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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 9, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 9, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911080901_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 9, 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. ? Hy'-- - I THE HARTFORD HERALD. Subscription $1 JPer Year, in Advance, 37th YEAR. GREA ".' Comt, the hmH of i Mij World, Hi Jm of am Mom Lnmbtring at Mj Bk." i and Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. ! HARTFORD, KT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1911. ry, composed of nationals of the two Governments, empowered to make recommendations for their settlement. Should tho commission decide that the dispute should be arbitrated, such decision would be binding. Before arbitration is resorted to, even in cases whero both countries agreo that tho difference Is susceptible of arbitration, the Commission of Inquiry shall Investigate tho dispute with a view of recommending :nto. 32 EDISON WILL GO ON I NATIONS WILL MEET 10 WILSON IS LOCAL OPTION No JOIN IN PEACE FGH T aPacts Between Uncle Sam, England and France State Board Takes Action But Says Matter Has In the Matter. Place in Politics. OREAD MALADY P W UNIVERSAL AWITY IS ASSURED Willilereafter Submit Dis- putes to Neutral Court In Any Event. A TRIUMPH OP STATESMANSHIP v 1 Washington, Aug. 3. In the of President Taft and a notable company of Government officials In the historic East Room J"of the White House, two Interna tional arbitration treaties, designed to end the possibility of war be-- s tween the United States and Great Britain and tho United States and France, were pjgnfid .at 3:1.0 j. m. and 3:11 p. m. respectively Secretary of State Knox signed the two treaties in behalf of the United States. James Bryce, the British Ambassador, affixed his signature In behalf of Great Britain, thus completing the pact with tho exception of ratification by the Senate. The French treaty was signed In duplicate In by J. J. Paris earlier Ambassador to the United 'states. An exchange of this treaty will bo necessary before It can be sent to the Senate. Tho general arbitration treaties between the United States and Great Britain and tho United States and France, signed this afternoon, will be sent at once to tho Senate for s ratification. As soon a3 the copies of the two treaties had been Blgncd, President Taft affixed his signature to two messages of transmittal to the Senate. It was thought at ilrst that an n exchange on tho treaty would bo necessary before it " could be sent to the Senate. Later, on ofllclal notification from Paris of the signature there, President Taft decided to rush tho treaties at once to the Scnate.In the hope of securing action at this session. M. Jiisscranrt Signs. Paris, Aug. 3. American Initiative in the establishing of unrestricted arbitration was crowned by tho signing of a treaty of permanent poaco by which France nnd tho United States agree to submit to a neutral court all differences that may arlso between them, even though the dignity and honor nnd vital Interests In either repubpresence -- , to-da- y. a settlement without arbitration. at the request The commission, of either Government, will delay its findings one year to give an opportunity for diplomatic settlement. The Senate will ratify tho terms of submission of each dispute to arbitration. grew directly The conventions out of President Taft's speech In Washington, December 18, last, before the American Society for tho Judicial Settlement of International Disputes, in which he said: "If now we can negotiate and put through a positive agreement with some great nation to abide the ad judication of an International Ar bitral Court In every Issue which cannot be settled by negotiation, no matter what It involves, whether honor, territory or money, we shall have made a long step forward by demonstrating that it !& possible for tv.-nations, at least, to establish, as between them, tho same system of due process of law that exists between Individuals under a govo IS SPREADING IT IS PURELTAJVIORAL ISSUE To Meet Corbin Govern- Cites His Letter of May 1, ment Specialists to Wherein He Defines Be on Hand. His Position. SKIN DISEASE WIIOLE I at AN INCURABLE MATTER IN NUTSHELL a telegram of the ed So alarming have become the reports regarding the spread of pella gra in this State and so futile the attempts of the various county and city physicians to cope with the situation, that the Stato Board of Health has Issued a call for a meeting at Corbin August 9, when both Government and foreign specialists will be in attendance. The call for the meeting was is- Answering itor' of the Louisville Post, Inquir ing as to his exact attitude on the liquor question. Gov. Woodrow Wil son, of New Jersey, gives forth his Ideas 'touching this subject. He says he is for local option, but he thinks ,tho question should never be mado a political Issue. His reply to the Post's editor, who asked if a certain published telegram, recounting what he was alleged to have said to Rev. Thomas B. Shannon recently, anent the liquor question, Is as follows: Governor Wilson's Reply. State of New Jersey, Executive Department, Aug. 3, 1911. Editor Evening Post: I did not see what was given out by the Rev. Thomas Shannon after my Interview with him the other day, but evidently he has. created a very wrong Impression of my position. I am taking the liberty of sending to you n copy of a letter I wrote to Mr. Shannon on May 1, which gives tho exact statement of my position. Cordially yours, WOODROW WILSON. His Attitude. The letter to the Rev. Dr. Shannon lsas follows: May 1, 1911. My Dear Mr. Shannr' : The question nsked in your letter of April 27 about my at- 1C, Immediately after tho close of the Park's Hill assembly. The officers of the Association are: President, Gen. Basil W. Duke, of Louisville; first vice president, J. W. Bowles, of Louisville; second vice president, Judge J. W. Alcorn, of Stanford; third vice president, Major O. S. Tennoy, of Lexington; secretary, Col. Green R. Keller, of Carlisle; Chaplain, Dr. E. O. Guerrant, of Wllmore: com- mlssary, Levi P. Young, of Lexlng- ton. Between 250 and 300" survivors of Gen. Morgan's command and their comrades of other commands attended the reunion last August and It Is believed that between 300 and 400 veterans will gather this year. One thing that has tended to enliven the Interest the last year or two Is the attendance of many Federal veterans, and It Is expected that a number will extend the glad hand to the old Confederate veterans at the "Hill" this year. Sails On His First Vacation in 22 Years. HIS "if" TRIP IRK "PARADISE," HE SAYS Has Finished His Famous Talking Picture Device Nothing Newer. ED1SON1AN A FEW EPIGRAMS OHIO COUNTY CITIZEN SUES WIFE FOR DIVORCE The Owensboro Messenger says: Malcom M. Hoover has filed suit against O.ra. D, ..Hoover asking for a states that divorce. The plaintiff he Is a resident of Ohio county and that tho defendant Is now and has been for many months-- a resident of Owensboro. Ho says that they wore married in Owensboro In November, 1909, and that after they had lived together for only a few days, the defendant abandon ed his home on November 13, 1909, and removed to Owensboro, whero The plainshe has since resided. tiff also charges that at the time of the marriage, the defendant was af flicted with a loathsome disease, a fact of which she kept him In Ig norance before the marriage. Tie also charges that she has been liv ing an Immoral life since she aban doned his home. Anglo-Americ- an ernment." sued by Dr. J. N. McCormack, secretary of the State Board. Dr. McCormack stated that he has requested the. United States Government to send experts and that he also expects several specialists from the Rockefeller Institute to be on . I ft r m ! JK EXPENSIVE HOG SUIT It Is said that besides the 24 THE END NOT IN SIGHT cases reported from the Lexington Jusse-"Iranto-dAsylums for the and Hopklnsville tertainment. The Madlsonvllle Hustler says: Insane, more than 100 cases of the "I shall not lecture while wagen be being A legal battle dread malady have been reported abroad," be continued. "I nm go tween two Hanson farmers over two from Bell and Whitley counties. ing for a rest, and If I moot any of hogs, value'd at $G each, threatens Tho spread of the disease In tho persons on the tho distinguished to be a record-breakIn tho way mountain sections of Kentucky Is othor side. It will he quite by accl- hogs is of costs. Tho value of both said to havo been rapid and nolilont. You know I want to go away $12, but tho court costs already attempts of the phy" where havo and worry for awhile amount to $75, and If tho threat of sicians been tho successful in allaying his aston"What " Interjected the loser Is carried out, there is lit It. ished friends. telling where the thing will tle HARE GIVEN AWAY IJY At tho meeting. at Corbin to"Yes. I said worry for n while. stop. And this does not Include the will take up day tho physicians MOTHER FOUND AGAIN You see, over hero I have been too attorneys. The case Is fees for tho a thorough search for the underlybusy to worry, and I had to cut out that of Frank McEuen against ing causes of tho disease and will Aurora, 111., Aug. 4. Seventeen my Florida trip In the winter for Adolphus Fowler, both prominent years ago Ethel Richardson, a babe, work. Now I nm going to worry also try to learn the best methods farmers. The case was tried out of effecting a cure. It is believed Franco-AmericaImportant ques- now a handsome girl of 19 years, a little for a change. My talking last week before a Jury In Magis- that evory member of the board titude toward the tion of local option Is, of course, a was given away at Dayton, Ohio, by pictures are absolutely perfect, and trate Wed Brown's court and tho will be In attendance and also many perfectly legitimate one, and you her mother, now Mrs. Georgo Starz. I have made a new phonograph disk Jury disagreed. Monday the caso as it may be are entitled to a very frank an- wife of a superintendent of a stove that gives a much deeper Intonawas retried and the Jury decided from other States, conditions swer. I would havo replied sooner works here. The child found Its tion than any of the old ones and found that tho same for the plaintiff. The defendant which has a much clearer enunciathat exist here are also In existence had I not been prevented by Imper- wqy to an orphans' home. says he will appeal to tho quarter When Mrs. Starz married again, tion." In other States. There have been ative public engagements. I have ly court. later, sho sought tho no reports of pellegra in any of the explained my views to you In pri- two years Some Erileouiuu FlnMips. FOURTEEN-CENSUIT larger towns of the State. Here are some Edlsonlan flashes vate, but have, of course, no objec- child she had given away and kept HAS ALREADY COST 8100 up tho search 1." years. Is n Skin Disease. fresh from his conversational short tion to your making them public. Speaking of tho dlseaso that Is Just on tho point of giving up In circuit: I I am In favor of locnl option. Hickman, Ky.,' Aug. 5. Sheriff threatening tho Inmates of the In- - am a thorough believer In local despair sho chanced to read a Day"I expect to live 150 years with Johnson has filed suit sano asylums at Hopklnsville and Goaldcr believe that ton, Ohio, clipping that gave her a my system of living. and against tho Nashville, Chattanooga Lexington, Dr. W. Ed Grant, City every community clew and finally yielded her daugh"Proper eating, sleeping and and St. Louis railway for fourteen Health" Officer, of Louisville, stated which constitutes a social unity ter. The girl, now a talented art- clothing make up my system. y to the moth cents. The suit was filed in the pellegra has been definitely recog should have the right to control ist, came homo "I stay In bed six hours and It's Quarterly Court, but Judge W. A. nized by medical men only during the matter of the regulation or of er sho had never known. solid sleep and quite enough. Naylor overruled the defendant's; tho last ten or twelve years. Pella- tho withholding of license. The girl had been taken from a "I never Intend to rottro. Work demurrer and allowed the case to gra Is a skin dlseaso that Is pecuInvolved are foundlings homo by a wealthy fatnl-l- nindo the earth i paradise for me But tho questions bo transferred to tho Circuit Court. liar to the South. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Desondorf, of and I don't It Is thought to social and moral, and aro not believe there Is any lic may bo Involved. The ceremony of affirming tho Mr. Johnson claims ho was unable bo caused by eating corn which has of being made parts of a Davtoit, and has had everything paradise up above. signature to tho unprecedented doc- to get a ticket at Union City, and been attacked by a fungus growth party program. they lavished on her that wealth could "Mv bodv and I nre still keoplng Whenevor ument was simplicity Itself, but It was mado to pay faro to Hickman known as "smut," It Is a skin dis- havo been mado tho subject matter provide, yet she will give all up for at It for pbout eighteen hours a day was marked by an extreme element Rt the rato of four cents a mile. ease somowhat resembling leprosy, of party contests, they have cut the hor mother. and T seldom got tired. witnesses were and Is Incurable. About thirty-tw- o of solemnity. Medlclno Is oU lines of party organization and "I am better able to keep work-n- g The treaty .was signed for France summoned and among them wero little or no nvall against It, the party action athwart, to tho utter JEER STAVE MANUFACTURER now than I was at 25. TO AID O'REAR CAMPAIGN by Jean Jules Jusserand, tho men who had had the samo expe- only treatment effective being com- confusion of political action In ev"This earth Is a cinch If you take to the United rience and 'who will swear that the plete rest, good food, and plenty of ery othor flold. They havo thrown French Ambassador t right. Frank B. Russell, manufacturer States, and In the presence of Rob- agent at Union City did not open fresh air. Exposure "AgroonHe to sunlight, every othor question, however Imnever hurts work ert Bacon, American Ambassador tho ticket window In time for them however, greatly aggravates the portant, into the background, and of beer staves, and a warm sup- - pnvono. I'm no oxceptlon to the to purchase their tickets. ortcr of Judge E. C. O'ltear before rule. at Paris; Arthur malady. havo made constructive party acThe suit has already cost about secretary of the American Embas"I am not an Individual: I'm an John D. Rockefeller has given tion Impossible for long years to- nd since tho lntter's nomination for Governor on tho Republican aggregation of colls. sy; Eugene Pierre, Secretary Gen- $100, and the caso Is only started. large sums to aid In the light gether. So far as I am myself eral of the President of tho French O'REAR'S CAMPAIGN OPENS dlsordor, against tho mysterious "I studv music In my spare time. therefore, I can never con- Irket, was named as chairman of being ad- sent to have the question of local he Loulsvlllo Republican City and Chamber of Deputies, and, Gaston a million dollars "I eat what I wish that's not DATES OF SPEAKINGS over Doucbement, assistant chief of tho vanced by him for a study of tho option made an Issue between po- County Campaign Committee at a much; only half a handful of solids protocol, who officiated in the abparties In this State. My mooting of tho Republican City and at 1 meal. According to an announcement two diseases that are now attract- litical sence of M. Mollard. ing so much attention In the South judgment Is very clear In this mat-to- r, County Committee held at tho Gait "I was a business mnn for nenrlv Cammade by the Republican State House last week. Mr. Russell b a half a century; now I nm merely A copy of the treaty as signed and pellagra. the hook-worI do not believe that party propaign Committee, Judge Edward C. will be forwarded immediately to grams of the highest consequence to eon of the lato Charles W. Russell, having a good time." Republican candldato .for PELLAGRA PREVALENT IN Washfngton In exchango for tho O'Rear, political life of tho State and of who made the race for Congress NO Governor, will open tho ASYLUMS OF KENTUCKY the ACTION WAS TAKEN copy signed at the American capiAug tho nation, ought to bo thrust on rom tho Tnth district on the Re s. contest at Ellzabethtown, ON THE 1WRRISH PAROLE publican ticket on several orca-elontal this afternoon by Philander C. ust 1.4., hopelessly embarrassLexington, Ky., Aug. 4. Super one side and Secretary of The Eon has an oinco In the Knox, the American Tho following dates wero an intendent R. L. Willis, of the East ed for long periods together by Columbia building and lives has defat 205 , The Board of Prison CommisState. The Government making a political Issue of a groat Eliza- nounced by the committee: ern Kentucky Asylum for tho In ho sioners which met Tuesday of last initely decided not to publish the tiM Peterson avenue. Heretoforo 1J Aiiivtlnf Is essentially non- PftllimKlo corn question which In Frankfort, did not tnko text of the treaty until t. has been I Jame8town; August 1Ql sane, has ordered the use of all and has not figured promlncntlv In Re- week moral polltlcal, 8t any action on the petition of James products foods discontinued, pendpublican politics In Louisville. given out at Washington, Montlcello, August 17; Albany, Au ing Investigation of 17 cases of pel- social. In Its nature. H. Parrlsh for n parole from the ' Very sincerely The signing of the treaty is hail- gust 18; Burksvlllo, yours, August 19; TRIES TO THREI YEAR-OLD Eddyvllle penitentiary, whero ho Is as meaning the exten- Glasgow, August 21; Wlckllffe, Au- lagra disclosed hero. Superintend ed in France WOODROW WILSON. SHAVE RA11Y nitOTIIER now conflnod, serving n five-yeent Willis says that several other sion of a movement in all countries gust 28; Tt-Rev. Thomas B. Shannon, Hickman, August 29; sentenco deposits for receiving for the reduction of armaments and Clinton, August 30; Mayfleld, Aug- patients show symptoms of the dis Newark, N. J. Paducah, Ky., Aug. 5. Imitat- when he knew the Owensboro Sav- ease. the absolute prevention of wars. ust 31; Madlsonvillo, September 2; Superintendent Sights states that Democratic State Convention at ing his grandfather, C. C. Mingus, llngs Bank and Trust Company wa3 Tho general view Is that a tremen- Hartford, September 4; Hardins-bur- g, soven fully doveloped cases nre unthree-year-oInsolvent. Loulsvlllo, Aug. 15th. L. & N. R.R. who had just shaved himself, dous impetus has been given to the Soptember 5; Hawesville, SepRobert Browder took a The announcement that Parrlsh der Inspection at the Western Ken will sell round trip tickets for $3.40. world-wid- e peace campaign. tember 6; Loltchflold, September 9. tucky Asylum, at Hopklnsville Only Date of sale, 14th and 15th, limited razor off tho bureau and attempt- would sek a parole at tho August General Features of NciVArbi-- 8 broth- meeting of tho Board of Prison ed to shavo his one Is a negro and Ave of the pa- to return Aug. 17th. ' Crop of "Murpn:es"rShort. trntion Treaties. er, Mingus Browdor. Young Brow- Commissioners was made In the loFrankfort, Ky., Aug. 5. Only tients are females'. In order to pro- Tho general features of the new der, in pulling tho razor over his cal papers, as. Is required by law, half a potato crop will be gathered vent the disease from spreading MORGAN'S MEN REUNION "treaties are: AT PARK'S HILL, JtY. llttlo brother's face, cut a deep gash and tho papers wero drawn up In Internationally in Kentucky this year, according; to. among the 1,400 Inmates of the , All differences 'and narrowly missed an artery. tho ense' to ho presented to the institution, the cases Justiciable shall be submitted to 'the monthly crop report for July; ls- - Hopklnsville have been isolated In tho tubercu Carlisle, Ky Aug. 3. Tho Ex- - Robert Browder had watched ev- - board, but at the meeting, which agree- - sued by tho Commissioner of . The Hague, unless by special losis ward. ccutiveCommltteo of tho Morgan's 'ory movo of his grandfather, and was held Tuesday, tho board did "' Tho 8tate Board of Control, will Men's Association has about com- - when ho was out of sight, tried to not take any action" on tho matter. from all parts of the State. Other or selected.. Differences that either country crops, while they bavo suffered hold a special meeting August- 9 at Ipleted all arrangements for tho an- - imitate him. Tho injured child's .There will not fce another meeting to be held at screams attracted Mrs. Browder, of tho board until some time in thinks are not Justiciable shall be greaUy as a result of the drouth, the Eastern Kentucky Asylum to n'ual encampment (September. Park's Hill, this county, August IB who went tohls rescue referred to a. Commission of InquI- - will not show so large a falling off. consider the situation. ay d, er T o-day to-dnv, lo Ballly-Blanchard, con-corne- d,, m pre-electin, -ar n ld one-year-o- ld to-d- ay - hand. Now York, Aug. 5. Thomas A. y Edison sailed for Europe on the first vacation he has had In twenty-tw- o years, and at the steamer he chatted gayly with the reporters on his work and his philosophy. "Have you anytlilns; new up your sleeves?" he was asked, as he watched the long procession coming on board. "No," he replied. "I have Just llnished something now. My talking pictures are complete. Two hundred sots of them - havo been made, and they are wonderful. You ought to see them and hear them." Mr. Kdlson has been working for jome time upon the device of mak ing the moving picture machines and phonograph take each other's hands and furnish a combined en to-da- " . v-- , l&& lVim9INfynWll-PMM'A. iwyi, ' PWimm ' '"irwjffe-iHVVMfwmi- ?pm VP4M'PPIIIM ",,I,M-(HlffJSPJ'- mwwjaww'" j i'w)ffyijiur;i 'wygMi'l & PAGE TWO. THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY, AUGUST , 1911. 2COOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IO0OC5OOO0CO0O0OOO(XO0OCXX5OO0OOO0O000OOCO0OC)0OOO0 THE FIFTH HNNUHL EXHIBITIQNI -- s BRECKINRIDGE COUNTY FAIR! A Ci. cultural Exhibition. A $100.00 Harness jf? The Noted Balloonist, will make a Balloon Ascension and Parachute Leap Running Races and Stake, each day of the Fair. Don't Miss Itl 0 m Trotting Races Each A $100.00 Derby & PLENTY OF MUSIC SOMETHING DOING ALL THE TIME! Day. Stake. Stake. i-rrsnrrx $100.00 Saddle m 3r dj$reggg i. - HARDINSBURC, KY. AUGUST 22, 23, 24, 1911. .W fi1. "? ?? f?. -- '' Ri W? r ? i S .V ftaBaaWMawaaMBBMBMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaBBaBBBBaaaa. T rrCKDr- k T v N T -- Kjt. V. T T--TT T T r"! T4 A Clean, Moral Agri! Excursion Rates on all Trains! E3"For any other information and premium ORGANIZATION AMONG FARMERS to the same rights and privileges as other stockholders. We would advise that In either buying or selling, that the benefits be restricted of such to members of the Society, or to those as provided for above. When such patronage dividends accumulate In sufficient amount to pay one gear's fees and dues and one share of sfock, such person should be no titled by the Secretary of the Com pany, to present receipts for deliv eries of grain and receive certificate of membership, and stock in said company, and after reasonable time, say 30 days, If such person fails to attend to such duty, then said profits, on delivery of grain, shall be forfeited, and should go genoral fund. Into the Company's We do not believe that a perma nent and successful organization can be built up by giving the advantages and benefits to If your neighbor will not join with you In your organization and assist in making benefits and protection to the farmer's interests possible, I cannot see In what sense such person would bo entitled to the privileges and benefits of your work or enterprises. Organization being tho first es enterprissential, our es or undertakings should be mado to serve and support the organiza tion, and not merely organize tebusi establish some ness and let tho business enterprise lead us away from tho original or ganization and Its manifold purposes. It Is absolutely Impossible to get unorganized farmers to successfully It is entirely useless to organize unless wo do So, then, wo conclude - All list, write to Secretary. Trains Stop at Fair Grounds. J. M". SKILLMMN, CR?ARY. WRONG BOD BURIED BYWFE after leaving Lorain, but refused to give any further explanation. He) stated that he had served on board the ships Massachusetts, Ohio, Ala- a THE SCHOOL PER MPIjAJ STAIE Has Gotten to be a Real Necessity HOW TO ORGANIZE PROPERLY Reviewed by a Veteran School Teacher. SOME OF ITS EARLY HISTORY So as to Get Well Earned Full Benefits of the Farming Business. Going Back to the Time of the First Public School System. IT WAS 50c FIFTY A news Item or interest to all farmers YEARS AGO Li in Ps I & Edward S. Meado. Dr. Meade Is a man of exceptional ability, and as Professor of Finance, In tho Wharton School of Flnanco and Economy, University of Pennsylvania, ho Is amply qualified to produce articles that will prove a sourco of valuable Information to prospective Investors. Tho Investments principally to bo discussed are stocks and bonds. Dr. Meade has specialized on theso subjects and will offer suggestions and Information that will bo helpful to tho man of limited moans, and enable him to select a sccuro investment for his funds. Dr. Mcado is a writer of considerable noto on fHo is tho author of inancial works. "Trust Flnanco" and a contributor to various financial Journals. Interesting as well as Instructive, ness year to accumulate until suff- these talks each month will provo icient to pay one' year's fees and of the utmost assistance to those dues In the Society and also for one who desire a thorough working share of stock Tn said company, af- knowledge of Investments. ter which, of course, 'Buch mombers and stockholders rouitf4Y0 entitled Subscribe for The Herald. $1 a year. To the Member of the American Society of Equity of Kentucky: I am sure that all must realize among farmers that organization necessity, for Educatloual, Is a real as well as Business and men Legislative purposes. This being true, then, how to organize, and how to stay organized, Is the problem that must be sohod. One necessity of first Importance Is to get more good, efficient men In the field to do the primary work of organizing Local Unions In each county, and to secure good, earnest, conscientious officers for same. Then to organize said Local Unl-loInto a good strong county union In each county for tho purpose of perfecting the organization in the county, and to tako up and prosecute tho work of establishing local elevators at shipping points, and granaries on the farms, to enable the farmers to keep tho control of their grain under their own management and thereby direct tho sale of same. It will bo necessary also to establish terminal elevators In the central markets, also to bo owned or controlled by your organization, for tho protection of the membership of tho Society. Wo will also be able through tho elevator and trading companies to buy binder twine, field seeds, feed stuffs, coal, fencing and building materials, fruits, etc., all of which will enable us to bring buyer and soller closer togotber and thereby quite a save to the membership nlco sum of money each year, as well as to get bettor and moro stable prices for what wo have to sell In establishing of farm products. your elevatorB, etc., we Insist upon their being established upon the profit-sharin- g plan; put tho shares of stock within tho reach of all tho members of tho Society. Wo do not bellove It Is a good policy to admit as stockholders thoso who aro not members, except with tho provision that all who would not be ablo financially to pay for stock upon tho regular plan could bo permitted to become mombers and stockholders by allowing tho pat-- ) ronago dividends to which all mombers who patronize Iho concern would bo entitled to recelvo prorata upon tho amount of business furnished at tho end of each busins from "Frankfort says per capita this year will that the child In tho bo $4.40 for each State between the age of six and On 20 years for school purposes. reading this notice we aro Inclined to let our mind run back to tho time when wo commenced teaching, half a century ago, and compare tho per capita then with what It Is now. tton that would bo of considerable voluo to the public. While we do not claim to be a very old man, nor are we old, yet we are one of the few men of this part of tho State who has been identified In some way with the public schools of the State for .about fifty years. We are really thankful that we have been spared to seo such rapid strides made in the way of the education of the boys and girls of tho Commonwealth. We aro proud that In our feeble way we have been able, wo believe, to contribute something In the way of bettering a system that Is now tho pride of the State. It would be interesting to compare of fifty the old log schoolhouse years ago with tho fine school buildings of tho present day. But tlmo are, however, forbids this. W proud that wo werd onco .1 humble country school teacher, even II tho salary was small and Insignificant. J. J. Glenn In Madisonvlllo bama and Raleigh. He also worked at his trade In Dayton and other Ohio cities, but during the time he had been absent he never had seen And Husband Appeared any one from Lorain nor had he even sent a message homo to tell Years he was still among tho living. Ho declared that ho had read In a newspaper of his wife's death, but WAS LONG MOURNED AS DEAD did not have sufficient money to come homo and attend tho funeral... years went As Heard Wife Was Dead, But ing to the his son grewalong a long see stronger un til he determined to return and see Write-Wa- nted Didn't Later. to See Son. DECLINES ANY the boy. Ho will go to Elyrla to meet him. EXPLANATION Hustler Attack Like Tigers. In fighting to keep the blood pure, the white corpuscles attack disease germs liko tigers. But often germs multiply so fast that tho little lighters are overcome. Then seo pimples, bolls, eczema, salt rheum and sores multiply and strength and appetite fall. This condition demands Electric Bitters to regulato the stomach, liver and kidneys and to expel poisons from tho blood. "They are the best blood purifier," writes C. T. Budahn, of Tracy, Calif., "I havo ever found." They make rich red blood, strong nerves and build up your health. Try them 50c at m James H. Wllllanms'. Lorain, O., Aug. 4. years tho family and friends of Arthur Gardner, aged 32 years, a ba- ker, have mourned him as dead. Gardner suddenly disappeared from Lorain eight years ago, leaving a son. No word wife and was heard from him, and shortly after the body of a man, identified by Mrs. Gardner as that of her husband, was found In the marshes near Huron, Ohio. ld To-da- Take it From Him. Judge You aro charged with For eight beating your wife. What have you to say? Prisoner lick her, Hope! 1M Not guilty, if I could be th0 White Man's PELLAGRA CASES INCREASE AT THE EASTERN ASY'LUM Tho Increasing number of cases of pellagra In the Eastern Kentucky Lunatic Asylum is causing great unamong the Inmates and easiness It was not until 1S3S that thero that organization, agitation, educaore tho essen tion and tials. Let us havo no drones In our organizations. We should all be hustlers and boosters If Wo expect to escape being slaves and hirelings for trusts and combinations of speculators and gamblers In farm products. Respectfully submitted, M. F. SHARP. m m INFORMATION HOW TO TELL A SAFE INVESTMENT important feature in Llppincott'B, beginning with the August Issue, will be a Financial Department, to bo conducted by Dr. A now and was a system of public schools established for the State of Kentucky. Tho per capita was so small that it was scarcely worth looking after. Fifty years ago It was only fifty cents to each child. Tho first school "wo taught, the amount allowed was so small that the trustees did not even make a report of tho children in tho district. Wo were paid out of the pockets of the peoplo, receiving the magnificent sum of $41.50 for tho teaching of a three-month- s school. In 18C3, tho second school, wo taught, the per capita was 83 cents to each child, which was Ihon thought to be a pretty nice little thing. Up to this time there was a tax of onl five cents on each $100 worth of property for school purposes. Nor was thero any permanent school fund of any great amount. In 18G9 the per capita had dropped down to 73 cents. But In 1871, on account of an act of tho Legislature, tho fund was Increased to $2.00. The efficiency of tho public schools of the Stato dates from this lart named date. Tho Legislatures on two different occasions had legislated In the Interest of tho schools. Prior to that time tho schools were few and far between. But from that date thero was a general interest and teaching becamo a profession. Thero were better schools and better schoolhouscs. From the per capita of $2.00 In tho year 1871 tho amount each year has gradually - grown larger, with perhaps a few exceptions when there has been a slight decrease. Tho State now h'as a sinking fund from which a considerable sum each year Is realized. Tho tax on tho property of tho people has gone from 5 cents on each $100 worth of property unlll now It Is 22 cents. Had wo tho tlmo to write tho history of tho public schools system of tho Stato and Ifs rapid growth, "and were thero room for It In the Hustler, and further, would the peoplo read tho" sarac after It was written and printed,-- we could give Informa- j y Gardner returned to Loat that Institution, and rain very much alive, and laughed attendants at the meeting of tno Stato Board when told the story of his supposed of Charitable Institutions August death. Gardner said ho grew lone- 9 and 10, measures are to be taken some to see his son Wilber, who Is to segregate those afflicted with this now living with relatives In Elyrla disease. since the death Of his molher three Several attendants have express- years ago. and ed unwillingness to attend the afEight years ago Gardner and his flicted and great uneasiness Is felt. family lived here. One day Gard- - Thero are now seventeen cases, nor was reported missing, and des- twelve women and five men, nt tho pite tho persistent efforts of the po- institution, and two Frcnk of Lightning. deaths have reWhile traveling on tho pike bo- - lice of several cities to locate him, sulted In the past two months. Sev tween Richmond and Crab Orchard the search was unsuccessful. His eral of tho afflicted show eruptlowfc son did not hear of the skin. a drummer was caught in a thun- wife and year-older storm. He hitched his horse from him again. Sallow complexion comes from to a tree and took shelter in a A few months later the body of a tho man was found at Huron, house. Lightning demolished Ohio. bilious impurities In tho blood and treo but did not hurt tho horse. Ho Mrs. Gardner went to Huron and the fault lies with the liver and resumed his Journey and shortly Identified the body as that of her bowels they aro torpid. Tho med another Bhower came up. Ho put husband. It was shipped to Lorain, icine that gives results in such his horse in a stable and sought funeral services wero held and the cases, is HERBINE. It Is a flno livshelter. This tlmo tho lightning body buried In tho Elmwood ceme er stimulant and bowel regulator. struck the stable and killed tho tery. Several years later Mrs. Price 50c. Sold by Hartford Drug horse. Gardner died and her son was taken Co., Hartford, Ky and Donovan & mm Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m by relatives In Elyrla to raise. KILLS BARE RATHER Gardner said he Joined the navy Tho Herald for classy Job Work. THAN SEE IT STARVE one-ha- lf d 1 1 ' -- 4. Chicago. 111.. Aug. 3. Haceard and desolate, Mrs. Mary Stasich sat y in a police cell looking Into vacancy with eyes and extending her arms now and then as If to receive some beloved ob ject, only to let them fall at her side, while she dropped her head and sobbed. The little Austrian woman had killed fier threo weoks' old baby rather than see It starve. Whllo It lay In Its crib raising its feeble voice for food, she strangled It. She planned to take her own Hfo after ward, but In a rush of horror she fled In the darkness and wandered aimlessly until arrested, Deserted by her "husband and too weak to work, the young mother faced a chasm which sho did not believe she could bridge. to-datear-dlmm- Neglected wounds te"ltniit produce old sores and dovelop u,eera 'which cat wrajj Snow Liniment Rmdy Is a Healing for AH Ailments of the Flesh of Man and Bsast. splendid liniment heala up a bad and pleased thoo to tho slower and uncertain effect of lesswho wero accus- .7 tomed powerful reme-?.'.etho lacerated flesh so quickly that T- 0T J iSu-Jfi-- t 2n. wllwln-- r rmumatfe pain "neural-firnJJ- ii 'IV? done doing a wonderful work. Many tj1MB peases have found to their great satls- 5Jt.ni? 7la ,n a rractloa of the time requires -- treatment. wl"S2Jfa.,!jr effective In tho flesh, ailments of animals. Owaara SnrtlIS0,'?.e.Btocr-tr,a,u- e u .n'Sbly for two reasons: It heals sores ""ni.iI0I?nasJ.qul.ckl3"' and leave o dlsagurlng Viv?ronedy w neded In every homo. If its scars. power and great Sfflcacy was generally known, no family would be without It. Ballard's JS& 5?S.wtth wh,h, thl sore surprised i &?&'. ' WhyC 'Willie! A? School' Sunday Teacher Yes. Willie, the Lord loves every living creature. Willie I'll bet he was stung by a wasp! , Subscribe for The Herald. 81 JAMES F. MLLMfi SfeyfeeiM mew Ago, ouc ana 91.00 par Bottl. rHWrWtlBH ST. &ffW""y MV. never Bye Salve la a Mfe aacl aeedy remedy trBor Bye. ISoAMBHieOWHtHiHtYl a year. Hartford Drue Co.. Hartfnni. v nm.i! n. ""b. ri. M. ' vli K'l HI .sal As ''t 'f Xh J&M f - .- -." k WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1811. THE HARTFORD HERALD ground not reached by the steadily rising water, Clary, late last night related his remarkable experience to men un tho surface. Communication was obtained with tho young man by means of a telephone. PAGE TnnEE. 'ENTOMBED MINER REACHES E RULES HOW TO TREAT 11 WOMAN -- t 4 - F As ho told of bis long vigil In absolute darkness, fraught now with After Three Days of Dark hope, now with bitter disappoint- Six Different Methods ment, but never with despair, he InAre Prescribed. Imprison. terrupted the conversation now and then to receive supplies of food h shaft, lowered through the FOOD WIS SENfDOWN SHAFT which after three holes wero bored ALL SAID TD BE SUCCESSFUL In vain, finally reached the drift where he was held prisoner. The Rescued, Man Tells Over The suspense he suffered Is Indi Instructions Covering: the Wide Range of Human cated in part of his story as told Improvison 'Phone His He said: over the telephone. Characteristics. Experiences "I "tried, to count the strokes of the drill and was able to gauge HEARD HIS KESCUER9 AT WORK time a little by the pounding of the INCLUDES THE WOMAN'S IDEAS bit. Hours passed until I heard tho Tho Idealist Put her In a glass Joplln, Mo., Aug. 2. Joseph drill cutting info the hard ground, at but I could not locate tho sound in case and kneel at her feet and wor Imprisoned by a cave-i- n Clary, ship her. Treat her as If she were the White Oak mine, near this city, the darkness. a goddess merely tarrying with you was Sunday morning, I "Soon tho drilling stopped. since last for a while. CIoso your eyes lest reached by rescuers this morning. knew they had missed the drift. As you ana your see her blemishes When the time passed and I could hear no Ho was alive and well. ears lest you hear her tongue too last spadefuls of earth were re- sound, J could picture them mak- often. r was not moved by workmen In the shaft and ing new calculations, Tho Practical Man Give her a they dropped through in.to the surprised when I heard tho drill- waterproof shelter, a comfortable their ing of the first hole. drift, Clary threw himself Into bed, plenty to eat, a few children, arms and wept, while the shouts of "All the time the water was risof ing a little higher, but I 'was not that she may not have tlmo to get thousands cheering at the mouth into mischief, and allow hor to have I was hungry, but I tried worried. the mine echoed down the fchaft. digging in to keep from thinking nbout any- her own way whenever It Is best for Three workmen were her. the narrow shaft. The bottom sud- thing to eat. It was hard to keep Tho High Brow Raise her to denly gave way and they dropped from thinking about it, however, your Intellectual level If possible. A and I 8:25 o'clock. Into the drift at drank a lot of water from tho Try to make "her your companion glare of light flashed In on the en- drift. and equal. Discuss literature, art tombed Clary, and he looked upon "After a while I felt a draft of and the topics of the day with her, fellow-being- s after p period of fresh air, and I knew the drill had oven If you are required to do a darkness which, though .reckoned by cut Into the drift. But In the dark- tiresome lot of explaining. It Is over four him to be something ness I could not locate It. I called possible for a woman to bo more exactly three days days, was really with air mv mleht hUt could not satisfactory as a companion than a minutes. and forty-fiv- e make myself heard. It was madr man. If she has tact and most had se- denlng. Imprisonment Clary's women have she will never tell verely weakened him. But shouts "Then when I heard the drilling you that you do not know what you from the mouth of the shaft, sounds again In a new location I was disare talking about and prove It. from the outer world and gushes of couraged for the first time. But And If she loves you she will accept and strenth to fresh air gave heart not for a minute did I give up hope. your opinion as the last word on thq miner. At first he had little to It was Just the same thing' over and any subject. thanks. say save to breathe his Brute) over again for tho next few hours. i A physician was lowered and he I grew ravenously hungry all tho Tho Low Brow (alias Thedo your Treat her Just as you Clary was administered stimulants. I bus-le- d horse. Feed her enough to keep time, b'uf tried to forget-It- . hoisted to the surface and set foot myself as much as possible un- hor In prime working condition. after on top of earth ten minutes Spectators wero til the fourth drill hole penetrated Buy her new harness when tho old was found. he the roof of the drift. It took me a 1b likely to reflect discredit upon kept from him while his father, long time to locate tho hole." you. Say nothing when sho works brothers and physician hurried him well; beat her when she doesn't. nearby, away to the Clary home Brag to others about what a truo, his mother, weakened by the FEMALE TAX COLLECTOR where steady puller she is, but don't let lay ill. Tho strain of her long vigil, her overhear you. When sho Is physician urged Clary not to talk HELD ALL-DARECEPTION h-- orn out, get another. strength. until he had gained Man Provide for Tho Average years old, fjCIary Is twenty-thre- e her the best you can. Love her a operator the son of a pioneer mine At Murray, Ky. Surprised the good deal In an undemonstrative who has directed the rescue work way after the first year. Be as true imwithout rest since his son's Natives But Got Back to her as the strength of tho tempRelays of workers prisonment. tation will permit. Be a bruto to Sunday and Taxes. gan digging the shaft' her, sometimes, and then repent, have- worked night and day since. apologize and atone. Remember The first three attempts to drill Sho was a mere slip of a girl, and Is not a creature of logic, a small hole to admit air and winsome, too; her coming had been that she reason or Iron, but an Inconsistent, young nourishment failed to locate heralded by about a hundred invibeing, with faults Clary, but the fourth was success- tations to meet her here Wednes- lovable, breakable moro numerous and less grave than imful. It was found Clary was in day, and they responded with alac- your own. minent dnnger of drowning from rity and with wampum, too, says Tho Woman Herself Glvo her water rising In the, drift. Diggers the Murry Gazette. lots of clothes. Tell her oTFen that redoubled their efforts in the shaft Her name was Miss Lorene you lovo her whether you do or and tho drift was reached hours repreSho of Owensboro. not. Listen to her when sho wants expected. earlier than sented the State Auditor's agent, to talk. Pretend that you like to Standing on a high section of and hor mission to Murray was to have her mako a fuss over you, interview some of our worthy prop- muss up your hair and sit on your erty owners who overlooked such lap, wrinkling your best trousers, WHEN HERjAGK ACHES Items as secured notes, diamonds, when you are well, and to glvo you cash In bank, and the like, when nasty medlclno when you aro sick. Woman Finds All Her Energy the tax assessor called around last Should her lovo become oppressive, fall. There were about 100 names and Ambition Slipping Away. on her receiving list, and the so- glvo hor children. If you won't or can't do any of these things, do not cial session was held at tho County blamo her for turning to a pug Hartford women know how tho Clerk's office all day Wednesday. dog or an affinity. Sho must havo aches and pains that come when the Your "Uncle Daniel" Morris was something1 to love. kidneys fall, mako life a burden. "among those present." Ho sat In This Is her ideal, but rather than hip pains, headaches, tho front row with purse In hand,, such treatment Backache, from a man she distressing urinary always ready to contribute to a does not love, sho prefers being dizzy spells, troubles, all tell of sick kidneys and worthy cause, and ho came across treated like a dog by one sho does warn you of the stealthy approach with tho greater part of a $10 note, lovo. Life. or' Brlght's disease. and did not bat an eye, but as for of dropsy Bites of poisonous insects that Doan's Kidney Pills are for the kid- owning diamonds, "Wy, wy, a $35 neys only. They attack kidney stone would look good to me." But cause the flesh to swell up must bo antiseptic from all over the county they camo treated with a healing diseases by striking at the cause. Can Hartford suffered desire to pay homage to the fair young that will counteract the poison and stronger proof than this woman's lady from the Green river country, heal the wound. BALLARD'S SNOW though not a few wero surprised to LINIMENT answers every requireword? cases. Prices 25c, find her the qne they were to meet ment In such Mrs. Francis Rutherford, Ky., says: "For over three after having been notified that aj 50c and $1.00 per" bottle. Sold by years I suffered from weak kidneys back tax collector was to bo there Hartford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., and dull pains through the small of on that day, for they expected to and Donovan & Co., Beaver Dam, m my back. Whenever I did any work see a grim, austere looking man Ky. that required lifting, sharp, shoot- sitting behind a cannon. But what HAS A FEW AVORDS IN ing twinges darted through my. Miss LeJuno failed in ferociousness BEHALF OF PERCY HALT loins. My back ached at night and was mado up In tact, good looks when I arose in the morning fwas and a pair of laughing dark eyes Speaking of tho committee meetstiff and lame. I generally felt dull, that knew no resistance. As a result of her visit the Stato ing last Thursday, the Louisville and languid and was also bothered Head- and county received $200, and she Herald said that tho reins of tho by a feeling of nervousness. to return within one i Democratic party organization wero aches were common and I had dizzy promises Haly. We by Percy during which there was a' month's time and several hundred controlled spells, blurring of my sight. The kidney others will be called upon to pay don't know that this Is so, but wo hopo it Is, and if It Is, the prospects wera also unnatural.. back taxes. secretions are Of the hundred property owners for victory this November Whenever I caught cold it settled kidneys and- - at such timon summonod to appear, 'only 12 wero greatly enhanced. Hajy is tho peer On my my suffering was 'aggravated. found delinquent, and paid up, of any politician in the State and Learning of Doan's Kidney Pills,' I though several others were given a for all of the fact that ho has been procured a supply and received re- few days' time to settle before suits maligned from one end of tho Stato to tho other, and has not the conv lief in. a short time after commenc- were Instituted. fidence of tho great mass of the ing their use. I continued taking people that he so truly deserves, it d A Fair. finished, the conj them until I had "How does your nusoana spena is a tact tnat wnenever miy was at tfetsoMwa boxes, at "w&!cht!me the helm, Democracy won. We his evenings. was , wjflipletely cured' He stays at home and thinks up ihave known Haly intimately for al- '.For Bale'by alh dealers. Price 60 Foeter-Mllbu- fn jmost ten .years and we are here to Co., Buffa-l- scheraea "to make money," cents. 'New--Yor"And what do you do with your-- j state that, his detractors to the con,- sole agents for the ,trary, there is no fairer, squarer, self while tie's thus occupied?" United Jtatee; "Oh, I think up BChemes to spend truer man or Democrat In the State. Remember the same Doan'a His word Is as good as Kla bond and & take no other. it." ... v five-Inc- V once given, there Is no question but that It will be mado good. The Republicans made him the butt of much of their campaign In 1907, and when they went Into office, searched the records of the several offices ho had held with a fine tooth comb, to find some trace of graft or crookedness, but nary a blot upon his record were they able to uncover, and cvon his direst enemies now freely admit that Haly Is square and honest, has always discharged his duties with fidelity and fights on tho level. The fact that he has made himself what he Is through his own efforts and ability, coming up from a poor Irish newsboy to be the friend and adviser of millionaires, makes those who really know him, admire him tho more. Tho Interior Journal knows that there Is no political office that Haly would have, slnco as tho confiden tial assistant of John C. C. Mayo he earns a larger salary than Is paid any official In tho State. Wo know that ho Is looking solely to the good of tho Democratic party and with hope of Its victory, whatever ho may do, and we are proud to have him as our friend, who when he Is a friend, stlcketh closer than a broth er. Interior Journal. Stubborn Case "I was under the treatment of two doctors," writes Mrs. R. L PhHIips, of Indian Valley, Va., "and they pronounced my case a very stubborn one, of womanly weakness. I was not able to sit up, when I commenced to take Cardui. I used it about one week, before I saw much change. Now, the severe pain, that had been in my side for years, has gone, and I don't suffer at all. I am feeling better than in a long time, and cannot speak too highly of Cardui." n i i CARDUI Woman'sTonic if you are one of those ailing women who suffer from any of the troubles so common to women. Cardui is a builder of womanly strength. Composed of purely vegetable ingredients, it acts quickly on the womanly system, building up womanly strength, toning up the womanly nerves, and regulating the womanly system. Cardui has been in successful use for more than 50 years. Thousands of ladies have written to tell of the benefit they received from it. Try it for your troubles. Begin today. Write to- - Ladles' Advisory Dept. Chattanooca Medicine Co.. Chattanoo2x Term . for Special Instructions, and book. Home Treatment lor women," sent free. J 52 Loss of Time Menus Loss of Iny. Kidney trouble and tho Ills it breeds means lost tlmo and lost FrofeBslonnl Cnrcln. pay to many a worklngman, M. Balent, 1214 Little Penna street, J. M. PORTER, Streator, 111., was so bad from kid-neand bladder trouble that he BEAVER DAM, KY. could not work, but ho says: "I Will took Foley Kidney Pills for only a alnltur practice his protection In Ohio and ad counties. Special attention Risen to a' short tlmo and got entirely well and business entrusted to his care. was soon ablo to go back to work, FRANK L. FELIX, and am feeling well and healthier than betore.'r Foley Kidney Pills are tonic In action, quick In results HAfiTFORD, KY. a good friend to tho working man Will practice his profession In Ohloandid of Appeals JlnlnK counties or woman who suffers from kidney .Tltnlnal practiceand In the Court tpeclattv. and Collections a Offlce In the Herald building Ills. Foley Kidney Pills will check jthe progress of your kidney and c. e. sum, C. M. BARNETT. bladder trouble and heal bv removBARNETT & SMITH, ing tho cause. Try them. For sale oy an druggists. m HARTFORD, KY. Will practice their profession In all the Conrt AROUND TRE WORLD olOhlo and adjoining counties and In tbr Conr w i Attorney at Law, IgillespieB BROTHERS. W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, Attorney at Law, ..BLACKSMITHING.. Tj4-R6D3irw- Trk j Attorneys at Law, Collections a specialty. Horseshoeing A Specialty if Appeals. IN THIRTY-NIN- E BAYS Otto French Newspaper Alan Trying To Cut Former Record in Half. C. flartin HARTFORD Kentucky. Attorney at Liwv ll.YItTKOItl), KY. ' Y - Le-Ju- -- Earl-Ingto- n, Well-Matche- I o, ? OflUo tip stalls oer Wilson X Clowe, opposite cuiut house. Will practice his piofesslon In nil the Jnger Schmidt, of the new Paris colitis of tills nml adjoining coun Illustrated dally, Excelsior, on July ties and Comt of Appeals. Commer17 set out from Paris to make a cial and ciliuinnl pinttice a specvoyage around the world In record ialty. time. PIACL'D IN YOUR ItESI- Tho tour has been organized with DENCE OR PLACE OF UL'S- H. 1". MCKF.NNKV tho object of beating tho time made OTTO C. MAKTIN 1NESS, AND PUT YOURSELF by M. Stlegler, of Lo Mntln, who In IN' DIRECT CONTACT W'TH 1901 made the tour of the woild In & THE 63 days. For a mouth past Ecp1-slo- r HARTFORD, KY. has been In communication with most of the remote parts of 1P0 ALL STATES. ..GENERAL INSURANCE.. the globe to ascertain the possibiliFOR THE COMPANY'S ties of travel. TO THE FARMERS, Life. Accjdent. Sick M. Schmidt started with tho prosCALL ON OR ADDRESS pect of being faced with terrible And W.OBANON. odds. Ho may possibly be delayed Will Local Jlinnger, by cqulnoxlal gales In the Pacific, Haitford, K. by the Manchurian plague, and bv Canadian forest fires, but ho left W. C. SEXTON. hero with the firm determination to Local Manager. Incorporated. do all that is humanly possible to Reaer Dam, Ky. accomplish tho trip In 30 days. M. Schmidt spent days several In making" a tour of tho Paris Rtores to find tho biggest trunk with the JMDESandWJR! least weight, tho most compressible shirts, the finest socks, the smallest BtiajDcalett, hairbrush and Ingenious time and ; we can no space-savin- g devices of all descripbetter for roa than if cols or commission merchinls. ESTABLISHED 1868. Rtlutace: any bank in Loaistillc. We jarnish tions. It lis a ring, a diamond, a natch, nooiDissrreciosiirsaipptis. niuimpraiw. M. Schmidt left the Excelsior ofjeelry or slUer-.VwsT LoaliTille, Ky. I. M.SABEL&SONS t ivv jv fices on his vovago at 1 hour and tli Wt nu.iliU at "Kftlh In west oricca tH, 18 minutes 41 seconds, the offBg" fromlhe icial chronometer being held by Mflll s y." nFST..."." i. Alme Richard, of tho Aero Club, Have your old ORDER HOUSE and drove In one of the most powIN THE SOUTH. a a r a av .a AAMft. erful cars In Parte to the Nord Staicmuij ww t oi.vt.i4 -. YOT Bimosi nail cluslvely the bouthern trade. Wrle tion, where he boarded the express Addresa. J for our tree illustrated catalogue. for Cologne. & G. P- Tho schedule of the voyage drawn up before the start Is as follows. Kvery Article Guaranteed. July 23, Irkutsk; July 29, Vladion the Japanese vostok; July VtfSjVyl Sea; July 3.1 (Vnorntng), Tsuruga August HARTFORD PRESSING (evening), Yokohama; on tho Pacific; August 13, Vanacross Can GLUB couver; August 13-Jada; August 18, Montreal; August on the Atlantic; August 25, Paris. Ladies' and gents' clothes also Liverpool; August 25-2M. Schmidt actually reached IrkWORK GUARANTEED utsk exactly to the schedule, at 3:50 In all Called for and delivered. ?romptlT obtained(.'areata countries OR NO ri(.. July 25. He should reach p. m and CopjrtjburtKl-lltermlHend NkeLch. Hodel or lhotn. for FREE REPORT on TAAtentAhdUv. I'Atont rr&rlj Vladivostok Club rate Si. 00 per month. toe exclnslTelT. BANK RiriRCNCIS. Details of his tour are at presRend cents In sumps for oar two lnve.las.nl noon on how to obtain and SILL pat. ent lacking, owing to tho fact that tNTS, Whirl, ones will par. llow to ret a vuu ner, patent law and other TsJuabla Information. tho Russian Government prohibits ': Y. M. C. A. Bldg. telegraphing in French. Paris Cor. New York Times. Hartford, Ky. PATENT LAWYKRS. .303 Seventh St., Washington, D. C. A well known Des MolneB woman PARKER'S after suffering miserably for two HAIR BALSAM days from bowel complaint, war CltssMS and txsntllX the hslr. ITOwUt. PrnmoiA. A lomrlA&k FOLEY' cured by one dose of Chamberlain's Merer Tall to SesUr dray to alpieMe heir itiiint-nutecalp ifa xonuuui yvior. . Fori BAOKAOHK KlOHKTS AN8 BLABDSH Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea RemeCum K)e,en(ltlJOJ Dracla m dy. For sale by alFTdealers. HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE in mm Long Distance Lines SPECIAL-CONTRAC- Fire Also Bond You. J. Krr" AC rr nilXf WOOL .., V - STRAW HATS i. m ,T ..- MADE NEW! Barnos Co.. 29-3- 1, 8, 19-2- 5, 6, to-da- y. Club. Hartford Pressing D. SWIFT & CO. -- ill m KIDNEY PHIS Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Hon- ey For Coughs and Colds. Subscribe for The Herald; $1.00 a y'r .. 'J' f liiiliiaii rAGE FOCK. ii4i''JWil.-iJiLWViii.waigWiPiii- i Jl 'i Ji""i'r THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1911. It ft 'I i W t! ip i I I (I) i M n tf A I School days will soon be at hand The writer of onr State Platform UNI RILL and It behooves all parents to see Jshould take this liquor paragraph bUUHlI and from It that their children attend. No more Jof the Constitution ABSORB MUCH INTEREST matter confronts any .struct a plank of interpretation and IHEZER MATTHEWS. FKAMC L.FEUX, I application which should lack onthfamily than that of educating their EDITORS. chlldren. This matter has already Ing In force or effect. No temper In Politics The Whole State PrtpV. ever-yffUSK L. FELIX, Pfc. been been too much neglected, and for ance legislation has this reason Kentucky Is low down enacted by-- the Republicans of Kenis Aroused Over the Their leaders have made in the educational scale. It Is a tucky. Entered at the Hartford post-offlblunder. many pretentions along this line, Question. ax mall matter of the second dais. shame and an excuseless The trouble Is not without remedy, but have signally failed to put their which should be applied at once. pretentions upon the records. The Frankfort, Ky., Aug. 7. OverWEDXKSWAV, AUGUST 0. 19". county unit law was the work of Send your children to school! shadowing all other Issues In the Democrats, as bare also been other campaign which will end Saturday When the framers of the Repub- measures of like import. DemoO U X C E 31 E X T S. AXX Platform put In that crats have ever taken the lead In with the selection of delegates for lican State Condocument the assertion that "We sane temperance legislation and In the State Democratic Platform of the We are authorized to announce riomand a comDliance with the plain upholding the spirit ofjthe people vention, Is the extension ! 31. T. WKSTKRFIKLD, retirement of the Constitution by who are against the liquor trafflc. County Unlt law to all the counties local Let this record not only be kept, In. Kentucky. Of Pleasant Ridge. Ky., as a candl If ho nnartrapnt of a uniform There was a decided disposition ,aw date for the Democratic nomination - joptJ lth lne county as the but enlarged upon. on the part of many of the leaders Representative from Ohio coun- jg0Ter!ng unlt." they must hare for ACCIDENTALLY DROWXED of both parties for the sake of harty In the Lower House of the next knowa tlley vere oniy talking to JT WHILE RUNNING TROTLIXE mony to let the temperance legisAssembly, subject to the cefVe or tDere , no such provis-actlo- n V I of the Democratic convention ,on Jn fne constitution. Plainly lation rest, but the extremists on ,n Mr. Rufus Fulkerson, a miner of both sides of the political fence at Hartford, Saturday, August 12, irPa,jnfr, tae Constitution means Ky., was accidentally slsted that the question come up cal option more than anything else. 3IcIIenry, Rock-por- t, for settlement in this campaign, Is no county unit In It, drowned In Green river, near ?rA thre In and the "wets" and the "drys" have Ky., last I rlday evening I expressed as such. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. company with his young ncphe.v in been making life miserable for the of Obio county a Tbe Democrats a conservatives since the campaign .By the liberal use James, should not forget tbe conventions trot-lin-skiff, he bad been running L. S. SBXATOR Ollle M. e and stopped near the shore began, of after-Theof Critteaden. ;at Hartford next Saturday for tbe steamer Hartford to pass The result of the agitation Is GOVERNOR Jm. B. McCreary, 'noon. August 12. should bp by. Evidently Intending to ride tbe. that the question has been so thor- !a larze crowd In attendance, for rolling waves a little or to swim to 'ougbly aired that for the first time of Madteoa. icur ,t vJ LIKLT. GO. Edward Ue JntIa, event of the tbe other shore, he plunged In, bls,n the history of politics in Ken-sca- nt mott, of Jefferson. Come In this countr. campaign clothing being already wet. Itucky neither party Is seeking the Tom Rhea, of Lor TRK.VSURKR Mag ag manj. of your ne,pn. He swam a short distance and then Rtrnirth of the Manor interests, but gas. a 9Oll0le- - A cana,aal Iorlcalled for help. He was known as 6n the contrary, both are dodging ' w, AUDITOR Henry M. rmwo-U- i named, also ' good gWln,mer, but notwlthstand- - their offers of assistance. Neither , Representative of Fayette. delegates to tbe btat convention ,ng thg hjs nepuew flm 8tarted to (party will openly accept campaign GENERAL JUM jnext Tuesday, and other Important jpaddje ATTORNEY the sMtl t0 the drowning contributions from the liquor Jn- Garaett, of Adair. matters will be attended to. It will man but making little headway, IteresU. and the result will be that C. F. b an Important STATE SECRETARY event and will setjpjuaged in and swam t0 hIs aggjst-i- if either nominee for Governor gets Crwcellas. of Pendleton. a mark for the progress of the par- - ,..-.,.Mr Fnivrin unv vhv nf ,i,.i iiuua ., un..n- - lunu. iiic ca ... x,awv w high-gra- de ..... ty ,n thJf, COBnty, luc ii'JUVt luriii t- -. in .sight Just as bis rescuer came up slstance will havo to bo extended In I ION IXhTRI arKai nmwni near him and never arose again. ,a new wav in Kentuckv politics. Gov. Woodrow Wilson, of Xew u of Christian. A search was at once begun and j The belief is prevalent that the OF AGRICCL-O- f Jersey, said in a recent speech that COMMISSIONER Mr. Fulkerson's body was recover- - Hnuor crowd has abandoned hone Wood- - "the great monopoly In this country TURK J. W. Xewman, oil atiftnt fu'n lin.tr tstop n.4, atiara ctf. JtiarJjig influence, with the State Ti ,. an-"-otife tbe money nwjnopuly," and" that . .. lord. ticket of either party In the coming ' Its power is used for personal ends j CLERK OK CO CRT OI 'was suddenly taken with cramps. election, and that the candidates Robert Greene, of Frank- fit, q fAW rann Lfin "phlll nnri ntinntr ,le was a the Senate and House will be genuine economic !The lac 'h,at and destroy lin. ... , ' " ul u, lJ uCetla Lawrence : freedom." COMMISIONER Gov. Wilson seems to R. U. cated 8udden danger ot the "quor men may offer. -in hare struck a vital point In the H. Flan. overtaken him. economic afiairH of men and to have ,ad tor wi .n unfortunate man inini Democrats, don't forest the coun- iRiaiti a ii uiu I'jaii.ij. iv nA(nnn.f Iwas hnrlf.fl at Pond Pun CTavevarri ,A portable sawmill, ,, . . The money power, em- ty conventions at Hartford next Sat- bluntly. ,in win oii nCn9. Come and bring your braced In the ., r,..i urday. , bin. on nasv navments. For further .i,i.t. in in ., ... nirllmilfiN noil nn nw M... 'W which control the financial (leStln- friend). i. UJ. u, uuuicdd ... ,was a memoer, conuucieu me iu-- 1 lies of the people In the great ques- . son-IceHe leaves' a wife and !' Her. Rockport. Ky., or Adam It is said that the Standard Oil jtJjn of gapr))y an,i demand. Is ever neral (Fulton, Beaver Dam, Ky. Route reorganized lntOjtn m,nace of he honest, efllclent one child. Company is to bo Xo. 1. 32ti or j n different companies It handicaps Indl- For Sale, Hlrsh affair. Ujdnal energy of development and Good varletle. Kind of a harness mare. MRS. LYNCH GIVES RON!) ., .... makes success n matter governed See John Jackson, Centertown, KenCASE .MAY GO OVER SpeaKlng not irom aumoruj, uui almost entirely by Institutions tucky. 31tf guess-worwe will DAM, nrotty reliable "higher up." Lynch, wife of Mrs. Loutilda say that Gov. Willson will not be More Ulll IJailK HUlllllnir how. nonrro W. T.vnrh ivhn.ii honn In .- "- - ' .. . . " allowed to take the stump for his The Mayfleld Messenger says: The Ohio County Rank and store jai at for the past four OCOOCOOOCOCOOGOOOOOCOCOOCO OCOOCOOOGOCOOCCOOGOSOOCOCO party In Kentucky during the ensuThe Hartford Herald Is one building In Hartford, Including the months on an Indictment for the ing campalKn. of the best weekly exchanges nxtuj;es in the store building, sold murder of her Aiuuie that chance to fall upon our meet her uncle, who was coming to under order of the Ohio Circuit Buck, has been released from cus- Ohio county can again be carried !. table. It Is well edited, well Court In the suit of A. H. Pate, As tody. Mrs. Lynch gave bond In the SEVENTY PER CENT OF dinner, wjien death her. fall If the DemoDemocratic w printed, beautifully Democratsighee Ohio County Baftk, vs. Ha- sum of $2,000, with her husband The current which passed through crats will only bestir ic and Its editor Is numbered CHOP 13 NOW PUNTED her body literally roasted her foot rriett Ford, et al last Monday at the and O. X. Robinson as sureties. and sen that the vote Is gotten out. men among the hantisomest , court' house door by F. L. Felix, and arm. special term of court that Is The right Let's ptart the ball .i PrcsB AssoIn our Kentucky Master Commissioner, was purchas to be held beginning Monday, Augat convention Democratic now! Administrator's Sale. ciation. ed by Messrs. M. L. Heavrin and E. ust 28, will be called by Judge Blrk-hea- d But Report Shows Only 63 Per Hartford next Satii'day. Lei there I will, on Saturday August 12, In the future. Editor Lemon will q narrass at the price of $4,600, within the next few days, as lie a Mrs attendance Cent as to Condition 1911, at the farm of Jacob C. Warplease notify The Herald scribe re- - (f0r which they executed bond In ten days notice must be given. In den, deceased, at Centertown, Ky., Perhaps tbe Republicans of Ken- ferred to, before he springs any- threo equal Installments, payable to the order Judge Blrkhead will give of Tobacco. offer for sale two "horses, hay, corn, again, so he can be the Assignee, A. E. Pate, tucky might be ashamed of another thing llko that a list of the cases to be tried, most oats and farming implements. administration of their own prepared for tho shock, for this State of whom will be parties now confinof the At the district meeting Terms made Known on "day of Ilrakwimn Killed. creating, as tliov are of the present came very near proving fatal. We In Jail, and ouon ball. - George ed Green River Tobacco Growers' As- sale. Sale begins at 1 o'clock p. Ky., Aug. 7.Llkton, one wouldn't even name the head can't help it because we are bald There Is no probability that the sociation, held July C, an order was m. slab-side- d Crofton, a brakeman, aged twenty- L. R. GOODALL, Let linadcd, lantern-Jawe- d, of it in their State plntform. case against Mrs. Lynch may go made for the secretary to take a re- 31t2 was run over at Guthrie and Administrator. pave them this humiliation by and our clothes don't fit us. We uh oyer until the November term, as it electing the full Democratic ticket were only enabled to stand this sal- instantly killed by a switch engine. is understood that the woman has port each month of the condition ot Buy It now.. Now Is the time to the brand which nobody has ever ly by remembering that the Messen- He was riding on the footboard of been in poor health, and tho fact the tobacco crop In the district, or buy a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, In the five counties that compose ger, besides being one of the very the engine and when at the coal yet been ashamed of. that she has now given bond, will the Green River Tobacco Growers' Cholera and Diarrhoea Jtemedy. It division, best newspapers of the South, Is chute, on tho Nashville not require tho necessity of having Association. great Is almost certain to be needed beIt looks like Kentucky's r, and was knocked off by n large chunk also a happy staple, corn bread, was going to be evidently got us misplaced for some of coal, which had rolled on the the case tried at this term. At tho close of tho month I mail- fore the summer is over. This rem-f- e. Inveighed against by the pellagrt more deserving pencil-pushe- r. ed out report cards to a number of edy has no superiq. For sale by , track. His body was horribly manHouse I'ai-ty- . Investigators. The new disease, m gled, both arms and a leg being cut parties In each Magisterial district all dealers. .i Mr. and Mrs. Robert Webb gave In pnllngrn, In thought to bo caused COUNTY UNIT NOT LOCAL 0P-- off. the counties that compose the Notice to Creditors. a most delightful house party at by eating corn which lias within It asking them to give Association, The body was taken to Rowling TION. their beautiful home near Liver-mo- re the per cent of the tobacco planted - Ohio Circuit Court, Kentucky. a fungus growth known as "Binut." L. B. Davis', Administrator, PlainLet It bo hoped that the Demo- Greon, his former home, for Interfrom Thursday until Monday, Like all now diseases, however, It of the tobacco tiff, vs. L. B. Davis heirs, Defendand the condition ment. In honor of their guest, Mrs. A. P. beyond the exact scope of cratic State Convention which meets seems crop as it exists at present. A In Louisville next Tuesday will inKing, of Owensboro. Those pres- majority of the cards have been re- ants. Memorable Day. present therapeutic knowledge. basis of platform All persons having claims against the clude In tho ent were: Mr. and Mrs. A. P. King, Tho Mayfleld Messenger says: turned with what I believe a fair the estate of L. B. Davis, deceased, Thoy fin things differently In Can- tho meeting a plank on tho liquor Thirty-si- x years ago. Wednesday, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Blansford and report given. ada. Over there they dissolved question which will be at the same August 2d, 1911, was an election son Master Roy Morton, Mr. and are hereby notified to file same with A general average of those re- the undersigned Parliament nnd took tho Issue of time clear and emphatic, abiding day in Kentucky. It was tho first Mrs. J. W. Spurrier, Mrs. Alice Rial Commissioner at Planted, 70 per turned shows: Reciprocity right out before tho tbe Constitutional provision which Monday In August, which was elec- and children, Mr. W. M. Barnett, cent, of a crop, with tho condi- his offlco In Hartford, Kentucky, people. Hero wo quarreled over it governs same. or tion day In Old Kentucky. Xo dodging It was Messrs. Tom, Bon and1 Robert King, tion at present 63 per cent. There properly proven, on or before Sepin Congress Hovcral months and f- equivocation tember 1, 1911, or they will be forshould be tolerated. on this day thirty-si- x years ago of Owensboro, Mrs. E. Crabtree and Is no question but what the tobacco ever barred. inally let that body of n few dozen Tho voices of temperate Kentuck-lan- s ' F. L. FELIX, that Hon. James D. McCrcary was children, Mr. Alex Hudson, Hartcrops are both suffering 29t4 men settle the matter. In less than Master Commissioner, arise almost as a unit In favor elected again. A wonderful man ford, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Stevens, and corn for rain, and I feel the estimate six weeks now, tho peoplo of Cana- of an extension of tho county unit In a great country. Ohio Circuit Court. Utlca. The party was Joined fn tho made Is a very fair one at present. da will vote on the question nnd law the present law enlarged upii. afternoon of tho 0th by the Llver-mo- Howover, with a good rain now, More people, men and women, Kntertuiueil. . then, let us hope, the whole thing on. Tho adoption of such a plank band, which furnished music the condition would be materially' are suffering Mr. and Mrs. Frank niack enter from kidney and bladwill be settled. would set at rest the present rufor the occasion, after which de- changed by the time we take our der trouble than tained a few of their friends Friover before, 'and mors and bickerings. It would lightful refreshments were served. report at the close of If you feel any Interest In Demeach year more of them turn' for this month. question day night at their beautiful homo All report n pleasant time. ocracy whatever, If you want any- eliminate agitation of tho " I want to thank the farmers who quick relief and permanent "benefit present Those It near Hartford. thing to do with tho shaping of Its during the ensuing campaign. have been so libera In responding to Foley's Kidney Remedy, which ' put the liquor Interests were: Misses Anna May, Hattie destinies, the expression of Its prin- would also to the request to send in reports, has proven Itself to be one of the Darr, Edna Black, Lattyo Sparks, O .MARRIAGE LICENSE. ciples and the success of tho ticket, hors do combat. O and I want to ask every onq who most effective remedies for kidney pro- Xbutt Rhoads, Marsle Benson, Me-v- el To do this tbe Constitutional don't fall to come to the convention Rhoads: Messrs. Elbert and OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO receives a report card at tho close tfnd bladder ailments that medical vision anent the liquor question at Hartford next Saturday, This of the month to fill out and return science has as Freeman Sparks, Mrs. J. B. Sparks Walter M. ICey, Fordsvllle, to at once with as fair and Impartial druggists. devised. For sale by ' all will be followed by tho Democratic will havo to be considered m an aid to rather than a solution of and son, Mr. and Mrs. Rhoads,' Mr. Pearl L. Thorton, Fordsvllle. Stato Convention at Louisville next report as he can give. and Mrs. Len Sparks and family, W. J. Graham, Narrows, to Eva Stato Ranking Rusiness. Tuesday, after which the hottest the matter. As a matter of fact, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wallace)." Very respectfully, Mr. Duke, Narrows. Frankfort, Ky., Aug, 7. Nine campaign Kentucky has known In that Constitutional clause is plain and Mrs. Frank Black WALTER ATHERTON, Beefy. and "'son. no county option. local There is S. N. Patterson, McHenry, to Ef-fl- o thanks In the State have closed since Many years win begin. Ice cream and cake were served and unit nor prohibition in It, Strictly Carncs, McHonry. For Sale Town property, vacant iu jiijwi i repori 10 iua secretary The Louisville Times remarks interpreted, it would allow tho li- all reported an enjoyable tlmeS. lots, cottages and two-stoi dwelling of State and three new ones have that "The selection of a manufa- quor question fo be brought to the begun business, making a total of Granulated Sore Eyes Cured. ' A. C. YEISER& CO.,' Girl Accidentally Killed., cturer fit bper "faves to direct tho most remote precinct inthe State, "For twenty years I suffered from 478 banks now In existence ss Ky., Aug. 7. MlssHteno Elkton, ' Hartford, Ky. campaign" In Jefferson county of to bo acted upon as the fern people Rager, aged about twenty-tw- o a bad same of granulated sore eyes." against 484 on April 12. the gentleman nominated In a beer living there saw fit. "Local" a years, accidentally shot and killed Bays Martin Boyd, of Henrietta, Ky,' Roasted Alive. "option" the right herself with a 38 caliber garden , would seem wholly appro- limited spot; In February, 1903, a gentleman Lexington, Ky Aug. 5. Eva revolver priate, were-i- t not for the fact that of choosing: this Is . the con- -' nf fhA nnma tt T.awf me to try Chamberlajn's , Sloan, the asked CHleCUtra UffitMWAM daughter tbcjJLOtnlHee. Ja relying ,for his elec- stltutlonal provision in a nutshelUinear Salve. i iiuubui uuo uux ana usea , ronoeinan ranK moan, of this I navEiT here --The b r... . .. And As to who shall ho affected bv 'this ' . tion ,ob' t)e . about two-thirof It and my eyes' city,' was Instantly killed a woun . hv I We Med FREE a Utd CwmbtL a ouick Mbit v,men. .. w.i.r....:: bo '" ' " als'aotoiw-Tote.ttat",niish- t w 'r HlK given me any trouble a. live wire falling upon her. . have not . jui tbt ? whIc Bhe djein .bout on ' ' , keedwJnked by the liquor plank says: "The people of any county, l since." This salve Is for sale By all h'a.d Just left her home In nanny of tBe1 Republican r8U(eJiPlatforni. city, town, district or precinct." , Subscribe for The Hartford Herald, dealers. m spirits to run up the treot nd jTfo Hartjord Herald oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo - Rotate Cultivate et AND ce FERTILIZE! Your soil properly, and results will most surely be satisfactory. Poor 5oll ral Can be ma de good lo-19- Good 5oil Can be made better re J Horse Shoe Breund OF PURE ANIMAL HATTER r , "r i. ,. ' nt JfA You can double your earnings by a their small investment Fertilizers. WHEAT SOWING AP-I'EA- f I . .,... it.. .--, fd or ,....t.i.. .....'. " j"vu..o year. We have our Fertilizer Warehouse crowded with the best Wheat grower the world. We are prepared to furnish anybody or would be pleased to talk to any one interested makinga success raising wheat Is your first preparation foMiving her flfty-sove- worK-nif.raa- E. P. BARNES BEAVER k BRO, k, KENTUCKY. I "-- -v- 41 s -- -- ty-tw- o, bokay-dlspense- m ro otooooooooooodoooo o : ry eight-year-o- ld mNQIWDTfAN anil-beVjjo- t," i.. """ .-- ".'" p.v. -- tu, , pm wiwuimiiiumo; to-d- av -- .1 r""' "? MKfwr. - PdSSlfffi&O ) I WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1911. THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE FIVE. I IMMMMHMiHMWMi FREE r FREE Sv. I IPIANO! For Your Home WE WILL GIVE AWAY FREE An Expensive HIGH GRADE INSTRUMENT A TCfre -- MANUFACTURED BY- - Cbmuno Cote piano ZITanufacturing Company, of $all 2fttcr, 21Tass. iittrTHfNffrf'Tf IhBHhI THE PIANO HAS ARRIVED And is on display at our store and havp us explain this new advertising plan COME TO THE STORE CONTEST BEGINS SEPTEMBER You have a splendid opportunity to get this Piano WATCH FOR FREE of all cost. Como 1. I OUR ADS. IN THE HERALD FAIR & COMPANY HARTFORD, The Fair Dealers at. KENTUCKY. I SPECIAL CASH PRICES 100 lb. Gran. Sugar 50 lb's. Pure Lard lbbl. Patent 5 Flour'. lbbl. Salt........ 10 lbs. Pure Lard lbs Pure Lard Best .Bacon, by side Bacon Butts Paris Green, per lb 5 lb? lots, per lb bare Lenox 25o pkgs. Argo Starch 10c I3ic pkgs. Eagle Thistle Soda 10c Matches lOc lie 3 boxes 26c 2 "boxes Tabid Salt 10c 25c 2 bars WhiteFloating Soap 10c 6 6.00 5.25 4.75 1.50 1.25 65c 6 bars 6 bars G bars Gbars Big Deal Soap White Magic 25o Ivory Fels Naptha 25c 25c 25c 3 8 HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY. Illinois Central Railroad Time bio at Beaver Dam, Ky. Ta-- " k South Bound. North Bound. No. 1324:05 a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. Some person or society will get No 12212:28 p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. the Piano at Fairs'. Contest beNo. 1022:48 p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. gins Sept. 1st. J. E. Williams. Agt. Likens & Acton will sell you best patent flour, 24 lbs. for 65cts or two Mason's fruit ars 55c aud 65c sacks for $1.25. 31tf. at Likens & Acton's. Mr. J. Rosenblatt has closed out Call at once and register at Fairs' his dry goods business hero and as a contestant for the Piano. moved to Louisville. work For Sale, Cheapo-Go- od It has arrived the beautiful horse, buggy and harness. Piano that Fairs' are going to glvo R. R. WEDDING. 29t away. Come and, see It. Give Likens & Acton a call If Mr. J. R. Hunter, of Smallhous, you want groceries at the right gave The Herald an appreciated visZ,ltt. it while In town Monday. prices. photog- R. T. fler has the best and cheapMr. Jesse Schroder, the rapher, Is In Evansvllle for a few est lot of saddles ever brought to 32t4 days. Hartford. Come and see. Rial and children, of Mrs. Magglo Griffin and son HenMrs. Alice ry re visiting relatives In Owens- Owensboro, are visiting friends and boro. r relatives inland near Hartford. Men's-Paten- t Shoes, the Low-CMrs. T. R. Barnard' and two $4,6oyklnd, tor $1.50 pair at daughters, of Hartford, have been visiting in Llvermore the past week. Fairs',., ," and 'find out about Visit Miss Annie Allen Elgin enter. their Piano Contest that begins tained a few of her friends with a Sept. 7lst. party Tuesday evening of last .week. of OwensCova. Anderson, Mlsa Watch Fairs' ad, from tlnfe to boro,. Ky.,is visiting relatives In time,- - It will tell you about their bigPlano Contest that' begins Sept. this cltyigfa ,' W " ' 1st. daughMr.j,CI.aUhand little ter, spent Sunday with relatives at F. CASEBIER & CO., Funeral J. Directors, and Embalmers. All, calls Cete;towiu i'KtoB Winnie D. Cottrell, of Ow- promptly and" carefully attended to, ensboro, 'is 'the guest of Mrs, Lucy day4 ornlghti Both telephones. .. Beaver Dam, Ky.' 28tf '"" ut Read Fairs' new advertising plan. A Piano given- away to some one, FREE. - Messrs. S. S. Acton, Narrows, 7, and Adam Fulton, Beaver Dam, stated that his ship was in that and John C. Igleheart, Equality, route 2, were pleasant callers at storm, and that it was the most O LOOKING BACKWARD. O gave The Herald g pleasant calls The Herald office Friday. experience the sailors O Twenty Yeuis Ago. O Saturday, had over met. Mountainous waves Mr. Gilbert Bell, Pleasant Ridge, leaped over lighthouses eighty and OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO has accepted a position in Mr. John a Leave your Laundry at my Grocery. hundred feet high. Young Fore(From Tho Herald of August 12, Domestic finish. Work Guaranteed. W. Taylor's barber shop In place of man has been in the marine service 1S91.) JOhn Johnson, resigned. Mr. Called for and prompt delivery. for the past several months. New Constitution Just adopted' 'Phone 140. ller'a Grocery. Messrs. V. C. Eskrldge and Van Mr. .T, C. Fehl, who has been with by a large majority. In Ohio coun-eTrade at Fairs' and get the cash May, Hartford, route 2; Burch Bell, the Thomas Monumental Works majority for Constitution, 1124. coupon certificates. Give them to Pleasant Ridge, and F. M. Allen, hero for over a year, left yesterday "Willie, the Quadroon," played your friend who will bo in our Big Centertown, were pleasant callers for Owensboro, where ho has ac- by the young people of McHenry at Piano Contest. at The Herald office yesterday. cepted a position with Mlschel Bros. Beaver Dam Schoolhouse. Call for the return of a nice silk Mr. and Mrs. A. Grlgsby and Mrs. In the same lino of work. Mr. Fehl Mr. John Johnson, who has been Is an expert stone-cuttand capa- umbrella "borrowed" from The In the Taylor barber shop hero for Dorcas Gray left yesterday for Mt. Herald office. (Not yet returned.) several years past, has gone to Col- Carmel, 111., to visit relatives and ble of holding a Job of this kind The Peak Sisters give a highlv anywhere. attend a big soldiers' reunion. They orado for his health. will be gone about & week. Mr. M. F. Sharp, President of tho creditable entertainment at College Mr. J. W. Wells, of the Arm of Society of Equity, who Hall. American You could hardly escape tho adMasonic Savings Bank of LouisWells Brothers, marble dealers of had been spending the paBt two This aswas In Hartford a vertisement of tho big Hardlnsburg months In North Dakota and Min- ville made an assignment. Madlsonvllle, Fair, found on the second page of signment catches several parties at short whilo yesterday. nesota, was In Hartford Thursday The Herald. It tells all about a McHenry. Including Mr. Elijah Renand gave Tho Herald a pleasant Miss Cllffle Felix, city, and her mlghtey blg entertainment. der, who Is said to havo had $4,000 call. He will spend a short vacavisitor, Miss Pearl Stevens, of DunMrs. Marvin Thornsberry and tion with his family, of Narrows, deposited In that bank. dee, gave The Herald a pleasant Owensboro Presbytery meets at sister, Miss Mary Bennett, have re- this county. call last Friday evening. Hartford with Rev. A. F. Dadlsman, turned to their home at Owensboro, Misses Grace Slsco, Bardstown, Moderator, and Rev. Willis Smith, Miss Winona Stevens gave a very after being the guests of Mr. and plc-nl- c enjoyable down the river Mrs. A. M. Barnett and other rela- Ky.; Permella Burnett, Adalrville, Clerk. Ky.; Alice Eaton Burnett, Murfrees-borHorso attached to a buggy In last Thursday for her house party tives here. Tenn.; Messrs. W. C. Taylor, which were Mrs. Tavlor Stevens and a few other friends. Miss Garnett Felix, daughter of Arlington, Ky.; J. W. Jones, Mur- and two small children ran awav Mrs. John C. Thomas gave a very Dr; C. W. Felix, Olaton, who has ray, Ky., E. C. Stevens, Louis- near Centertown. Also drug Mr. delightful party In honor of Miss had typhoid fever for tho past three ville, Ky., and have been who the guests Stevens some distance. The smallEdwlna Rowe, of Owensboro, Ky., weeks, Is getting along nicely and of Miss Winona Stevens for the est child, two years old, was found last Wednesday evening. It Is hoped she will soon be fully past week, have returned home. lodged In top of buegv. All receivMrs. T. A. Fowler and children, recovered. Mr. Byron Foster, one of Hart- ed serious bruises but none badly of Beaumont, Texas, will arrive Irt Prof. I). E. Fogle, head of the de- ford's boys who Is "making good" hurt. to visit her sis partment of modern Hartford languages at with the engineering corps of tho Born To the wife of Thomas W. ter, Mrs. J. E. Davidson. Georgetown College, arrived Thurs- L. & N. railroad with recent head- Barrett, Barrett's Ferry, a son, Denn. Miss Mary Kahn, Louisville, will day to be the guest for several quarters at Hopkinsvllle, has been ver Ion. To tho wife of B. P. a gill. Film. To the wifp Kentucky, where days of his brother, Judge J. E. Fo- transferred to Eastern arrlvo In Hartford where he will do some special work of Henry Lew. of Bodn. a fine 10-l- b she will visit Miss Mary Elizabeth gle, and family. Felix. Mr. R. O. McAdams, Nashville, on a new railroad that Is being con- Democratic bov. To the wlfo of John II. Weller, of Colorado, n slrl. Misses Katio and Iris Elliott, Tcnn., Mrs. Eliza J. Phlpps, Mrs. structed by the L. & N. people. Ills Articles of Incorporation filed by and Mrs. headquarters will probably beat Greenwood city, and their visitor, Mis3 Carrie Laura E. Company. the wmTanfs-Con- r Cynthlana for some time. Hill, of Wysox, honored The Herald Blanche Phlpps Crowe, Centertown, were pleasant callers at Tho Herald with a call last Wednesday. NOTICE! Baptist . in inlidii Meets. office yesterday. Hcrmenla and Misses Emma The Ohio County Association of I .have moved mv. office to the Mfsshes Leila - Glenn. - Mildred Frey, of Louisville, arrived" In 1!1 TOVfct Trt CfctTt Rim jttjptistsr Hartford Wednesday to bo the Elgln.tN'ancy Ford and Mary E. Fe- drug store of J. H. Williams. Church, near Dan Station, between lix, Hartford, visited Miss Rebecca guests of the Misses Wccrner. Horse Branch and Owensboro, WedE. B. PENDLETON, Al. D. Shultz, Llvermore, Ky., from last nesday, August ICth. Wo hope all Mr. Rethel Duko has completed Friday until Monday. They report GIRL DROWNED WHEN tho churches will be well representanother gasoline boat and launched a delightful visit. A. B. GARDNER, Moderator. THROWN FROM BOAT ed. It in Rough river. It is n fine little Miss Efflo Carnes and Mr. S. X. craft and will make good speed. Harlan, Ky., Aug. 7. Llddle Ohio Bit or Two IVet Deep. Patterson, of McHenry, were marMr. Travis Weatherford and fam- ried at tho store of tho Ohio Coun- Harris, aged about fourteen, daughMaysvllle, Ky., Aug. 7. All navily have returned to their home at ty NDrug Company, Wednesday af ter of William Harris, was drowned igation on this end of tho Ohio river Phllpot, Ky., after a visit here, tho even the ferryboats ternoon. Rev. Chester Stevens, of In tho Cumberland river, two miles closed guests of Mrs. Amanda Phillips. below Harlan, Sunday morning. .having difficulty In getting across. Louisville, officiated. Miss Harris was out taking For Sale, Farms All sizes, from boat Crowds of men and boys amused Mrs. John T. Moore entertained ride In tho early morning when, In themselves C to 300 acres. by wading across tho We can please you her Sunday School class of little some unknown way, she was thrown river at this point, the water being If you want to buy land. Sunday folks of the Methodist over tholr knees. from the boat Into deep water and a lltt A. C. YEISER & CO., Marks School at her residence last Thurs- drowned. on gauge show less than two feet. Hartford, Ky. 3 to 3 o'clock. day afternoon from Ddn't fill your stomach with med It was a most enjoyable affair. IT. icine forty years old, Just because It Bennett, of Nar- OSOOGOOOOQGOOOCOOCOQOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOC1 Itev. Reginald Is cheap. twenty Our pride for rows, Ky., will preach at the court years has 'been a nice, fresh stock. houso In Hartford next Sunday JAMES H. WILLIAMS. morning and night, August 13. Mrs. J. W. Ford and granddaugh Special program of music will be ter, Miss Wlnnlo Slmmerman, went delivered. Everybody to Invited to Llvermore last Friday where attend. they are visiting friends and Mrs". C. M. Feiguson and children, Miss Era and son Her, arrivMr. Douglas Felix has purchased ed Tuesday of last week to be the gasoline guests of Mr. R. T. Her and Mr. J. the nearly completed launch of the Scli reefers, and will C. Her and family. They expect to finish and equip It for Rough river visit In aud around this city for in waters. about a month. Insist that your doctor leave your Mrs. S. U. Williams and children, prescriptions with you or at our little Misses Rosalie and Lois, and 25-ce- nt is store. Then you will know you aro Mrs. S. H. Oglcsby, of Centertown, safe In price and quality. paid Tho Herald a visit yesterday, JAMES H. WILLIAMS. while on their return from a visit onit. will Judge J. M. Porter and H. B. to the father of the ladles, Mr. Josh ly Taylor, Beaver Dam, and W. C. Tinsley, at Beda. Wallace, Hartford, route 3, weco Mr. C. C. Justus, of Beaver Dam, pleasant callers at The Herald office Is Instructing In the Calloway Counit Monday. ty Teachers' Institute this week at Rowe, of Owens- Murray, Ky. Mr. Justus will reMiss Edwlna -y boro, who had been visiting her move next week to his old field of aunt, Mrs. John C. Thomas, for tho work at LaCenter, Ky., as principal past two weeks, returned home yes- of tho Ballard County High School. terday. local agent Mr. II. E. MIschke, Golfing Mrs. R. Alexander and daughter, of the L. & N., returned with his Mrs. Rudd, and Mr. Joe Alexander, wife and little son Walter from Monday. They were acof Owensboro, visited Dr. Wayland Alexander and family, city, a few companied by Miss Nora Smith, of days recently. Ind., and Miss Lela Mt. Vernon, Bag MIschke, of Evansvllle, Ind., who Mrs. E. Crabtree and children says: have returned homo from Llver will make them a visit. more, where they had been visit city, who had Mrs. Ann-Ben" eight, nine, ten ! ing friends and relatives for the been the guest of her daughter, Counted out in the first past few days. Mrs. Ed Johnson, Duel, McLean round! That's the Mr. Owen, M. Leach and family, county, Ky., for two wooks, returnv ? trouble with some coed home Sunday. Miss Maralj Benof Alexander, La., are visiting Mr. power.' llarsno staying and Mrs. W. P. Leach and other nett returned home with Mr. John1 A. Why not back the stayson and will visit her sister, Mrs. relatives and friends at Beaver t.U ers the hand trained, two weoks. Johnson, for Dam and vicinity. Zyrin. from. I3 in.back CorlissSome sneak thief hroke off tho Misses' Marlam Holbrook and Coon brandl They and entered Mr. Henry Car Louise Phlpps, Hartford, went to lock never get groggy until ago, n Llvermore last Friday, whero they son's smoke houso a few nights they're too old to come his mission being a nice large ham, are visiting the. family of Mr. and back. And they do hold tho which was taken. However, Mrs. A. H. Rowan. the record for laundry seemed to believe In "living thief T. H. Balmaln will speak to tho and let live," for ho left a whole trips." farmers at Baizetown, August 10, shoulder lying near by. at 1 o'clock and at Fairview, AugllCorirss,Cobn 6Gb. Makers Concerning a former citizen of ust 11, at 1 o'clock, in the Interest Hartford, the TJalhoon Star says: of the A. S. of E' Collar-a- rid "R. L, Tweddell, who has been emand Tice ployed in J. A. Thompson's Messrs. Wra. Riley Burns havo closed out the season's for the past four years, tobacco, business here at, the. local has. accepted a position with Ellis will warehouse and returned to their & Cllno, "af Rumsey and will move home in Owensboro. his family to that place this week." Hon, A. S. Bennett, Secretary ofJ The Herald last week contained me,, aicpupncan mate executive an account of a terrific storm at sea Committee, of Louisville, has been off the New England coast, in which spending a few days lately with a mother and her babe were miracrelatives In ulously rescued. A letter from Mr. "f Messrs. S. L. Wbjfet&ke'r and son Frank' Foreman, a Hartford boy, a few days later to bis parents here,; voooocoocooooooooooooooooo OOOOOOCOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Carroll and Charlie, Hartford, '' hair-raisiny, er o, Ber-rvmato-da- ooooooooooooooo , EXTRA SPECIALS JUST once can 'Kirk's Juvenile Soap.' It a regular Soap. Splendid! You like To sell at lOcts cake. -- f a long we buy this from us while we at the price. have Buy Iw 'THE Laundry ;.y"vv. nett, m Ms M I A xood Icollcirj'l tor summer '.Combines style) fbrt, 'Willi Hand Made Corliss-Coo- nink-o'conditi- Ccllarsf (IforlM -- black-smlthBh- Here is a new a dandy, too you like the "Golfing thls-count- y. rpu, T"T'W17""rt'-.ft?y- Y y" p. .-- ' iSp r 11 i jjmimmi.m- - - i"f" if TVrTr,-W""- - ., vrTfF mppwi1 JWJjpVypMW im1".ll")Sll",-W'- ' "IP'.UrfW JWt! r PAGE SIX. h'K THE HARTFORD HERALD OOOOOOOOOOOOOO fore the election the financiers POEMS YOU'LL ENJOY. those who called themselves Demo- O . crats and those who called Jhem-selv- O got together O Tho Herald's Special Selections. Republicans es -- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1811, The Hartord Herald WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 0, 1011. M. & E. RAIIillOAD TIME II. TA-BL- E AT IIAItTFORD, KY. table effective Sunday, Dec. 4th,contalns the following schedule: No. 112 North Hound duo 7:20 n. in. Dally No. 114 Dally No. 113 Dally No. 113 Dally eveept Sunday. North Hound due 3:40 p. m. except' Sunday. South Round due 8:33 a. in. except Sunday. South Round due 1:40 p. m. except Sunday. II. E. MISCIIKE, Agt. and threw their united support to Roosevelt. And so it will be again. Wall Street will control the Demo cratic convention if it can, but if it does, it will throw tho party down at the polls. Wall Street will not trust the Democratic party, no matter who is nominated. It is folly, therefore, for tho party to allow .Wall Street to dictate the nomination. No Democrat whom Wall Street would support could get tho vote of the rank and fllo of the party. The only chance for success is to nominate a progressive Democrat and appeal to tho growing progressive sentiment of the country. OO - O "THE HEATHEN CHINEE." Which I wish to remark And iny language Is plain That for ways that are dark, And for tricks that are vain, Tho heathen Chinee is peculiar. Which tho same I would rise to plain. nated by tho Democrats Saturday is ah .exceptionally strong and deserving one, and we are glad, indeed, that' wo caif glvo our hearty suppoA to each and every man whoso name will appear on the ballot' under the rooster emblem, and urge all Democrats, and others who want good' government, to do likewise. The Democracy of Kentucky should and will lead this year In tho great National victory that seems certain next year. Up and at 'em, boys, e majorand let's roll up an ity in' Kentucky In November. old-tim- life non-ieore- 0 pletely upset the nerves if lodg continued.- Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a positive weakness and dueaso of the feminine organism. No one but a woman con tell the story of the suffering, the despair, and the despondency endured by womea who carry ana painjeeauM Ol disorders and a daily burden oi derangements of the delicate and important organs that are tortures so bravely endured comdistinctly feminine. The cure for Despair and Despondency v , IT MAKES WEAK WOHEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. heals ulceration and soothes paia7 the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and urge upon you as ''just as good." have nothing to t. and has a record of forty years of cures. It is Asc Your Neighbors. They probably know of some of its many cures. If you wont a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and how to cure them at home, send 21 one-cestamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing: illustrated cb, and he will send you a fret copy of his great thousand-pag- e Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, upto date editionrin paper covers. 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. ' In handsome io cloth-bindin- ex- It allays inflammation, It tones and builds up rt U .Bryan's Commoner. Ah Sin was his name; ' And I shall not deny In regard to the same What that name might Imply. and But his smile It was pensive childlike, As I frequent remark'd to Bill Nye. -- FATHER ILLUSTRATEES A "' SURE TEST OF INEBRIETY I m MUMMY SEED FRAUD EXPOSED An Old Game Which is Be- HIiACKSMITHING QUITE COSTLY FOR UNCIiE SAM ing Worked Again. FAKERS SElTwHEAT GRAINS Ta- Supposed to Have Been ken from Tombs of Egyptian Kings. "SEED ntOM .JONAH'S GOURD" 4 15 M If r ."ThsLjnan. with, the mummy seeds again thTs in tho land widely upon the season, preying farmer," said Mark A. guileless Carleton, in charge of grain Investigation In the Uureau of Plant Industry of the Department of AgriO ODE TO FASHION. culture. "He Kas been keeping O pretty quiet for some years, but OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO from the number of inquiries I have Ilackward, turn backward, oh had this summer and spring from who want to know about 'Time in your flight, and give us a farmers these wonderful wheat grains from maiden dressed proper and right. ancient Egypt, he Is hot on the trail We are so weary of switches and of the dollars salted down In the rats, Billy Burke clusters and hats. Wads of Jute ginger Jar on- - the kitchen shelf. peach-baskThese Inquiries come from all parts hair In a horrible pile, stacked on of the country, for the mummy seed .their heads to the height of a mile. man's Held of activity extends from Something Is wrong with the maidThey all ens, we fear. Give us the girls as Maine to California. they used to appear. Give us the want to know the same thing grains of wheat , girlies wc once knew of yore, whose 100 whether the they bought on the representation curls didn't come from a store. Maidens who dressthat they were taken from the tomb of an ancient Egyptian King of the ed with a sensible view. And Just banks of the Nlle.are tho real thing. as Dame Naturo Intended them to. the letters Give us a girl with a figure her Of course, we answer In nil probability own, and fashioned divinely by Na- and tell them that getthe wheat they bought was raised iture nlone. Feminine style's or. If It was Indeed ting fiercer each year oh, give us In Minnesota, taken from tho tomb of an ancient the girls as they used to appear. King, It was utterly worthless. "Of course the mummy seed man FOR FLETCHER'S writes a most enticing letter, quoting history, correctly, too, to the effect that the wheat of ancient THEHlT SEEMS 1 Egypt was much more prolilic than 1008-11)- 1 TO HE SOME DIFFERENCE grain, bearing perhaps the modern three or four times as many kerIn tho early days of 1908 a batnels to the stalk. Then he tells how he secretly raided tho sacred tombs, tle royal was on In the Kentucky Tho prize was a seat tore off the wrapping from the roy- Legislature. al corpse and gathered In nbout a In the United States Senate. The Beckpeck of wheat that had been em- contestants were W. O. Bradall ham and with the mummy balmed of which makes mighty fascinating ley. Judge E. C. O'Bear was one of reading to the fanner. He Invests a couple of dollars for a hundred Bradley's chief supporters. Judge grains of tho precious kernels and O'Rear was a member of the Kenlater writes to us to know why It tucky Court of Appeals, and his didn't sprout! Or If It did and dally duties called him to the ripened Into maturity, why It bears judges' chambers In the old Capitol such a close resemblance to other building, within a very fow feet of wheat growing In his field! Then the scene of battle. Bradley was tho of we have to shatter his dream candidate of the whiskey Interests wealth." "It's surprising the gullibility of of the State and the Nation. Ex- some people," said a special agent Governor Beckham was nllled with of tho i'ostofflce Department who the Prohibitionists. Bradley was has been detailed to smoke out this elected by tho whiskey votes, and mummy seed person and bring him Beckham was defeated mainly because of his prohibition views. to justice for using the malls to No man In the State rendered "Not long ago I ran down a man who had swindled a lot of Bradley more valiant services than folks, preachers .malnlv, by selling O'Rear. Standing side by side with them ordinary pumpkin seed at a tho whiskey lobby, fighting cheek dollar a piece! Claimed they were by Jowl with the Beer Trust, O'Rear seed from Jonah's gourd which he aided materially in the landing of had accidentally discovered while Bradley. Where were his prohibidelylng In the hills around ancient tion views then? And whore his shoe standard of purity? Shall we ask Nineveh. He's now making Logan tho Third House of 1908? Penitenpegs In tho Leavenworth tiary, but his customers never got County News. Now York their money back." WAXTKD FOR U. S. ARMY, Times. Ablebodled unmarried men between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of UnitWALL STREET INFLUENCE A TEMPORATtY SUPPORT ed States, of good character and temperate habits, who can spcalc, langread Wall Street's support of a Demo- uage. and write tho English For information apply to temcratic candidate Is likely to bo Recruiting Offlcer, Beaver Dam', porary. In 1904 Wall Street 30tf. help tho Demo- Kentucky. ed very anxious to party It promised all tho cratic money neesMary. and these promises value at St. c!rculafed?'atltheir-fac- q Louis, Bat.wken .ihe convention was 0TflffaHreet's. ardor coolaftr ed. Senator the lectioH IhatmjwhfTereac. tlve In securing Judge .Parker's nomination took nfl htim afterFOR FLETCHER'S wards. The rJroBilMd cotrtrjlw'tions forthcomfa; and Jnet b- Is abroad Washington. D. Horseshoes .. .. 67,000 Horseshoeing 43,000 Blacksmith tools 2S.000 Veterinary surgeons These War Department expendl-'ture- s In 1900 appealed to Chairman 'Harvey Helm and his War Depart-- 1 ment Committee as so outrageous that he forced an admission from Quartermaster General Ayle-- I shire that methods In the department are lax and loose. Gen. Ayle- shire said, however, that he had Ins stltuted a new system, which will result in much saving. He said that he would ask for a million dollars less for his bureau next year. "Since each regiment has an enlisted man to act as farrier, these cxponees are tremendous,", .said Mx. Helm, after the committee meeting. "I think the House Investigators have induced Gen. Ayleshlre to save Uncle Sam a million next year." to-d- It was August the third, And quite soft were tho skies; Which it might be lnferr'd That Ah Sin was likewise'; C. August 4. Yet he play'd it that day upon Wil- -. $80,000 Ham, And me, In a way I despise. ooooooooooooooo Which wo had a small game, And Ah Sin took a hand;t It was euchre. The same He did not understand; But ho smiled as he sat by the table, drunk." Tho bov looked long and earnWith a smile that was childllko and estly. "Yes, father, but but bland. there Is only one man In that corYet the cards they were stock'd Llpplncptt'8 Magarlne. ner." In. a way that I grieve, And my feelings wero shock'd Thirty Years' Together. At the state of Nye's sleeve. Thirty years of association Which was stuff'd full of aces and think of it. How the merit of a bowers good thing stands out in that time And the same with Intent to deor tho worthlessness of a bad one. ceive. So there's no guesswork In this evi, dence of Thos. Arfss, Concord.Mlch,, But the hands that wero play'd who- - writes: "I have used Dr. -9 By that heathen Chinee, King's New Discovery for 30 years, And the points that he mndo," and It's the best cough and cold cure Wero quite frightful to see 1 ever used." Once It finds en he put down a right Till at last trance In a home, you can't pry It bower. out. Many families have used it Which tho same Nye had dealt unto forty years. It's tho most infalli"if. .. ble .throat and lung medicine on up at Nye, earth. Unequaled for lagrlppo, asthThen ma, hay fever, croup, quinsy or And he gazed upon me; sore lungs. Price 50c, ?1.00. Trial And he rose with a sigh, bottle free. Guaranteed by James And said, "Can this be? m We are ruln'd by Chinese cheap la- H. Williams. ' On a pleasant Sunday aftemoon an old German and his youngest son were seated In tho village Inn. Tho father had partaken liberally of tho homo-brewe-d beer, and was warning his son against the evils of Intemperance. "Never drinl too much, my son. A gentleman stops when he has enough. To be drunk is a disgrace." "Yes, father but how can I tel when I have enough or am drank" The old man pointed with his finger. "Do you see thjse two men sitting In the corner? I? you should see four men there, you would be Illinois Central -- AND- AUG. 12 TO Chicago - $15 St. Louis - $12 Y.&M.V. RAILROADS - Detroit - $18 1 Tickets limited to return to Aug. 27, 1011. Annual EXCURSIONS -I- AUG. 19 TO Louisville - $12 N srlllgUdl TO THE Cincinnati - $14 Norfolk - $18 Washington $18 (AND OTHER EASTERN i l '! MI tiff EAST POINTS) '11 T Ickots limited to return Sept. 3, et bor;" And he went for that heathen nee. Chi- These fares apply from all pointa on tho Illinois Central and Yazoo ond Mississippi Valloy Railroads in Louisiana, and all points in Mississippi EXCEPT stations on tho Illinois Central, north of and including Senatobia and Holly Springs, and EXCEPT stations on tho Yazoo and Mississippi Valloy Railroad, north of and including Clayton and Crenshaw, Miss. J&rPULLMAN STANDARD AND TOURIST halr-dressl- ng In the scene that ensued I did not take a hand, But the floor It was strew'd Like the leaves on the strand With the cards that Ah Sin had been hiding, In a game he "did not understand." In his sleeves, which were long, Jacks, He had twenty-fou- r Which was coming It strong, Yet I state but the facts; And we found on his nails, which were taper, For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of CASTOR I A C&aSeZ7&&& SLEEPING CARS WILL BE RUN For further information apply to nearest I. C. or Y. & M. V. R. Agent, or to R' G. H. BOWER, General Passenger Agent, Memphis, Tenn. ! The Original Chlldron Cry What Is frequent In tapers that's C ASTORIA wax. Which Is why I remark And my language Is plain That for ways that are dark, And for tricks that are vain. Tho heathen Chinee is peculiar Which the same I am free to main I CUT-RAT- E & marks pertaining to this Cut-Rat- e DRUG STORE re- - M E! We haven't the time, nor spae, to make any introductory tain. FRANCIS BRET HARTE. Ueware of Ointments for Cnturrh Thnt Contain Mercury. As mercury will surely destroy the. sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering1 It through the mucous surface. Suchar-ticle- s should never be used except on ten fold to the good you can possibly clans, as the damage they will do Is ten fold to the good you can possibly Hall's Catarrh derlvo from them. Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co. Toledo, O., contains no mercury and la taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surface of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It Is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists. Price, 73c. per bottle. Take Hall's Family. Pills for constl- m Ipatlon. Solomon Grundy. (Revised.) Solomon Grundy, Born on Monday, Tonsils removed on Tuesday, Vaccinated on Wednesday, Appendicitis on Thursday, Operation on Friday? Died on Saturday, Autopsy on 8unday, This waB the end Of Solomon Grundy. JUDGE O'REAR'S HOME .PAPER JPRONOUNCES. AGAINST HIM , ,, x t Drug Store, but read over thev partial list, and come in to see us when you want anything in the & ' drug line. It's all &UT-RATVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV'VVVVVVVVVV . jYiisceiianeoiJs Mides . VMVWVWWWWVWVVWVWV J Rilukr Goodnepartment S2 t, d. Cnrlstedt's Liver Powder.. .19o Nyal's Little Liver Pills... l9o Chamberlain's Liver JPills..l9c M Dodd's Kidney Pills 42c (J Doan's liidney Pills 42o Dr. Kings New Life Pills..l9o Pierce's Discovery 83c i Wine of Cardni :...83c ? Pinkham's Veg. Com.s...,88c (j) Stuart'sDyspepsia Tablets 42o. 29c sjx Castoria 19c , j Cephalgine. 19o t Sloan's Liniment -- Fountain Syringe 83c 2-qt. n c r-- r $1.50 " 1.25 jf 75o Atomizer. C.....50c 50o Rubber Bath Sponge..35c O r-- c r i o Paint! Paint! S. W-P- an o a qj en . CD Brighten up and use o OJ . Covers most, wears long- a C) 1 tj j Toilet Jrtlclcs est, looks better than any paint you can buy. Now don't forget this, but when you do painting, come to see us and call for Sherwin-Wil-liam- s D- P - o B s o a. p3 JS - O Colgate's Talcum Ppwder..l5c Mellier's Talcum Powder..lQo M Golf Girl Talcum Powder..l5o M Hind's Honey and Alum Cream v..,..40o 'Colgate's Toilet TVater.w19c JEuthymol Tooth Powder.. 19c Paint. in S n o,, ST. p " H fc- i- Prescription Dept. At your comrriand at airy 1 hourday or night. rn a- v ili,'r't,Lld appreciate theNEWSwe wiH O'Rear: Send The Herald The followlng'ls taken from ,tho paper wh'lch Is printed In Mt. Sterl-- . ing, thVhome of Judge Edward O, were sot it Child jjii .Cry rx CASTORIA Ohio County Drug &6 ikJcorpOratbd. s nomialways support Democratic nees, and Its editor would not stlie-hiconscience by making a doclara--1 tlon that it did, for either pelf or power, But tfie tat iicaei nomi- -. "The Sentinel-Democr- at does aot HARTFORD, I Original &xrxflxx'& - Old .Steiracl. - Cut-Rai- e Druggists KENTUCKY. . r WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1911. field how her husband drove her beside his mules to a harrow and beat her with a club when she faltered and did not keep up with them. Tho Ohoats live on a JackII PROBLEM son county farm. Mrs. Ohoat said her husband be came enraged and decided to hitch Is her at the side of one of the mules. Question of Sho was compelled to help draw Yet Unanswered. the harrow. Her hands wore tied behind her. When she stumbled over tho broken ground and fell beLIGHT SIMILAR IN SOME WAYS hind tho strides of tho mules, her husband would strike her. She said he drove lier around the field Peculiar Properties of the four times. Then, she said, he drove to tho "Fluid" Used so Much barn and tied her to the side of the cow barn while Tie unhitched his Everywhere. mules. She was awarded the cusHAKNESSIXG A GKEAT FOKCE tody of two children, 5 and 8 years old. er "Whdt la electrtcty? Can you ooooo the question? It not, you need O SAYINGS OP MRS. SOLOMON O not feel discouraged, for nobody olso In the whole world can answer THE HARTFORD HERALD OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O PAGE SEVEN, ELECTRICITY IS REQCIESCAT IN PACE. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O place in politics, and opinion tho liquor question had no it was purely a moral and social problem. m STILL What It PX A an-Bw- oooooooooo ooooooooooooooo My daughter, heed while tho honeymoon its days are numbered, Is easily quenched In It either. ., scratched his head and stammered, then Anally explained that he did know exactly what light was, but had forgotten. Whereupon the professor told him that he, by his lapse of memory, had done science an Irreparable Injury, for nobody else In the whole world had over been able to acquire the Information that herd let slip from him. Many men who call themselves engineers like to pretend they know all about electricity, but tho real engineer only knows how It acts and what good it Is, and ho spends a llfetlme-l- n the study-- of-- Jn 1U manifestations without being able to say In the end what It really Is. In many respects light and electricity seem to bo alike. Each seems to bo duo to very rapid vibrations In the ether which permeates substances, including all known the atmosphere and space beyond the' atmosphere. The vibrations or waves of light are Intensely rapid and of very short length, whereas tho waves of are much longer and cor- respondlngly slower. Theso vlbra- tlons do not produce any motion of the Wire transmitting tho current, but nevertheless It Is reasonably certain that they exist. It Is inter- csting to note that because of these vibrations It Is supposed that a wire does not really carry tho current, but merely serves as a guide, as it were, the current being really in space around tho wire. The wire is, however, a necessary part of tho equipment. Similarly, though the current Is said to flow, it must not bo thought that any material substance actually flows. Some sort of action goes on which produces certain results, and by these results It Is possible to study electricity. Ono manifestation of electricity way be noted by any ono. If a wlro from one terminal of an ordinary door bell battory Is placed on the top of the tongue and the other wlro on tho under side, a very slight stinging or bitter taste will ne noted. In this way It Is possible to determine whether tho current Is flowing and whether tho battory Is played out or not. It Is ty this manifestation that wo know there Is something doing In tho electrical lino. A wlro carrying current does not look, any different from a wlro without current. Honco everything known about electricity Is from some manifestation of It. Fortunately, enough is known to enablcjnan to be the master of electricity, and henco this great force obeys his will for tho progress of tho raco. Without knowing exactly what It Is, It Is known that It can be produced by machinery In large enough quantities to supply every existing want for power and light nnd many look to It for a heat supply, too, as wo now look to It for heat for many special purposes. Jt Do you know what light Is not what It is like, or how It acts, or what It can be used for, but what Its very nature Is? Don't let It worry you. .Onco a high school boy was asked to give a definition of light. He my a wisdom woman's shlneth, for and Its light tears. Lo, even as a skyrpeket on a damp day, It goeth out without a fizzle when a bride beglnneth lo weep. Now, one of these cime unto me crying: "Donald, I nm cast down and neglected, for Harold no longer loveth me! Alas! v. lion I cough, he no longer thluk'h I am alto tit to die, but contenteth himself with suggesting a lozenge! "When I cry, my tears no longer drive him unto distraction, but unto tho club! "When I am offended, my wrath doeth not cause him contrition, but Indigestion! I Lo! ""HOW shall make him happy? For I am become as the paper on the wall, at which he never glanceth." Then I mocked her with my ha- has, saying: "Go to, thou, simple one! Thou weepest not because thou canst not make him happy, but because thou canst not make him miserable. "Verily, verily, what a brilliant Imagination hath a bride of sl Lo! she is astonished If months! her beloved doth not appear upon the appointed moment; but a oned wife Is astonished when ho DOTH appear thereon, "A bride is cast down if her lord ( forgetteth her for half an houn but 'a seasoned wife Is overjoyed ff ho remombereth her that long. "A bride is shocked If her beloved showeth a healthy interest In his dinner, but a seasoned wife Is shocked only when he doth NOT ty car-Ti- ed Bhow an interest therein. "A bride trembleth when her husband meeteth a woman with whom he had once flirted, but a seasoned wlfo trembleth only when he meeteth one with wfiom he hath not YET flirted. "A bride followeth her husband about with kisses and solicitude and questions, but a seasoned wife glv-et- h him a chair whereon ho may put his feet and leaveth him at that 'distance' which lendeth enchantment. "Verily, verily, my daughter, a and brido is a trying proposition, poradventuro many a husband thlnk-ct- h that a 'klssless moneymoon Is not to bo despised." Seemed to give nim n New Stomach. "I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good,"wrltes editor of tho W. H. Youngpeters, Sun, Lake VIow, Ohio. "Tho first few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets gave mo surprising relief and tho second bottle seemed to glvo me a now stomach good health." For and perfectly m salo by all dealers. Just Before tho Bnttle. "Is you looklii' foh trouble." "S'posln' I is, or s'posin' I ain't. What about It?" "Well,, if you Is, you's wastln' You kin shot yoh eyes an listen to it talkln' to you right yoh time. gen-or- al heah." mim A STORY "OF imUTALITV ALMOST, PAST BELIEF. Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 3. Mrs. Lafayette Choat Uafod her arms to show tho bruises In Court this afternoon and recited to Judge Portor- - You can't dodge the malarial germ while your liver is torpid. It makes you an easy mark for tho HEItBINE Is the host disease. protection. If puts your liver healthy condition and in sound, and bowels. purifies the stomach Price 50c. Sold by Hartford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., and Donovan & m Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. A few years ago flying 'machines were hardly ' thought of, nor was In tho Gloaming. "Henry, tell mo the old, old story." "Well, It was this way. Our team was doing fine until the seventh Inning, and then our pitcher blow up,,H- An Scott's Emulsion Now Scotts Emulsion is as much a sura- -' er as a Winter remedy. in' summer. ordinary case of diarrhoea can, as a rule, bo cured by aslngle dose of Chamberlaln'sColIc, Cholera and Diarrhoea" Remedy, This Jedy has no superior for bowel com- ,vJL' u JJICUUVB. rot? m; m . era. To Stop Rooster Criming. this plan to stop roosters from crowing in the early hours of tho lornlag-: " " ers" "A simple device to stop the bird OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO from crowing Is to nail a board' O twelve Inches above the perch In O THE Hill STOBY. This will pro- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO the chicken-housvent the rooster from raising Its No story, perhaps, has been tho head to the proper angle for crowsourco of more mental Ingenuity ing, thereby suppressing tho clarion throughout tho ages than tho leg notes." end of Adam's rib. Centuries ago. A GREAT RIVER FLOWS tho Jews wove many tales and fan UNDER STATE OF TEXAS cies out of the ancient theme. They said, for Instance, that tho great Geologists are claiming that tho Rabbi Gamaliel had once brought greatest underground river In tho tho Scriptures of his nation to tho world flows from tho Rocky MounRoman Emperor Hadrian, who, af tains underneath New Mexico and ter a study of the Sacied Books, Texas, emptying Itself in tlte Gulf rashly retorted to the Raltbl that, of Mexico. This river is thought to In tho story of GeneBls, tho Creator bo In places several miles wide, and was little better than a thief, be- It Is believed that It feeds rivers cause he had stolen one of Adam's that flow upon tho surface. Tho ribs. Gamaliel was bewildered and artesian-we- ll belt of Texas Is pointperplexed, but his fair daughter ed to as the uplifting of the water arose to the occasion. "Let mo an- from this river, often from 800 swer the Emperor!" she begged, feet below. Christian Horald. "and L will vindicate our holy Cuts and bruises may be healed writings!" So on the next day sho d of the time re Hadrian. In about presented herself before Romans!" sho quired by the usual treatment by "0 Emperor of the liniment. cried, "truly a terrible thing has applying. Chamberlain's happened, wherefore we Invoke thy It is an antiseptic and cnuses such aid!" Hadrian was greatly con- injuries to heal without maturation. cerned, and asked what It was. This liniment also relieves soreness The Hebrew maiden replied that, at of tho muscles nnd rheumatic pains. m the dead and darkling hour of mid For sale by all dealers. . night, a thief had subtly and stealCause For Suspicion. thily entered their abode, and had "Geo-g- e, I believe your love for stolen away a silver flagon, though added, that ho had me U growing cold." It was true, she "What has put such a foolish left a golden flagon in Its placo. Idea as that Into your pretty head?" "Why," cried the Roman Emper"I notice that when I have one r; or, "that was no robber, but a of my pouty spells and refuse to would that such" a one kiss you goodby In tho morning, you might rob mo, too!" don't seem to act any more as If Tho Hebrew maiden smiled a sub- the light had gone out of your life tle Oriental smile. "Ah!" she said, or oven as If ou didn't expect to looking down and blushing sweet- find mo here on your return." ly, "then why do you blame tho Stepping on a rusty nail has been Creator and accuse Him of theft, from tho causo of many cases of lockjaw. seolng that, If ho took one-ri- b Adam, he left him Eve Instead?" The nail was not so much the fault as neglect of the wound. If such Hay Fever, Asthma and Hummer wounds wore promptly cleansed and Colds BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT apMust bo relieved quickly nnd Foley's plied there would he no lockjaw, as Honey and Tar Compound will do It. the antiseptic properties of tho linE. M. Stewart, 1034 Wolfram St., iment would counteract tho poison been and tho wound would heal quickly. Chicago, writes: "I "have greatly troubled during tho hot Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bot-jtl- e. Sold by Hartford Drug Co., summer months with hay fever and find that by using Foley's Honey i Hartford, Ky., and Donovan & Co., m nnd Tar Compound I get great re- Beavor Dam, Ky. lief." Many others who suffer sim ilarly will bo glad to benefit by Mr. A TIMELY SUBJECT ONE FOR THE LOAFER Stewart's experience. Foley's Hon is effective ey and. Tar Compound Now, doesn't tho Stfelby Record' for coughs and colds In either chilor grown persons. No opiates, know Just how to toll tho truth a dren ono, at no harmful drugs. In a yellow pood, round, wholesome Rofuse substitutes. Sold that when It says the following? package. Read It: m by all druggists, "If thert Is one thing abovo an"LIQUOR OUESTION HAS other a young man should bo NO PLACE IN POLITICS" ashamed of doing. It Is loafing without aim or purpose or profit, on tho Trenton, N. J.,Aug. 4. It Is "not streots or In stores, day after day, sound statesmanship to allow po-- t all weolc. If you have nothing to lltlcal parties to -- become wrecked on do, stay at homo a part of the the rocks of prohibition," according time, at any rate. No young man to Gov. Woodrow Wilson, who was with any self respect will content besought this afternoon to aid the himself with aspiring to no higher approaching campaign of tho Anti-Salo- reputation than tha.t of a chronic League In New Jersey. Tho Innfor ami Rtnrn hor mnenntn. Noth. Governor so declared to the Roy. jlng will so blunt the higher facuB. Shannon, superintendent lties of tho mind as Inactivity; and of the league, and G. Rowland Mun- - no Inactivity Is so banoful and 'malevolent in Its effects as that r &vv, " vwune. The "Governor added that la his voluntary Idleness termed loafing." A Chicago man gives e. one-thirJ A gloom like tho darkness of Egypt has settled over our office, writes the editor of the Scott County (Indiana) Journal. Bill, tho office dog, Is dead. Bill was not a handsome dog. Indeed, he was so homely he was Interesting to look at. But Bill had a heart of pure gold. He came to tho Journal office about a year ago a disreputable looking homeless cur with a whipped look In his eyes. A few kind words spoken to him at that time made such an impression on his sensitive soul (yes, the Jour nal believes that dogs have souls) that ho at once constituted himself a memoer or our starr ana uecame a faithful defender of the office and an Inseparable companion of the editor and employes. But his friendship for Miss Anna Erwln was especially strong,, amounting in fact to jealousy; no enemy might point a finger at her and no friend might "touch the horn of her garment," without Incurring Bill's displeasure. Whenever a stranger entered tho sanctum, Bill would place himself betwen him, or her, and Anna, and tho Imagined Intruder was warned by his jealous eye to stand aloof. Of one or two who disregarded his warning bristles, BUI had an Implac-abl- o distrust and whenever ho met. them, never failed to show his unfriendly feeling. Although ho never bit or seriously hurt anyone, he became a terror to a few to whom he exhibited his ferocious bluff. For little children and nearly everyone else Dill bad a friendly wag of the tall, and If every one to ihom he has smiled with his soul ful eyes were to bring a single blos som to his grave, he would rest tonight beneath a wilderness of flow- HOW 1,000 SUCCESSFUL MEN GOT THEIR START I ha"Yo on my desk a list ot 1.000 successful men of this nation. By "successful" I do not mean mere moneymakers, but men who have given us new conceptions of steam, electricity, construction work, edu cation, art etc. Theso are tho men who influence our moral as well as physical lives. They construct for better things. How theso men started In work Is Interesting. Their first foothold In work Is a flno study. Three hundred started as farm ers' sons. Two hundred started as messen ger boys. Two hundred were newsboys. One hundred were printers' ap prentices. One hundred were apprenticed In way work. Fifty only fifty had wealthy parents to give them a start. fJu- venlle Court Record. Mnny n .SuiTorlnc Woman Drags herself painfully through her dally tasks, suffering from backache, headache, nervousness, loss of appetite and poor sleep, not knowing her Ills are due to kidney and bladder troubles. Foley Kidney Pills give quick relief from pain and misery and a prompt return to health and strength. No woman who so suf fers can afTord to overlook Foley Kidney Pills. For sale by all drug gists, m MiavHhWvryivrv'v"'vvv''"',y,,'iTi' lV?S5BJCCCCSCS?CSfCCCCCCSSCSJ Tito Kind You Havo Always Bought, nnd which has been In uso for over 30 years, has homo tho signature of and has been mado under his per- Bonal Mipcrvislon since Its infancy. ijLjyfj-!- , Y, Allow no ono to deceive you In this. bnt All Counterfeits, Imitations nnd" Experiments that trlllo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. Jnst-as-good"a- ro manufactories. Fifty began nt tho bottom of rail Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphino nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is Its guarantee. It destroys "Worms "and allays Foverishncss. It cures Dlarrhoia and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho giving healthy and natural sleep. Stomach and Bon-els- , Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. What is CASTOR I A GENUINE CASTORIA -- ALWAYS Bears the Signature of (AtY. The euc&M TMIT. NCW TOKK CITV. KM You Have Always Bought TT MUHHAr In Use For Over THCCINTMinCOMP.Nr. 30 Years. New Model' 27 Tttarlifi RIFLE ST Shoots high e- loclty smoke less cartridges, also DiacK ana low c The only mm that fills trie demand (or a trom bone ("pump") ac tion repeater m .23-2- 0 and .32-2- 0 r Avf yi. V"t v$cy pressure smokeless. Powerful enough for deer. sal e to use in settled districts, ex cellent (or target work, (or foxes. geese, woodchucks, etc. calibres. rCof - . n na the n It hat coeitructioo and ivory Bead (root conrenience. nght; cct extra oo cihei nuei cJ theie caubtei. vttit'imtbw Sptdat SmoktUi SUet barrel; the modern oUf oaod tide ejector tot rapid, accurate finoj, increawd tafety and .!. uuuiic ft.l. . L b..!L . noi unu punif utiiufif iiamicsi uicuuii.t iuiwui aAL?A4B "a.IM&''I.17.A A the line Our 130 page catalog deacribea the full 77?arut Sent for three tamp a pottage. Write font mmjLmmmm Light and Power Company (INCOIU'OKATKD) E. G. BARRASS, MGR, Will wire your liou&e at cost. Electric Lights are clean, healthy and safe. No home or business house should be without them when within reach. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Justices O KIItST W. O power of the Federal courts to annul necessary legislation passed by Preaching every Fourth Sunday Congress." Mr. Herger pointed out that old morning and evening. Sunday at nge pensions have been passed In BIhle School every tho principal nations of Europe, In 9:30 a. m. and even In ono Communion service at 10:30 a.m. the Antipodes every Wednesday American nntion. Prayer meeting evening at S o'clock Instead of Friday as heretofore. FOR FLETCHER'S IIKIIGKK IXTHOnUCKS HIS OLD-ACPKXSIOX HILL OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO CimiSTIAN CIIUKCH. 11. AVilRlit, Pastor. may hold different opinO ions," he said. "The bill furnishes O a good opportunity for testing the Children Cry E :... Washington, Aug. 4. Every person In tho United States, GO years of ago or older, who has heen a citizen sixteen years, who has an Income of less than $G a week and who has not heen convicted of a, felony, would he put on tho pension-roll of the United States If Congress passed a bill Introduced by Itopresentativo Horger, of Wisconsin, who constitutes tho Socialist party in the House. The bill would glvo pensions of from ?1 to 4 n week. Mr. Derger offered n Joint resolution providing for the appointment of a commission to Inpension quesvestigate tho old-ag- o C ASTO Rl A Subscribe for The Herald; $1 a year. A Six months, 50c. HAPPY Is one where health abounds. With Impure blood there cannot be good health. With a disordered LIVER thera cannot be good blood. HOME on tion. "The old working men and women are entitled to n living outside of tho poorhouse nnd without aid of private chnrlty," said Mr. Der-gIn discussing his hill. "If tho old parties and tho Supremo Court do not realize that fact, they will bo wiped out of existence, together with tho old Constitution." It is the belief of tho Socialist representative that his old age bill Is perfectly constitutional "But some of the Supremo Court er TutfsPills revivify thetorpld LIVER andreatorc Its natural action. A healthy LIVER means pure m blood. Pure blood means health. r'i Ti fl Health means happiness. Take no Substitute. All Druggists. roiCTRIDNEYPlllS KIDMBYSANDaiABWftl rOnHMKUUATISM VJ V A t nvfmw IAGE EIGHT. wmmmm wwwi Jump'1" "WII"' iIW(pH iKUwiW'mWI THE HARTFORD HERALD was In good condition and FATHER OF GIRL SEES c!tr offlclala decIded t0 let th0 qtorage place building stand as a NEGRO PHY PENALTY equipment. for the playground inWhen city officials started to spect the building, they found It Smjles Grimly Of His Crime missing. "WEDNESDAY, AUGpST , 1911. If I r r SfK' best of health when her friend sickoooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooooooo ened and died. A few days after her friend was burled she went to 5 bed and after lingering for several WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 0, 1011. weeks, passed away. Notwithstanding the entreaties of her family to take nourishment and medicine, she refused to do either, and It is said KE TUGKY GIRL as Electrocution Does BENNETTS. by those present that she seemed Aug. 7. Mr. Dock Faught, who glad who nshe realized that tho Its Work. has been in Owensboro for some end was near. . SPY time, visited his family hero a few r1 Eddyvllle, Ky., Aug. 5. In the HEAVER DAM days last week. ; Aug. 7. Miss Nona Dovoe, of Mr. T. J. Smith Is having a now presence of the father and uncle of 8 the little girl he criminally assault- Louisville, delivered a lecture at Of Austrian Government, barn built on his farm here. Sunday afterMrs. B. F. Bean's sister, Mrs. ed, Spay Penman, negro, paid the tho Baptist Church fit Camp, of Owensboro, who has been penalty for his crime in the electric noon in tho interest of homo misAs Alleged. chair at the Eddyvllle penitentiary sions. It washer purpose to orvisiting here, returned home three-year-ofull-groat 4:45 o'clock this morning. ganize a Ladles' Missionary Society ld As the fatal current shot through and her lecture was to ladies only. IS NOW III ARTILLERY CORPS Mrs. J. H. Likens and grandson, " him to .Tnhn TlArrv. nf TTnmlln'a fThnnM the negro's body, causing Dr. J. B. Moody, of Martin, Tenn., visited her daughter, Mrs. Frank givo a last convulsive movement be filled Rev. A. B. Gardner's appoint fore sinking limp In death, the ment Sunday. Wants Release of Private Geo. Black, Saturday. Bro. Gardner was Mr. and Mrs. Len Sparks and father of the wronged child allowed Invited to preach at the Third Bap BoPeters, Said to be family, of Pleasant Ridge, visited a smile or satisfaction to spread tist Church at Owensboro. Miss Irene Jones, who has been is Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Sparks from over his features. His brother felt hemian Count. the pulso of the dead negro as soon on an extended visit to Simmons, Friday until Sunday. Miss Myrtle Lashbrooks, of Ow- as the current had been turned off, Ky., returned home last weok. (illUj SAYS THEV AUK ENGAGED ensboro, Is visiting Paxton, of Piano, Mr. Wayne Mrs. Hawkins. and there being no signs of life, Mr. and Mrs. Sanderfur, of Cen- - nodded his head in approval and Tex., who has been visiting friends Aug. C On Ind., Indianapolis, stepped back to the father's side. and relatives In this county, has retertown, visited Mrs. Stevens an affidavit furnished by Miss Clara The crime for which Penman turned home. Anita Dyer, formerly of Phllpot, paid the death penalty was commitMrs. Fred Taylor and children, of Ky., Capt. James Watson, In charge , ted September 5, 1910. Ho attack Princeton, Ky., aro visiting her army re- HUSBAND KIDNAPS HIS of the local United States ed Nancy Jano Rankin, the mother and father, Mrs. and Mr. cruiting offlce, has asked the War daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Chapman, this week. Private Department to arrest couty. CHILDREN FROM MOTHER A. L. Rankin, of Lincoln Mr. nnd Mrs. John Alford have George Peters, said to be of the He was captured after a chase and returned from a visit to relatives at Thirty-tilt- h Coast is first One Hundred and Rpnteneed to death. An nnnpnt was Horso Branch. artillery, stationed at Tort Totten, While His Wife Was On a Shop- - made to Gov. Wlllson for clemency, Mr. A. D. Taylor and son have New York, charging him with bebut the State's Chief Executive re- gone to Mammoth Cave to exhibit ping Tour Sequel of ing a spy in the employ of the Ausfused to Interfere, saying at the their moving picture show for a trian Government. The alleged extime that there appeared no excuse short time. Divorce Case. posure of Peters, who, according to or grounds upon which to commute Born to the wife of our depot the Informant, Is Count Windlsch-Graot- z, tho sentence. agent, Mr. Joe Williams, on the first A Bohemia, was Messeiiger of The Owensboro of Prague, Penman livelier, was a docile prisoner day of August, a girl. Dr. S. D. made by Miss Dyer while trying to Saturday says: and, after the Governor's ultimatum Taylor officiated. A daring kidnaping case was had been made known to him, he obtain his release from tho artillery Notice. committed at Calhoun, McLean Lappeareil resigned to, his fate. In .scrpe through. -- 1 he local The --undersigned" absignee of the-i when his cell, a few minutes before t gostation. Miss Dyer says she and county, yesterday morning, George II. Greenup kidnaped his ing to his execution, Penman made Fordsvllle Banking Company will Peters are engaged. be In Fordsvllle, Ohio county, Kensupport of her allegations Miss own children from his wife, Mrs. tho following statement: In tucky, at the office of the Fordsvllle Dyer lias turned over to the author- Edna Greenup, while she waB down 1 I gave up hope of inter "Since garBanking Company, on Saturday, ities letters from Peters, which town shopping. cession from the Governor I have August 19, 1911, at which time and Capt. Watson says are in accord It is claimed Greenup arrived in become resigned to my fato and am in, Calhoun Thursdny night, and yes looking for tho last moment with place said assignee will sit to renth her aflldalt. Several days ago Miss Dyer ap- terday morning, while ills wife was longing. I am glad to have this op- ceive claims against said estate, and peared at the local recruiting sta- down town, ho went to her homo, portunity of talking. I have mado any creditor falling to present at tho tion nnd inquired about obtaining which was at tho home of W. J. n statement to my minister which timo named, his claims, verified In tho release of Peters from the ser Boston.and kidnaped their two chil he will give to you. I do not want the manner claims are required to vice. At tho time, according to dren, Charles, aged 4 years, and In to die with a Ho on my lips that be verified, against tho estate of deexcept that thoy need not Capt. Watson, she said he was her gram, aged 2 years. would bar mo from the homo that cedents, Securing tho two chldren, Green- I feel God is going to give me In be verified by a person other than brother and by her manner attractLast Fri- up passed down the principal street a few the claimant, shall bo deemed to ed suspicion to heiself. minutes." havo waived his right to any part day the local police were called of tho town to tho river, where he IKCOJPilPOK.A.'XUSD. to by Tho statement alluded Into tho case by the army officers boarded the motor boat Kallsta and Penman was to the effect that he of the assigned estate. Seo Russell's nnd Miss Dyer was summoned to went to Llvermore, where he caught was dying for a crime ho had noth- Statutes, Sec. 402. This July 21, 1911. headquarters. At first she refused a train for Dawson Springs. Mrs. ing to do with. 30t4 j. w. Mccarty, to answer questions In regard to Greenup knew nothing about tho Tho electrodes were adjusted by Peters, but under a rapid fire of disappearance of her children until Capt. Depp and his assistants, the Assignee of the Fordsvlllo Banking ooooooooooooooooocoooooooooooooococoooooooooooocooo Company. questions, broke down and finally the boat had been gone about an signal was given and 1,900 volts of told the story that Peters Is an Aus- hour. electricity shot through tho black's MAXWELL. trian spy sent to America to obtain, Several months ago, Mrs. Green- body. Ho straightened convulsiveAug. 4. Prayer meeting at tho If possible, the manner of manufacup Instituted proceedings in circuit ly, then sank back In his seat, dead. M. E. Church here is progressing turing dunnyte, n powerful explo- court for an absolute divorce from The current was .applied once only. regularly. sive known only to tho United Greenup, on tho pleading that he was turned off in twenty seconds. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Watson, of 1 and also plans of had led a reckless life and had It States army, this place, went to Owensboro Sat She made squandered most of her money American fortifications. With every 2.00 cash purchase A King Who Left Homo urday. an affidavit to her story. which she Inherited from her par- Set tho world to talking, but Paul the next 10 days Miss Mara Hudson, of Brlerflold, According to tho girl, sho met Pe- ents. Judge Blrkhead Issued an Mathulka, of Buffalo, N. Y says ho ters on board an ocean liner com- order permitting her to live separ always KEEPS AT HOME tho King visited Mrs. Delia Crowo Thursday. Miss Hattyo Mae Barr, of this I ing to this country last September. ate from her husband, but did not of all laxatives Dr. King's New place, is visiting Miss Lattyo friendship grew and he was grant an absolute Their divorce and did Life Pills and that they're a blessWe are loaded on Shoes alid deInlted to her Kentucky home, not give her permanent charce of ing to all his family. Cure consti- Sparks, of Hartford. Mrs. Delia Crowe, of this place, In the two children. where they became engaged. pation, headache, indigestion, dystermined to get rid of them any spent Wednesday with Mrs. Min the correspondence turned over to Greenup formerly resided old way. at pepsia. Only 25c at James H. Wil- nie Hudson, at Brierileld. Yours truly, police aro a number of letters Shelbyvllle, but is now engaged the liams, m in written to the girl in Kentucky by business at Dawson Springs, nnd It FOR SALE, SMALLHOUS. Peters in which he outlined his Is clnimed thcro Is where ho took iNconronATr.D. One hundred and four acres of land, plans for obtaining the information the children. Aug. 7. Mrs. Jim Barnett, Ow mostly cleared, In full state of cul DUNDEE, KENTUCKY. desired by his country. In another, ensboro, and Mrs. Jim Taylor, 14 which is said to have been written South Carrollton, are visiting rela- tivation, half bottom, half hill, HOPEWELL. w. acres of which is well timbered. This to Miss Dyer since sho came to InAug. 5. Our meeting closed last tives here. Is in two tracts, adjoining, undianapolis about three months ago, Thursday night with both converMr. and Mrs. Mack Ross, of Cen- - land vein of No. 11 In answer to her pleading for him sions and reclamations. tertown, were guests of Mrs. Gar- derlaid with a coal. Good dwelling, lino stock to give up his dangerous work, PeMrs. H. King and son Paul, and field Barnard and attended church barn, good young orchard, two good 1 ters said that he was in no peril, as Miss Jessie Taylor left .Friday for here, Sunday. I pond of everlasting he had a number of aides who their home In East St. Louis, after Mrs. Jake Igleheart and "daugh- wells and stock would come to his assistance If he a three-week- s ter Miss Lydla, of Matanzas, and water. Near Hartford and Beaver visit here. Dam pike. Will sell ns a whole or needed them. DAYSI Miss Blancho VanMcter, Inver- Mrs. Bettie Athorton, Calhoon, visreasonable. ("apt. Watson said that ness, Miss., spent Saturday and Sun- ited Mr. Alva Calloway and family In two tracts. Terms For"'fu,rther particulars call on or he had sent a number of messages day with Misses Lena and Katie Sunday and attended church. nddrcss, John M. Chinn or Mitchell East regarding tho case, but that he Russell. Miss Pearl Easterday, Beda, Is Clip out the advertisement of any drug 31t4 Baldwin, Beaver Dam, Ky. had received no answer. Mr. Henry Leach, of the Bald visiting Mrs. Ben Ross. atore in the city and bring it to James Misses Oma Maddox and Ethol Knob community, spent Saturday CENTEUTOWN. H. Williams' drug store. That adverWhat Is Host for Indigestion? night with Mr. Sherman Taylor. Hunter wero guests or Mrs. J. H, Aug. 7. Several from hero at tisement and 78 cents will get tho prepMr. A. Robinson, of Drumquln, Mrs. Mary Neal has moved to Wood, Ceralvo, recently. tended the Street Fair at Llvor-mor- o aration offered at 83 cents; it and 87 Ontario, lias been troubled for years Echols. Mr. J. R. Hunter nnd wife visited last Saturday. cents the 42-cewith Indigestion, and recommends Mr. Alford Fulkerson has bought Mr. S. J. Hawkins, Hartford, SunMrs. J. B. Tlchenor, wlfo of J. B. package; it and 20 cents Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver and moved to the P. R. Robertson day night. TIchenor, died nt her home near the 29-cepackage; it and 16 cents tho as "tho best medicine I property. Tablets 19-ceMr. V. B. Morton nnd wife visit- here, August 4 th. Tho remains package. The Taloum Powder ever used." If troubled wllh IndiMr. J. R. Shull had a sovero at- ed their undo, Mr. Vlg Morton and were taken on tho following day to offered for 15 cents we will sell you for 25 gestion or constipation, give them a tack of pleurisy last week, but Is family, recently, at Llvermore. Walton's Creek, where funeral serceiits and givo you a full 25-cepackage trial. They aro certain to prove better now. vices were conducted by Rev. H. P. Accused of Stealing. EKEE! : -- : : .:. .:. ..-- . beneficial. They aro easy to tnko Mrs. Will Russell and daughter, V, "R Phnmhftrlnln nf fUlnfnn' Brown. and pleasant In effect. Price, 25 Mrs. Blanche, of Echols, are vlslt-.- k Rev. R. D. Bennett filled his reg boluly accuse8 Bucklen.B Arnl. cents. Samples free nt all deal- Ing Mr. and Mrs. Alec Russell, of ular appointment here Sunday and ca Salvo of stealing tho sting ers, m Sunday night. this neighborhood. H. Ky. from burns or scalds the pain Mrs. Oma Chapman, of this place, Mr. Will Russell, of Echols, had from sores of all kinds AUODBT 2, 1911. tho dis- visited her sons, Messrs. Claudo and THIEF CARRIED AWAY A a slight stroko of paralysis a few FRAME HOUSE days ago and is being treated by a tress from bolls or piles. "It robs Walter, of near Elmwood,, last cuts, corns, bruises, sprains and indoctor in Owensboro. juries of their terror," ho says, "as week. O., Aug. Cleveland, 7. Some Mrs. Will Russell nnd daughter, a healing remedy Its equal doesn't POPE PIUS X. CELEBRATES y one stole nnd carried awny a Miss Blanche, of Echols, visited Mr. Only 25c at James H. 'WilEIGHTH ANNIVERSARY frame houso belonging to the nnd Mrs. D. A. Russell,-- , of this exist." liams, m city. Tho building stood on tho place, recently. y Is the Rome, Aug. 4. street playWest Thirty-eight- h GRIEVES TO DEATH OVER The kind that makes you look good In the eyes of the wholeeighth anniversary of the nomina grounds. EASTVIEW. THE LOSS OF A FRIEND tion of Pope Plus X. to tho pontifi sale dealer and flie city merchant: that makes your neighbors Aug. 7. Mrs. Frances Ezoll, of The discovery was made yestercate. Many felicitations from Ita proud of you, increases respect and sets you right In the minds day by Assistant Park Superintend- Sebree, visited Mrs. George AmGlasgow, Ky., Aug. 5. After ly and abroad wero rocolvod at the of all people; this kind Is ' ent Starkey that tho thief or thlovcs brose recently. grieving for weeks over the death Notwithstanding his reMr. and Mrs. W. T. French spent of a dear friend and refusing io Vatican. had left tho hole In the ground cent Indisposition tho pontiff celeDONE-.- L above which tho dwelling stood. a few days last week with Mr. and take either food or medicine, saying brated mass in his pricate chapel In And promply delivered bythe HARTFORD HERALD. EveryThe leundations, too, were not Mrs. Frank Collins, of Llvla. she wanted to die, Miss Annie Da- the presence of a few inmates, In- Mr. B. J. French spent Thursday vis, a prominent young woman; of The police are trying to molested'. body m any kind of business needs Printed Stationery Note eluding his sisters. lerH-,'Wh- o at Fordsvllle. took the .building. this county and daughter of the Heads, Cirds. Envelopes, statementsEtc. wwadays, Prices Mr. Less Taylor Is erecting a Rev. W N. Davis, died Wednesday The Texas Senate adopted a resSeveral, weeks ago the city x the lowest; work the best. Call Brrwrlfcs. evening at Freedom, the home ,of olution ordering an Investigation bougttt several lots and a frame dwelling house. Born July the 31st, to the wife her parents. Miss Davis, who was 19 into the recent State-wid- e prohibidwelling on West' Thirty-eight- h "She HERALD. Ky. years of age, was seemingly In the tion election there. street, sear Fulton road. Tho of Mr. Lon Taylor, a boy. Ine Jtiartjom neraiaith(l M s Young Men's m IU181P0N CLOTHING wn r SjPfiHERE is not a break in our line $u I any one from a up to a man. When a boy steps out of knee trousers, he steps right into our Young Mens Clothing, Style the main thing that young men think of. We think further and make their clothes We s2 of clothing.boy 1 ld As Good as the Men's. thought, too. And our we pick out patterns for our young Men's Clothes that don't go into our brighter, more dashing. But style men's X. And we cut our Young Men's Clothes younger lines and curves. Suits start at $5 and $ 8. Swell ments for Fall. Come young man, and take a look at the new things. different 'i CARSON & CO., Clothing arvd Furnishings Hartford, Kentucky. WE "WIIL GIVE ZFRFFT llbkl MISSES' OR LADIES' OXFORDS PAIR i 1 DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO., 5 A HOT SHOT PROPOSITION )t FOR THIRTY BSlitJ&riF -- ht i i 1 r TWO-STOR- Y two-stor- To-da- JOB PRINTING. JSTEATIiY eEi JAMES WILLIAMS, Hartford. H.rtfod, V t- ,V i. - - rX