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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, July 5, 1911.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, July 5, 1911. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911070501 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, July 5, 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. IHE HARTFORD HERALDLLp r- Suilsc3 ptio2l fxaPer Year in AdVa11c113tII Ctcif the flenUgf a friij Iftrld Ike newt of ill Mjiiis Lpaikring at Mj Buck All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed c 37th YEAR HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY JULY 5 1911 XO 27r k t tMCCREARY AND d OLLIE JAMES Got Great Vote in Primary Saturday hfieCBEMfS MAJORITY LARGE A Light Vote and Quiet Election Throughout I the stateITHE RESULT IN OHIO COUNTY ofI The Hon James B McCreary Madison county was Saturday choI t Ben by theDemocrata of Kentucky to i Jead them IIn the race for Governor this fall Senator McCearys majority Is claimed by his managers to be between 25000 and 30000 T Less than forty per cent of the Democratic vote In Kentucky was polledHon i Ollie M James candidate for the Democratic nomination for United States Senator was Homlnat ed by an enormous majority A Week or so ago Senator Paynter hla opponent withdrew from the race However Paynters name remained on the ballot and he received a scat terng vote In the race for Attorney General James Garnett was nominated by a majority of 20000 defeating Pollard Barksdalo Hamlett of Christian county won handily by a majority of 10000 in the race for Superintendent of Public Instruction defeating Littrell and Eubanks ij Newman Avon the race for Com l 4efeatinglI mated at 25000 j Popular Dob Greene was cho sen as the nominee for Clerk of the I Court of Appeals by amojorlty of I 15DOfl votes over Morgan Chlnn Ollie James of course led tiiotick et polling more than 90 per cent of the vote cast In several counties not a vote was recorded against Mr James notwithstanding the fact that Senator T H Payntera name was on the ballot Paynter carried majorityMcCreary Greenup his home county by a bare I probably carried nine out of the 119 counties When the Sinai returns are in they may show that the Madison county man carried 100 counties leaving 19 counties In which his opponent received the greatest number of votes McCreary led the ticket and his majority will be greater than any otber candidate He carried nine out of the eleven Congressional dis tricts having received a majority of the votes in Addams own district JJcCrearys big vote came from tBe Second Third Sixth Seventh EighthTenth and Eleventh districts In these districts Addams made a sorry showing receiving only a I scattering vote hero and there Mc Creary carried every county In the Seventh Eighth Tenth and Eleventh districts Ho lost McCracken cQun ty Livingston county and Crittenden county In the First district In the Second district ho lost Davless coun ty Henderson county and Hancock county by small majorities Addams carried Louisville and efferson county by a majority of tar 8000 In the Third district In which Ad- damsl was thought to have consid erable strength McCreary ran away j wjth the Harrison county man carrying every county but one In the Fourth dl8trjdthe home of Con t gressman Ben Jphrisbju Who with Mayor Head and Frank McGrath constituted tha opposition to Mc Creary the Harrison county man came Into his own Practically el- lerycounty reporting from the Fourth gaveyjAddama a majority l iNelebn count hero Mr Johnson tildes re urns 1a majority of up rds of 7 oft fof Addams I Thomas 1UMa for Treasurer iiind C F qsrecetlus lot Secretary otII Btl 9 won WithoutI opposition i i f i t1thDeJ t1 iltate Auditor and Lleutent GovjI i ernor Ruby Leffopn and Henry M K Boiworth claiming the nomination pjn the former and Edward J McDer mpitnd James P Edwards in1 the Utter race The outcome Jo both f r contests will depend on the vote of missing counties located principally In the eastern section of the State On the face of the unofficial returns received McDermott lead for Lieutenant Governor with Lai foon and Bosworth running clos together In the Auditors race While Mr Edwards makes the dl rect charge that the missing counties are being held back for a purpose he says It is the Intention ot his friends to sift the matter to the bottom and not to stand for any pad ding or monkeying with tho ra turns Ho claims to have won the nomination by 8000 On the other hand Mr McDermott says he is con Qdent that he has been nominated for the second place on the ticket and that the returns from the miss Ing counties will establish his claim to the nomination without question Official returns from very fey counties have been received and Ir many Instances the full vote of sow oral counties Is not figured In the tabulationsIn for Lieutenant Gov ernor and State Auditor It will take the official count to decide who hat received the nomination In several counties only estimates of major ties have been made which may be materially changed when the offi cial count Is tabulated In Ohio Connty The Democratic primary In Ohio county last Saturday was very quiet and sparsely attended only aboul onethird of the fullregular vote being polled There was no elec tion carried on In McHenry precinct at all owing to the fact that the officers appointed neglected the matter on account of being busy and failed to get substitutes The total vote for the different candidates in the county was as follows IFor United States Senator Thos H Paynter 12 Ollie M James 627 For GovernorJames B 1ICcrea1ry 157 William Addams For Lieutenant 1 GovernorEd ward J McDermott 195 James PIEdwards 319 T G Stuart 88 IFor TreasurerThomas S Rhea 56GiAccountsIttubyworth 145 For Attorney GeneralJames 3arnett 386 O H Pollard 3recellus For Secretary 527 of State 187I For Superintendent of Public InI itructlon Barksdale Hamlett 271 L C Llttrell 137 R S Eubank 156 For Commissioner of Agriculture Labor and Statistics J W Newman 240 D F Hill 271G T Wyatt 90- For Clerk of the Court of Ap eala Robert L Greene 343 J Morgan Chinn 269 SIGHT 1MDKRS THREATEN TENNESSEE CATTLEMEN Nashville Tenn July lAn unexpected form of night riding Is hreatened In Henderson county Tennessee Some time ago the State livestock Inspector granted certain persons In the county mostly widows the privilege of allowing their illch cows and other cattle to roam at large on unfenced lots Recent evolopments In that county which Is within the quarantine line have letermlned Inspector White to arbitrarily withdraw this concession- Dr White was led to this action by the fact that vine vats were iullt In the county to dip their cat tie as a means of ridding them ofII Tens fever ticks but night visited the vicinity of the vats cut the wire fences and left written noII Ices that unless the dipping process was Immediately stopped the vats themselves would be destroyed These written notices conveyed the information to the owners that cattle dipping should not bo car rlell on In the countv 1 Soldiers Reunion There was a very large crowd In ttendance at the Soldiers G A R Reunion at Centortown yesterday and the day Was highly enjoyed by- all present There was such a crowd acting at the Hartford depot yes toray morning that the two coaches I pjM not accommodate over hat- S6 the train went on to Centertpwn returned to Hartford and took those ho could not go on the first train I TnYes DupIYour taxes foil till year 1911 re now due piea e call at the erIlfB office andT settle Prompt MfB In this matter tylll be Greatlyi ppreclatedl v 4U T HBLACk B 6 0 tlI 1 tc1J y PEOPLE SCARED BY BIG QUAKE Another Shake on Pacific Coast CAUSING PANIC IN BIG CITIES Two Shocks FeltThe Most Violent Since Quake of 1906 MANY INJURED DURING PANIC San Francisco July 1Tire cen tral portion of California and West ern Nevada was shaken today by two earthquake shocks which are pronounced to be the heaviest since the big shake of 1906 They were separated by only a few seconds Tho first sharp shock was expe rienced at 201 oclock and was fol lowed In a few seconds by one of similar intensity each lasting about five seconds In San Francisco and other cities In the affected area panic seized the crowds In stores and restaurants and there was a pellmell exodus from the large buildings One peculiar feature of tho earthquake was that It did not appear to J follow the old fault ID the earths crust which has been the playground of tremblers in the past but extended from the seacoast eastward 1 to the Sierras including hitherto ex empt mountain areas It was felt to the northward of Sacramento In the Sacramento Valley southward as far as Fresno and to the east to Carson and Reno INev the latter place experiencing he heaviest shock In Its history Some slight damage was done to buildings in San Francisco Heavy stones In the cornice of the Mechanics I Bank building were moved slightly out of alignment superficial j tracks were made in several large office buildings cornices of the now ostofflce building were dlsarrang 1 ed and minor damage was done to he Interior walls of a number of other buildings IWithin a few seconds after the first shock many downtown build ngs were depopulated In a rush to the streets Telephone and tele 1operators1 nmate fell dead of fright and some cases of hysteria of cuts or bruises uffered In the semipanic were treated at the hospitalsII Santa Rosa which suffered the j greater disaster In proportion to Its dza than did San Francisco In the arthquake of 1906 scarcely felt I odays shock 11 San Jose another heavy sufferer in 1906 reported that the shock toI c day was the severest experienced I lace that time but it did no serious iP damage Stockton and Fresno peo jj1 pIe Were frightened by the Jarring i 1 but there as In San Francisco whoreII he State offices were deserted rice as a result of the trembler the 1 IJInj IJ caroly felt but In Carson it was seIj vere The Federal Court was in session J- In the Nevada capital and Judrce ury and attorneys rushed to the street At the Santa Clara Colleee Observatory both reels were thrown oft I the seismograph They were Imme I lately replaced but the record of the disturbance will be incomplete The mean time clock at the o ser atory of the University of Callfor J- nla was stopped for tho first time since the great quake of 1906 The deep boomlnc reverberations r Which usually mark disturbances ic- of a wldesoread character accom anted the first trAmor In San Francisco the groaning and creaking of the steel structures layed a lartrer Dart In i people than did the frlghtentngIE Despite some slight opposition Itr Is said that Francisco I Madero E ill be the nominee of the political t powers that be for the presidency II- f ff- of Mexico President Taft will 0 maIntain the border patrol u J The production of commercial cllal In Kentucky during the year ji 1910 was 14720011 short tons J T WuO1PS WHO I- N4HESTATEIDI 4fil Primary v Held by Demo crats SaturdayI SHORT SKETCHES OF WINNER Who Wfu Carry the Part Ste dard to Victory Next Fan A SILTSNDin HUNCH OF JXjrl Fr- OLLIE fhlteilSt States Senator I JAMESBorn In Cutfltendon cotuty July 27 1871 ad witted to bar 1891 delegateat large c to l national conventions 1904 and 1908 seconded nomination of William J Bryan for President in 1908Malrman Democratic State Convention 1900 Representative districtF1031913or Governor JAMES J MCCREARY Born ir Madison co mty July 8 1838 grail uated froim Centre College Danville 1857 Junberlad University Tenn 18G7 Majdr and Lieutenant Colonel In Confederate army under Gens Morgan and Breckenrldge admit ted to barln 1859 member Lower House Kentucky General Assembly 1869 187JJt 1873 Governor of Kentucky 18751879 Representative InI Congress from Eighth district 18851 1897J United States Senator 1903 1909 delegate to Democratic National Conventions 1868 1900 1904 1908 delegate to International Monetary Conference Brussels 1891 For Lieutenant Governor In 110IlhtIEDWARD J McDFRMOTTDorn- in Louisville educated at ward and high schools graduated In law from Harvkfd University 1876 member of the Lower House Kentucky Legislature 1880 member of the Constitutional Convention 1891 member of the Charter Committee which wrote charter of city of Louis ville 1891- JAMES P EDWARDS Born In Caldwell county graduated from Centre College Danville studied law under former Gov Proctor Princeton1untll the Lower Houso of the Kentucky Legislature from Louisville THOMAS O STUART Born In Clark county graduated In law from University of Cincinnati ad mitted to bar after examination by the Kentucky Court of Appeals served two terms In Lower House of the Kentucky Legislature from Clark county member Democratic State Central Committee from Tenth district eight years formerly Grand Dictator Knights of Honor of Ken i fraIternalFor Treasurer THOMAS S RHKA Horn In LoI an county prominent in the busi ness and financial circles of Western Kentucky being president of the Russollvllle Bank associated with his brothers John W anti A G Rhea in farming on an extensive scale Auditor of Iulilln Accounts fin doubt HENRY M nOSWORTHDorn- In Favotto county 1864 srraduatod rom State University at Lexington IS8C Sheriff of Fayette county 18981903 State Treasurer 1901 1907 Democratic nominee for State Auditor 1907 I RUBY LAFFOONTtnrn In HoI tlnfl county and prominent nttnrnnv of Western Kentucky bring PSHO latrd In te nrnctlr of law with udco w H Yost for ynrs 1Idr or the Democratic party In Hopklnn ourtv and tbo Second Copprepslpn 111 district Democratic nominee for Mate Treasurer In 1907 IFor CoiHil Moiicr of Agriculture W NEWMAN Born In Mon IM cojntv 1809 educated at South rn nrIP1mbrt Late Colleee now State ITnlver Hv it T xlncon1 twelve years menhor ot the Lov ir 1Jol q Kontncky Lee l hire from Woortforrt OOUT + V Gel t me her n Et Trntrhnt- ptp Senatej 49051907 sporetarr ot Kentucky State Fair 19081909 I u 1916 Democratic nominee for Commissioner of Agriculture 1907 For Clerk Court of Appeal ROBERT L GREENE Born IIn Gallatln county eleven years chl deputy clerk of the courts of Kenton and Pendleton counties chief deputy clerk of the Court of Appeals 18841904 having held the position I1 beganIthe of Appeals For Attoiioy General TAMES GARNETT Born IIIn Adair county November 15 1871 graduated from Georgetown Collec and from law department of Unlvei slty of Louisville 1893 County At torney of Adair county 18981906 i member of Democratic State Central Committee from the Eleventh district 18951903 Past Grand Maste of Grnnd Lodge F and A M for Spfotniv of State C F RtFLTtRBorn In In dlana but has bean a resident ofI Penrioton county for many yonrs 1omnIcol1ntvKentucky rnnmb r of the Kon Iin Legislature from Ppndletoi In sessions of 19081910 I Vor Cunt Inlillr In itr iion nAR snALK UAMLFTTBari- in Christian county mliicntfd lIn common schools of native county worked as a farmhand to oarn mon py to attend col1 lei grarlunted from i the HampdenSldney College Vlr plnln at age of 19 Snnerlntendpnl of Schools of Hopkinsvlllc CHAXICD BY HEAT SHE KILLED SELF AND CIIILDRE Lockney Tex June I Cri7e by heat Mrs Matnle McCrary of Lo Angeles Cal killed her three smal children and ended her own life Ir a vacant house here yesterday This become lost tound the boiJIos of the searching party which late yesterday scoured the countryside for the wo man nnd children thinking they had became lost found the bodies of the children In the weeds near tho va cant house and the body of the mother hanging to an unused wind mill at the rear Mrs McCrnry was here on a visit to her mother Mrs R M Hamilton Yesterday Mr McCrary went oul of her mothers room unobserved and with her children sought seclu sion In the deserted house some dis tance from Mrs Hamiltons real donee The house Is a twostory structure Apparently Mrs Me Crary took the children one at r time Into separate rooms upstairs where she cut their throats with broken glass talOn from the windows and tossed the bodies Into the weeds outside The childrens ages were three years five years and three months reajmcMvely The mother lIntl a note stntlnir tlm 10 one was to blame except herself tit Its wording caused the bpllff hat she was temnorarlly Insane rom the excessive heat which pro railed hero yesterday ICK FOVLiU TO liE SOLD AGAIN Ion THIRD TIME Paducah Ky June 30Foderal Fudge Walter Evans has ordered the teamer Dick Fowler sold again on sly 5 at 10 a m Deputy United Itates Marshal Elwood Noel will onduct the sale which will be at auction This will be the third mbllc sale of the boat At the last sale Capt Ralph Emerson bought the boat for 500 but creditors pro tested nail Judge Evans held the figure too low therefore ordered an other sale At thin first salo the boat brought 1000 The Dick Fowler was formerly the fastest boat on Western waters rHixihc Nick While Dilvln Paducah Ky Juno IOThe low tare of water In tho Ohio river Is responsible for the death of Penn err of Golconda 111 who broke his neck diving Ho attended n pie nlc at Rondeau Island and dived off a launch His head struck the river bod and although his body was peodlly rescued ho could not bo esuscltatod He was twentv years oldanll son of Tony Kerr of Pope county Illinois Headn IVUnijrn Lexington Ky Juno 30Mrs annle Ellen Murphv wife of len IMrphy a mechanist emploved bY the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad dIe here this morning of pellc rra Thlsls the third death from the new dltceaee reported here within a rear I l 4J SHEER FALLACY OF PROTECTION RedII fields Speech IS IA MANUFACTURER HIMSElF And ThereforeKnowsWhereof He SpeaksInstances of Tariff Graft TARIFF EXPOSURE TO DATK Hy Tavenner Special Washington Correspondent of The Herald Washington July 1TlJere Is one protectionist argument that I Iwlll never again occupy the place in American politics that it has in the pastThat is the argument that aI high protection wall Is necessary to enable American manufacturers to jIcompete In home markets with for I I goodsIprotection 1st argument will never again per form the same valuable mission for the Republicans is because of a speech delivered in the House by Wm C Redfield of New York who is a manufacturer himself and who for 18 years has been selling Amen can manufactures In foreign countries Hell field contended and proved I that the difference in dally wage at theIsolelof protection to be applied to a giv I en articleHe instance after instance In which he sold articles manufac tured by iiaday American em ployees In the countries where labor I dnyIAmerican manufacturers do not need as much protection as they are now enjoying to protect them from foreign competition because they are successfully competing with for eign manufacturers In all parts of the worldHow I It happen demanded Redfleld that in a quotation re cently made for machinery to a mine in Japan the American price was less than the English price 121ii ow does it happen that 720 lo comotives are running upon the Japanese railways and upon the railways of Formosa and upon those of Manchuria These ore sold In open competition with the makers of Great Britain Rcdflcld related nn Incident between an American salesman who recently took a large contract from the Japanese imperial State Railways and one of the managers of the Imperial Railways shop The Japanese ofllclal was under the Impression that he could manu facture locomotives cheaper than an American plant because Japanese wages are but onefifth of American wages Doth men got out their cost books said Rodfleld and they found that the fact was the labor cost for locomotives on the same specifications was three and one half times greater In the Japanese And this Is a perfectly normal fact and not an abnormal one Redfleld said when ho was In Cnl utta India recently his agent pointed to n pair of American made shoos he was wearing t paid 30 for those shoes said the agent It is the regular American ii shoe Rodllolil nald that when he re iurnod to Now York he found the mmo shoe cellhiK on Broadway for t Fii I shall be glad to give names and addresses to any member who nqulres In private Redflold pave a score of similar nstances It Is Impossible to do nstlro to his remarkable revelation In this dispatch Every render of this article may secure free of barge a copy of the complete ipccch without doubt onn of the post remarkable of Its kind per nnrto In Congress bv wrltlns Hon fames T Lord Chairman NnMojml democratic Congressional Committee Washington n C I T R Rolcimann former pat ent of the Carnegie Trust Comna ny was sentenced to four and one HI half months in the penitentiary t +M k 1 PAGE TWO THE HARTFORD HERALDWEDVESBAZ JULY 0 4911 AN INCREASE IN KENTUCKY FARMS Is Shown by the Lates Census ReturnsII VALUE IS ABOUT 66 PER CENT More Now Than in 1900 Implements Also Af ford a Gain GENERAL INCREASE is oooi Washington June 30Actlng Census Director Falkner has Issuei the flrst olllcial statement from tin Census Bureau relative to the agricultural statistics of the State of Kentucky collected at the Thirteenth Decennial United States Census April 15 1910 The statement shows that the number of farms reported In 19U was 258712 ns compared with 234667 In 1900 an Increase of 24 075 or 10 per cent The total value of farm lands and buildings was given In 1910 as 033782000 as against 382004 000 In 19QO an Increase of 251 778000 or 66 per cent The reported value of farm Im plements and machinery was 20- 793OOOln 1910 as against 15 302000 In 1900 a gain of 549i 000 or 36 per cent The total acreage reported In 1910 was 22159000 as compared with 21979000 In 1900 a gain of 180000 acres or 08 per cent The Improved acreage was re turned in 1910 as amounting to 14 334000 acres as against 13742 000 In 1900 an increase of 592000 or 4 per cent The average acres per farm reported In 1910 was 86 as against 04 In 1900 a decrease of S acres or 9 per cent The average value per acre of farm land and buildings In 1910 Is stated as 2860 as against 1738 in 1900 a rise of 1122 or 65 per centThe average value per acre of farm land alone In 1910 was re ported as 2180 while In 1900 It was 1325 the amount of gain be ing 855 or 65 per cent Of the whole number 258742 ofI farms reported In 1910 there 247036 or 95 per cent operated byII white farmers and 11706 or 4 cent by negro and other nonwhite farmers as compared with a total of 234667 In 1900 of which 223 429 or 95 per cent were conducted by white farmers and 11238 or 5 per cent by negro and other non white The Increase In the number of farms of white farmers during the decade amounted to 23607 and In the number of farms of negro and other nonwhite farmers to 468 The total number of farms oper ated In 1910 by owners part own ers and owners and tenants com prising the all owners class was 170088 as compared with 155996 i In 1900 an Increase of 14092 The total number of farms con ducted In 1910 by cash tenants share tenants and sharecash ten ants comprising the all tenants class was 87674 as against 77065 In 1900 an Increase of 10609 Tho total number of farms opereI ated by managers In 1910 was 980 as compared with 1606 In 1900 a decrease of 626 The total number of farms operated by the all owners class con stituted 66 per cent of the whole number of farms In both 1900 andII 1910 those operated by the all tenants class 34 per cent In 1910I and 33 per cent In 1900 and those conducted by managers 04 per cent In 1910 Of the total number 170088 of farms operated In 1910 by the all owners class thero were 137079 or 81 nor cent reported as own ed free from debt and 33009 or 19 per cent reported as mortgaged In 1900 131985 or 85 per cent were reported free from debt and 22574 or 15 per cent as mortgaged The expenditures for labor In 1910 reached the sum of 12181 000 as compared with 6613000 s In 1900 an Increase of 5508000 or 84 percent The expenditures for fertilizers amounted In 1910 to 1348000 as against 908000 In 1900 an increase of 440000 or 48 per cent FyLlppincotts and the Vacation tt Season And now comes tho vacation sea son when tho outofdoors calls to us In tones that will not be denied Even our reading Is done In the bpen so far as possible while as forii 4 the kind of reading well no In volved problematical fiction need j 4- r f apply We want stories of love and adventure full of action and Inc dentstories of live people One such story Is the complete novel 1In the July Llpplncotts From the Car Behind by Eleanor M Ingran author of those successful book The Game and the Candle and Stanton Wins Like her other stories From the Car Behind has to do with motoring especially motor racing The love Interest Is car tlvatlng the action tense the humor abundant the mystery longsus talnedThe shortstories are fully up to the magazines high standard One of Many Is one of a life In Wash Ington by Ella Middleton Tybout Others are The Return of Rebec ca by Minna Thomas Antrim The Tribulations of Trinity Tim by George Rothwell Brown and The Labor Editor by Grace Dru Itt Latus Besides these there is the usua big humorous section full of new jokes Jingles and anecdotes Yoi will need this number of Llppln cotta to read on your vacation and If you dont get any vacation you will need It to console you OUR FORBEARS GOT A RELIGIOUS SOUSE From Old Gospel Hymns Say Critics Who Call Them Baneful Music St Louis June 29Old gospel hmm for which our forbears martyred their peace and occasionally acrlflccd their heads and with which they rocked themselves Into ai religious souse are cheap crude and do not tend to sobriety They appeal to the Inebriate Instincts and produce a physical ecstasy akin to Intoxicating liquors They are indigenous to America and probably sprang from the rhyth ilc convulsions of the old Southern arkey The tunes are the cheapest at dance music of a most primitive character They are the most bane tul Influence against the progress ol American music This is the conviction of repre entatlve musicians attending the Missouri State Musicians Convention here The hymns mentioned as typical of this class of socalled sheet music wore At the Cross At the Cross Throw Out the Life Line Oh Happy Day and I Vant to Bo an Angel James T Quarles organist at the aristocratic Lindell Avenue M E Church where the convention is elng held said none of these hymns was used In his church He declar ell they are being thrown out of nil the large churches and are heard now only at the missions He said radically every Protestant city hurch has revised or is revising its hymn books Ernest R Kroger another noted St Louis musician said Canned music or music of the mechanical kind Is the greatest agency for popularizing good music In America Sentimental songs like Annie Roo ney are on the wane Old Ulcers Are unsightly and dangerous Dr nells Antiseptic Salvo will heal them promptly It Is clean and pleasant to use 2f c a box Sold rerywhere mII ALLOWING INSTRUCTIONS IMPLICITLY ONE ON DAD A Washington parent from out- Mt Pleasant way tells the Washington Star the following story of his young son who by the way has not reached the shaving stage yet but s the story Indicates is still not I1verse to trying The other evening ho was read- Ing the newspaper when he sudden Iy excallmed Father I see in the paper that the corporation is going to bust that you are president of Now I knew I knew more about my business than the paper so Irep- Ueel very comfortably My son never believe anything you seo in a newspaper A few days later I found my now razor broken wrapped in a newspaper and thrown behind tho house I Immediately wont In search of Dobby Look hero young man whats lhe meaning of this I said Heresy now razor broken all to pieces rapped in a newspaper and thrown behind the house Father h6 replied backing hastily out of the room never be- lIeve anything you see In a nowspa per A Coiisli A CoM- And then no telling whatunlessy- oU use Dr Bolls PlneTarHoneyI- BIt the bestask your neighbor ook for the Don on the bottle ilold everywhere m v f t I JOY KILLS WIFE OF A SSOLDIER While He Kissed Her ia Happy Greeting SHE FELL DYING IN HIS ARM TragedyMarks SuddenlReturnI of Trooper From Long Stay in Texas WIPE WAS IN CONSTANT FEA1 Brooklyn June 30Joy at tin sudden shock of seeing her husband after an absence of nearly tour months was assigned as the cause of the death of Mrs Ida Hollis Har ding She dropped dead as she threw her arms about the neck other husband Sergt William H Harding greeting him upon his re turn from the Mexican border Plans for a happy reunion were turned to arrangements for a fu neralHarding Is a Sergeant In the Coast Artillery stationed at Fort Hamilton HO has been married four years On March 8 he was or dered to the front with his company In the Third Provisional Regi ment under command of Col White The order came late In the after noon and Harding was forced to leave his home that night Mrs Harding was almost overcome bII the shock but he assured her that his stay would be short I The regiment was sent to GalVeS ton Texas where Camp Crockett was established Mrs Harding became very nervous following the de parture of her husband and spent n great deal of her time with her mother Mrs John J Hollis at 341 Morgan avenue The Hardlngs live at 210 Oelston avenue Fort Hamilton Twice after Mr Harding went away his wife received reports that he had been kl11edjj that the Sergeant had been killed In an automobile accident In Galveston and two weeks later she heard that ho had been shot In an j engagement on the frontier An ex hange of telegrams proved both ofJJ these rumors unfounded Following theso reports Mrs larding went Into convulsions her mothers home brought atII by nervous strain rr- Sergt Harding returned to fork with his regiment on NewII ransport which docked about 7 clock Reports from Sandy Hook tad reached Mrs Harding to the effect that her husband could not each home until next day She was sitting on the front porch at her home at 915 oclock talking with one of her neighbors and In highly joyous spirits In anticipation at her husbands homecoming Suddenly the Sergeant turned theI IIhomeII steps of the porch and flung herself Into her husbands arms with a lItI tle cry of Joy Oh Will Im so glad to see you she said Then she kissed him Then without any warning she sank Into his arms and died Dr McGowan of Fifth avenue was called In and said that Mrs larding had died from heart failure brought about by the sudden shock y Of Course See here said the dressmaker your car steps are too high for wo men In hobble gowns Whats to be done I Thats simple enough replied the street railway official Welll- get up some new styles In car steps p DONT DUCK IM 1JKJUND A HTOHV OF nULL RUN I These follows who are so much I reciprocityrmer remind me of a soldier I used to know named Carlysle Rep sentatlvo OHIo James of Ken icky said to a reporter of the rooklyn Eagle Carlysle was given a recruit to break In Just on the eve of the first Battte of Bull Run continued the giant Kentuckian and was greatly agitated because the new soldier expressed some fear of cannon balls rape canister and oven plain rifle Jalls Courage boy courage l he- cried to tho recruit as the roar of battle began from the breastworks and tho whining of minnie balls IIsaIIIII III aint afraid but I wish the 1 V W O OOO 01JOOO GREAT HOPKINS COUNTY FAIR ZMCOjcUsonvllle JULY is 19202122 Special Train Service on MH Eat Reduced Rates C C GIVENS President jA FRANCEWAY Secretarytr e e o oo i ld Qs ys 3 Q things would Quit sassing me as they go by my head cried the new- man Gee here comes another I Be a man cried Carlysle and dont shame your country Remember Im with you Im rlgh behind you- Another missile came whlrlln through the air Just over their heads and the recruit dodged am lowered his head Be brave Carlysle cried and whatever you do for Gods sake dont duck Remember Im rlgh behind you- INFAMOUS TREATMENT OF McMINIGALS WIFE In Order toCompel Her to Appea as a Prosecuting Witness Los Angeles June 29Represen atlves of the prosecution In the Los ngclce Times dynamiting case today confronted Mrs Ortle McMani gal with her husband one of the accused conspirators In an anteroon at the grand Jury chamber Her verwrought nerves gave way before its pleadings and she swooned McManlgal it was said had been aken from Jail to plead with his Wife to be n witness for the prose utlon Instead of for the defense after she had persisted In refusing to answer questions put to her before the grand Jury even when she had been told of the power of the law to punish such refusal When she emerged hysterical rom the grand Jury room Attorney Clar1enceiIcNamara brothers rushed among the detectives surrounding her and with clenched fists swept tho officers side with threats of violence If they did not cease hounding this wo nanLater when Mrs McManlgal and her attorneys reached the street and departed In an automobile another machine occupied by three detect- Ives followed The detectives admitted they are making every attempt to win Mrs IcMantgal to the side ot the prose utlon and that they have taken an partment next door to the one she occupies so as to note her ovary movement Never leave home on a Journey ithout a bottle of Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It Is almost certain to be needed and cannot be obtained when on- board the cars or steamships For Bale by all dealers m AYS TOO MANY DOCTORS ARK ADDICTED TO DRINK In an address on Relation of the octor to the Alcoholic Problem slivered before tho afternoon session of the Jefferson County W C T U Institute In the Warren Me iorlal church Dr W F Boggess deplored the fact that many physicians do not take a positive stand jainst alcohol As It is fiftylive per cent of doctors the world over I1re addicted to the overuse of alcohol while twentyfive per cent of them are positively drunkards and come in time to fill drunkards raves ho declared Dr Boggess said that the average duration of mans life should be 125 years instead of three score I1nd ten as King David expressed it David was pretty much what we moderns would call a high roller he said and burnt the candle at- hath ends and burned up energy I1nd tissue Possibly In his day lhree score and ten was a good av- eralle for a man who lived reckle- ssIYLoulsvllle Times SS AJVKILLINO DAY IS NAMED AT CARLISLE Carlisle gypJune 24EdltorO- reen R Keller as grand high meander of the Rat Slayers has Issued a proclamation calling on all Dr the citizens of Nicholas county toi observe July 3 as a day to kill rats Annually on May 37 for a ember of years Mr Keller has led- tb slayers against the rats wltlt- lhQ result that hundreds were klll edI but as that day was not observ edt this year July 3 was chosen i 1 t AA GHASTLY TRAIL OF BROKEN LIVES Lies Behind Career of Ev elyn Nesbit Thaw SHEE LIVES UNNOTICED NOV And Alone in Modest Littli FlatHer Name Has Lost Its Magic TOLL OF WRECK IS THIRTEEN All the world knows of the kill Ing of Stanford White on the Mad Ison Square Roof Garden and the testimony of Evelyn Thaw upon the witness stand which enveloped her In shame perpetual It was this story of her fall that sent Harry Thaw to an asylum for criminal In sane Instead otto the electric chair After the second trial various stories were told and published as ko the whereabouts of the girl her mode of life and her ambitions She was variously described as liv lag luxuriously upon her Income from the Thaws and as occupying a small studip In the pursuit of sculp ture study But she has drifted gradually out of the range of pub lic notice As a matter of fact this girl not yet past the youth of her twenties the center of a tragedy known throughout the world Is living In a modest flat unnoticed and aloneHer name once the open sesame Ito every gilded hostelry In town has Its magic It is not even upon her doorplate Perhaps she has some friends but the gay throng of Broadway are no longer her friends They have no time to remember as they hurry along In the current But she In her quiet backwater of a ref age has plenty of time for memories She and Nemesis can look rack over a ghastly trail of broken Ives Perhaps sometimes she counts Stanford White In his grave Harry Thaw wearing out his lays within the galling limits of an asylum for criminal Insane His Aged mother and his sister Alice olfexlled to the little village on the Hudson where they may watch the neverfading lights In the sec mdfloor windows of his prison A oung millionaire aimlessly wander- Ing about a foreign land watched by his creditors and shunned by his amjly An old man once a factor In the financial life of Wall Street now broken and Impoverished Three of the lawyers dead who once ought to save Harry Thaws life two others whose careers have been tided by their own discreditable practices Another man of law whose glory faded from the day of his association with the Thaw case mrt herself The toll In thirteen TVho nexUNewYork Press n 1000 in Prizes The publishers of the Dollar Mag zlne will give 1000 in prizes to ho person who sends them the argest number of words constructed from letters contained In the text Dollar Magazine A l1al1y prize of a Genuine Gold Fin shod Watch Stem Wind and Stem Iet will be awarded dally to each orson sending 25 or more words This Isa popular plan of intro uclng a popular publication For full particulars of the contest address THE DOLLAR MAGAZINE onicrvlllc New Jersey 2flt3 INDICATIONS SEEN IN THIRTEEN LIGHTNING RODS When the Republican progres slves In the United States Senate come face to face with propositions to reduce the cost of living to check the paper and lumber trusts and to extend our markets as pro Ided for In the Canadian agree ment or to elect Senators by popu rvote they bristle with suspicion And opposition They are more crit- Ical than any standpatter It Is ardor to satisfy them than any ember of the old guard Most ot them pretend toflndl- ome merit In reciprocity but they will vote against it because it Is not a perfect work Most of them profess friendliness to the idea of di rect elections but they are as par ticular as d trust magnate about the kind of direct elections that la to be secured Their Ideas are very large They recognize progress only when It Is beyond their reach Reforms that do not revolutionize government reorganize society convuls nature and regenerate man do not t appeal to them Nearly every one of these socall ed progressives occupies a place that belongs to a Democrat and that would have gone to a Democrat If they had not outtalked the Demo crats In their advocacy of Democrat ic principles That lIs the way they tided themselves over one severe political storm It looks as If they were now trying to read their titles f clear not to mansions In the Democratic skies but to front seats In the next Republican standpat con ventionMr LaFollottes Presidential can didacy Is announced Perhaps every one of the thirteen has hopes New York World ooooooooooooooo THE 14 ERRORS OF LIFE Z- ZD00000000000000 To sot up our rigid standard ot right and wrong and expect eVe irybody to conform to it V To try to measure the enjoyment if others by our own t To expect uniformity of opinion In this world To look for Judgment and experience In youth To endeavor to mold all dlsposl j Ions alike j Not to yield to unimportant trl j tee To look for perfection In our own i actions To worry ourselves and others about what cannot be remedied Not to alleviate It we can all hat need alleviation Not to make allowances for tdJ weaknesses of others To consider anything Impossible hat we cannot ourselves perform To estimate people by some outside quality for It Is that within which makes the man To believe only what our finite rinds can grasp To live as if the moment the Ime the day were so ImportantI hat It would live forever i estate of Ohio City of Toledo Lucas county BS Frank JChoney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the firm of F J Cheney k Co doing buislness in the City of ToleddCounty and State aforesaid and that said firm will pay them sum of One Hundred Dollars for ach and every case of Catarrh that annot be cured by the use of Halls Catarrh Cure Frank J Cheney Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence this 6th day of De ember A D Halls Seal 1886ff anll nallY mucous and acts Send for testimonialsfreeF dt Co Toledo Ohlo9 Sold by all Druggists 75c Take Halls Family Pills for con Upatlon Ho Will be n Great Help Bridgeport Conn June 24 Captain George Anger 8 feet 1 Inch tall a native of Cardiff Wales and the tallest man in the world be I came a naturalized citizen of United States here today maden fortune In vaudeville theII IIvos on a farm he purchased airfield He was obliged to double up like a Jack knife to get Into the ovator in the court house 4 almostthe worst thine for consumptive Many of the justasgood preparations ofIcoholtotadrop Insist on having EmulsionIIrOR r we pr +ra a WEDNESDAY JULY 8 1911 THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE THREE I PARDON FROM t tGOY WILL ON Was Shown and Prosecu tion Stopped is c NIGHT RIDER CASE WITNESS J Was Protected by Governor When His Trial Came Up in Court DILL TAYLOR METHOD USED The Hopklnsvllle New Era says Instead of having to answer for trial yesterday morning on Indict ments charging him with breach of the peace and malicious shooting Arthur Cooper confessed night rider t and one of the chief witnesses for the prosecution In the recent sen sational trial of Dr D A Amoss on the charge of leading the night rider raid on Hopklnsvllle was re leased from all responsibility for the offenses charged on a pardon from Governor Willson The cases were set fr Monday morning and a number of witnesses were read1 to take tho stand against Cooper VTnc presentation of the pardon bv Attorney Stanley Bassett came as a complete surprise and acting upon It Judge Hanberry dismissed the indictments The pardon Is written on the usu al blank prepared for such documents and is not as long as some of them are but the statements in it are none the less forcible and sensa tional J Ono night recently Cooper Is al leged to have driven In company with another man to the Pee Dee vicinity It is charged that he first visited the home of Finis Luttrell where he had boarded for a time Awhile engaged in organizing W O W lodges about eighteen months ago and to pave Insisted that Lut trell come out and talk with him but the latter declined He IB then said to have gone to I I the home of John Osteen arriving J there after midnight and to have aroused the household and to have cursed in the hearing of the family after Osteen hdd refused to let him put his horse in the stable or to fur nish him with corn for the horse Osteen says he stood It as long asI he could and then ordered Cooper to leave which he did but that just after driving away tram the gate i two shots were fired from the buggy and the bullets passed through the lmlty1toCooper was arrested next morn ing as he drove Into town When the grand Jury considered the case they flst returned an Indictment for breach of the peace and later a Itt second Indictment for malicious fIf shooting The man who was with t Cooper was not indicted The indictment t charged that Cooper wAs drunk In addition to the other offenses Happiest Girl in Lincoln A Lincoln Neb girl writes I hI had been ailing for some time with chronic constipation and stomach trouble I began taking Chamber gains Stomach and Liver Tablets and in three days I was able to be up and got better right along I am the proudest girl In Lincoln to find such a good medicine For sale by all dealers nl I OLD AGE OUT Or FASHION IN THESE MODERN TIMES Careful studies and measurements have shown that our time of actual maturity and arrest of growth In k h f physical characters such as height weight and chest girth is much la ter than formerly supposed In stead of reaching as was at one I time confidently stated our full 231andmatter of fact we continue to crease slowly it Is true In all InI respects until 35 38 and even years of age I By living a beautiful healthful active happy life and keeping up all our interests we can grow and develop and adjust purselves and I feel that we are growing until we are one day suddenly dead with out ever realizing In any distress ing or painful way that we are t kJBTPWing old at all y Already old age has pone quite out of fashion The civilized edu rated man or woman of 70 la young er than the savage of 40 or the peasant j of 50 What with steady spread of regular Vocations and country cr Suburban homes and walking clubs 4rd Rolf and gardens and autorao tyInff and trayej of all torts those f who would bavebeese considered old f1v4 If tIpri1Aftt1Q ttl II- t I once are now only 70 or 75 years youngNot only Is there no definite period In adult or later life when these t buttproIgres torelIn fact the extraordinary par jadox exists that what we term old is the time Of life In which wegage growing old least rapidly The only thing that makes it appear oth steadilyjj accumulations I Woods Hutchinson In Hamptons j Magazine m CORDS BROKEN BV BIG STEAMER OLYMPIC New York June 30The largest number of cabin passengers that ever left this port on a single ship boarded the White Star liner Olym I I OlymIpicstarted the second half of her maid en trip with 2205 persons in her three cabins The cost of sailing I from Southampton and back Is I 175000 and the return from pas Durling than 12000 persons paid fifty centsI each to Inspect her The money went to the Seamens Orphan Fund SECRET OF Till WILL NEVER BE KNOWN Declares Gen BixbyDecay Too Great to Fix Cause of Destruction Tampa Fla June 30The so cret of the destruction of the battle ship Maine will never be known said Gen W H BIxby chief of en gineers in charge of the work of raising the Maine on his arrival deIstruction says Gen Bixby and the deteriora tion has been so great that it will bo impossible to say whether the ship was blown up from a force I TheIthe inside indicating that the forward magazine had exploded Whether this was from a sympathet ic explosion caused by a torpedo from the outside may forever re main a mystery Gen BIxby says that unless the fragment of a torpedo is foundthere- Is no way of connecting some out side agency with the blowing up of the vessel IRelics found in the officers cabin which was aft consisted for the most part of rubber goods Rubber door mats look as though they had just come from the factory Rubber bands rules and triangles have been recoveredWe not expect to find any hu man remains he said The dlsappearIed entirely It lay in the vacant nowfliesthe ship was broken off The bottom under this vacancy is bare of wreckage fan Blxbv declared no further revelations of consequence are ex pected S XotleeI Society of Equity are urgently requested to send delegates to the county un ion July 7 and 8 1911 There will be much Important business to come before the body and a full delega tion Is urgently called for 24t4 HENRY MPIRTLE Secy SAVED DROWNING MANS LIFE fiOT A NICKEL According to a little business transaction which took place today at Ocean Park between a life guard Charles Bassett and George Hager land after the former saved the life Iof the visitor 5 cents was sufficient Valuation to place upon a life Hagerland who Is from New York wont in beyond his depth in the surf and called for help Bas sett responded and succeeded after a struggle in bringing the man safely to shore Hagerland gave a dlmq to the man who had saved his life Bas sett accepted the coin and handed barn 5 cents with the remark Heres your chanleLosAng- eles cor N Y HeraldIRight In your season when you have the least time to spareyou ark most likely to take diarrhoea and lose several days time unless you have Chamberlains Colic Chol era and Diarrhoea Remedy at band and take a dose on the first appear ance of the disease For sale by all dealers XII irei it utosi rAJlpt1 AIr awlfin r 7 FLIES THROUGH I HEAVY SPUME l Of Roaring Niagara Falls In Biplane THE DARING FEAT OF AVIATOR I Who Scorned Death in Wild Swoop Through a Nar row perture1 FIRST VENTURE OF ITS KIND Niagara Falls N Y June 29 With the whir of his biplane motor drowned in the roar of the cataract and man and machine momentarily obscured In spray and mist Lincoln tcIdayswooped beneath the thlII upper steel bridge and don the gorge almost to the whirlpool Rising again between the sides of the lower river Beachey soared toI the Canadian side where he made a successful landing It was the first time that a bird man had cut through the air cur rents and mist clouds and leaping foam caused by Niagaras falls and rapidsTo add to the difficulty of Beach eys flight a light rain began to fall as he took his seat 1n UHf biplane I shortly before 6 oclock He mount led upward moving always In the I direction of the cataract and when he crossed the American Falls he was about 2000 feet In the air In a great sweeping circle he swung toward the north and over the Horseshoe Falls Down the river he flew almost to the llower steelarch bridge two miles below the Falls then coursed to the west and then south again always drop ping as he circled On his second circle he went well to the west before beginning his low flight toward the upper steel arch bridge under which he was to I pass Swinging again to the north and traveling about 50 miles an hour he came on probably not more than 200 feet over the Horse shoe and through Its spray Once over the cataract he lower ed his plane and rushing with the wind at a speed estimated at 60 qulckhlunder let of the power tunnel which shoots out from the rocky side of the precipice at that point At no time from his final dip until the I time he was clear of the structure was the biplane more than 30 feet above the spume The space through heightlandside The distance from the brink of the falls to the bridge under which he made the dip Is about 400 yards I Summer Colds Are harder to relieve than winters ones but they yield Just as readily jto treatment with Dr Bells Pine TarHoney Sold everywhere LookI for the Bell on the bottle mII j STRENGTH OF OlmAnIWANING IN ELEVENTH l Somerset Ky June 30There IsII lively scrapping among the Repub licans of the mountain section The most remarkable thing about this party and the race for the nomination I for Governor Is the wonderful I change which has taken place with i In the past ten daysor whether itII Is just the fact that the true sltua j tlon has just come to light Any Ii way ten days ago It looked from careful study that ORear i surely make a clean sweep wouldII entire Eleventh district carrying every county by a large majority but a great change has been wrought within the past ten days and now it will keep the ORear followers hust ling if they get a majority of the counties in the Eleventh district- It Is now almost certain so some of the very best posted politicians say that E T Franks will carry the CumborlandAdair I are the very strongest Powers counties and It is now an open and well known fact that the Powers and Bradley forces are llnlne up solidly against ORear In Whitley county IIts said that Charley Finley will see to It that the delegation from I that county will not be of any aid ito ORear in the LouiayllJe conven tlon though it may go un Instruct M Bell county IB sure to send a i delegation that will be for Franks or Cox while the county ofKnox Will go uninstructed on account of having a candidate for R miner of fice but as that is the home county fJ 1H 1 f t91TlAti Yf e f of Caleb Powers it Is easy to guess where it will land in the State con vention In this county Pulaskl Where the fight between these two factions Is always the strongest there will likely be some of a battle and it is practically a foregone conclusion that there will be two delegations from here one for ORear and the other one for Franks or Cox but probably Instructed for some local man The developments of the last ten days how the fine Italian hand of Senator Bradley and that means something In this district The Democrats are looking on jubilantly for they anticipate a big split in the Louisville conve- ntionoocooooooooooooo NEW OLD OAKEN BUCKET 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO The old order changeth NO lon ger do we sing of the Old Oaken Bucket but In its place has come a molernverslon which While It may lack in poetic meter tells a tale hear the line of truth just the same The old oaken bucket The Ironbound bucket The mosscovered bucket Dont hang In the well The doctors discussed it Health officers cussed It And threw the germcrusted Old bucket towell At any rate the old songs dead We use a sanitary cup Instead THE WHEREABOUTS OF SHERRll YET UNKNOWN Former Cashier of Utica Deposit Bank Who is Short 55000 The Owensbora Messenger says The whereabouts of W A Sher rill the former cashier of the Utica Deposit Bank is still unknown to the officers of the bank and to the officials of the bonding company as Davlcssiger to locate the man as an indictment has been returned against him charging him with the embezzle ment of 5000 There Is but little doubt that a thebynorthis will bo recommended to him by County Attorney Finn The matter of the shortage was brought to the attention of the county officials only after Sherrill shad disappeared from this section of the country and nothing has since been heard of him As soon as the alleged shortage was discovered Sherrill left Utica and went to Web ster county where he made an ef fort to raise the money to meet the shortage At that time he stated officialshe might be wanted but failing In his efforts to cover the shortage he left Webster county When the shortage was first dis covered neither the bank officials or any of the officials of the bonding company would prefer any charge against the alleged defaulter and he was allowed to take his departure When the grand Jury convened how ever he was Indicted and an effort is now being made to have him ta ken into custody The officials are of the opinion that the offering of a reward will cause his arrest Escaped With His Life Twentyone years ago I faced an awful death writes H B Martin Port Harrelson S C Doctors said I had consumption and the dreadful cough I had looked like It sure enough I tried everything I could hear of for my cough and was under the treatment of the best doctor In Georgetown S C for a year but could get no relief A friend advised me to try Dr Kings New Discovery I did so anil was completely cured I feel that I owe my life ito this grent throat and lung cure Its positively guaran teed for coughs colds and all bron chial affections 50c and 100 Trial bottle free at James H Wil liams m Born in Automobile Akron 0 June 29When In a speeding automobile within two blocks of her nome Mrs Elmer Hall gave birth to a baby boy today Mrs Hall had been visiting at the home of relatives and had started for her home Soon after beginning the return trip the bird approaches and the machine was given ful speed in an effort to reach the Hal home but the race was lost by f few minutes 4 All Skin Diseases Yield readily to treatment with Dr Bells Antiseptic Salve We gua antee it 25c A box Sold everywhere r ijjrr The Secret of Youth- Do you ever wonder how you can remain young or why other women older than you look wordspreserveThe secret can be put in a few your health and you will preserve your youth By health we mean not alone physical health but nerve health as sometimes magnificently stronglooking women are nervous wrecks But whether you are weak physically or nervously you need a tonic and the best tonic for you is Cardui It builds strength for the physical and nervous systems- It helps put flesh on your bones and vitality into your nerves Take j CARDUIJ 4sThe Womans Tonic My mother writes Mrs Z L Adcock of Smith yule Tenn is 44 years old and is passing through the change of life terriblyMyof Cardui which she took according to directions and now she is up able to do her housework and says she feels like a newwoman Try Cardui in your own case i Wrttt to Ladies Advisory Dept Chattanooga Medicine Co Chattanoow Tena for Special Instructions and 64page book Home Treatment for Women sent free I Irol n ionnl Cardsii J Mt PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice Mr profession In Ohio and ad olnlng couutlet Special attention given to aIbnilne enlru ted lo his uteIj jFRANK L FELIX i iAttorney at KY Law j Will practice hlA profession In Ohio and alII 3lnl RCouutlei and In the Courl or Appeal Criminal practice and Collection a Office In the Herald building peclaI II C M BARWBTT C R SUITS IIII Attorneys at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice their profession In all the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In the Conr jIAppeali Collection a specialty r WE BUY fltWOOLiHIDCSANOFUR I HIDCSANOFURBeiniDealas iwe eta do better for pa Ilia agents cr commission nacho ate Rctnence oar tail in LcuisriKe We famish Wool Pits Free to out skippers Write forpriulistI I M SABEL SONS s ailLanhdUc B- rA Have your old STRAW HATS MADE NEW At HARTFORD PRESSING CLUB S Ladies and gents clothes also WORK GUARANTEED I Called for and delivered I Club rate Si100 per month I Hartford Pressing I I BldgIPARKERS HAIR BALSAM Cltiniri and tmutinet the hair growthNeverorayXtalrCine fWngelkrlh Rhoumatism 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 free application o- fCnamberdains Liniment Iis all that is needed and it is cer tain to give quick relief Give it a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain and soreness Price asc Urge size 500 I PAINII a t1 co GILLEPIEBROTHERS BROTHERSW J PROPRIETORS BLACKS lITHING And y Repair Work HorseshoeingA HARTFORD Kentucky a rur1 HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR KESI DENCE OR PLACE OK ilLS 1INESS AND PUT YOLPvSEIV IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR THE COMPANYS SPKCIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OltIDDRESS J W OBANONLocal Hartford Ky W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Heaver Lam Ky ESTABLISHED 1868 4I If its a ring a diamond a watch lewelryor silverware you call get the best quulllY at the lowest prices from the- OLDEST MAIL IRDER HOUSE- N THE SOUTH Ieluslvcly J II utnea In ar NO retR iJ ft I hatotliorrut cticetend 4 nllln atanlpa for ourtwo mva4oahle PATINTIWhlehones ner patent law and other TaluaU iflforumllwo Dr SWIFT It CO PATENT LAWYERS j 303 Seventh St Washlnotoni D C- Dr Y y Bells AntisepticSalve Good for all Skin DIseasss uSubscribefotTheId M i r 5- EE 1AGE FOUR n I u I fAi HARTFORD HER LDvEDJ NIgDAY JULY 5 1911 r c I f A She rIrjord Herat I HEBER MATTHEWS FRANK LFELIX y EDITORS PRANK L FELIX Pub and Propr Entered atthe Hartford postoffle as mall matter of the second class WEDNESDAY JULY 3 1011 DKMOCUATIC TICKET U S SEXATOK Ollle M James of Crittenden C30VKIIXOK Jas B McCrear of Madison WKUT fiOVKUXOU In doubt AUDITOR In doubt ATTORNEY GKXBRAL Jaroe Garnett of Adalr- SECRETARY OF STATE C F Crecellus of Pendleton- SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC IXSTRlCTION Barksdale Hamlett- of COMMISSIONER OP ACmcur- TUHE J W Newman of Wood ford CIERK OP COURT OP AP EALSRobert Greene of Frank- TREASUitERTam lIn Rhea of Lo gan Good morning Have you got your fifth of July hat on straight Yesterday was the glorious Fourth throughout the land 0 what will the harvest be Thexlays are now getting shorter both by tho almanac and for the power of tho Republican party In the nation thatreciprocityIt Is said bill passes It will be a feather In the cap of President Taft Yesa rooster feather F Hon James B McCreary candidate of Kentucky Democrats for i Governor will be seventythree years old next SaturdaIThe seventh day ber will complete the job inaugurated last Saturday with an oldtime Democratic victory In Kentucky When the Republicans of Ken tueky meet in State Convention next Tuesday will they endorse the ad ministration of Gov Wlllson Will i they dare do Itii The makers of style in millinery announce that ladles hats will beII smaller next season This will least be good news to menandItootherswho essay The Democratic free list bill InII Congress simply means that farmer will pet his vehicles farm tools wire fencing harness and shoes for less money Is not that a good thing I Now that the primary Is over It behooves all Democrats to enter In i to an earnest and loyal support of i the ticket Without this victory In November will be doubtful With It victory is assured NationalsHouseK Polk ever became President I Rut our present SpeakerChamp ClarkIs being confidently spoken I of for this place The inobeing used i to deliver packages which were left behind to ships at sea But no invention has yet been perfected that will deliver those letters which a mans wife gives ITI The date of the initial g o pStateI ismenagerie performance tt ttnext Saturday when Republicans i will meet In county conventions to select entries Into the ring at Louis vllle Tuesday July 11th Doors open at 1 oclock Performance begins at once I We are yet hoping that the State executive Committee will give the r conIventlonneeded to adopt a platform andII handle the live reform Issues of day The Democrats of Kentucky In convention assembled with delegates from the several counties j should take a standand at once 4 t Mayor Williams has taken an im 1 1portant matter in hand and in an t other column In boldface type will 11efound his timely warning to the of Hartford In regard to f tho cutting of weeds in front of J premises the removal of rubbish c7and parties found guilty of neg 1 lectlnK this ordinance after the specified date will bq assessed a heavy fine The4wecd and rubbish a ordinance has been too long neglected and should be obeyed at once I Otlc1c 1t A Winning t atwas selected by the DemocrAts of Kentucky last Saturday j I to till the State offices Each man on it deserves the earnest and I DtlnItssti support flteTeff1 7all I party man Being composed of able clean men It also appeals to the Independent voter In a strong way Every candidate named would till the office to which be aspires In the most acceptable manner It Is the peoples ticket and deserves the peo pies support without dlscrlmlna I tlon It remains to be seen whether the Republicans of Ohio and other counties of Kentucky will endorse the arbitrary and browbeating methods employed by ono or two of their county newspapers to compel them to support Judge OReai1 These papers seem to think that Judge ORear Is the only respectable candidate of the bunch and that those who do not support him ought to be driven from the party In mattersand voters have a right to support whomsoever they please i It Is more amusing than serious to notice the efforts being put forth I nowadays by g o p leaders to have the administration of President Taft endorsed In some places the effort Is difficult but no chance is leftt unimproved The various State strongholds are being besieged and if a Republican approaches within shouting distance of the executive j mansion these days Mr Tafts secretary I feeds the Associated PressII representatives with the that Eald Republican Is strong forII the nomination of the President oCtheII Mr Wallace Brown editor Bardstown Standard Is a candi hisIhomei frrlSpeakerAmong the several good things ho stands for ho seems to be the only candidate openly pronounced In his position against the Frankfort Lob by otherwise known as the Third Housea most laudable ambitionI I Mr Brown Is a sterling ocrat and deserves to win all along the IneII TuFt about a year ago Roosevelt returned from TheodoreII can trip burdened with glory and the homage of the world and he I was received with glad acclaim The glory of his reception was an event In history He was lauded by his party and the people as a Presiden tial hero and his candidacy seemed j assured Then he dashed Into politics j and made a bad break His c friends forsook him and he was al I IIsoclatesj II IIpoliticalII Among needs Is a rigid enforcement of herjj compulsory educational law With the III many educational advantages afforded parents who will not volII intarlly send their children to school should be Impressed with their duty In a rational yet forcible way It Is a shame that KentuckyIiIi stands so low In the scale educaII lonal status It seems hard toI arouse some people to the and disgrace of this showing shameII mrents be aroused and if ry let our compulsory laws In this ilenforcedj il II We modestly lthe attention j of Hartford Herald readers to theII large amount of reading matter contained In the paper recentlyall of our own selection Last week there was about 38 columns or nearly eight hundred Inches of reading matter space besides the advertisements II This week as much We try to give an Infinite variety of IJ subjectshome and county newnc the latest State and general newsl a little poetry and jokes religious J scientific technical and literary Ie stuff of all kindssomething that will be of Interest to everybody We I I hope and tiellovo our readers apprec elate our efforts to give them a goodII paperii i II TwentyFive Cents Is the Price of Peace The terrible Itching and smarting Incident to certain skin diseases Is almost Instantly allayed by applying Chamberlains Salve Price 26 cents For sale by all dealers m CASTOR IIAA For Infanta and Children Tbs Kind You Hare Always Bought Bears the STJf y T Signature of w 72i4fI j Triplgts at Leltchlicld Lcltchfleld Ky June 3QTdp 11born11 t Wright of Clarksoa near here this week One arrived at 7 oclock and the others at 4 a m the next day t- They are well developed little mitts one girl weighing five pounds and the otters four each SPECULATIONS I OF t tHANK x CASHIER ABOUT 2000 But the Banks Loss is Fully CoveredAccused Has Skipped Out Paducah Ky June aOWhlle the expert accountant John D Smith of this city will give out no I figures It has been learned from an authentic source that the alleged shortage of W F Purdy Jr cashier of tho Ballard County Bank at Bandana will be around 20000 Smith has finished examining the j books and is now preparing his re port to be made to Purdys bonding companies Purdy was under 10 1000 bond each with two surety com panics therefore the banks loss Is fully covered I What has become of Purdy is a mystery As soon as Smiths report is filed with the surety companies a big reward Is expected to be offered for Purdy The cashiers al leged peculations extend back It Is said to 1906 and he Is alleged to have taken money from the bank steadily since that time He dis appeared shortly before the inves tigation was started and cannot be located With a view of reorganization C O Sexton assistant cashier of the lank and assigns is In Paducah Two or three Paducah men are stockholders in the bank Assignee Sexton stated that the bunk would be reorganized and opened OR sown as the shortage Is settled KENTUCKYS NEXT SEXATOU HON OLLffi M JAMES Ollie James will be the next Senator from Kentucky the withdrawal- of Senator Paynter leaving Mr James a clear field In the primary and the certainty of a majority In both DemocraticI I elecItlonThough still a young man ho al ready occupies a recognized place as- ai factor In national politics What ever of success has come to him has been won through his own merit A arge measure of opportunity is be bre him both by reason of his ability and experience and because of I the virtual certainty that ho will beII one of the most thoroughy equipped men in the Upper House of an I administration Democratic in both Its executive and legislative I branchesAlways a strict party man Mr Tames loyalty to his convictions and to his State his personal integrity mIl his capacity for work have been abundantly proved gradII these qualities and soon to be ated from the best of all training chools for senatorial service theII look ahead for Kentucky nexttt Senator is one of large promise both to himself and to the State I he Is to represent Louisville Times S Dr Bells Two In OneII ternal and external m antiseptic remedy and destroys disease germs Sold everywhere on a positive guarantee mII RRESTED FOR CRIME LITER FOKTYFIVJ3 YEARS Bonham Tex June 30After having his liberty for more than 46 years Daniel W Byars is under I arrest at Greenville Tex charged with having killed L L Harris on December 19 1S65 It Is said that only one person who witnessed the killing Is now living The witness resides at Fort Smith Ark and anII effort will be made to have testify at the trial Sheriff W B Leeman was advised I of Byars whereabouts some days ago His arrest at his home near reenvllle was made yesterday Children Cry FOR FLETCHERS CAST 0 R IIA RUSTIC SOULS WEDDED IN VERY ARTISTIC WAY Grand Junction Colo July 1 landing before an altar of quartz and granite carved and fashioned by the hands of the bride on a narrow ledge 100 feet from the ground and reached by a trail hevyjout of the solid rock by the bridegroom Miss Beatrice Farriham the Boston artist and sculptress and John Qtto hermit prospector and trail builder were married In the Monument National park of which Ottp hoe 10 entlr been snppintod junertntenrt Dat Jt originally had hgonplan- aol to hold tha ceremony oiTVhaitop Dr Independence JMka Mtfyt plre towering more than 500 feet in the air the pinnacle of which no one as reached before exceptOtowl- prOro Ii1a1 ife en cuttteg tap44 i the side of the rock but the mlfl IIhi balked and a compromise we tho ceremony the brideI IDefore wedding feaSt over a camp then donned bet wedding gown of white satin with long brid al veil and made her way to the foot of the cliff where the groom In blue serge coat and khaki trousers awaited beside the minister who was clad In the full robes of teEpiscopalian church Later wbei the wedding gown mountainIclimbing ricd pair scaled the Independence spiral and on its pinnacle where I they had planned to be wedded 1In tho first place went through a cere of their own devising Imony MATTER OP TUB GREATEST MOMENT TO KENTUCKIAN- The school census of the State Just made public shows that less than forty per cent of the children Iin Kentucky of school age attend i the public schools This Is a condition I of affairs that Is quite alarm ing Kentucky pays more than oneii half of the State revenue for education i and we are sure that there is no more worthy cause for which this money could be spent but when it Is shown that people for whose good this money is appro priated do not take advantage of It i it is high time that those engaged i in the work of higher education i were sitting up and taking notice This country needs nothing worse than education and the States are all liberal In their support of the pilhllc schools of the country JIll lions of dollars are annually expend ed for that purpose but the school man of the future is the one who can get the people to take advan tage of their opportunities for hlgh ed education and see that the chil dren for whose good this money Is yearly expended get the good of it Higher education means a better State and nation and to get this re sult the people must be aroused and the money spent for education must bring In a proper return In the way of a more highly educated and a broader minded citizenship Cadiz Record TilE ONLY PERSON WilD KXOWS A GREAT SECRET 3 Jim Jones who was the faithful negro body servant of Hon Jefferson Davis president of the Southern Confederacy during the Civil War and who was with him at his capture In Georgia Is In dangerof losing his place as an attendant in the United States Senate stationery- room at Washington A year ago efforts were made to remove him Senator Money of Mississippi then saved him Other It Democrats are now trying to have the aged negro retained evenSthough the Republican steering committee placed his name on the list of those for dismissal 1Fon1 the Southern Confederacy was hid den Pursoiis Poem a iaFromRev H StubenyoH Allison Ia In praise of Dr Kings New Life IJP1lls1TheyreIn every home these pills should be- If other kInds youve tried In vain USE DR KINGS And be well again 1 j Only 25c at James H Williams 214 Main street m- PUT NAME ON MACK OP TERRAPIN 35 YEARS AGO Princeton Inc July IWhile wheat was being cut on the Louis Watkins farm near here a terrapin was found on the back of which was carved Harve Watkins 187Gp Harve Watkins now deceased formerly j a prominent Princeton resi dent was born and raised on that farm and probobly had marked thoII terrapin 35 years ago The terrap jI In was again released ji Married by Lamplight Driving up to the residence ofII Rev Jesse Brown in the Grape vine country Hopkins county Mr Reginald Crabtree and Miss Gradye feLeeriage in the buggy and by lamp light I As soon as the nuptials were sol mnlrod the happy couple drove off of They are well known and popular oung people of near Madlsonvllle lotI 1C1 0FReunibs and Rcpnbllcnu j c Convention Louisville Ky f July 11f1011 rn For the above pccailon the 1111 nols Central1 Rallrpad Company au hprizcB rate of one fare pjus 2fs- ceptij for the roiTd trjp front all stations Halt fare for Children flveto twelve rears of ape Tickets on Fate JPly 10 and H i 1111 retttrn llinItJuJy 12 1911 atonnd trip iron BenyerDam = 3 40 t Jc WIL ttf 1Mr4oent f r r IH H fOOG O OCfttOfOOO1s 0 mIl REDUCTIONS MILLINERY IN j i I W 0 t m JnI order to rid our stock 0as near as possible of eve jT fe seasonable Hat = mw Rgave made special r 0 0w 0 0B0off our stock Millinery o 0 at advantageous prices v ftyto the purchaser can be o 0hadat this store from 0 now on to the close of 1 0 the season You will i be surprised at t- heHAT T h G M 0 You can buy for 0 1I1- s If you are interested at allin uptothemin ute Hats we can serve you we f IIII IIEE p BARNES BRO JI I BEAVER DAM KENTUCKYi ti++vati+++tmvw 0 WI wH ij NOTICEI We want to call your attention to the large trade Were having on the Standard Perfection Oil Stoves in No 2 and No3 One of the nicest Oil Stoves on the market No no odor absolutely safe Please call and Ictus show you Satisfaction guaranteed Yours for trade DUNDEE MERCANTILE COr CORlOnATED DUNDEE KENTUCKY GOODS FOUND UNDER CHURCH PULPIT Mystery Surrounding a Robbery Commited 13 Years Ago Partly Cleared Slmpsonvllle KyJune 30A partial solution of the mystery surrounding the robbery of the general store of T 21 Lyons Co of this on July 30 1S9S came to light this morning when a portion oCthe stolen goods consisting of food and clothing 0 together with burglar tools were found concealed the pulpit of the Slmpsonvlllo Colored Baptist church which Is being remodeled and painted The stolen property evidently deposited in the pulpitriiyt the thieves or safe keeping nearly thIrteen workImenfrom the rostrum The presence a slip of paper containing a list of the articles found In the unu soot hiding place led to the belief the authorities that the list was left with the goods to guarantee hope among thieves to insure enial division of the booty at anytime that they should bo able- to remove It The loot has been returned to the rightful owners Qn thee night of July 30 188 thieves sawed out a panelof the rear door of the store of T M Lyons Co Stock to the value fit f150 ryes taken The comblnatloV cf the bufll t I 1c r box as the money had been removed rby the proprietor when he quit bust ness for the d yrThree strangers white men werd seen prowling about the town fln the j day before the robbery and were missing the following morning when i the theft was discovered No trace 1ot1 would be unable to make off with all the loot they took from the store and placed a portion of It in the pul pit of the Colored Baptist church In tending to return for It later The fact that three suspicious character were seen the day before was pub lished In the newspapers with the report of the robbery Fear of ap prehension prevented the burglars from returning To place the clothing and grocer lea In the pulpit box It was 1tor1 restedthe Bible and then nail Ittback That the church had been en tered and the pulpit tampered with was never detected What was Found Under the Pulpit Two new shirts eight cans of Bak ing powder twopound can of roast ed coffee twelve Boxed of matches one pair of new shoes size No9 two pair of old shoes three cheese one weighing seventeen pounds andII tbe other eighteen pounds two pairs of longJawed pinchers threeIt kpivesone I two old parses three papers of need lee twbspVeltf ef treadj one candle MX skeleton keys wrapped in a copy of+ the Evening Pset of date July 30 1898 three burglar Jimmied j aneta1written Itat of artjclwi deposited In I the hldln fctaw 4 J K DrEelrPfri4NTar + y k or IiIMI I k i 4Ily c4YEDNESDAY JULY 8 1011 THE HARTFQRD HERALDPAOE FIVE 7II Half Price Millinery Believing as we do that it is not good busi ness to carry over millinery we will put i on sale Friday and Saturday our remain ing stock at exactly ONE hHALF PRICE Every Hat marked in plain figureCome look then overdivide the marked price by two you will have what the Hat costs you Plenty of new MidSummer styles 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 H GO II IIHartford KelhI kyIu H wH H2H H H H H H wH wH H wH H H H H H H H H H H H H wH I HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY SPECIALCASH PRICES 1 bbl Patent Flour85048 lbs Patent Flour IB 7I50 Ib Can Pure Lard 55 lOlb Pail Pure Lard L25 51b Pail Pure Lard2gaiaWhiteFl-akOSyrup i i 715 2 gals Santee Syrup 7 SIJf1 2 Cans 5 1 doz Pie Peaches Sf Illinois Central Railroad Tlmo Ta ble at Beaver Dam Ky North BoundSouth Bound S No 132405 am No 1211135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101 248 pm No 102248 pm No 131f55 pm J E Williams Agt Mr J M Hoover Hartford Route 3 gave us a pleasant call Friday Several responded to my other request for settlement Did you 23tf E W FORD M D Miss Mollie Bratcher of Narrows IB the guest of Misses Daisy Wed ding and Elenor Petty i I Ileriwere turning Thursday night The lid was on in Hartford sure enough yesterday almost every bus- Iness j house being closed Mr Lou Hill has beennge god as nurse for Dr Wayland Alexander who continues to be quite ill MrG O Wedding of Louisville Ky Is visiting MB lather Judge R I K Wedding here this week Miss Stella Thomas Louisville IsI vjsltlng the Misses Nail and other j friends and relatives In Hartford r i Leave your Laundry at my Grocery Domestic finish Work Guaranteed Called for and prompt delivery 1koee 140 her i Orocerl- Mr Henry T Jones ot the CadI Bonvllia Hustler was In Hartford last Saturday boosting the big Hop x kins QUl 1 doJ ilr rid1tiGAB bav NfaQ as their guests Mrs Georgia Wade and daughter Miss Marla of Nashville Tenn Messrs A H Ross Centertow- and W R Chapman Beaver Dam gave The Herald a pleasant ca while In Hartford Monday FOR SALEA new piano WI take a good horse or cow in tradeit Call on or addressC D CHICK 24t4 Beaver Dam Ky Rev and Mrs B F Atkinson and daughters Pauline and Flo who have been visiting Mr and Mrs WHi Acton near Sulphur Springe left Friday for their homo iu LouisI ville Mr Zack King of Route 1 die d at hisI home Wednesday afternoon n He was nearly 71 years old and wa affected with lung trouble Burs took place Thursday morning Bells Run Mr Arthur Alexander of PleasI urevllle Ky visited his stricken brother Dr Wayland Alexander city last week Mrs B A Evans J I of Owensboro also visited her uncle l Dr Alexander Miss Mayme Shown has i tho prlnclpalehip of the Pjeasa Ridge graded scjioolc and will take charge for the ensuing scholastic year Miss Shown la one of Ohio countys err best and most highly accomplished teachers well prepar ed for her chosen profeesioaan there1 can be no doubt that she will flljibtr er post of duty In the most acapt+bJjaanngr 1- j Y ff II Mr Wayne Griffin with Bayjesa i Bros in Loulsrvlllov came home few days ago toattend his wife ayd little son Wayne Jr who were 111 but are Improving Mr Alert Leach oZ Beaver Da claims to be In the leadfor the Re publican nomination for Represen tative from Ohio county ae the reIsuit of last Saturdays precinct con ventlons Mr R H Glllcsple went to Rock1 port Saturday returning home Sunday afternoon He was accompan led home by his wife who had been visiting her sister Mrs M J Reid I for tho past two weeks Charles Narksof color was stricken Sunday night with a second attack ot paralysis and Is in a very x precarious condition He can live but a tow bays at most respectled Col C M Darnett has sold his half interest In the Hartford Repub lican to Mr Ramey Duke foreman of the mechanical department of that paper 1It Is understood that Cal Barnett will continue 6n the editorial staff fQrahlleIMessrs L G Hoover of the fir of L B Hoover Sons Frledaland Dock Burton Olaton route 1 N 0 Davis Horso Branch Horace Pan lei Olaton W M Addington SraailhouB and Sam Morton Ceral vo were among our callers Monday Prof T H Smith former vice President of Hartford College and well known here will preach at the Christian Church in Hartford next Sunday morning and night At the be1jourI IFOH SALE at a bargain one 12 I horsepower stationary boiler and ilOhorsepower engine Used but very little Call on or address JAMES P TAYLOR 26t4 Beaver Dam Ky P SAllo havo one twoseated d trap nice for family use Will trade for horse or sell SCHIUKTEirS FLOATING STU DIO is lying at the Hartford wharf If you want photographs have them made now We have done work onI the boat in this county for a ber of years and you know what we can do for you In the picture line JGive us a call THE SCHRCETERS After knocking a thr ebagger and while making a fast run aroun the bases at the ball game here last 1 Friday Mr Ed Barrass sustained a j bad wrench of his left ankle Just as he landed on third base His too swelled up and the Injury gave him I much pain but he thinks he willI soon be able to lay aside his crutches In colsumn be found the card of Mr Otto C Martin of Hartford who has thoroughly equip y ped himself and has recently been granted license to practice law Mr Martin is an earnest capable young manand evidently has a bright fu 5ture before him Any business In i his line placed with him will receive careful attention 5i It doesnt matter whether you own or rent The premises on which y- oF u live you are required to clear away the weeds or rubbish In front of 5 and about same This Is for t health of Hartford andvicinity than ill you will bring a fine upon yourself MayoRr thlms city ordinance in another column canm ply with this requirement willingly nMr Rowan brook vlfe daughter Marlam and ions Bar- njrold and McHenry Holbrook ac cnpanled by Misses Ann Dudley Stella Warmer and Mnrgle Marks left in Mr Hribrooks launch Mon day morning for a point near the locks on Rouijh river where ih party will camp unll today ii he Axy1Ij oversupply of fish and squirrels fIs predictedIIDr H J Bell who for a year two past has been conducting a den tat office In Hartford loft Monday acceptsed a lucrative position Intone of the offitCOB of that city Dr Bell a splen did dentist a man of the highest personal Integrity and well deserves the auccesa that Is sure to come t I him His many fries here regret ted to see him leave but know that he will make good wherever be Is placed dlHathI of n3by Boy J 88 n JHujlIkln futon son of Mr and Mrs Chas TV Mulll kin of McKehry died at 130 o clock Friday afternoon June 30 af for an JHness of three weekenottl monthaan4lclard t war aivlsable to take the Jtttle fel low firoikk the breaaE some t6 r wki 4O and prli on fL It- t v f got cows milk which did not agree- a with him Dr Smith the family I physician assisted by Dr McKinney of Taylor Mines and Dr Crowder of Williams did everything known littlemTruman Dr Smith being In con stant attendance and was with the little fellow when the end came Funeral services were held at tho family residence by Rev Harper of Beaver Damafter which the remains piece laid to rest In the Fisher ceme tery u SPECIAL SERVICES AT HAITIHT CHURCH SUNDAY Business men and officials of Hartford and Ohio county are given a special Invitation to attend church next Sunday trio theme at the Baptist Church next Sunday morning 1045 will be Observance of the Sabbath We extend a special Invitation to our town and county officials and toIthe business men those who are takethe lead In obeying the law and enforcing It upon others Would like also to have the housekeepers who cook most all day Sunday the ball players the plcnlcers Sunm day visitors the reader of the Sun day paperIn fact let everybody come Tho sermon will not consist of hard saylncs but It will be a plea for Gods Holy Sabbath Special music will be rendered and we hone toxmake the service very profitable J W BRUNER Pastor Cln l to Get the News Gazelle Cal Juno 24 1011 Hertford Heaid Hartford Ky Gentlemen Find enclosed check for 200 for subscription for two years Tell your scribe at Beaver Dam to send In the news as The Herald Is like a letter from home Greetings to all old friends RespectfullyJ RY u AVFbnt OnwerR Notice TIO Wheat Crow era see request ed to meet in Hartford Saturday July S In connection with the Coun tv Union A S of E Good attend ance Is desired as important business Is to be transacted I T H BALMAIX Chmn HOPKIXSV1LLK BOYS AIm HEM UP BY AHMED MEN I Evansvllle Ind July 2HoldI- ng up tour young men on the Louis nearlthis city late last night two armed men made two of the party change clothes with them went through the tooktthenImaderailroad telling them they would shoot If hey looked back The four young men are Jacob Harris Her schist Hays Hugh Rudd and Vernon Homer all of Hopklnsvllle They came to the city later and notified the police of their experience with i the hodup men The poles lime no clue to Identity of the robbers For Sale Brand new 100 No 5 Under wood Typewriter used by owner ml one month Larpo discount for cash Address Mrs Mayme L Bar rass Beaver Dam Ky 24t4 Centenarian n Paralysis Victim Marlon Ky June 30liraMary Flower of this place who will be 10Q years old if she lives until I August 1 was stricken with paraly sls and while her condition Is se rious she has a chance to recover She has a brother living at Jeffer son Tex who is 102 years old For Sale FnrnrsA11 sizes from C to 300 acres We can please you It you want to buy land A C YEISER CO- Hartford Ky Cashier Mysteriously Missing Paducah Ky June 30Al-e though Reuben Groves ot 1009 Barn prison street has been missing two weeks no trace of him has been IsIbellevbers His accounts are straight ex ceptlng for whatever sums he col lected the day he disappeared June 17th For Sale Town property vacant lots cottages and twostory dwelling A C YEISER CO Hartford Ky oSomnambulist Fatally Hurt Blackford KyJune 30W T Lamb an Insurance man of Clay Ky wills walking In his sloop In the White Hotel here fell from a- secondstory window to the ground thattbeuiardletured In two places his left leg was broken and he was Injured In fernally flat I Old Papers Lots of EmFor sale The Herald o lceTo go on shelgosrorunder carpets or for blast lag+ par Paes rive vents per large package tf SPECIAL NOTICE TO THE CITIZENS OF HARTFORD This Is to notify you of an ordl mince In force carrying It fine of fjWJOO to i000 for each day you allow weeds high grass and rich blsh of any kind to remain on your lot sidewalk or pullers adjacent to your premises Thinking you have forgotten thls and dcslriiiK to treat you fair we Rive you until July 15 Ito clean up and the Marshal is lime by directed to proceed under the or dinance after that date JAMES H WILLIAMS Mayor 0000000000000000 HASEBALL 0 000000000000000 lly Our Spotting Editor Hartford 16 Rob Roy 4Satur WllIhams dayBarnctt Six hits were made oft of Barnett and 17 off of Williams All the Hartford boys played a fine game Saturday John Taylor stole homo while Williams held the ball In his hand King was there behind the bat goodsI was there with second and got two hits I Estlll Thomas was the star of the game three nice catches and three hits Kdmonpon umpired a nice game Joe Barrett played a tine game at second for Rob Roy and pot n two base lilt but made a home run out lof itas Thomas lost the ball In the corn field i Part of the regular team and four subs went to the Mines Sunday and were beaten 13 to 1 They will play our regular team at Hartford soon I Robertfon landed on the ball In the seventh for n 3base hit anylmareville to locate Adabtirg failed to come last Saturday but say they will sure be here next Saturday the Sth Thin putouts Satnrdav King Is Hunter 7 Thomas 3 Robertson 2 Bell 1- With Barnett In the boy we have one of the best teams in the county Ho sure does make the base runnor the has I Thug Hunter played such n nlco game Saturday the boys agreed on him for manager and Barnett cap tarn Special Train Service to Hopkins County Fair Madlsonvllle TCy July l in2VJI and UU 1011 Lv Hartford 830 a m Centertown 844 a m Kronos 855 a m oormanI 907 a m Firemen 917 a m import 927 a m Anton 941 a m Ar Madfsonville 1000 a m Leave Madlsonvllle returning 630 p m- lOne fare plus 25 cents 133 for the round trip Dates of sale I July ISth to 22d inclusive Return limit July 24th The special train service will be run only on following dates July 192021 and 22 H E MISCHKE Agent I CANNING PLANT AT- OtVENSliOHO IIUKNED Owensboro Ky June 29The large plant of the New Bluegrass Canning Company one of the largest canning plants In the State was I burned to the ground last night shortly after midnight entitling a oss of 35000 and throwing two hundred employes out of work I The entire plant was aflame when discovered by the watchman and the origin of the fire is unknown J Ed Guenther the owner of the plant carried 21700 Insurance on the building in the Canners Exchange of Chicago but he stated this morn ing that the lohh was considerably larger than the amount of insurance A Good Man GoneI Mr Delmer Bishop of Center town died at 7 oclock Wednesday morning of paralysis For several i weeks he had been in a critical con dition The funeral was preached at Central Grove church Thursday afternoon at two oclock by Rev Hi ram Drown and Interment followed In the cemetery at that place Mem bers of the Odd Fellows lodge of Center town Attended tha services In abody and several from Acme lodge of Hartford also paid their respects to their departed brother The deceased leaves a father mother sisters and brothers I Great Fire in Alaska Seatle Wash June 30 Idltarod City Alaska WaS nearly destroyed fc o tire on Tune 25 News of the con feeration has Just been received hereOJ 100000000000000000 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Prayer meeting and business ses sion of the church Wednesday ev ening at 8 oclock I ITeachers meeting Thursday ev ening at Business session of the Baraca class Friday evening at S oclock Sunday School at 943 Dr E 1Ford Superintendent worship at 1043 Theme of sermon Observance of the Sab bathB Y P U meeting at 7 oclock Evening worship nt 8 oclock- A welcome for all in these services In Loving emory Of Otis Maddox who departed this life July 7 1909 You are gone but not forgotten Never shall the memory fade Sweetest thoughts shall ever linger Around the grave where you arc laid i Two years have passed and oh how we still miss you Taken from life so young so pa tient and brave Some may think the wound Is healed Little do they know the sorrow that lies In our hearts con cealed Father Mother and Sisters ThnnkfltH We take this method of thanking the people of Hartford for the many tributes of love and kindness shown us during the Illness and death of our mother We shall always cher- Ish them in our memory nail wllf willinglyI return any kindness but God alone can reward them Mrs Frank May and Family pled in Cincinnati N i ws was received in Hartford Wednesday morning of the death or Mrs Richard Browner of Cincin nati daughter of Mrs Emma Hud BrownelIfore her death Besides her hus band and relatives in Hartford sloe leaves an Infant a week old and a remainslarrivednoon and services were conducted at the family residence Saturday t morning at 10 oclock by Rev Bru ner Interment was at Oakwood IIChamp Clark Speaker of the National House of Rerpesentatlves has announced that he will comeo Kentucky next fall and stump the State in the interest of Ollie James for United States Senator HAVE YOUR WATCJT CLEANED OCCASIONALLY WATCH will run without A oil or cleaning longer than any other piece of machi- nerybut it needs both occasionally If you will consider that the rim of the balance wheel travels over fifteen miles a day you will not grudge your watch a speck of oil and a cleaning thelifewatchLeave J B TAPPAN Jeweler and Optician Hartford Kentucky OOOCXXJOOOOOO3COOOSO2OOOOO3 Otto C Hattin Attorney at Law HAUTKOKD KY Ofllco up stairs over Wilson AJr Crowe opposite court house Will practice his profession In all the r courts of this and adjoining coon ties amt Court of Appeals Commer clal and criminal practice a spec laity OTTO C MARTIN 8 P MCKENJJKY M1J M XBlnf HARTFORDKY GENERAL INSURANCE LIFE ACCDENT SICK AND FIRE- WiU Also Bond You r wc 1 11f WEDNESDAY JULY B IBil PAGE six THE HARTFORD HERALD n The Hartford Herald WEDNESDAY JULY 5 1011 II E RAILROAD TIME TA DLE AT HARTFORD KY wTimo table effective Sunday Dct 4tlirontalns the following schedule No 112 North Hound due 720 a m Dally except Sunday No 114 North Hound due 340 p m Dully except Sunday No 115 South Round due 855 a m Dally except Sunday NO 113 South Round due 140 p m Dally except Sunday H E MISCHKE Agt THE PICKS FROM LEADING PLAYS Presented by Nearly One Thousand Actors TO THE BRITISH SOVEGIGN And Royal Guests Hous Ablaze With Fine Gems and Costumes A FEW AMKItlCANS PRESKNi London June 29The King am Queen and royal and distinguished t guests attended the second com- mandI performance In connection with the coronaton festivities at His Majestys Theater tonight For the occasion Sir Herbert Beerbohn Tree had arranged a superb pro gramThe distinguished audience was treated to scenes from The Merr Wives of Windsor David Gar rick Julius Caesar The Critic and Ben Johnsons The Vision ot Delight in which appeared more than 300 leading actors and actresses with minor actors and actresses filling supernumerary roles the whole number engaged reaching nearly 1000 y The whole grand tier was converted Into a royal box beautifully decorated The audience rose and sang the national anthem as the King and Qncen walked to their seatsNearly all the men present were In uniform and the women were superbly gowned but as at Covent Garden the Indian Princes with their gorgeous and bejeweled appar el outshone all others The audience included all the royal and other special representa tives to the coronation Ambassa dors Colonial Premiers and mem bers of the Cabinet The King wore the uniform of a Field Marshal with the Garter ribbon The Queen wore a wonderful robe of old gold with the insignia i of the Garter and a diamond fieur de Us and Maltese cross tiara Special American coronation Am bassador Hammond was a guest In the royal box and sat beside Prince Louis of Battenburg who in a heavily gold braided Admirals uni form appeared gorgeous in compar ison with the representative of the United States who was in conven tional evening dress Mrs Ham mond wore An emerald green satin gown embroidered with dull gold No fewer than 6000 persons at tended tho Kings afternoon par ty at Buckingham Palace this af ternoon It was the largest affair of the kind ever held in the spacious grounds of Their Majesties I London residence The gardens DO acres presentedf a charming picture A bright sun I favored the festival and tho great j groves and multicolored flower beds with a large lake In the center look ed their best- Brightly painted barges manned by the Kings boatmen in scarlet and gold liveries lent a touch of earlier days to the brilliant scene Temporary structures had been erected on tho lawns and bands of music were stationed through the gardenKing George and Queen Mary with their royal guests and escort ed by the great officers of state f toured the grounds IIn procession during the afternoon Among their Majesties guests were many Americans Including r andCCrocker and Miss Crocker Mrs and f Miss KerrSmJley Mrs and Miss F WhlterVdiro JRIrtpely Carter Amer- Ican Minister to Roumanla Richard tc C Kerens American Ambassador rtoVienna and Mrs Kerew Mrs 4 Robert Bacon wife of the irnerlcan Ambassador to France Special 4 t American Ambassador Hammond and Mrs Hammond and Miss Des Isle Curtis Whltelaw Reid the American Am bassador who with Mrs Reid and the staff of the embassy vas a guest at the garden party was presented by the King with a coronation medal poo oo oo oooooooo O WORTH KNOWING C- 00000000000000C An eagle can live twentyeight days without food i An Inch of rainfall represents 100 tons of water to the acre London uses iiOOOO tons of su gar annually for Jammaking I For every ton of gold In circula tion there are fifteen tons of silver I Germany sends 29000000 feath ers per year to England for mlllln cry purposes- InI seven days no fewer than 267 000000 herrings have been landed at Yarmouth In England I I The coal conpumptlon per head laII greater In England than any countryII erage woman j The growth of girls Is greater InI their fifteenth year of boys In their seventeenthA which cuts up wood to make matches turns out 40000 aollnts as they are called In minute aII MOURNING FOR DOGSII LATKST FAD IN LONDON Deep mourning for pet dogs Is theII latest feminine fad In i Deep mourning among human beings to a certain extent has gone out of fashion Deep mourning for I dogs is taking its place I A London woman tells how having advertised the loss of her dogI she was surprised and shocked toI l receive the same evening an envel ope In mourning nearly nn Inch deep Inquiring of her veterinary surgeon what this meant she was j told that mourning for dolts by memorial cards with deepest black edging and even by wearing black i clothes is becoming a definite fash- Ion In one Instance ho sold a clergyman accompanied a dog to Its burial Many smart wompn owners now intimate the death of a pet dog by means of mourning cards I They use the deepest of borders I comptlmes thrpe quarters of nnI Inch lIeepon their envelopes ante have special mourning cards print ed of the same pattern as those I used when humnn conn cernedTitBitsLeokS Way The Dutch have seized one of the Philippine Islands and our Gov ernment Is not even going to compel them to relinquish It What do think of that IOU I think our Government has pot for the Dutch but I dont know what for- TAKE IT IN TIME Just as Scores of Hartford People i Have Waiting doesnt pay If you neglect the aching back Urinary troubles surely follow i Act In time by curing the kidneys Doans Kidney Pills are especlal I y for sick weakened kidneys Many people in this locality rec immend them Heros one case I J C Weatherholt High street yearslagoI could ever be well again in fact I I had settled up my affairs I can not describe the misery I endured from pains through my back and whenever I stooped they became 80II sharp that It really felt as If some I ono were thrusting a knife Into my I kidneys I was otter very dizzy I dark spots floated before my eyes I and I had to grasp something to keep from falling My Joints becamo swollen to twice their natural size and I lost weight rapidly until I was ai mere skeleton The doctors medicines or the many guaranteed cures fIInallyImmediately procured a supply and I I was greatly surprised by the reI sults received Before I had taken contents of the second box there was a marked Improvement and I continued using them until I was completely cured I am now as wells any man In this county and I I 5lve Doans Kidney PJlls the credit For sale by all dealers Price 50II Dutra1JoI Remember the nameDoans and take no otherII OWNS WORLDS FINEST JEWEL Maharaja of Baruda a Modern Croesus GLITTERING GEMS ABOUNDING Everywhere Which Add Gl mour to Priceless Fur nishings of Palace d GLIMPSE OF MAGNIFICENC Another native ruler who is likely to attract public attention is His Highness Maharaja Sir Sayajl Rao aekwar Dahadur of Daroda who possesses probably the finest collection of Jewels In the world The Gaekwar represents a stat which has been In the hands of the rtaharattas since the early part ot the eighteenth century when his ancestor the first Gaekwar wrested the territory from the hands of the loguls He became the ruler at Baroda at the age of 12 His palace at Baroda Is one at the most remarkable buildings In ndia It has cost millions to build rom first to last It is called Laka ilml Vllasthe Abode of the Goddess of Fortune The corridors arc- oC alabaster and pearl Inlaid with precious stones and the throne oom is magnificent in its gorgeous iplendor The Oackwars Jewels are the yonder of Asia In the tosh- akhanatho treasure chambers at the old Nazi Bagh Palace then ire precious stones the like of which not even Aladdin or Sinbad ever saw There is the famous Star ol the South one of the great diamonds of the world bigger than our own Kohinoor and the only second to the Culllnan Then there Is- the great collar of five hundred din nonds with a double row of pear shaped emeralds the broad scar Iterally covered with row upon row ot pearls and knotted with Immense pigeon blood rubles on the left ihoulder and the necklace which tails from the throat to the waist made up of seven rows of pearshap cd diamonds as large as hazel nuts There Is a carpet large enough to over the floor of a fairsized room loyered with seed pearls and fIs worth a kings ransom And besides all this there are bushels of uncut tones and cups carved out of solid meraldsNor these gems and precious metals confined to the treasure hambers They may be found In- the elephant stables as well These have their gold and Jeweled how lahs one of which Is the gift of the EmpressQueen Victoria Another tor the little Prince Is borne by all rer leopards which have spots of ihrysoprase and acquamarlne There arc great forehead plaques guiding irongs and leading chains of pure gold Inlaid with every gem And Cor those who wish to climb up Into the howdah there are ladders of olid silver The stables contain other treasures There Is a victoria made of gold and a litter for these of the Maharani also made of gold with curtains of cloth of gold and handles set with rubles And then there Is the wonderful silver bullock wagon with beautiful embroidered hangings of gold tissue And last of all there is a cannon of olid silver which a former ruler of laroda had made and another of olid gold which a successor not to be outdone had cast Dut fortunately for his people It Isi not in his treasure houses that the heart of the Gaekwar Is to be fund His training under European nfluenccs has led him to see that where the Oriental tails in his Con tact with the Occident Is In the matter of education His four sons have had the benefit of an English public school and university education having studied at Eton and Ox ord The Maharaja Kumarthe iaroda Crown PrinceIs quite Eu opean in his tastes He was allowed to choose his own bride and marrlsgeI Ba Iroda He has quadruples the n m- Iber of elementary schools in his do minions and supplemented them with technical and secondary boots There Is a perfectly equipl ped polytechnic and to crown all there is the Baroda University which His Highness has built and the domes of which rise above the public gardens and crown one of the seat modern buildings in India Tie Gaekwar has been a great traveler and In all his wanderings be has paid the closest attention to the methpds of education in thp countries he has peeped Moreovel he Has obtiilned the besttcachers hei could get from all lands Ph- yearsgo he paida prolonged visit Ita the United Statest the result ot i which was that his only daughte been educated There and one oC This sons has spent sometime at ain American university t London Chronicle I jo o o o o qo o o o 000O 0 1GOOD RELIGION 0 ooooo oooqoooooo r To beirbie to took every ma squarely in thoeres to mak friends and hold them to keep clean oftnindand body to smiles 111 fortune toilaugh at my mis takes to frown when temptatloi comes a=visiting to bo ready witI I worIwi11I Lutmost the heart head ahd hand qualities endowed by the Bule Over All to hold all women in re spect and to lore one to weave the thread of Eternal Optimism into he lives of all with whom i may come Iin contact to worship Nature and the Great Spirit that conceived it al- lIIn a word to play the gameoC Life with a steady hand and a qualmless conscience and a real de I sire to be of servicethat Is my religion And shyIf I can live up to the mark dont you think Iv corralled about all thb creed thatiii necessary Backbone Monthly NEGROS SKULL CRUSHED NEVER MATS HIS Eli Taylorsvllle Ky June 29The black mans proverbial hard head was given an Impromptu tryou here this morning and the test more than substantiated tradition I Rclllcy Drown negro porter at the branch plant of the National Ice almojltIscalPedwater heater struck him following an explosion In addition the Iron cut a clean hole three Inches In length across his forehead TheI pulsations of the brain could be plainly discerned through the aper I tureNotwithstanding the fact the Drs J T Martin and O M Cren shaw whQ attended the Injured man removed a tablespoonful at shattered bone from the wound the negro declareshrdeed he whatever and didnt even have a headache The negro will get well- S KITTY LEAGUE HALL Gum CENTRAL CITY JULY Oil On July 9th the Clarksvllle and Henderson formerly McLeansboro t clubs will play the game scheduled for that date at Central City Ath letic Park in Central City Ky This Is no amateur game but la championshipIgamesI I I twoII played In Central City Is that the law will not permit Sunday ball to be played in Clarksville where this game Is scheduled to be played Ladles are to be admitted to theI j grandstand on this day without extra charge I IIralns on the I C North and South have been practically assured to accommodate those who may at I tend from either direction and theI L 8 N regular schedule Is such as to accommodate everybody who may TheIgaenabling everybody to stay through the entire gamo and catch their train after the game is over Kill More Than Wild Beasts The number of people killed year Iy by wild besets dont approach the mat number killed by disease germs No life Is safe from their ittacks Theyre 4n air water lust even food But grand pro action is afforded by Electric i1t ers which destroy and expel these deadly disease germs from the sys em Thats why chills fever and ague all malarial and many bloodI llscases yield promptly to this won lerful blood purifier Try them end enjoy the glorious health and new strength theyll give you Money back If not satisfied Only 50c at James H WilliamsN m I eo IURIED UNDER HEAVY PILE OF GOLD COIN San Frariclsco Juno 13ally burled under nine million dol lars in gold Wadsw6rth S WII liams an employe of the San Fran clsco mint was so badly injured The1JOldmint vaults and overwhelmed Williams who was wheeling a truck v Swilled Mrs Gillet rover the phone I- Want to complain of a mistake In our order 1 CetgrQrit tyKwt Ryas wrong 1 1Inyt t Tharpwaswhittle- ce cream In thataaltybUaet us i OOOOQQOOOObOOO O POEMS YOULL ENJOY 0 toOI Tlio Heralds Special Selections 0 0 00 s 00 ONLY A NEWSPAPER GUY I see a man strut through the jam In the hall Take a seat mid the speakers and chat with them all- Is this Murphy I ask that the crowd he defies No ofJthe newspaper gUYsII see a man pushing his way through the lines Of the cops where a firo brlghtlj glimmers and shines Chief Kenlon I ask but a fire man replies Oh no why thats one of those newspaper guys I see a man start on the trail of a crook And he scorns all assistance but brings him to book Mr Burns I Inquire Someone 1 scornfully cries Burns Naw Hes Just one ol them newspaper guys I see a man walk through the door of a show Where great throngs are blocked by the sign S R O Is this Goodwin himself that no ticket he buys Well hardly Hes one of those newspaper guys I see a man knock dn a presidents door And the sign No Admittance com pletely Ignore Is this Morgan that privacys rights he denies Morgan 1 Shucksi Its Just one of those newspaper guys And some day Ill walk by the great streets of geld And see a man enter unquestioned- and bold A saint Ill inquire and old Pe terH reply Well I should say not hes a newspaper guy CATHOLICS AROUSED OVER GOVERNORS APPOINTMENT Louisville Ky Juno 30Cath ollcs of Louisville and Jefferson county are aroused over the alleged discrimination on the part of Governor Willson in his recent appoint ment of William F Yust of the public library librarianI ommlsIslonthe mdmbershlp of that The Federal Catholic bodyILouisville and Jefferson literally swamped the Governor recently with petitions from promi i nent persons over the State asking t for the appointment of Dr W B Doherty a local physician Not i I withstanding these requests the Gov I ernor appointed Mr Yust Action protesting the appointment will be taken by the Federa tion on Tuesday July 11 Its mem bers claiming at least one Catholic should be Included on tho commls sion ooooooooooooooooo O FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 0 O W D Wright Pastor O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Preaching every Fourth Sunday morning and evening Bible School every Sunday at 930 a m- Communion service at 1030 am Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 oclock instead of Fri day as heretofore L Statistics of Independence Day In America Year Dead Wounded Total 11903 466 3393 3811 1904 183 39Sr 4109 1906 18249J4 r176 1906 158 6366 64661- 91Y7 164 42491 44I3 1908 163 6460 6625 1909 216 5307 5522 1910 131 2928 3054 1662 35620 37282 THIS Year 1911 What will the record bo I IForI summer diarrhoea in children always give Chamberlains Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil and a speedy cure is cer tain For sale by all dealers m I MERCHANDISE DELIVERED I STEAMER BY AERQPLANE I ION York June 30The first piece of merchandise delivered at sea by aeroplane tell on the upper deck of the giant Olympic as she steamed through the Narrows out bound on her maiden eastward pas sage contractedII I for delivery of the package before Bailing with a department store which In turn engaged Thomas Sop wlthV the English aviator who recently topic up Henry W ftjthe 1t Presidents brother for a sky ride 1 With Richard R Sin clair Secre tary of the Aero Club holding the h package Sopwlth arose from the aviation grounds at Garden City and timed his flight to meet the liner in the Narrows i tti While Sopwlth controlled the ao rOplane Sinclair dropped the pack age at the given signal 1 o o o o oo ooooboooo0 A BACHELOR GIRLS 0 0 REFLECTIONS C- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO4 Truth vls indeed stranger than fiction In the mouths of most mar tw tied men Usually a girl who can speak four r languages and think in two mar ries a man who can eat In six lan guages arid cant think in any When a woman longs for a ca reer she usually means that she prefers careering round a platform talking platitudes to puttering round a kitchen washing pans 3onuhov the man arid the fluh who got away always look so much more desirable In the vanish ing perspective Joy cometh in second mourning Speaking of signs it is a bad sign for somebody when a widow j begins curling her hair again and a widower begins to take an Interest tt- in his haberdashery The average mans attitude tosward a clever woman Is that of the curious small boy who wanted to shee de wheels go wound If a girl is pretty enough she can sometimes manage to live down a college education Its useless for an heiress to waste time learning to speak French In to captivate a foreign noble larder because her money will do tho talkIng orherDy Helen Row land In Chicago Journal JWASFALLING 20 STORIES Chicago Ill June 30Patrlck Eustlce one of tho human files whose agility and power of nerve makes syscrapers possible lost his balance today and toppled from the twentieth story of the Heisen Build IngOrdinarily r that statement would complete the story The structural Iron builder slipped from a beam In the dizzy heights just as scores of others had done under similar cir cumstances and his companions happenIsee the mangled body below As Eustlce fell John Murray was sounding hot rivets into place on the nineteenth floor directly be icath him Murray lunged out from its position seized the falling man lby a flying garment but the weight laC the man was too great to permit onI was able to do tvas to swing his fellow workman out of his course and info the open Ilng In the shaft at tho eighteenth loor He fell headlong upon two crossed beams on the eighteenth hoar and half way off and clung here His thigh was injured but lot seriously a OXJ ON THE AMERICAN IRISHMANS COMEBACK A nativeborn American member V at a party of four business men who often lunched together took great delight in Joking the others on their foreign birth Its all very well for you fellows to talk bout what we need In this country he said but when you come to think of it youro really only Intruders Not one of you was born here Youre welcome to this country of course but you really lughtnt to forget what you owe usrr natives who open our doors to you Maybe said an Irishman in the party thoughtfully Maybe But heres one thing you seem to for get I came into this country wld no farepaid an me clothes on me back Can ybtty the same IEAN INTEItFEItENCEii i WHY HE DIDNT FIGHT Blldad Is very proud of his prowess and upon occasions is a trifle quarrelsome because of his assumed powers with his fists It was rumor led that he and Dubblelgh had had a nearfight at a little dinner reentry given and Tompkln desirousiof getting at the truth of the mat broached the subject at the clubTlier Yes said Blldad getting very red in the face Dubbleigh and I early came to blows I wanted to 1lck him then and there and Id aye done it too If I hadnt been j rabbed tram behind and held ach- eEverybody I v SaUsflet1 i The has tried Dr Bell a PJneTar loney for coughscolds grip or anyf throat or bronchial trouble Get a iottle today took for thei Belt onto bottle m e F 7x1 Snr-r r WEDNESDAY JULY IS 19U i THE HARTFORD HERALDPACESEVEN SAFE MAKER VERSUS- THE SAFE BREAKER Adroit Plans Are Employed- to Thwart Methods of the LatterI A number of years ago two pros poctlve safe breakers succeeded In obtaining employment In two dif ferent safe factories worked over a period of yearn in the various departments gained all the informa tion that they desired and subsequently working together managed to baffle the safe makers by their skill In opening complicated safes 1 in different parts of the country The police were at a loss to under stand how the safes had been open II ed and only upon the apprehension of the two men several years later was It learned that the Jobs had f not been Inside ones as was orig inally suspected but had really been the work of two men who had been initiated Into the mysteries of i safecraft and had put their knowl edge to criminal use This put the safe makers on their guard and an exceedingly complicated system was whereIby closelyIIr but the work among the employees I manIformation about a safe to put It to dangerous use afterward Further more when an employee Is discharg ed or when he voluntarily leaves his i watchedi ISIaemployee of a safe company who Is possessed of intimate information regarding the secrets of that com panys safes Is kept under constant surveillance As an illustration ofI the thoroughness with which this done there may be cited the case of a former superintendent of one ofIthe principal safe companies was discharged eight years ago Intoxication who forI t sought and obtained a position superintendent of an Iron foundry In the Middle West who has now held that position for the last seven welllanddiective In the safe companys pay 1 1There is not the slightest reason toI the mans integrity but I has been suggested by the mans employer who knows his superin 1 tendent Is being watched the safe I takeIslightest chanceHarpersW- eeklyI i I RELEASED AFTER BEING f YEARSfj Barcelona Spain June 24Sen- orUa Matllde Andeyro has been released from an asylum after thir ty years confinement on a trumped up charge of lunacy to enable the trustees of her enormous fortune to manage It to suit themselves Senorita Matilde refused to mar ry a person of their selection and has spent all this time In n mad- houset rather than yield to their Wishes She was accidentally dis I tTcovered by a cousin who has ob tained her release The case Is attracting great Interest throughout Spain owing to the high social position of all par 1 1tica involved Her father was a colonel In the Spanish army in the Philippines where he accumulated a fortune after the customary mari ner of Spanish colonial grandees A Thought The world Is wide In time and tide r guiderThat man Is blest i Who does his best I restII IrJJCEII HAIR TAKES THE OF SKIN IN GRAFTING Chopped hair has been success fully substituted for spin In skin grafting by the French surgeon P t Carnot who has applied his method t In many cases It Is based on the fact that the cells of the hair and its rpots are epidermic outgrowths t tand can be easily transformed Into t skin cells The use of hair not only does away with the necessity pf talc lug skin from other persons which Is a painful operation but It Is said to ba an improvement as well as It Is strong and hardy and being InI ured toa minimum of nutrition IsI able to thrive under unfavorable A conditions such as prevail where grafting Is necessary The manner ot performing the operation lis simple a few hairs be I lag pulled from the head of the patient or of a relative end with the bulBoua root removed the freshest rl Iri akmac or newest parts are cut into small pieces so as to form a coarse pow der This powder Is then strewn over the surface of the wound and a proper bandage applied Within a week white spots appear on the surface rapidly Increasing In size The spots extend and thicken and finally form a perfect new skin Popular Magazine 00000000000000010 COUNTY FAIR DATES IN 0 0 KENTUCKY 0 00000000000000000 Allen Scottsvllle Sept 1416 Anderson Lawrenceburg Aug ust 1518 Barren Glasgow Sept 2730 Doono Florence Aug 31Sept 2 BourbonParis September 49 Boyle Danville August 24 Boyle Perryvlle August 1618 Breckenrldge Hardlnsburg Aug ust 2930 Butler Morgantown Sept 2123 Bullltt Shepherdsvflle August 2225BrackenGermantown August 2326CallowayMurray 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 Mayfleld Sept 2730 Grayson Leltchflold Aug 1518 Hardln Ellzabethtown August 912 Hart Horse Cave Sept 2023 JeffersonFern Creek August 1619JessamlneNlcholasvl11e August 2931KentonErlanger August 2326 Knox Barbourvillo August 30 September 1 LaRue Hodgenvlllo Sept 57 LaurelLondon August 2225 Lewis Vanceburg August 912 McCrackenPaducah Oct 36 Monroe Tompklnsvllle August 30 September 2- MercerHarrodsburg Aug 810 Montgomery Mt Sterling July 2629NelsonBardstown August 30 September 2- PendletonFalmouth Sept 2730 PulaskiSomerset August 29 September 1- RobertsonlIt 011 vet Sept fi8- Rockcastle Broadhead August 1618ScottGeorgetown July 2529 Shelby Shelbyville Aug 2225 Spencer Taylorsvllle Aug 811 SimpsonFranklin August 31 September 2 Union Unlontown August 812 WayneMonticello Septa 58 WebsterProvidence Aug 15 Woodford Versailles Aug 24 STRAWBERRIES TEMPTED THE HUNGERING FISH Lee Mass Juno 30Fred Vo Ben was fishing In the Lee Reser voir today and heard near shore what he at first supposed was a muskrat It proved to bea big carpHe watched the fish for some minutes and says positively that along the shore strawberries hung over the water varying in distance from 4 to 10 Inohes from the sur face and he was surprised to see the big fish bobbing Its head out of the water and grabbing the berries Vosen watched it repeat the op eration half a dozen times He then tried his bait and succeeded In hooking the fish He had to shoot it before he could land It The carp weighed 32 pounds END OF PROTECTION EItA CAN IT REALLY RE JTRUE When a solid Republican delega tion from the State of Kansas votes solidly for a Democratic measure reducing by onehalf the duty on beIplalnpublican doctrine of protection has fallen upon evil days When a Re publican Senator from the great State of New York frankly admits as Mr Root admitted yesterdaythat he does not think that the farmer has been greatly benefited by the protective system perhaps not pro tected at all except in some Instances along the Canadian border it must further be evident that the bond that has so long united the RerMbllcan party and the protected Intcosts is broken New York Times Th site Diogenes was searching for an honest man I Ho will advertise that his summer resort has mosquitoes ox plained the sage 1heI btu accepted for the 5Q000000 3 per cent Govern ment bond liMue la 1022167 f iI Ji THE RECENT VISIT OF STATE INSPECTOR To Hartford Found One Dis crepancyOther Offices Were All Right The following telegram from Frankfort appeared in the Owens boro Inquirer Tuesday of last week State Inspector McKenzie Todd has filed with the Governor his re recentIlyAs the result of his investigation thd Inspector turned Into the State treasury the sum of 1404 collect I OhioIcounty The Inspector also commends the County Judge and County Clerk of Ohio county tor the businesslike manner In which they conduct their respective office but criticises the practice of the Commonwealths At torney and the County Attorney In collecting fines which they have no authority to do under the law this power being delegated to the SherI iff and trustee of the Jury fund only To the above the Inquirer adds The above telegram does not ap ply to Commonwealths Attorney Ringo or the present attorney of Ohio county his all the money collected by the Inspector was from former officials of the county When shown the above telegram Commonwealths Attorney Bingo 111finecause the statute says whose duty ItI Is to collect all finesIFor the benefit of our readers who are not acquainted with the facts of the above in justice to the officials of Ohio county will say that a few weeks ago Mr Carver a representative of the State Inspec tor spent several days In Hartford going over the records of the Cir cuit Court Clerk the County Court Clerk and the County Judge In County Court Clerk Tlnsleys office the inspector found that his Ibooks balanced exactly to a cent and every book record etc was In I perfect shape It was found however that a former Clerk Mr Rag land had discrepancies In his rec ords that amounted In all to some thing like 1200 with penalties amounting to about 200 Mr Rag land made good this amount Upon investigating Circuit Clerk Barrass books the Inspector found them correct with the exception of a few fines which had been over looked but would have been ulti mately checked Mr Carver com plimented Mr Barrass very highly upon the manner In which he kept his office and stated that It was In perfect shape Judge Weddings office was also examined and found O K SelfEvident The Supremo court of the United tate announce that hereafter proecutlon of trut mut be gov erned by the rule of Something elo 1 an lmprelon that they are gov erned by the rule of something ele belde reaon Glasgow Times Clnonlr Sore Eyes Are easily cured with Sutherlands Eagle Eye Salve It Is painless and harmless and guaranteed 25c a boX Sold everywhere r f fovc- MabelI am sure he must have loved her very dearly Maude1 I should say so Ho married her In spite of the fact that he had been out in the rain with her all one afternoon was seasick with her and saw her unexpectedly at home the morning after a dance JUST KEEP ON PUSHING ITS GOOD FOR EVERYBODY If there was more push in the world there would be fewer hungry lialfclothed homeless suffering children i fever broken down dis I sipated men and women less need of almshouses houses of correction and homes for the friendless Push means a life for a neighbor in trout ble Push means a life for yourself out of the slough of desponden troubleIrealii nYbOdY The harder the push the better If it Is given In the right dlI rection Push uphill tew people be4afraldslnewsIthey be afraid of your hands they were meant for service Dont bo afraidI of wha your companions tray says Dont be afraid of your conscience It will never reproach you for a good deed but push with all your heart mind and soul whenQrSyou see anything or anybody that will be the better tot a good long strong c 7r0 determined push Push It Is just the word for the grand clear morn log of life It Is just the word for strong arms and strong hearts tt- is I s just the word for a world that 1 as full of work as this Is If any thing Is in trouble and you see It dont stand backpush I If there iII anything good being done in anyplace where you happen to bt push SAYS Sill CANT LIVE ON A THOUSAND PER MONTh Washington June 30 = The Roosevelt panic high cost of llv Ing supporting an automobile and chauffeur and her husbands se rious Illness were reasons given to day by Mrs slllson Hutchins for asking an increase of her monthly allowance of 1000 from the 4 000000 estate of her husband For several hours Mrs Hutchin- gave Intimate details of her mode of living expenses and domestic management fanning herself vigorously and answering many questions with evident show of indlgna tonII got 800 and 1000 a month and sometimes only 600 said Mrs Hutchlns when asked what her allowance had been The year 01 the Roosevelt panic I was reduced saidI wa andI expenses Mrs Hutchins said What Cover all my expenses Most distinctly not- I S have had an apartment lii Paris nearly six years Mrs Hutch ins said explaining part of her ex penses I pay my chauffeur mor than my cook I third my car cost me much more than I thinktires repairs and painting Then too wages of servants are higher than three years ago Food marketing onEImonth 2500Ithat sum dill tickletsHutchins and other necessaries Mrs Hutchins could not remember details of expenses of her Eu ropean trips because she went soften and to so many different places S fOOO oooooooooooO SPECIAL NOTICE c O In regard to- O C OBITUARIES RESOLUTIONS O OF RESPECT c C OOOOOOOOOOOOOO The Hartford Herald has adopte a new rule In regard to Obituaries Resolutions of Respect Cards o Thanks c whether written at th the behest of lodges churches or In divlduals and that is we shal charge at the rate of two cents pe line for all such articles except obit nary poetry which will be one cen per word stralghtThis Is tile small est rate we charge for anything an- is only onefifth of our regular rate The amount In cash or stamps must accompany each article oSi it will not be printed words average a line In ordl nary reading and every separat character or Initial letter counts a a word The heading and tho elf nature both count one line oven if they are only a word or tw All obituary poetry stralgh through one cent per word Our old rule In regard to Obltun rigs c was 150 words free balanc a cent a word but this did not prov satisfactory because the bounds wen almost always overstepped and w have been forced to adopt this new rule which is In effect from now on Contributors will please remember A Jills Mull Our literary club discussed Browning last night What was the result Well we decided that 9 certain lady had better keep an eye on he husband and that the harem skin wont do Ilhistriitcxl TeacherNow remember lie that anything you can through is transparent Can yoi name something that Is transpar entSmall NellieYes maam tl keyhole TuttsPills FOR TORPID LIVER- A torpid llverdcrnnges the whole system and produces SICK HEADACHE Dyspepsio Costiveness Rheu matism Sallow Skin and Piles There IIs no better remedy for these common diseases than DR TUT proverake SDTIEHUUiDS EWE EYE SILK Good f Nothing hut thE nt l We Give Away Absolutely Free ofCost The Peoples Common Sense Medical Adviser in Plain English or Medicine Simplified by R V Pierce M D I Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids Hotel and Sur gical Institute at Buffalo a book of 1008 large pages and over 700 illustrations in strong paper covers to any one sending 21 one centc stamps to cover cost of mailing only or in French Cloth binding for 31 stamps clothbindingcopieswereready 1for mailing Better send NOW before all are gone Address WORLDS Dds PBNSABV MBDICXL ASSOCIATION K V Pierce M D Presidenr Buffalo N Y DR PIERCES FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION enougbthatwrapper every ingredient No Secrets No Deception THE ONE REMEDY for Jnoroots ofwell established curative value sNttD Shoots Model martin high ve 27 locity smoke REPEATING RIFLEalsoless cartridges black and low Theonlygunthatfillsthepressure smokeless demand for a trom Jz 0 PowerLl enough for deer Ibone pump ac safe to use in settled districts ex lion repeater in cellent for target work for foxes f 2520 and geese woodchucks etc 32Iiticluht wiwmutuf ftitirtil Sp tequikoothorlinpumpGdlol calibreslopdI aide tttlot let ripid accurate tfiring ictewdsafety and frontst I cot extra CO Our 138 pegs catalog d4cribei the full fflarfirt gins Sent for three etampt pottage Write for it TP 777 Streetu1rnoIi KENTUCKY X Light and Power Company INCOltPOHATKD E G BARRASS MGR Har1iford KyWill wire your house at cost Electric Lights are clean healthy and safe No home or business house should be withouttl then when within rcac- lrHARTFORD HERALDS0- OlubbingRatesI FOR YEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS r e The Herald and Weekly CourierJournal 150 135I1 I 350rand Twiceaweek Owensboro Messenger 175- ttt 4 and Twiceaweek Owensboro Inquirer 175 and Daily Owensboro Inquirer 325 I and Kentucky FarmerLouisville 125 aand Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer 150 50r1 and Thriceaweek New York World 165- I and Twiceaweek St Louis Republic 150- e and National MagazineMonthly 150- s a and McCalls MagazineFashions 130 Kyot Yeared e Why Not I I ReadThe r Courier= Journal u HENRY WATTERSON Editor wit CAN IT15XI8H YOU The Hartford Herald AND TUB Weekly Courier Journall BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ONLY 150 We can also give liberal combination rate with Daily or Sunday CourierJournal Write CourierJournal Com pony Louisville Ky for free sample copy of edition you desire but be sure to send i your subscription order to the- EE HARTFOKD HEKALD NOT to the CourierJournal THE LOUISVILLETIMES FOR 1911I I RKUiHTER PETTER RKUiER THAN EVER The regular price of the Louisville tries Is 5500 a year If you will send your ordor to us you can get Tim HARTFORD HERALD anti the- IOVlS1IIH TIMES both one year FOR ONLY Jl1m Tito Louisville Titties is the Rest Afternoon Paper Printed Anywhere Has the best corps of correspond cuts Covers the Kentucky Held perfectly Covers the general news field com pletely Has the best and fullest market reportsDemocratic In polities but fair to everybody SEND YOUR SUBSCRIPTION RIGJIT AWAY To THE HERALDnot to TlteLouls vllle Times- F wc p4 v= PAGE EIGHT THE HARTFORD HERALDWEDNESDdY JULY 5 1011 The Hartford Herat WEDNESDAY JULY 5 1011 KILLS HIS STEPTFJTHEB j OVER MOTHERS 5HOOLDE Both Raced for Deadly Pistol Mother Couldnt Avert Tragedy The Hopklnsvllle New Era says Firing over his mothers shoulde who ran between him and his stepfather In an attempt to prevent a tragedy William Durdln aged IS fired a shot which struck his stepfather James Casteele over the right eye causing Instant death Neighbors who hurried to the scene of the tragedy were astonished to find the boy In fine spirits and saying that ho was glad ho did 1 i It i because he would have been klllei himself If he bad not The partle live at Dawson Springs Early Wednesday morning the boy went Into his mothers room when she was sick and asked her abou some housework His father ordered him to shut up and leave the room The boy repeated the question whereupon the stepfather seized ia I chair and started for the boy but was arrested by his wife who Jump cd from her sick bed i According to the boys story his stepfather swore at him and said be Was going to get his gun and kll him Both left the room at a run for the drawer where the pistol was kept the boy reaching there first The mother followed and made a I desperate effort to prevent the shoot I Ing The boy surrendered to Marsha J Ligon and was placed In the count Sail Wednesday afternoon The ex amlnlng trial will Tie held some tlm next week L R Fox a prominent attorney was engaged to defend the boy Casteele according to the boyhat threatened on several previous oc I caslons to kill him The slain man was a teamster nnd had been living at Dawson Springs for about a year I PocketIArnica Salve that E S Loper ia carpenter of Marllla N Y always carries I have never bad a cut wound bruise or sore It would not I soon heal he writes Greatest healer of burns bolls scalds chap pelt hands and lips fever sores skin j j ruptlons eczema corns and piles 2c at James 11 Williams IT- tt r Take Notice I Will be on the market to buyI I i both pooled and unpooled wheat Ir car lots Sacks for rent or sale I W E ELLIS I Man6tfKy j IIKAVKIl DAM July 3The stork has been busy in our city of late Born to the wife of John Harrison June 30 a boy weight Ofc pounds Dr Sam Taylor was the attending physician Te tho wife of Allen Mlllor a boy weight only 2b pounds Dr Sam Taylor attended This babo lived only a short time Also to the wife of Henry Taylor a boy weighing 10 pounds Dr Moore officiated All the mothers are doing well Miss Lutllda Hodges of Dale t Ind Is at the bedside of her little niece and nephew Francis and Or- vIlle children of John lodges who have lately been stricken with ty phoid fever Mrs Edmond S Williams of Roseboro N C mother of Mr Joe Williams our depot agent Is In the city visiting her son Mrs Williams Is ono of our good old Confederate ladles having n husband who went with his State Jn defense of the Lostt Cause Mr Charlie Williams brother of Mr Joo Wllllame who formerly lived at this place but of late has been boilikcpner for a firm lu Florida Inivs to our city Ilast week to meet his mother Ho has nrivisted a position as bookkeeper r for n coal piiTiiipy IiuWtst Vir4a Charlie Iln other fiUrnctlono to I Iinr city Jlr Sllnnbaugh and Mr Fred Taylor of Princeton Ky made a flying trip to our city last week having business with tho Planing Mill Co This company has a large warehouse with building material tit Princeton where they are doing I a thriving business under the man ngement of Mr Fred Taylor Our little grandson Master Ramsey Taylor who has been staying With us the past month return 011 to his home at Princeton last Sat 4mayMr J O Bratcher of Hbrrln IH was In our city last week looking utter his dwelling houses that he owns near the depot He Is havIng to f j his houses repaired and they will be occupied by families he has rent ed to since he arrived Drs Dorcas Stahl Widow of tt e late Sam Stahl of Owensboro 1Is visiting item brother and sister Mr- S P Taylor and Mrs J P Stevens Mrs E Stlllwell of East Viol Ky Is visiting the family of Mr I Gordon Young this week II BlUX July 3Mr and Mrs Shorma Condit and children visited MIr Herman Pirtle and family of No creek Sunday Mrs Lizzie Youngs of Bato Rouge La who hal been vlsltln her C9uslns Misses Lattle and Ia tie Henin at this place for the past week has returned home Miss Fllydla Foster who taught a threemonths school at this place closed Friday A large crowd attended and a nice program was well rendered All congratulated Miss Foster for the school she taught Mrs Oma HIggs who has typholi fever Is no better Mr Will Crabtree wife and chll dren of the Washington neighbor hood visited her mother and father at this place Saturday and Sunday Mrs Grover Plrtle of Owensboro visited relatives at this place las week Her husband came over Friday returning home Sunday Miss Lea Rowan who has fever Is no better Mr and Mrs Wayne Pirtle and children of Nocreek visited his sister Mrs Kate Heflin hero Sun dayMr Curry Wallace and Miss Ger die Bennett of Beda attendee Church at the Valley Sunday and dined at Mr Lewis Easterdays Mr J W Foster and family vis ited his brother Mr Arch Foster i near Livermore from Saturday af ternoon until Sunday Mr Robert Carson and wife of Louisville are here visiting friends and relatives Mr and Mrs Asro Rowan andI Mr and Mrs Robert Rowan wll leave for Owensboro this morning Mr A C Foster Is on the sick listMr Allen Johnson wife and chip dren of near Pleasant Hill spent Sunday with Mr Willie Johnson and wife here Mrs Ann Holbrook Is visiting her sister and friends at Beaver Dam this week Help for Those Who Have Stonmcl Trouble After doctoring for about twelve years for a bad stomach trouble and spending nearly five hundred dollars for medicine and doctors fees I purchased my wife one box of Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tablets which did her so much good that she continued to use them and they have done her more good than all of the medicine I bought before Samuel Boyer Folsom Iowa This medicine is for sale by all dealers Samples free m HKD IIILia July 3There will be meeting of this place attended the play at J Acton Everybody Invited The party at Mr Adam Wrights last Saturday night was much en Joyed by all present Mr Wames Burton who has been ill for some time is no better Mr Andrew Flllback who has been In Missouri for some time has returned home I Misses Mardlo and Martha Potts of this place attended the play at Olaton Thursday night Mrs Tom Duke of Owensboro who has been very low for some time at the residence of Mr and Mrs Jim Wright returned to her home in Owensboro one day last week All her friends anti relatives hope she will soon recover Misses Marie anti Martha Potts and Miss Lizzie Burton of this place attended the party at Mr Adam Wrlghts last Saturday night Messrs Harlan Potts and Lorenzo Acton of this place went to Hartford last Saturday on business Mrs Wayno Mldklff of Sulphur Springs has been visiting her parents Mr anti Mrs James York Mr and Mrs Frank Atkinson and family of Louisville have been vis king their parents Mr and Mrs Will Acton of this place fA Inln Remedy Both internal and external Is need ed dally by almost every family Keep a bottle of Dr Bolls Anti Pain Good for all kinds of bowel troubles Externally for cuts burns sprains and all pains Strong ly antiseptic Sold everywhere m Cardinal Gibbons offered up a mass of thanksgiving in a little chapel about fifty miles Irony Baltl more In honor of his fiftieth anniversary as a priest and twentyfivi years as a cardinalS I Children Cry FOItFLETCHER S ASTORIA J LEdLISLftllVE CANDIDATE Named at State Prirnar Saturday MANY NOMINATIONS MADE r For State Senator an Representative in Various I Districts DEMOCRATIC SUCCESS IS 8tl1f A feature of the Democratic Stat primary In many counties comprls ing senatorial and legislative districts was the nomination of candl dates for State Senator and Hepre sentntlve and these contests In ever case overshadowed tberaces for the State offices In the First Senatorial district Fulton HIckman and Graves coun tlesW A Frost was nominated for State Senator over Sam V Nor man both the candidates hailing from Graves county Frost carried Graves and HIckman counties while his opponent received a majority In Fulton county The district Is over whelmingly Democratic and the nomination equivalent to election Frost is a strong county unit man The fourcornered tight for the nomination for State Senator In the Twentyfirst district Carroll Hen ry Oldham and Trimble counties was won by W 13 Moody of Henry county the home of the other can dldates who were W T Chllton W H Ellis and H K Bourne The se lection was left to the primary In Henry county Moodys nearest com petitor was Ellis The district Is reliably Democratic- A pretty triangular fight was made for the nomination for Senator in the Twentythird district com prising Boone Gallatin and Owen counties which went to former Rep resentative J W Berkshire of Boone county who defeated J R Kennedy and S W Tolin In the pri mary which was confined to Boone county The nominee Is assured of electionNominations for Representative were made in the following districts at the Democratic State prlmaryv AndersonJ R Paxton defeated Edgar D Burton for Representa tive The district is strongly Dem ocratlcnallnrdCarllsleL B Owen of Arlington was nominated Ho will have no opposition at the November electionnarronC C Terry and Elkans Dickey both claim the nomination for Representative nooneG D Carroll was nominated for Representative over N Allen by a small majority- BoyleRepresentative W F Pitt man was defeated for rcnomlnatlon by Francis B Douglas a young newspaper man of DanvillebBullltt Spencer David B Thur man a former newspaper man won the nomination for Representative over his two opponents W M Windy Bill Thompson a former Representative and E L Snider The district Is safely Democratic Oarrard John M Farra won the nomination for Representative over J A Doty and J O Bogle the In umbentGravesT J Gregory captured the nomination for Representative In a fivecornered contest defeating Seth Boaz A L Hicks John R Thomas and John B Hobson He will have a walkover at the general election i- Hardln Tho four candidates for the nomination for Representa tive came under the wire closely bunched hut Will A Shawler managed to win by a nose The other candidates were W H McMurtry D M Cooper and Jerome Meors The nomination is equivalent to election Harrison Representative H O Duffy could not qualify for come back honors and was defeated for tho nomination by a small majority by James A Leach an ultra dry advocate HenryMuch Interest was man fested in this race on account of the fact that former Lieut Gov W Thome who represented the county several terms In the Legislature was a candidate for the nomination stating that he desired to round out his political career with one more term 4n tho House Tho successful candidate was Dr Elijah Bishop who defeated GOT Thorne by a small majority The other candidates who ran as pacemakers were J0Renfro and W H4 Johnson g landgathe 1 over A L McKenney by the narro margin of four votes s UnlonrG L Druryi a well known lawyer defeated John T 0Nan for the nomination for Ropresenfatlvi He will be eloqted easily Warren County DlstrlelAW Palmer won the nomination tor Representative over W R Whltlpw who sought renominatlon Tho dU trlct Is regarded as safely Dome cratlc WebsterJIn a threehanded fight for tho nomlnntlSn for Represents tlve D W Wiley won but over n B Baker and W G Roney Tho nomination Is equivalent t6 election In the MorganWolfe district tbe Indications are that Horton of Wolfe has won the nomination for Representative r START SOO000 FUND TO DEFEND Tim TUcNASIARA Indianapolis Ind7 July 1 Ev ery member of a local union in this country Is to be asked to contribute 25 cents toward the defense of Johr J and James B McNnraaru charg led with dynamiting outrages In Lot Angeles according to a plan adopt ed by Samuel Gompcrs president of the American Federation of La bor and other national Jabor organ ization officials mad public In this city today It Is expected rn this way to raise a defense fund of 500000 this summer The various national labor union headquarters are to be asked to send the contributions to Frank Morrison secretary of the Ameri can Federation of Labor McNam ara stamps bearing a portrait of J J McNamara also are to be Issued by the Federation of Labor to be sold at 1 cent each the proceeds tot go into tho defense fund I PUBLIC LANDS THROWN OPJ2N lOll KKOISTRATION Washington June 30 mately 600000 acres of land have been opened to settlers under tho registration plan through a proclamation signed by President Taft 150000 acres being within the Fort Berthold Indian reservation ol North Dakota and 450000 In the Pine Ridge and Roseland Indian reservations in South Dakota BLIND TIGER OPERATOR IS LIVEN FINE OF 90r Bedford Ind June 30Harry Terrill an aged man on trlil before Mayor Fields charged with running a blind tiger was convicted and given a fine and costs of 63 to which was added a Jail sentence o sixty duvn Terrlll Is past seventy years of age and until forced out of business by the option law had been in the saloon business at Huron this cqunty for many years The trial Is the result of a raid by the officers on his place In which a considerable quantity of lqupr was round i Sprains require careful treatment Keep Qqlet and apply Chamberlains Liniment freely It will remove the soreness and quickly restore the parts to a healthy condition For tale by all dealers m Hank Offers Reward A reward of 350 has been offered by the Farmers blink at White Plains for the capture of the robbery who made an unsuccessful attempt to blow up the vault recently ChiidrsnCryFOR OASTORIAII Send The Herald theNEWSTwe will appreciateit HA R1ICU 0WlXSUOR o O Fine Watch sad Jewelry Ro y o pairing 3 HJJJj= and Plain Engraving C 5 Eyes Tested and Lenses Ground r O oins O We have a complete Lens H i Sjij Q P Graduate Opticians and tan c H give perfect resultsC2 Dont buy classes from spec S O tacle peddlers who travel = K e from clty tp city 3 H We have Skilled Workmen and C jp- Q the very Finest and Best 0 Machinery and Stock and are 5 J tjjZ i service U iI f We pay cash forold Gold and 0 =t tJ Sliver Q1 0 upa s N aAvoH o IAV aii vii d i I o The Kind You Have Always Bought and vWcl hits been in use for over 30 ycnrs lies borno the signature of and has been rondo uiulcr his personal supervIsion stnio its ithfancy i Allow no 0110 to deceive you in this All Counterfeits Imitations nod Jnstasco nl nro but Experiments that trifle with and cuclnhgci tho healtl ftfl Infants and Children Experience against Export eats I What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Parer gone Drops and Soothing Syrups Jt is Pleasant It contains ieltOr Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic Ji substance Its ago is its guarantee It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness It cufcs Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles cures Constipation and Flatulency It assimilates tho Food regulates thoI Stomach and Bowels giving healthy and natural sleep Tho Childrens PanaceaTho Mothers Friend S GENUINE CASTORIA ALY- AYSajO Signature of A 0 The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TMK OtNTAUH OHMNY TT MURRAY TKCtT Maw YOaa CRY j 7 I 0IO KENTUCKY NEWS NOTES 0- o 0 A stock barn belonging to Jame Arnell east of Sharpburg wa struck by lightning and burned to the ground The barn was worth about 2000 and the loss Is only partly covered by insurance A new and untried horse that was being driven to tho delivery wngoi CompanylatWillis Hargrave the driver to the ground fracturing his skull from which he died in a few hours Flresupposed to have been caused from a defective flue totally des troyed the frame country home 01 Will Pf Henry near Judy Mpntgom cry county All of the crfntonti were burned and tho loss will reach 2000 with insurance of 1000 Later reports regarding tho deluge which flooded Hardin county at an early hour Tuesday morning are to the effect that there wore rises of eight to ten feet In many creeks of the cpunty and that the consequent damages to the crops will total thou sands of dollars W G Dunn an Inmate of the Eastern Kentucky Asylum for the Insane escaped from tho institution a few days ago and prowled for several days about the South Elks horn neighborhood and caused much excitement In that vicinity before he was finally captured A brood sow belonging to Melvn Hall n farmer of upper Beaver creek gaVeT birth to twentyone pigs all perfectly well formed In two litters she has given birth to forty eight pigs The owner has been of fered a fftncy price for the sow but will not accept It Gasoline leaking from the light machine at the Presbyterian church In Sbarpsburg Ignited and caused an explosion during services A panic prevailed for awhile and it looked as If the church was doomed The fire department was called out and the flames were extinguished tSrowers of Nicholas county Intending to raise a crop of tobacco this season have just completed the last transplanting and the crop Is now all out A careful investigation shows about twothirds of tho usual amount of acres transplantedI but most of It has been set so latd that it will be hard tot it to make a crop + I Despondent because of protracted 1111 health James E Rowland aged sixtyeight years a fell known farmer and horseman of Botfrbon coun ty committed sulcldeln a barn on his farm near Parisby shooting him self through the heart The body I was found shortly after breakfast by a farm hand who had gone in search of him The Stony Creek section of Nicho I las county was struck by a water pout which did a great deal of dam ago from the washing of the land and overflowing of tho bottom lands where growing crops were almost rulned Stony creek and tributaries went on a rampage and cleared out water gaps and tore away much I fencingMatt S Kelly of Mt Sterling was pinned under his engine at Aden Springs Carter county and Instant l ly killed Crulghlon Stump of Los ington the fireman was unhurt though Roadmaster Watkins was Asustaineding rails caused the overturning of the engine Surveys for the location of Dam No 51 opposite Smlthland twelve miles above Paducah are being made by a party of Government en gineers Soundings are being made by survey boat No 2 In the tow of steamer Waverock The dam will be just below the mouth of the Cum land river at the foot of the Island at that point Thirtysix days in the workhouse was tho aggregate of the sentences given by Police Judge Southgate in Lexington to a gang of half a dozen negroes who were caught loafing about ho streets Judge Southgate and Chief of Police Reagan are mak ing a vigorous crusade against idle negroes loafing in that city while the farmers are unable to find enough hands to attend to their harvest The ninetieth birthday of Miles Webb oldest member of the remark able old Webb family ofLetcher county descendants of DanlelBoone was celebrated by a general family reunion at the home of Undo Mlles at Mayklng above Whltesburg In which hundreds of the descendantsii of tlncle Mlles took part They came from all over Letcher county and Wise county Va to be present at InuallyI Suit was filed In the Franklin Clrtt Ie cult Court by Suter Adams for 10 000 against the Capltnl1 JFrankfortlittle son Oscar Adams The petition charges the neglect of the defendant In allowing children to play about the top of the dam or dike owned bit on the bank of the river The boy was playing near tho dam about twoa ago when Jie fell Into the Kentucky river and was drowned- A flight of homing pigeons the object of which Is the establishment of records was started at Lexington when 2PO of the birds were let loose with Rochester Jamestown and Buffalo as their destination Tho fright of the birds will be checked up I by tolpgraphlo reports I McCALL PATTERNS Celebrated for title perfect fit simplicity and reliability nearly 40 year Sold In nearly every city and town In the United Statei and Canada or by mall direct fore Sold than say other make Send for free catalogue MeCAUrS MAGAZIN- efore 1 aubcr bera Uiaq anyother aihlon magaalnemtllfon a month Invaluable Lit eat style dressmaking millinery plain aewingbancy needlework halrdre ilnp y eUqnette good Hotltt etc Only 60 cent a year worth dnuMc Including a free pattern Subscribe today or end lor ample copy WONDERFUL INDUCEMENTS a 0 loAgcnta festali 1 brlgga rvcmhlm c blolc- andllow t cash prize oflcia ddreli mMtCAU CO tWw37lbali NIW YOU Take TrFHERALD Hr doD1yl yrr tA