGHTNING FLASHKB MEAN DEATH Hawesvllle Ky June 24Dur- Ling tho heavy thunder storm that visited this county last night Matt Jarboo the bachelor son of Mr George W Jarboe was struck by lightning and killed He was lead- Ing a mule to the barn at the time and the mule was not hurt This death occurred in a part of the county that contains a few square miles that is more frequently visited by lightning strokes and thunder storms and hurricanes than any other In the county The three farms are those of Will Arbfa G W Jarboe and Vornon Lynch It has also been observed in the comII munlty that the worst lightning hasII been on Friday Yesterday which was Friday a man was kl11 dthe Friday before a cow was killed on the Arbra farm and the Friday beI fore a mule was killed on the Lynch farm On a farm that lies adjoining these belonging to George Curry there Is a large poplar that was hit ten times by lightning and then If drooped and died That was two years ago but since thot time the- o I heavens have bombarded the dead giant eYr Curry Bayaflhat In the space covered br taiif fbter Q farms named there Is not ten acres that has not been shinned hy light nlng and cyclones He says he thinks Jl18 because of the converg ence at this point of two long Sweeps valleys through which 4he torna does always pass- ADDITIONAL LOLL NEWS I Mr W 8 Gaines PhIlpot Route was a pleasant caller yesterday Mr Charlie Turpor shipped a car of stock from Hartford yester dayMessrs J W Mercer and J G Keith Beaver Dam were among the Heralds callers Saturday Miss Ozona Moseley returned home yesterdayj after a two weeks visit to relatives In Whltcsvllle Supt Leach and Mr Fred Anderson are attending the Kentucky Educational Association In Owens boro this week Messrs Sam Morton Ceralvo T Lloyd and son T O Lloyd Nar rows and J P Vincent Center town were among our callers Fri laySi rnv Messrs B E Ross S M Dexter and U S Whalln Centertown and C Ross Corbin were among who called on The Herald Monday I 8MALLHOUS Tune GMrs Opple Klttlnger and children spent Friday night at Island Master Albert Klttlnger has returned from a few days visit his grandparents at Island Mrs Cordelia Addington has beenI the guest of her daughter Mrs Derry Bishop Hartford Route 4 for he past ten days Mr V B Morton Livermore was the guest of his brother Mr Sam Morton Friday Mrs James Hallows and children James Mungln Hallows and Samuel Kimbley Morton of Louisville are visiting Messrs Sam and John Morton and families Dr M D Maddox who has recent graduated In the Dental College at Louisville Is at his home hereMrs J S Trunnell and children Utica have returned home after few days visit to her parents Mr and Mrs J R Hunter and other friends and relatives at this place Miss Reo Iglcheart was the guest her little cousins Misses Mary and Ethel Barnard Hartford a few ays the latter part of last week Mrs Ray Faught who has been quite sick for some time of typhoid1 fever is still quite 111 Mrs James Trunnell Utica andI thel Hunter were guests of Mr C O Hunter and family Hartford recently Mrs Louis Fulkerson attended the funeral and burial of Miss Mai mee Rowe at Centertown Tuesday Mr Ray Faught went to Central- Ity 1 Saturday Mrs Alva Galloway Is on the ek list Dr Brown and sdn and two daughters Misses Oda and Eu nice of Indiana are visiting Mr W M Addington and other friends and relatives near this place Mr Wing James Centertown was the guest of his son Mr Joe James recently Mrs Zack Reid who has been quite sick is better Mrs Sam Morton has returned from a visit to relatives at Livermore and also her son Mr Morton and family of Central City Mr Emory Schrostor Hartford was visiting at Mr Sam Mortons FridayMr John Morton and family are guests of Mr Ross Morton and fam- Ily of Central ICty toJoseph harp Is Dead Hawesvlllo Ky June 22Jos- eph Harp aged 72 years died at his homo here at an early hour this morning of infirmities Incident to old1 age Mr Harp was a Confeder ate veteran having served with distinction throughout the war When the steamer Mountain Boy sank a number of years ago at Ow ensboro and on which one life was lost Mr Harp proved himself a hero ho being the last man to leavo the boat after assisting some of the officers to safety although himself only a passengerS 5 I Taxes Due Your taxes for the year 1911 are now due Please call at the Sheriffs office and settle Promptness In this matter will be greatly appreciated 24C4 T H BLACK S O C O I 0 0000000000000000MARRIAGE 00000000000000000 J W Carmlcklo Rockport to An nie B Cherry Rockport Orvlllo Lloyd Narrows to Estey L Daniel Narrows I IS lucribe ltor The Ii11 4 TIIl1 1 L- ki 7 i tI J1 t t II t cJ HO L t AoGreaternow than laterCerhaesbest k won i thesafe side select NOW t LSll styles sizes andwidths w L EP BARNESBROf Beaver Dam Ky t EIGHT THOUSAND MEN CARRY BIBLES IN PARADE At San FranciscoA Vital Problem Which Concerns the Churches San Francisco June 23A pa rade this evening of 8000 men each carrying a Bible formed the days chief feature of the International Sunday School Convention Olio section of the parade consisted of Civil War veterans Among the Important papers read at the afternoon session was the report of W C Pearce super intendent of the adult department which says that the last triennium has been one of continuous progress i In adult Bible class work and that the number of organized classes has rapidly increased- In a paper on Ten Years an Asset and an Opportunity the Rev Edgar Blake of Chicago associate corresponding secretary of the Board of Sunday Schools of the Methodist Episcopal Church said The evangelical churches ot America are facing Rvery serious situation The six leading denomi nations showed a net Increase of only 384000 members in the year 1910 This represents the combln ed offortsxof more than 160000 churches seventeen million church members and an expenditure of more than 250000000 Each pet gain of one represents the years work of forty our church members and a cash outlay of more than 650 The speaker said that unless there was a change for the bettor the church sooner or later would face the problem of existence He Insisted that the church put its em phasls upon childhood rather than upon adulthood Work Will Soon Starts After you take Dr Kings New Life Pills and youll quickly onjoy 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 L MAXWELL June 2GMr and Mrs J G Newcomb are visiting relatrves at MaceoMiss Helen Riley of Maxwell who has been visiting in Owensboro for the past two weeks returned home Monday Mr Forrest Bell of this place wont to Hartford Saturday and re turned Sunday Mr Ellis Johnson went to Owens boro Friday Mr and Mrs J O Crowe of this place spent Sunday with Miss Lock ie Atherton at Nuckols k MAYOR HEAD DECLARES FOR ADDAMS AND JAMES Louisville Ky Juno 241 fa- vOr William Addams for tho nomi nation for Governor and Ohio James for the indorsement for United States Senator and I Intend to cast my vote for thorn at tho Democratic State primary Thus dldMaybr W O Head tp the Times dispose of the question referenceItafirst authoritative announcement of the Mayor and seta at rest the 9 t many conjectures and misrepresentations as to his position Speaking of these candidates Mayor Head said that he was cer tain each would add strength to the ticket and there could be no doubt of the result in November in the event of their nomination rCFor Sale v Brand new 100 No 6 Under wood Typewriter used by owner mly one mouth Large discount for BarirassHOPEWELL June 24Our protracted meet ing will begin the fourth Sunday In July Everybody Invited fMr Sherman Taylor of Old Hick ory spent Saturday night with Mr and Mrs C G Taylor Miss Pearl Engler spent a few days with relatives at Rockport last weekMr P S Coleman commenced work on his new house last week Mrs J A Miller Is having her ruins of the recent hall storm re built and repaired by her son Ira Miller of Williams Mines j Mr Sherman Taylor will teach our school at Jubilee Mr J R Shull Is not so well as he was a few weeks ago Ho Is very feeble Miss Margaret Taylor who has been sick for a week Is better Mr and Mrs Henry Stum visited Mrs Stums parents Mr and Mrs Ashley at West Providence recently Dont be Annoyed With skin troubles chaps pimples black heads eczema or sores when one 25c box of Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve will cure you Try it atmrune m WANT DAY SET ASIDE TO PRAY FOR RAIN I Jefferson City Mo June 23 o Letters are being received dally byI y Gov Hadley asking that n day be 1 set aside by proclamation for prn ers for rain to break the drouth which is ruining the crops Gov Hadley said today he might Issue a proclamation within the next two days A similar proclama ion was issued In 1901 Since June 1 in manyparts of e State the rainfall was only 41 Inches Tho i normal rainfall for the month Is 447 inches tL J c I ICROWN AND DRIOGE WORK For the refined and dainty woman is what she demands now Americans are uptodate on dentistry and are not satisfied with anyttilftft but the acme ot perfection in dental work Teeth extracted withas little pain S as possible Cniidren given careful attention Special attention to plate work and ALL WORK GUARAN TEED Work dome at lewest pri- cesDRHJHELL ort1e llIIpiWilu i- mETFCio KY r