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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 23, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 23, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911082301_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 23, 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. THE HARTFORD HERALD. Sttbsoriptioh $1 Per Yeart in Advance. "37th YEAR. A SPECIAL "1 Coat, the Herald of a Kniij World, tie 1: Sen of ill !fatio Lumbering at Hj Bad." All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed, HABTFOBD, KY., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1911. NO. 34 yes- I GREEN terday, Miss Dyer secured a room and refused to be seen by newspaCOURT per men, politely sending them an m Was at Play With Younger 4, When Air. Ale- - answer to their cards that she was TWO NEW STARS ADDED not disposed to bo Interviewed upBrother When the Tragic Creary Will Atake His TO THE NATION'S FLAG on the subject, which has, no doubt, Opened Monday in Extracaused her an unlimited amount of End Came. Initial Speech. Aug. Washington, 19. Stateembarrassment by tho publicity it ordinary Session hood for Arizona and New Mexico has given her. The Louisville Herald of Sunday The first shot In the campaign to now only awaits the perfunctory apIt is known that Miss Dyer was elect James B. McCreary, Demo- watched upon every hand by newsTRY ALLEGED MOB LEADERS proval of President Taft. Tho Flood-Smit- h says: TO "Hero I go, brother, wajch me' cratic nominee for Governor, to the paper men in Indianapolis, and durresolution admitting these territories Into tho Union with tho was tho playful shout of fourteen-year-o- ld highest offlce In the State will be ing the past few days has been re Byron Ford to his fired by Mr.- McCreary at Bowling fusing them audience. Eighteen Men Now Under Ind- Judiciary recall feature of thoArI- Izona Constitution eliminated to brother as he clung to the Green, September 4. ictment-Speedy Trial meet tho objection At the headquarters of tho comwhich caused highest perch In his father's barn, Deaths in Hicckcui-irigc- . mittee R. H. Vansant, chairman, President Taft to veto the original four miles out on the Preston-stree- t Cloverport, Ky., Aug. 18. Mrs. Will be Had. Statehood bill was passed by tho road, tied a rope around his neck announced the appointment of an Mary Dellaven, a prominent resiHouse without tho formality and looped It over a rafter. The Executive Committee, composed of dent of this county, died this mornHaving been pass- smaller brother clapped his hands men prominent In Democratic cir- ing of heart trouble after an illness NEGRO MOBBED LAST APRIL of a roll-cal- l. ed by the Senate In tho Identical In glee at tho supposed mimic hang- cles throughout Kentucky, who will of several months. She Is surviv with the regular Com- ed by four children Mamie, Carl The McLean Circuit Court was language, the resolution will go to ing. An Instant later the lad's clutch mittee In an advisory capacity In and File Dellaven, of Cloverport, convened In an extraordinary Se- the White House as soon as the Vice and Speaker formally upon the support slipped, he grasp- outlining plans for the campaign. and Mr. Fred DeHaven, of Danville. ssion at Calhoun Monday morning at President ed wildly to check his fall and This committee is made up as fol o Charles Farmer, a 9 o'clock by Circuit Judge Thomas attach their signatures to the meas purpose ot ure. No attempt was made In tho swung to Instant death at the end lows: farmer, died yesterday of the InP. Blrkhead, for the rope. R. H. Vansant, J. A. Sullivan, firmities of age. He leaves ono hearing the trials of the alleged House to pass over the President's of a twelve-foCrying out In terror, the younger John C. C. Mayo, A. W. Young, J. daughter, Annie, and a stepdaughshot and killed veto the original bill which conmob members, who Llver-imor- e, tained tho Judicial recall provision. brother went to the house, whero ho N.lCamden, Jr., P. H. Callahan, Dr. ter, Miss Letitia Chapln. William Potter, a negro, at J-frantically told the mother of the A.fGatllff, W. C. Montgomery. April last. The purearly In CENTRAL GROVE. exOLATON. accident. Together the two ran The personnel of the regular ' pose of the court In holding the Aug. 21. Rev. H. P. Brown fill back to the barn to find the body Campaign Committee follows: Aug. 21. Mr. Leslie Combs and session Is to give the traordinary wife, of Dukehurst, attended the R. H, Vansant, chairman. alleged members- Ofttnr mob a ed, his. legular ..appointment hero winging far above their heads. ed Not until the father was reached. Association nt Cane J. A. Sullivan, "vice chairman. speedy trial, and the Common- Saturday and Sunday. Mr. W. I. Igleheart and Mr. and and came to aid, was tho body liftnesday and Thursday and were also J. N. Camden, Jr., treasurer. wealth will Insist upon entering Mrs. T. G. Hunter, of this place, at- ed down after the fatal plunge. The the guests of Mr. T. W. Daniel's 7T. 0. Phillips, secretary. Into trial Jn as .many of the cases a3 tended the Onto County Baptist fboy's neck v. si broken.- - week. ;IMrst-Dist- rict Doany P.- - Smith. family, of tills place, Wednesday possible during tlio present - 7."-night. Tho accident occurred only a Second District C. E. Sugg. Three alleged leaders, Lawrence Association at Cano Run last week. Littlo Miss Susie Belle Carson has short distance from the house. ByMis. J. A. Daniel and three chilMitchell, a brother of tho young Third District J. R. Mallqry. Owens-bor- o y. dren, of Hartford, who had been ron and his younger brother had Fourth District W. C. man shot and Injured by tho negro returned to her homo at Cllf-foa visit to her aunt, Mrs. been playing In the barn nearly all after tho guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. , Totter, who was mobbed, and Flfth District John B. Castlc- - Daniel and other relatives at this and Jesse Schrceter, are charg- J. W. Rono, of this placo, and tho afternoon. Mrs. Ford was about place, for tho past few days, went returned grnndmother, Mrs. Elvira Miller, of to call tho two children to supper irffin. ed In tho Indictments "Sixth District when tho smaller brother camo to Owensboro last Saturday mornS. D. Rouse. against them with murder, while Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. Alney Tichenor, of rushing In almost unable to talk. Seventh District J. N. Camden, ing, where they will be tho guests the other alleged members of the Thornsberry, W. N. Da- this place, visited Mr. and Mrs. L. He finally communicated tho cause Jr, of her brother, Mr. Crowo Acton, mob, Ellis and other relatives. of his fright to his mother and she, Eighth District J. A. Sullivan. vis, Cecil Jake, Ira Coghlll, John P. Loney, of Owensboro, recently. n, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Rowe, of unable to believe tho story rushed Mr. Charles Bruner, wlfo and INInth District T. D. Slattery. Flelden, John W. Taylor, Sam their son, Mr. to tho barn hnlf expecting to find William H. Coghlll, Tom Dab-Tie- r, Equality, visited Tenth District John C. C. Mayo. daughter and Mis3 Maria Dugan, prank. P. Messrs. R. L. Arms and Hiram George Gephart, Robert Hayes, Noah Rowe, hero Saturday night the tale an District Virgil Eleventh Monroe, Olaton, attended tho GrayMrs. Ford was prostrated when Smith. Wright, Edward Hanoy, and Sunday. Leslie Miss Mary Hazelrlgg, of Beaver tho realization of the tragedy broko In tho course of tho next woek or son County Fair a few days last Roberts and Ellis Burton, Clarenco are Indicted under a blanket Indict- Dam, who is teaching school at upon her. Mr. Ford is on agent of so the work of tho headquarters last week. It's very dry and hot in this secment, charging them with aiding Elmwood, was the guest of Miss the Bowling Green Nursery and was force In Louisville will bo fully unthe three nlleged leaders and with Violet Loney, near here, one night at work some distance from the der way. Campaign literature will tion of country. Crops are perishlast week. house when the accident occurred. 1)9- - mailed broadcast. A special ing for rnln. being accessories bofore tho (act. School at this placo Is , being County Patrolman Hovekamp and campaign book will be ready for which will Messrs. C. B. Lyons, of tills The Commonwealth, of near bo represented by Commonwealth's taught again by Mr. J. C. Jackson, Constable Frank Fisher were call- distribution by September 1. Tho place, and Lon Whitely, ed and aided In moving the boy's preparation of the book is now Ycaman, attended tho base ball Attornoy Ben D. RIngo and County of Centertown. Misses Ruth Tichenor and Myrtlo body to the house. engaging the attention of tho com- game nt Hartford last Saturday. Attorney It. W. Alexander, will seek Besides his father and mother ho mittee, the members of which preMiss Garnet Felix and Mr. W. B. case presented to Park, of this place, aro visiting to have their best tho court first. Thero Is no doubt, Misses Gail Tichenor and Cora Ib survived by two sisters and his dict that the coming campaign will McDanlel, who have had typhoid brother. be the most memorable In the his- fever, aro able to be out again. howover, but that It will be an ut- Welsh, of Pleasant Ridge. Mr. Nobert Ross, of Pond Run, Mr. J. A. Daniel, of Hartford, tory of tho State. ter Impossibility for tho court to try was tho guest of Mr. C. B. Lyons all tho cases, as a special torm of attended church at this place Sun- A KENTUCKY CASHIER ARRESTED IN MICHIGAN POPULAR YOUNG TEACHER last Saturday night and went to tho Daviess Circuit Court Is to bo day. He dined with Mr. M. F. by Judge Blrkhead next Faught and also visited his aunt, DIES OF TYPHOID FEVER Owensboro Sunday morning. convened Mich., Aug. 19. John Dotrolt Rev. Birch Shields, of Beaver Each trial will Mrs. O. H. Ashby, Sunday night. Monday morning. Mr. J. E. Goff, Misses Madlo and C. Byland, formerly tho cashier of doubt, require a couple of days Jenkins, ono of tho Dam, will fill his regular appointMiss Lula no to be heard, as there will bo from Georgia Goff, of this placo, attend- tho RIchwood Dopostt Bank, In best known teachors of tho Green ment nt Olaton Baptist Church next also Friday1 twenty-fiv- o to fifty witnesses to bo ed the fair at Leitchfleld last wook. Boone county, Ky., for whom tho rivor section, died of a complication Thursday night and Mr. J. T. Hocker and family vis- nuthoritcis in nil parts of tho coun- of malarial and typhoid fever, at evening. heard In each of tho cases. since the There will ho nn electric moving In the case of Clifton Shroetor, ited at Mr. J. A. Caldwell's, of try have been searching year ago, tho home of her parents, Mr. and bank closed its doors a Friday one of tho defendants, the Common- Goshen, Sunday. Mrs. J. M. Jenkins, of Pellville. at picture show at Olaton "Our days nro gliding swiftly was arrested in Detroit last night 2:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon. night. wealth's Attornoy will move to have tho Indictment filed away, as Shroo-te- r, by." Since our last letter wo have by Sheriff B. II. Hume, of Boono Sho had been ill for seven weeks, PREXTIS. bond again been made to realize that county, and Doctlves Stelnhel nnd and death came not unexpected. since having executed Aug. 21. Mrs. Cela Brown, of twenty-tw- o McLean coun- life is uncertnin and death Is sure. Golden. Tho deceased was and released from the Byland Is charged with embez- years and four months of age, and near Equality, Is visiting relatives ty Jail, has been entangled In tho Mrs. Sallle Tichenor, wife of Mrj nets of tho federal laws, and Is now J. B. Tichenor, died at her homo zling $18,000 of tho bank's funds had been a teacher in the Pellvlllo near here. by means of forged Casebler, Carl W. A. checks and school for soveral years. Sho was Messrs. confined In tho Daviess county jail, hero August 4. Coleman, Win. Sherman Mrs. Charles Sturgoon, formerly other methods. His son, Raymond, a devoted member of tho Pellvlllo Taylor, counterfeiting. charged with i of this county,. died at her homo in who, it is alleged, was his accom- Baptist church, nnd is survived by French, John and A. Patterson, Ira Evansvillo last Saturday. Tho re- plice, was arrested somo tlmo ago lior parents, two brothers and a Plummcr, and Miss Lillian PatterMEN KILLED BY SONS son attended tho Association nt FOLLOWING A QUARREL mains will bo taken to Beech Grove, in San Francisco, nnd is serving a Bister. torm In tho Stato prison at Cano Run last woek. McLean county, whero the inter- five-yeBarbery Frankfort, Ky. Byland was cash- A "TOSS-UP- " Misses Williamsburg, Ky., Aug. 18. Laura and ment will take placo DECIDES A visited her cousin, ier of tho bank and his son asslt-aNews has reached hero of tho kill- Mrs. Sturgeon LAWSUIT Shultz 'returned last week from a Both men, Sheriff cashier. visit with relatives In Owensboro. ing of Hannibal Ross and Marlon Mrs. M. F. Faught qt this placo, Rracken returned Miss Victoria Strunk In the western part of tho, in July. While hero she was taken Humo says, had tho full confidence Ky., Aug. 17. Barbourvllle, 'county. Ross and Strunk, who 111 and roturnod home, but gradu- of tho directors of tho bank and tho Harvo Hatton and William Napier, to Clifton, 111., last Saturday, after wore old men, became Involved In ally grew worse until tho end community in which they lived. For two citizens of this county, disa- a few weeks visit with relatives a quarrel, when thos sons of each camo. Littlo did we think that her several terras tho older Byland was greed over tho ownership of a yoke near here. a representative In tho Stato LegisMessrs. Wesley Stevens and M. camo up. Strunk's son shqt Ross life was so near Its close. of oxen, nnd two trials resulting In lature. The Sheriff will take By- hung Juries, they decided to toss up Miller lcturned rccontly from Lexand Ross' son shot tho elder HOPEWELL. y land back to RIchwood for Strunk. Young Strunk shot and "wet or dry" to roach an agree- ington, whero they attended tho Aug. 21. Mr. Joe Brown has trial. seriously wounded Ross, who Is In ment, the cost of tho two suits hav- fair. Tho sold his crop to Mr. Fox Brown and Mr. nnd Mrs. R. II. Stovens and tho hospital at Somerset. ing already amounted to more than Mr. nnd Mrs. J. D. Hocker, of Beayounger Strunk escaped with only Is tn)klng of selling his farm and .MORGAN MEN FINISH REUNION AND DEPART tlio oxen wore worth. a. flesh wound and has not been moving to Texas. A small board was procured and ver Dam, visitod Mr. Albort PatterMiss MItt'le Miles, who was nick son last Sunday. napturod. Ky Aug. 18. Parks a considerable quantity of tobacco Carlisle, last week, is Improving. Tho Infant child of Mr. and Juice' placed on ono side thereof. 1IEFUSED PERMISSION TO Miss Polly Coloman is visiting Hill, this county, which for severnl Mrs. Grovcr Burgess died and was .MARRY KENTUCKY GIRL rolatives and friends in Rochester. days has been tho sceno of n happy Tho board wns thrown Into the nlr, burled at the Slaty Creok burying was cleared Messrs. John Coleman and Al- reunion of Morgan's men, Is de- and when tlio dust away Hatton wns found to be the ground last Tuesday. Portland, Ore., Aug. 18. A Do- -. bert Taylor spent last Sunday with serted All of tho old solcember and May romance, spring- Mr. and Mrs. Emorson Bennett, diers have gono to their homes. owner of the oxon. Botli parties Centennial Celebration. away satisfied. ing from a matrimonial want Tho Ohio County Baptist Assoacross tho river from Ceralvo. Gen. W. B. Duko, Col. E. Polk John wont was ended here when ciation met at Cnno Run Church Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Shull, Mr. ston, Col. G. R. Keller and others MISS DYER DECLINES tho municipal department of public and Mrs. Albln Shull and Miss loft yesterday. on Wednesday, tho IGth, and a TO SEE REPORTERS large delegation was prosent. safety for girls Hufused to permit Lovel went to Tayiortown last The meeting closed to meet again William G. Delanoy, a middle-age- d Sunday to preaching. October 18 In Lexington churches wore represented for tho Mcssonger of by lotter nnd messengers. The Owensboro blacksmith, to. marry Vera Clark, a of tho Morgan monu Miss 'Margaret Taylor spent last dedication It was girl, of Paducah, Saturday night with Misses Marian ment. It was decided to hold the Sunday says: pretty the centennial of tho old church. Miss Clara A. Dyer, tho former Joseph Taylor helpod to organlzo Ky., who came to Portland on and Margaret Williamson at Wy-so- x. tenth annual reunion at Parka Hill school teacher of tho Phllpot vicin tho church ono hundred years ago solicitation a month ago. next August. ity who cau3od an International and two of his s, The girl saw Delaney's advertiseMr. Porter Hunloy sold to Mr. Ind, Rovs. A. B. Gardner and J. E. Tny-lo- r, Succumbs to Pellagra. sensation at Indlanapolisfi ment In a Kentucky paper "and she Chester Rowe, of Centertown, a Mlddlesboro, Ky., Aug. 19. J. T. several days ago by preferring answered It. Do'laney wooing her young horse for $175, last woek. took part in tho celebration. McLane, fifty years old, died bore charges against Private George Tho history of the church will np- by mall, she accepted him, coming Kentucky was the third Stato In of what physicians craim was Petr, chargjng that he was an Aus pear In tho minutes of the associato Oregon on the ?57 which ho sent tlio list for Internal revenue collec- a casd of pellagra. Mc- - trian. Bpy, arrived in Owonsboro yes- tion. her. f H. D. BURCH. The authorities affirm that Dela- - tions during the fiscal year onded- Lano had been sufforing for over a terday on the noon "Texas" train, The Government of Australia Is ney lr li no position to support a June 30, 1911. Kontucky contrib year with tho disease. There are and registered at tho Rudd house. three other light" cases of pellagra Later In tho day sho went to tho now offering handsome prizes for wife.' Delaney demands that the ( uted $33,295,173.98 ts tho Dr. the best designs to be usod In makSlrl)repa.yj,the J57, She being with- - i of the Government. , This was. only In Mlddlesboro, but physicians say home of her" brother-in-laHarris, at Phllpot, whero sho will ing a new series of postage stamps. has secured a position;" exceeded by. New York and Illinois. they havcithera under control.' outfuafls, 1 DFlLi Intending to cam money with which to "repay him. Her only living rela- MIMIC HANGING BRINGS tive is a grandmother In Paducah. DEATH TO LlfTLE More than one hundred Oregon men have sent written proposals to the girl. TO BOY OPEN CAMPAIGN AT BOWLING spend several weeks as the guests of her sister. Upon arriving at the hotel BRDE DESERTED IN f CINCINNATI Dies of Grief Her Kentucky Home. ISJELD Charge IN INDIANA at HUSBAND nine-year-o- ld - On Bigamy A Young Life Snuffed Out by Aw- ful Experience. DELIRIOUS FROM FATAL HOUR to-d- ay well-to-d- ot - nitn-lasfW- - -- Mont-K&nor- rd Col-bur- ar nt LONG-FOUGH- T to-da- Lexington, Ky., Aug. 18. In the fover of a delirium that had been upon her since the day of her desertion in a Cincinnati hotel as tho bride of Peter Paul Apkins, now under arrest at Richmond, Ind., on a charge of bigamy, Elizabeth Young Apkins died this afternoon at the homo of her foster-mothe- r. Mrs. J. M. Baxtor, near this city. Miss Young and Apkins were married in Lexington on Friday, May "2J. "by Revr It ot the Central Christian Church, after a brief courtship. The following morning they took a train for Cin cinnati, where they registered at a"" - l - 4.T.-m- J.nn1 J '. At midnight people In the hotel by screams were aroused Issuing from the room occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Apkins, where the bride was threatening to throw herself from a window. Tlio bridegroom had deserted hor. She was transferred In a patrol wagon to a sanitarium. Sunday morning Apkins called Mrs. Baxter on the telephone nnd told her to come to Cincinnati, saying that his bride was very ill. Mrs. Baxter and Mrs. Irene B. Strode, a cousin of Mrs. Apkins. Apkins hurried to Cincinnati. had disappeared, likewise a considerable sum of money and some Jewelry belonging to tho bride, tho girl's relatives chnrge. Mrs. Apkins wns returned to her home hero tho following day, and from that time until the hour of her death sho had few lucid moments. She wns constantly In fear, believing that Apkins was near and was attempting to take her life. Apkins was arrested at Richmond, Ind., July 20, on a charge of forgery. It developed from papers In ills possession that he had previously married nnd deserted Mrs. Bertha Coler at Paris, III. Tho Fayette grand Jury last month returned nn indictment charging Apkins with bigamy, and Detective Henry Bnkor, of the Lexy ington force, is nt Indianapolis with requisition papers for his return to Kentucky. Apkins Denies Clmrgt".. Lexington. Ky., Aug. 10. The requisition issued by the Gowrnor of Kentucky on the Governor of Indiana for the return of Peter Paul Apkins to this city was honored yesterday, and Apkins was brought back to Lexington last night by Henry Detcctlvo J. Baker, who went to Richmond, Ind., for tlio prisoner. Apkins is under indictment hero for bigamy. The Indictment chnrges that he married Miss Elizabeth Young, of this city, nnd the next day deserted her in a Cincinnati hotel. A few days prior to this marrlngo to Miss Young he married Mrs. Bertha Kohlor, of Richmond, it Is alleged. Ho made no fight against extra dition In tho court nt Richmond. Miss Young died Wednesday, never having recoverod from the shock caused by tho alleged Illegal mar:to-da- to-da- y. Thir-ty-thr- eo rob or drug Miss Young in n Cincinnati hotel, and I did not marry Miss Kohlor In Par-I- s, III., two weeks before I married Miss Young In Lexington lost May," said Apkins to-da- riage. "I did not Dc-lane- y's great-grandson- -- to-d- New Tlmo Tho following is effective' from North Bound No. 112 due at No. 114 duo at South Bound No. 115 duo at No. 113 duo at X. Table L. L. & N. Time Card Monday, Aug. 21st: Hartford 7:19 a. m. Hartford 3:40 p. m. Hartford S:45 a. m. Hartford 1.4G p. m. well-dqlln- " - up-ke- ep strange disease, but proA by some, Is causnounced lock-jaing the death of a number of horses In Daviess county, especially In the Panthor neighborhood. w I Ei ?. v?. -- .fitifeu KaasfiSKtS let t&mU'famiiki IjlJLs ;jti&Alto'' iiiis .MMJUlMJJi'M mnt.j'.u TACK TKO. THE HARITORD HERALD itZarz fc WEDXESDAY, At'CUOT 111. dstr to kself fa tfcfc t- - tie local- sg Strtflg Dfa&cralk Platfona is Adapted. The foifovfa? adopted --- by - Between the "Advance regalaied Is the tase tsaaser zad lait veek: Stctlos 17. We faTor tie ea- JAMES M. 0BRIEX. peaakies for lactases! of seb vise schjeet to ti a as vfll and the Actual" frxtUu I. We, tie riolatJo&s. aj lo eae of rejalar r . Xerrr His Luck. fcto eZeet all secUoss aad nro- m bi Kentaeir, In dc4?at eoareatioa eleetiosj. Aaal" Aad ie lacsied Cendlia-rifles of tie State Coastitatloa. Thirty Years Togetttcr. . We faTor tie eaaet zsA vt declare that ve are fa fa- - MJ" duly aiaeraMed aad keld fa tie k read " tie aoraiag P- - iM JUDBE DREAR'S "DPEHER" Settioa Thirty years of association ti'r of Ismtrrtttt. Keatseir, oa aseat of as exafletc aad effective jTer Cf t eaforeeaeat of all Java. 'P- - Tie burglar shot at tie man. think of It. How the merit of a August li, 1J11, do hereby please corrupt praetiee act. viiei stall vas tared by tie ballet life Settles 15 We faTor Use esaetthing stands out atr our fait f atd drtIos to t&ztzraiSLt at eaiapaJes atat of 1i la for tie protee- - riklns ajabut a bnttoa of his At Eizatetlitowii Says 70,- - good the vorthlessnees in that time of a bad one. or asd etrna! prta" shall be I;rfels:at. aad rikh iU.ttea froa aecldeat aad fnjarr of all jeloties!" tt So there's no guesswork in this evi Kentucky Yoters prosee!- -' proiide for tie eoaeUorr psMlea--1 jaiorers esgaged la hazardous esc- fjt ftmr anj &r rf 000 "Well." snapped his wife, iriat dence of Tbos. Arlss, Concord.Mlch., is the VttUtxtUm rji Isde- - ttea la detail, asder iearr peaaJ- - p7eats. aad we faror a vise. of that! Are Purchasable. who wrlt.es: "I have used Dr. erf the easpalsa ei5aies of eoaserrailTe lav resalatlag esdeao asd staee reaSrzsed fa ,tles, tie ar-- "What of tiat?" ie said, as he King's New Discovery for 30 years, S3reslre ptatfnas of tie jartr er?7 candidate for pabHe eSce. jUtratloa of labor strikes aad dls- - Mt al collar sola? np stadllr to -cold getfa 7 We faror ti esact-- : friiseUtlT rtAlZna ttmz tiki tie aape of bis Beck. "O. nothing EXl'LAXATIOX" WAS 03IITTKD and it's the best cough andfinds cure at enOnce It I ever used." fa asd derothm U the aatferaal of iseh additleoal lavs as vH tioa 1$ We faror a lav pro-- except that tie button oust hare trance in a home, you can't pry it Aug. 17. jAxtl&nB adopted at stake Elizabethtown, iMcormle K., oa!" ettre eestsc iitool Mbiticr peoaae aad fexaale slare sere esefeat aad aore tra2e, rezardless of color. The opening speech sent out In ad- out. Many families have used it Ufartr Colorado, la the 7ar ISts. I' vance to the newspapers by Judge forty years. It's the most infallifefkw 2. We fIoSft tie Ke-- pracsleal. we are oiraosea in i zeciiron KISMET. O E. C. O'Rear, and the one he ac- ble throat and lung medicine on rtr ad the pretes Re-- We pledze m? imppon to nobs and lraehlnn and are In n jas I'reiMeat. for their Sa- i7teai ad the edaeatfaal ixror oi eTereat peaaKr poasi- - OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO tually made here in launching his earth. Unequaled for lagTlppe. asth quinsy or ma, hay fever, croup, campaign for Governor on the ;?ra aad vtntal besraral or tie tsutttfcos of the State, vueir aad ;w cader oar Coart It alios, oa all Tn5rtT-2lr- e or forty years ago it "-ied Is these hy the Aar- - eeooaieall7 adllsterd. Moaer oseers vko fall to protect prison- -' ticket, differ materially, sore lungs. Price COc, $1.00. Trial the flaest avlamlag "hole in the as shown by a comparison of the bottle free. Guaranteed by James p9le zd eall aUeaUa e- - iaproUted for the edtreatloa of !eri jBtrested to their keeping. cntrr-- Jct vhere the creek advance speech and the stenograph- H. Williams. p x..j to the m that they hare the people Is ?s farestaot aad act! Section 21 The Deaocratie par- root of n M ic report. sehool trsstees, teaool 'ty naa alvays been a party of rellg- - took ,narP tnra ,i.:r dfa;ra;ded theV jele- - aa pr'Mto' ' to the ereet that boards aad all ichool oScfals ej M cjyji liberty, la Ken- - Tcaaiore preheated the vater from In his speech prepared in ad- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ti.vcM rertoe dovavard iboeld he held rigidly reiponslMe jtaky and tie republic It refers CBtlinK- ,nto the bank, and the ie vance, copies' of which were sent to OSOME RULES FOR MARREEDO HAPPINESS. O aaj UriC syiteM asd voold j for adeTate retsras oa eTery del-- ; m, prtje to 1U aoble and consist- - a,t,nR T,rl excaTated a deep hole, the newspapers two days before de O Anions avimming place. A livery. Judge O'Rear offered the OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO r the amai of the r rfe of lar so larwted. We charge tie'fcaf retord on this Imoortant ones- - II ira ,e tary hsrdeM of Jsit aad .RepsMfcaa party vfch neglect of jtlon, so "dear to erery true Ameri - snarIe1 root of tne oId tree ittcd following explanation of the moves For tho Wife. the vater. aad from It which resulted in the election of lasd ladiSernice tovard oa iboo!;,n - - " usatkw. In full aroiH. ont or . -i Don't quote father. Pet your Os 'be umtxTj the Keptthlkasi sritea. both in letter and in spirit, vlth the yon look maD3r a d,re- - M! bnt W. O. Bradlei as United States h,ke Senator: II un Ja e dar h husband; he Is only a big kid. Reeogalzlsg that a large raajorl-t- i' teachings of Thomas Jefferson, the the odloas of proAOtt&ced Vr.tr of the teacbers of oar cornmon foander of our party, on this ques- - off to the CTek w,th a bunch Dress as carefully as when he f lav of some weeks of futile bal "After Jf'- Taft to he "the bent Kepebltean ;ieboolJ are vorsen and that vo-- a' tlon, and vith the prorislons of our "nles and svlm and splash and loting, Mr. Bradley says he notifi- came courting. 1 lav erer pawed," vhkh lav men are nov eligible to be elected Stat Wear the color he likes you In, ed the Insurgents (the and Federal Constitutions. ldiTe ,n the coo vater? Wel, a J a grow b?ft&h of the promise sehool trastees, coonty sehool sa-- and ve are unalterably opposed to aS TOn went 0r ai Democrats) that unless they and the style of gown. ' the old hoxne' and one er voted for him the next day, he Kepablltaa I'r)iWt and bis pertateadeats and to bold office, railing any religious test as a qual - back Have something in the way of a pc "Val party. This tariff Jav, la and are frequently to elected, ve ICeatlon for holding any office In en,nS T0U "eaked off and vent would resign his caucus nomina- surprise dish for dinner. ' f4.wr tb f.rr'j.r r( nrvi the !cwr to ze s:a sv:a:ag co.e. la- - tion, thereby absolving the Repub Read the papers and magazines i$flo to von2 .' ib Stiu, or nation. Ending to take another plunge In lican members from further sup- and be your husband's Intellectual In all tcboo! elections, burdM of tt- - jaaay, aad Sectlon 22 We faTor the nomi-- ! thoce favored fev sot only Ject to each vise regatations as to nation and election of United States the crek' 'att for old tlme'" porting him, In which event he equal. to "ittlnae, but to inereM, thdr : ritallfieatlois as the General As-by direct vote of the Deo- - Bnt Ton dWn't- - Instead of a broad (Bradley) predjeted enough RepubKeep up with him In any speclal - rtek- y - oftdw Ihv xewhlr T dHermlb.'- a piddling little" licans would vote forMr. Beckham line of work. vt t 'ii nl flection . V,'e faror sath lavs f' rrm of lav. 23 We denounce Encourage his hobby. Second and trean' that ran8 about enough va-a- to elect him, in spite of the insur,i'lon J. W point with pride as xlll, nnder appropriate penaltlos, opposed to Cannonlsm or one- - ter t0 keP a minnow from dying gent Democrats. Under this threat Be sympathetic, and do not tell fo, at, I hoartllr Indorse the patrlot-- I destroy all corrupt lobbying seek- man power In all representaflre as-- 'rom tblrtt- - The 0,d sycamore had four of the seven insurgents voted him all the troubles of the day; he ing to Influence any legislative lemblles. whether It be In Congress disappeared, and the old swimming for Mr. Bradley the next day and has had his own, more significant mad br tbe present on the or In representative conrentlons no,e wasn't deeP enough for a hog he was thereby elected." rnxmbers of CongrM and body in the Commonwr-altand important individually than all n Heuators, In thdr xnbject of legislation or tbfi'm'.'ratlr We favor the "rule of the people." "allow. In the speech he actually deliv- yours put together. An you cou,d do was to stand ered at Elizabethtown Judge O'Rear Kepnblkan over determlnod of ofScrs by It, or in an7 othSection 24 On this pla'tform of Keep his clothes a clean memory do Its work, failed to touch this phase of the (,IOKinon to. In Krd faith, er matter; but we rogniz the and on the aims and pur- - 'here and house and good food. pONfttltntlonal ffio promises right of the people poses of our party In 'the State and ,And after Indulging In reverie for Bradley election in the same way. of the Keep him, or some other woman party U rpal unjust and to pfitltlon and to be Impartially In the N'atlon.we appeal to all Ken- - a te" minutes you wiped a tear Following are the words he actual- will snap him up and make him lv HufinhlUnu laws, and to hoard on all rjaostionx. oil' of previous trom J'our eve and sneaked back to ly delivered: tucklans, Irrespective think she and she alone eved did floetlon &. We faror, under wine political affiliations, who are proud town aeatn. JIaybe it la because iiuti Aiatt and J out lavs for th "If these people who want to or will understand him. l, t of the v;rKt maww of thu and proper rostrletions, the crea- of the past and desire a still more 'ou are not hunting for them now, cast suspicion upon Senator Brad For the Husband. Comrnls- - prosperous, more progressive pres-- but eomebow or other there don't ley and convict him and v(, Iqrlti all U con- - tion of a fltate L'lllltle I by lnuendo, Don't quote mother. Call up any more swimming have any evidence, let them pro tin.- aims and rerord of the slon, harlng ample powors to dis-- I tr'n' ent and future, for all our people, 8eem to be your wife while at business nnd ask ho!e8 ,,ke the swimming holes of n.'.'rau In the House and Ken- -' charge Its duties. to support our magnificent State duce it, put up or shut up. I want ;i'M i1 the present Mission of or iony jears ago. bcien to go one step further, and make how she Is, say that you called her floctlon 10. Wo favor a change ticket, Including our nominee for imrty-nv- e up Just to hear her voice. with the alms and roeordof In tho present method of selecting the United States Senatorshlp, and tlsts tell that the appendix vcriform- - this statement with premeditated Bring her a box of candy. Hcptjhlleans and ospsclally with ho I'rison ia Is merely the remains of a bodily ComrnlsMloners of the our nominees for General Assembly tlo deliberation. If you have evidence Ono of the new books that she Is organ that used to be worth while, that Senator Bradley bribed one I'j'i'j Ktato, and the removal of all poli- and for other offices. Ucpubllcan t xosslon of h Mhsii onactixl tho which has degenerated Into a vote or that the liquor Interests Interested in. tics from the management of our but Conclusion. And don't ever lay your head on penal Institutions. tar ff law. While comSection 1't. In conclusion we nuisance because of neglect. Maybe bribed one vote for him, I declare your pillow at night without having Vic sp.",lally Indorse tho word mending the present Hoard of I'ris- call the attention It's the same way with swimming that his title is tainted." of Kcntuck-lan- s done something to gain and obtain f'ongrossrnen on Commissioners for Its successof our IiornocratW With bath houses and bath paraDemo- holes. to the fact that The following remarkable and Honator from Kontiicky for ful management of the Institutions cratic principles are triumphant in rooms and plunges and all that sort graphs of his actual speech were a firmer hold on your wife's love. Kiss her every day. At least once tho prorn-U'- )i under Its care, wo recognize that the Nation nnd In almost every of a thing to be found In nearly ev- omitted from the advance speech Mt'r fidelity In a month meet her downtown and of their party and roproaentlrig the system of election by the Legis- State, and that the Republican par- ery town It would seem that the furnished the newspapers: take her to dinner or tho theater. th- holes have evoluted and not tho Intercuts, lature, under which they are elect- ty everywhere Is professing to swimming "I don't know much about HarDon't ever stop courting, for as and we denounce the record of the ed, Is unwise, and we therefore backwards, Just like the appendix din county, but I would not be suradopt Democratic principles In Its soon as you do, some other man will CongroxRmen and Ken- such a change as will place platforms, but we warn them verlformls. prised If In Hardin county there nro begin. aor from Kentucky, because they their appointments In the hands of that the Republicans of this six or seven hundred men who haCuts nnd bruises may be healed Make your wife your companion. not tho people, tho Governor, subject to confirma- State have reprexenteil placed in their have bitually sell their votes every elecd in about of the time reTnke her out with you, nnd when nor have they nought to relieve tion by the Senate, or some other platform mdio progressive Demotion, If there is anybody to buy tl elr hunlenx, hut have represent-w- l method such as tho General As- cratic doctrines, not with a view to quired by the usual treatment by them. Take them over Kentucky, you have a big time, take your wife the prlvllegerl, protected Inter-'I- h sembly may provide. carrying them out or to atempt to applying Chamberlain's liniment. and there are more than 70,000 along, and the divorce evil will be . Hectlon of tho country. We favor a law carry them out In good faith, In It is an antiseptic and causes such men who sell their suffrage in the lessened. On SltiN' Insiic. that n uniform system of tho Improbable event of their suc- Injuries to heal without maturation. market. !"loti . Kontiicky Ih, and of accounting he Installed and con- cess at the polls next November, This liniment also relieves soreness "A distinguished politician of rlgl ' ought to hf, a Democratic ducted In all public olllccs charged but only for tho present purpose of of the muscles and rheumatic pains. my faith said to me on the eve of DOH'T EXPERIMENT m Htatc, mid the Democratic party In with tho collection and disburse- catching votes and deceiving the For sale by all dealers. convention which the Republican npp filing for the xupport of the ment of public monoyH. people, so that thoy might get tho met a few days after the county Whaled. Hectlon 12. We favor the of the HUtto eagerly o dices thereof. and emoluments convention: 'If you do not mako a You Will Make No Mistake if You Now, children, who Teacher Assembly submitting to a Tho broken promises of tho presan Intelligent comparison of compromise on a question can tell me what happened to certain Follow This Advice. the words It hH made with those vote of the people whether or not ent Republican State and before the people of Kentucky toJonah? they desire to adopt nn amendment miiilc hy Its political nIvernary as well as the enday, you cannot have any campaign Johnny He was whaled. (he temporary otcnnlonB It ha to our State Constitution broadenNever neglect your kidneys. tire history of the Republican parA well known Des Moines woman, fund, and if you do take that posiAsufTnlrti of the Ktate. ing tho powers of tho General controlled tho If you have pain In the back, uri ty, are sufficient to convince all tion you will.' Then he said: after suffering miserably for two Ak agtiliiMt tho Uupuhllcnti record sembly, so that It may classify nary disorders, dizziness and nervcitizens of tho Insinwas 'You are a crazy man, and tho ousness, It's time to In Kftihicky nssasHlnntlon, property for tho purposes of taxa- cerity of the Republican party, and days from bowel complaint, of net and no time cured by one dose of Chamberlain's very gates of hell will be opened to oxpcrlment. These are common IiIoo'ImIiimI nnd dlxrcgunled of law, tion; hut wo are opposed to any that It Is not the party of tho against you In November.' I said: Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea RemeW( present the Democratic picture law tho effect of which would be to symptoms of kidney trouble, and while, on tho othor hand, the m 'Why, they were opened last Sat- you should of pence, xcriipuloiiH regard for hu- lighten the burdens of taxation on record nnd history of tho Democrat- dy. For sale by all dealers. seek a remedy which is urday.' " man life find n Htrlct ohservnrico of, the wealthy and on corporations at ic party In tho Nation nnd the Stato Judgo O'Rear also radically recommended for tho kidneys. oo OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO and rexp'-cfor law; iih ugaltiHt mi the oxpormo of the farmer or tho conclusively establish Its devotion, Doan'a Kidney Pills Is the y regarding O rOMTENKSS OVERWORKED O changed his statement empty treimury nnd rejection and laboring man. to use. It has cured many to duty and Its purpose In good OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO hlB language on tho county unit xhavliig of honest demnmlH ngalust Section i:i. Tompornnco Is es- faith to redeem all platform pledges stubborn cases in this vicinity. proposition. the Hlal, wo present n picture of sentially n moral, and made to tho people. Can Hartford residents demand A man there Is whoso fortune lies it magnificent Klalo Capitol erected social riuestlon and should not bo J. C. W. HKCKHAM. You can't dodge tho malarial further proof than tho following In saying, "I apologize!" nnd paid for without any extra tax, made a partisan Issue between po- II. A. SOMMERS, He feels with all the world at case germ while your liver Is torpid. It testimonial? unit every Just claim ngalnst tho litical parties. DK.NNV I SMITH. First District, Mrs. R. A. Smith, Wilson street, When he exclaims, "Excuse me, makes you an easy mark for tho Wo favor Hlate promptly tho extension of tho S. W. HAGKR, Second District; met anil paid In disease. HERBINE Is the best Earllngton, Ky., says: "I am glad pleaso!" full; nh ngalnst platform pleilgeH present local option Inw, as applied I1KN T. PKRKINB, Third District; protection. It puts your liver to publicly recommend Doan's KidHis manner mild nnd confident tin il promises broken ami iriuilo to to the salo of liquors, which has W. C. MONTGOMERY, healthy condition and ney Pills. My kidneys wore badly in sound, Fourth Dis Bids every angry mood relent, ho broken, wo present n record of hcen upheld by our hlguest court purifies the stomach trict; and bowels.. disordered and the pains in my And all your harsh resontments flit nil pledges and promises faithfully as valid nnd constitutional, so that J. A. SULLIVAN, Eighth District: Price SOc. Sold by Hartford Drug back wero so acute that I could not As you reply 'Don't mention It." y the citizens of each and avory counkept, us against hypocrisy, Co., Hartford, Ky and Donovan & stoop without Buffering Intensely. M. F. CONLEY, Ninth District; so his willful way he goes. ami Incompetency wo presont ty In tho Htnto may dotormlno for JNO. C. C. MAYO, Tenth District; And m Tho pain often, extended into my Ho stops upon your tendercst toes; Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. n record of sincerity, fidelity, com- themselves whether spirituous, S. IJ. DI8HMAN, Eloventh Dllstrict. Ho elbows you nnd hurts your pride sides and became more severe If I Curve Season. The petency nnd statesmanship. or malt liquors may bo sold As patiently you stand aside Biggs Is your daughter popu- stood for a short time. I had dizzy We denotiiKo the action of tho therein. The Rejected I'lnnk. spells and many times .was obliged And let him grab tho dairy' lunch lar? Itopiihllcau Governor for IiIh partiSection 14. Wo favor organiza Minority report, substituted for Or battle through the baseball Boggs Well, I don't want to to grasp something In order to san nnd unjust action In pardoning tion and among tho Section 13 of majority report, and bunch boast, but 15 young men aro teach- steady myself. I also suffered from the men Indicted for participation farmers and laborers of tho 8tntc, dofoatcd by a voto of 007 to 514: ' sought tho front seat at tho ing hor to swim. terrible headaches and some days In tho nsBiiHiilnatlon or William l, and tho enactment of such constiparty of KonTho Democratic game could scarcely got out of bed. I protect them tucky Is, and has always been, a tho Governor of our Htuto, nnd tutional laws as will can safely say that I spent more Which now serenely ho will claim. WOMEN'S FEET LARGER wo nnsort that those pnrilomt wore from tho greed nnd oppression of party of moderation and temper- Ho'b hore, he's there, SAY THE SHOE MAKERS thnn ono hundred dollars for med he's everypolitical ruinous, and tho trusts and monopolies of tho ance. Every existing grnnted for statute In where; icine and doctors' treatments, but country, which nro tho direct fruit restriction or the salo and use of Innot upon the merits of tho casea. feet- - aro Women's bigger than obtained scarcely any benefit. On And yet to chldo him who would churgo tho Ilepubllcnn party or Itepubllcan legislation. Wo toxicants was enacted by a Demothey used to be, and still growing, a friend's advice I procured a box daro? Section IB. Wo favor such wlso cratic Legislature and approved by both In tho Stato nnd In the nation say the shoo manufacturers of of Doan's KIdnoy Ho has a saving graco Immonso began Pills with grois oxtravnganco and will- and conservative laws as will en- a Democratic Governor. Unaltera- Of mingled norvo and Innoconco America, who held their fifth an- their use. This remedy and, cured me ful wnsto In tho expenditure of tho courage road and brldgo building bly opposed to tho prlnclplo of pa- That lets him bully us at ease, nual fair In Boston not long since. In less than two weeks." . ' In Kontucky, nnd wo favor reasonpeople's nionoy, and wo pledgo ternalism, and pledging tho party If ho but says, "Excuse mo, pleaso." A canvass of opinions among the For sole by all dealers. Price 50 to rotrenchraont nnd reform, able Stato aid for tho construction to tho rigorous enforcement of the dealers revealed that tho average cents. Co., Buffato nn economical Dullness ad- of roads nnd bridges, but only on laws, tho Democrats of Kentucky nnd size of shoes that women woar to- lo, Now York, for the condition that each county or local renew tholr allegiance to tho time- ministration of public ' affairs. day is from four to live whereas United States. FOR FLETCHER'S 15. prlnclplo of honored are In favor of a community which Is primarily Wo Section 20 years ago the average was from Remember the name Doan's shall first do Its part nnd dls- - ment and home-rul- e embodied byj dlroct primary election law, provld- three to five. The No. 2 size In and take no other. WEBSTER 1 - b tire FJatfors Is tiat all prfsary tie Daotrxiie Stat b eoadseteii eader lavfol fa, a. a a ! I ,u l fairr lh T A(r4tf. w6S. & c'Ju .& Stalest IK. We faror tie crea- aad hypocrisy of ;ticz. rescTed fross politics, of a tie Repabrieaa effort to drag fato Depsresx of Banking, prorlelsg ?artr polities a social, soral aad c&spetest irrptfoa of an oar! reUglocs qaetiioa harfcag bo probhaH state JtztrSUj fcutftatioas, aad; er place tierela. 3ti? to ti syiie3 now exiftlaci JEfEXBT WATTERSOX, CcratHs-iealt- Corstttstioa ofdos ciaue of the State aad desossce tie RECORD SHOWS A DIFFERENCE fr 'riili ...- HELM. lin women's shoes baa practically disappeared. Only oae la 20 retailers handle them. It was also said that many firms were sending their products out with a code number In place of the actual size. Women refused to wear the number that fitted them. Nov, whatever size they ask for, whether It be two, four, or six, the dealer glres the shoe that flu them, and he alone knows vhat size they wear, M 5 Tji f ad J J J xst irta or jt. aa ori,n j ooooooooooooooo ta " J' ft i - exei; o, - re-t- . hrt v -- i -- F - li, Parse-Aldrk- ! '"n1 & j m of -- oa sub-tf-'r.z- -'.' , sake-Senato- tsv-iaaii- -- -- yoir-fouii- d -- re ( l of-f- ,r - elee-tlo- , Dowio-rra- 'i' 'l m r tli . - Con-Ff- -f I'ayno-AWrlc- t fa-f- or one-thir- 1 1 Gen-or- al National-Administration- s cv i )L & dur-In- i.' fair-mind- peo-pl- o; t rem-od- nl State-at-larg- o: 3tatc-at-larg- c; 'Wi demn-rog- (loo-bo- " our-Bolv- os Foster-MIlbu- rn Ghtilcfrn Cry Bole'-agent- B bon-oflte- -d self-gove- rn CASTjORIA wnawnwiww fmm yr '"" "" -V- J,....U.j i.i.ii' "WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 588, 1011. THE HARTFORD HERALD vitally concerned every citizen? drel of him who has once offended. What good ever came of that mot- The hope of temperance is local of self government and homo rule, coalition odorous tled and morality from, a springs preachers, Dick Knott, John Whal-e- n where Demsense of right in the Individual conand a lot of ocrats of the city of Louisville, In science. Ky., Aug! 16. that preposterous stunt of alleged reform? What, oh, what ood ever Tho September Woman's Homo came to tho State from the thousCompanion. Democratic votes cast for ands of Woman's Homo Tho September Wlllsnn? Were not measures. Drln- clples, policies and sentiments for Companion Is the advance fall fash-Io- n number of that periodical. It which they had fought all their amount of Hvcs,8arlficed and worse than wast- contains an immense Have wo not tried Prince fashion news that will Interest and ed? Georgo drunk, and tried him sober"' bo of practical service to women. and, drunk or sober, found nothing Grace Margaret Gould, who conducts tho fashion department of In him but graft? Without false Issues and scuttle-fis- h tho Companion, does her work adtactics, the chances of the Re- mirably; that Is, her object seems publicans would be hopeless. Their to be not to present fashions in a policy Is to break the Democratic way that will Influence women "to party Into helpless factions, and waste money on clothes, but In a ay to show tho great mass of they have shrewdly chosen the lihow they may dress fashionaquor question as the tool of cleavage. Can there be any respectable bly and yet at reasonable cost. On the entertainment side tho so easy? number of Democrats to September Companion Is an unusuSurely they have had enough al number. Notable and lively Acmake them at least mistrustful1 kind o' like n koyote that has had tion Is contributed by Allco Brown, Annie Hamilton Donnell, Anna his tall shot off. Sholl, Mary Heaton Vorse, stronger A Democrat needs no vote John D. Swain and others. proof of the uses to which his Eight special articles, full of now for temperance is debased than tho cost of facts and Ideas, are included. Tho election of Bradley at tho the County Unit Bill, to which he titles of some of these are: "What Readers Think About and his party wero so solemnly Companion pledged. If ho needs more, let him the Cost of Living," "Tho Boy and in tho Somo of His Opinions," "Tho "Moreview O'Rcar's decisions Paradise," "HouseCourt of Appeals with his Temper- dern Woman's Electricity," "Saving In his party platform, keeping by ance plank not forgetting the proceedings of Steps In the Kitchen." departments, Fourteen special their recent State convention held decoIn a hall over a brewery, and, as and tho great fashion, home features, the whiskey ration and household If to further placate contingent, now have as campaign completo the number. chairman a manufacturer of beer keg staves; especially tho now faO REFLECTIONS OF A O mous O'Rear Brewery Hall speech O BACHELOR. O In which he had tho hardihood to O Q.Q OOOOOOO brazenly declare- that Bratlley had O O.O O been elected without stain, even In Never put off till tomorrow tho spite of a whiskey lobby. I wonder escape the In- man who proposes how long a party can Tho social ladder Is fast becomsuch consequences of evitable double-deaduplicity. I wonder ing tho "golden stair." No girl cares to be loved for how much longer they can bamDemocrats who beauties of the soul alone; but boozle tho lot of have tho causo of Temperance so then, no girl need live In the harat heart. Why, a child learns when rowing fear that she ever will be. It's a wise woman who knows It Is burnt. The Chinese say that a man wrongs you tho first when to stop talking; but a wiser when time, ho Is to blame, but tho second one who knows when not to comover-zealoXXX-Rockpor- t, PAGE THRiSE. ry fTHBlURPBT ; UNITED STATES As Exemplified in f DEMOGRAGY LEPEFLCOLONY Conducted by Monks Near New Orleans. SUFFERERS "Cardui Cured Me" For nearly ten years, at different times, Mrs. Mary Jin'-- s Tenn., suffered with womanly troubles. She says: "At last, I took down and thought I would die. I could not sleep. I couldn't eat I had pains all over. The doctors gave me up. I read that Cardui had helped so many, and I began to take it, and it cured me. Cardui saved my lifel Now, I can do anything." of Treadway, Its In- herent Teachings. !& DIFFERENGE!NPARTY SPIRIT JK TO FORGET Which Separates the Leading Cases Are Incurable and the End is But a Matter of - Forces and Gives Distinction to Each. WHAT EACH SIDE STANDS FOH TAKE Little Time. DOOMED TO DUI WomanoTonic If you are weak, tired, worn-ou- t, or suffer from any of the pains peculiar to weak women, such as headache, tu SKVENTV EXILE wo-m- on & A &c W "EVERY MAN HIS OWN TEMPERANCE SOCIETY." This is the spirit of Democracy that develops character, Individualism, manhood, as nothing else can. In its generally accepted, broad meaning, the and comprehensive spirit of Prohibition is Inherently antagonistic to that of Democracy; hence, although it may seem a little harsh, Watterson Is right when he declares that "No Prohibitionist Dut In truth can be a Democrat." and Justice, Prohibition does not mean to a Democrat all It means to a Republican, There's a differencco in both spirit and design that the To a word does not determine. "Democrat It is confined strictly to the liquor curse which he regards as an exceptional evil, so out of the ordinary and so grave In its character that extraordinary treatment is demanded, and, because it comes nearest to Local Self Government that Ideal state, every man his .own jnorajity society a Democrat naturally turns n6t only loyally to the constitutional provision but to the smallest subdivision which he calls Local Optloy, to distinguish It from Prohibition, which is an "Ism" that sprung from New of all "isms." England, the hot-be- d To a Republican It means the wholo theory of a paternallzed and cenThe former, tralized government. trusting to the good sense, sound judgment and moral stamina of the Individual to maintain moral standards, while the latter relies upon the strong arm of the law, the temptation and fears of rewards to accomplish all and penalties, good, believing that the individual is but clay In tho hands of tho legislative potter who can make of him Just any kind of a pot he wants to; all of which, at once, leads to tho doctrlno that tho good should rule and they are the good; tho earth belongs to the saints and they Mc-Clu- re ooooooooooooooooo - to-da- y. lt are the saints. Emerson, who, it is believed by some, has said all that Is worth saying or will be worth saying for two hundred years, declared that "Republics abound In young civilians who believe laws make cities, that commerce, education, religion and morals can be voted In and out." Xo Democrat could possibly subscribe to such doctrlno any more than ho could bellevo sumptuary laws can reform a sinner; for ho knows all reforms must begin within the human heart, a vital spot that nothing but moral suasion and its own leaven can over fas reach. The utmost power of the State Is to restrain; It can neither convert nor reform. Wo have delegated to it the authority to concern itself about whatever wo may do that Invades the rights of another, but any attempt to meddle with what wo bellevo or do within our own right, would be an encroachment so Intolerable that it would justify revolution. So wo see the difference is so and fundamentgreat, al that no Democrat should be confused or misled by the sophistry of whoso success mere upon Injecting a moral depends which has no placo in question, into tho campaign, thus politics, not only diverting tho public mind from their public record which concerns every taxpayer ?n the State, but so excites the zealous temper-- , ance advocate that he loses sight of his party principles and. goes off chasing a delusion, leaving his State to suffer the consequences. Why try to make an issue of Temperan.ee? Isn't everybody for lt Or, if they aro not, are the Republicans more competent to deal with the problem than the Have they proved this? What have they ever done in Kentucky for thefccause of Temperance or any other cause? Did they prove their willingness and ability In, .that flagrant betrayal of an oy--' erwhelmlng temperance sentiment when they made that notorjoua.deaj wfijhtaWhiskey ring, bartering the Couaty ynlt Bill, sacrificing" the ? cause of Temperance with all' its hopfs,, to elect a U. S. Senator"? Wb'at. good J came o tho sacrifice of tho Democrat who abandoned hid pfcrty ,wlth all . Its policies hat bo office-seekers areth. tlmo ho wrongs you, you aro to mence. No, Clarice, n man's Idea of beblame. It Is a Bourbon who Clover ing loved isn't exactly being followlearns. May not the Democratic party bo ed around with a hot water bottle, entrusted with the serious prob- a box of pills and tho eternal queslems of Intemperance? How comes tion: "Do you love me as much as It that the Republican party is tho ever?" are being used only conservator of our morals? nowadays, probabWhat havo they ever done to earn on automobiles such confidence? Or Is It Blue Laws ly, so that when nn accident ocyou seek? Have you witches you curs people won't be so shocked to want hurned? Or would you1 have, hear who were the occupants of tho like Sancho Panza, an official doc- car. Never argue with an angry man; tor to stand at your table and with his wand point out and deny your nothing' puts out tho hot fire of his palato of every tempting dish upon wrath so effectively as a wet blanket of dead silence. your table as unhealthy? Love your enemies If you want Left to tho Democrats, tho quesprotect you from tion would be eliminated from pol- to; but heaven itics, as It should be, and referred, your friends. Propose In jest, and repent by as provided by tho Constitution, to local option, where it would securo paying damages for breach of prommoro dry territory than under the ise. Helen Rowland In Chicago proposed County Unit system. Tho Journal. County Unit Is nothing but an InLoss of Tlmo Menus Loss of Iny. sidious step toward Statewide ProKidney trouble and the Ills It hibition, and Statewide means that Louisville and all other cities of breeds means lost tlmo and lost M. the State shall say whether whis- pay to many a worklngman, key shall bo sold in Hartford or Balent, 1214 Little Penna street, This is not Homo Streator, 111., was bo bad from kid-neOhio county. If Rule, neither Is It Democratic. and bladder - trouble that he Hartford does not want whiskey could not work, but he says: "I sold, In tho name of Local Self took Foley Kidney Pills for only a Government, why should tho whis- short tlmo and got entirely well and key tubs and toughs of Louisville was soon able to go back to work, and Lexington bo allowed to butt and am feeling well and healthier In? than before." Foley Kidney Pills Taking advantage of tho nlco are tonic in action, quick In results points of divergence where the thin a good friend to tho working man lines of distinction so finely mark or woman who suffers from kidney the parting of tho ways between ills. Foley Kidney Pills will check Democracy and Republicanism, tho tho progress of your kidney and latter seeks to confuse the unwary bladder trouble and heal by remov who aro so earnestly enlisted In tho ing tho cause. Try them. For salo cause of temperance, by assuming by all druggists. m that all h6pe is centered In them, that they are the saints and that OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO tho Democratic party Is the champ-Io- n O FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH. O O W. D. Wright, Pastor. of whiskey and debauchery and O no good can ever come out of Naz- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Shock-absorbers w All the lepers who belong to the United States do not live at Molo-ka- l, and thore are other Father Right Damlens in the flesh in our own United States there Is a leper colony. It Is on the Mississippi river, sixty miles north of New Orleans. Thero dwell seventy poor souls who are doomed to die a slow, lingering death. No escape Is possible for them. Theirs Is well nigh solitary contlnc-mcu- t, simply to wait for tho end. Benedlctlno monks and nuns run the colony. Their lives are consecrated to tho work, just as Father Damlen's was In far away Hawaii. At their head Is Father Keenan; assisting him is Sister Benedlctla, ono of tho nuns who was driven from Franco when the government stepped in and took the convents. She fled to this country and asked for some religious work to do. She was assigned at once to the leper colony, and thero she Is now helping-t- ho pool irnfoUirnutes- to pass their weary days as easily as possible. It Is her care to see that their tortured lives are made as pleasant as possible. Tho colony has not been there long, but fifteen have already died, and there are as many more who will go soon. It Is the work of the good priests and sisters to see that the doomed ones can forget. They arrange entertainments, make up croquet partles.tako long walks and drives, and do anything to amuse the poor unfortunates who must stay thero until they go to their graves. Best of all Is tho leper choir. Those who have voices and a knowl- lodge of music sing In the church regularly, and the practice they receive In singing Is part of the plan to help them forget their doom. The State pays $1.",0U0 a year for the support of the homo and the rest of the expense Is met by the Is little Benedictine order. It enough, as those who aro closest to this great charity well know. Only the other day there was a sad experience for Father Keenan. A man called to seo Ills wife and son,' both sufferers with leprosy. It was time for him to go. "Can't you find Just one spot of leprosy on my body somewhere?" he begged. "Then I could come here and live with my family. They aro all I havo In the world!" But thero was no spot or taint on him and he had to say goodbye. to-da- y. feelings, pains in arm, side, hip backache, dragging-dow- n or limbs, and other symptoms of womanly trouble, you should try Cardui, the woman's tonic. Prepared from perfectly harmless, vegetable ingredients, Cardui is the best remedy for you to use, as it can do you nothing but good. It contains no dangerous drugs. It has no bad Ask your druggist. He sells and recommends Cardui. after-effects. Write to: Ladic3 Advisory Dcpt, Onttanooca Medicine Co., Chaltanooea, Tenn., for Special Instructions, and book, "Home Treatment lor Women," sent Iree. J M ProfPKsionul Carcla. -- Have your old- - J. M. PORTER, Attorney at Law. BEAVER DAM, KY. Will practice his profession In Ohio and ad olninp counties. Special attention given to ' business entrusted to his care. STRAW HATS MADE - NEW! HARTFORD PRESSING iOLUB FEANK L. FELIX, Attorney at Law, alnlng counties and In the Court of Appeals Criminal practice and Collections a speclaltT, Office In the Herald building C. M. BiaNUTt. C. It. SMITH. HARTFORD, KY. Will practice hit prdi'ejsion in'Unioandaa "SPsS DARNETT & SMITH, Attorneys at Law, HARTFORD, KY. Will practice their profession In all the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In thr Cour of Appeals. Collections a specialty. Ladies' awl gents' clothes also WORK G 17AR ANTEBD Called for and delivered. Club rate 1.00 Her month. Club. Hartford Pressing : Y. M. C. A. Bldg. Otto C. Hart in Hartford, Ky. Attorney at Liwv HARTFORD, KV. OfiliT up stalls over WINon St Crowe, opposite court house. Will practice his pioli'vsion in nil the courts of this nml adjoining counties anil Comt of Appeals. Commercial nml cilmiiial practice a spec- KERSfl mu.MlJiZi wKS3S Pa ESTABLISHED 1858.$55SH ialty. OTTO C. MAIITIN & S. m .ftPbat diamond, a watch, lewelrv or siher ware, you can get gmiie best quality at lowe.t prices from the ? xlne -- ?? SJJ II && l&nfl 2i$&w. I. MCKIINNttY rc?i - 'r t nnnco uiiiiuu M in iitur' . ma1 i .. A rj . -- ctuiively the Southern trade. for our tree illustrated catalogue. t.1l F ROUT Til jkAa. A 1 1A SW A Wre Address, f HARTFORD, KY. G. ..GENERAL INSURANCE.. Barnes F. Box2C louiaville, & Ky. Co., Every Article Guaranteed. Life. Accident. Sick And Fire Will Also Bond You. the Cltiniti am bcnutirin prowth.btlr. rromotts a Iuxuriart Hever Falls to Ilritoro Orsy Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures mlp ditfiiKt at ht!r lilung. HAIR BALSAM Drurrirti PARKER'S KANSAS SOCIETY NOTK SOMETHING "HAPPENED" UNI JOc.tndlijM BROTHERS. W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. But, with all his experience and dexterity, can O'Rear, like the Duko of Leeds, double so cunningly that the people shall bo unablo to track him? I fancy not. Unless, within the next few weeks, he can live down his Brewery Hall speech, November will bring a fitting punishment for his duplicity and we shall then see only fragments and tatters of his beautiful Prohibition halo festooning his ears and ballbearing Jaw. Remember tho Democrats do not deny the evlf consequences of drink. Nor are they deaf to tho heart-rendin- g appeals of its victims. But a even a man can bo for temperance teetotaler aa I, have been all my llfo -- without being a prohibitionist; because I know Force, can make but one "kind of morality and that a very poor one, supported ,by fear of public sentiment and dread of penalties of the law, while it offers no hope to and often makes a scoun , Demo-ocrat- s? The guests at Mrs. Arthur Mize's tea detected an odor of something burning. They looked at each other knowingly and said: "Poor Mrs. MIze, something Is burning up in tho kitchen." But the odor grew strongor, and at Inst one woman said: "It smells as though feathers are burning." Then suddenly ono woman screamed: "Mrs. Chal-IIs- s, look at your hat!" Sure enough, Mrs. Jim Challiss had been standing near a lighted candlo and the aigrette on Tier hat was on fire. The guests had a great tlmo putting out the fire. Tho aigrette was what the Insurance men call a total loss. An Atchison woman who has gone to thousands of receptions Preaching every Fourth Sunday says the burning of the aigrette Is morning and evening. the first tlmo she evor knew anyBible School every Sunday at thing to really happen at a recep9:30 a. m. tion. She had given up going beCommunion service at 10:30 a.m. cause nothing ever happened, but Prayer meeting every Wednesday now she will start In over again. evening at 8 o'clock instead of FriAtchison Globe. day as heretofore. Tlio Herald for classy Job Work. WANTED FOR U. S. ARMY, Ablebodled unmarried men between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write tho English lang uage. For Information apply to Recruiting Officer, Beaver Dam. Kentucky. 30tf. ooooooooooooooooo O o' SPECIAL NOTICE IQ In remind to O HESOLUTIOXS Oi O OIUTUAItlKS, OV RESPECT, Xc. O O; ..BLACKSMITHiNG.. 1 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO' Tho Hartford Heroic has adopted a new rulo In regard to Obituaries, Resolutions of Respect, Cards of iiiBDa.r'work Horseshoeing A A -- ! , Thanks, &c., whether written at the the behest of lodges, churches nr Individuals, and that Is, wo shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles, except obituary poetry, which will bo one cent per word, stralght.This Is tue smallest rate wo charge for anything and Is only one-flft- h of our regular rate. The amount, In cash or stamps, must accompany each article, or not bo printed. it will avcrago a lino In ordinary reading and every separate character or Initial letter counts as a word. Tho heading and tho signature both count one lino each, even if they aro only a word or two. poetry, straight All obltuajry through, ono cent per word. Contributors please remember. Six-wor- Specialty W Kentucky. HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE -P- IN YOUR RESl- HENCE OR PLACE OP Bl'tf-1NESS, AND PUT YOURSELF IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH THE LACED rflMCITMDTIAW Can Be CURED Long Distance Lines SPECIAL FARMERS, k taken by people in tropi- Sure Way. Willis I wbncler if there Will over be universal peace. uuiis sure. All they've got to do is to get the nations to agree that In case of war. the winner uass the pensions. keeps up the) strength and vitality in summer as well as winter. ALL DRUGGISTS cal countries all the year round. It stops wasting and TO PROVE IT i TO ALL STATES. We send FREE a bottle Gerrainal. a quick relief FOR THE COMPANY'S for lung trouble, coughs, paint in ciieit, and that CONTRACT TO THE run down feeling. (Meanoa thU papei.) Box 85 OHIO MEDICAL COMPANY . . CALL ON OR ADDRESS COLUMBUS, OHIO J. W. O'BANON. Local Manager, Hartford, Ky. W- - I Subscribe for The Herald; $1.00 a y'r C SEJXTON. Local Manager. Beaver Dam, Ky. Incorporated. PAGE FOUR. THE HARTFORD HERALD scandalous charge to be brought against the voters of Kentucky. Wc HIBOISON NOMINATED do not believe It Is true, and we believe the honest yeomanry of the FOR THE STATE SENATE State, regardless of political affiliation, will resent .the charge at the WEDNESDAY, AUGUST M, 9il. The Hartjord Herald HEBER MAHHEWS, FRANK L.FELIX. EDITORS. fRANK L. FELIX, Pub. sod Prop'r. Educate For Business , Private ! polls In November. This sweeping charge against all voters' alike Is e unworthy the man who Is an aspirEntered at the Hartford mall matter of (h.. second class. ant for the highest office within the as gift of the people of the State. post-offic- InSeventh District, at Convention Held in Louisville Last.. instruction from expert teachers in all departments'. Books free. Free employment agency. Not graduate out of a position. Write for catalogue and terms. school in session the entire year. , Day a$3 JiigEt ai Week. Pursuant to a call of the. Executive Committee the delegates to' tho Seventh Senatorial District Convention met at the Old Inn, Louisville, Ky., on the 15th day of August, 1911, and were called to or der by G. B. Likens, chairman of SaId Lisaid District Committee. kens was elected to preside over the convention and E. A. Taylor, of Greenville, Ky., was elected secre Mark the Studies You Are Interested in. . . .Shorthand ....Bookkeeping. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. r U. S. SENATOR Olllo M. James, beThe Hartford Republican wails the fact that nothing Is said State Platform In the Democratic deal by about the questionable which Senator Bradley was elected to the seat which he now holds. What was the use? Hasn't this Infamous and notorious episode publicity albeen given enough ready to brand Judge O'Rear (who declared It devoid of stain) as an apparent demagogue. In this InWe are thinking, stance anyhow? however, that tho Republican leaders will hear enough of this disbefore the camA French scientist claims to have graceful Incident Invented an apparatus with which paign closes. he can photograph thought. It goes Referring to the opposition withwithout saying It will be bitterly in his own party for nomination, all married men. .faiicM. bx Jmtige O'Rear- said in-- his npenlng to do speech at Ellzabcthtown: What is Ohio county going "The postmasters, with two with the able candidate for Reprein the or three exceptions, sentative. Mr. M. T. Westerfield? First and Second Districts, And Why, elect him, of course. where they were also County let's get about this duty right at (a bad policy, as Chairmen once. well as unlawful) were solidly against me." A New York woman was arrested This "bad policy, as well as unfor beating her husSand with a piright here ano leg. Pity she should have gone lawful." Is exemplified to the trouble of unscrewing the In Ohio county, where five postleg when the family axe was no masters are also committeemen In Judge precincts. doubt lying loose just outside the their respective O'Rear was right In his Just conback door. demnation of a too common pernicAdmiral Togo, the Japanese na- ious political practice. touring the United val offlcor paragraph of In the concluding States, got along all right until he reached Boston. There he ran the Democratic State Platform will utterance upon the famous baked bean and be found n significant quickly went down with a bad spell referring to the fact that "tho Re-publican party everywhere (and esof Indigestion. pecially In Kentucky) Is professing According to the theory of Judge to adopt Democratic principles in O'Rear, nobody should make charg- its platforms, not with a view to es unless they can be proven. The carrying them out or to attempt to able Judge should set us an exam- carry them out In good faith, In the ple by proving that there are seven- improbable event of their success at ty thousand men in Kentucky who the polls next November, but for annually sell their Totes. the present purpose of catching Judge O'Rear boldly asserts that votes and deceiving, the people, so seventy thousand Kentucklans an- that they might get the offices and nually soli their vot03. Will the tho emoluments thereof." This is Judge kindly classify those con- a true and a timely, warning, and citizens who bargain the wise voter will take heed ac scienceless tholr suffrage? Who are they? To cordingly. which party do they principally beJudge O'Rear said In his opening long? speecli at Ellzabcthtown: "I don't know much about Marso Honri came out of that Hardin county, but I would not fiorce scrap with "tho boys" with be surprised If In Hardin counhis metaphors slightly disfigured, ty there are six or seven hunbut still In the ring. In his editodred men who habitually sell rial noxt day lie landed nicely on their votes every election, If ground. We aro old Democratic there Is anybody to buy them." prophesying that ho won't "limp In The official vote In Hardin counthe rear" long. ty last year was: Ben Johnson, It looks like a strange arrange- 1.SC9; D. W. Caddie, 982; E. G. ment of the affairs of men when the Austin, 32. In these days almost President of our great United States every voter Is aligned with some pogets only $."0,000 (usually consid- litical party. There are fow known for a whole "floaters," or men known to be for ered a largo sum) year's work, while tho negro slug- sale. In which party In Harger Jack Johnson Is to receive al- din county belong tho six or seven most three times that amount hundred bought votes out of a tofor a year's occasional "punching" tal of 2.SS3? Would tho Appellate through Austrailla. Judge care to explain? --- of Crittenden. GOVERNOR Jas. B. McCreary, of Madison. McDer-mot- t, LIEUT. GOV. Edward of Jefferson. TREASURER Tom Rhea, of Logan. AUDITOR Henry M. Bosworth, of Fayette. GEXEHAL James ArrORXEV Garnett, of Adair. SECRETARY OP STATE C. F. Crecellus, of Pendleton. SUPERINTENDENT OK PUBLIC IXSTRUCTIOX Barksdale Hamlett, of Christian. OF AGRICULCOMMISSIONER TURE J. W. Newman, of Woodford. CLERK OF COURT OF APPEALS Robert Greene, of Franklin. Lawrence It. R. COMMISIOXER B. Finn. SEXATOR 7th DISTRICT Robt. Hardlson, of Muhlenberg. OHIO FOR REPRESENTATIVE. M. T. Westerfleld. COUNTY One of the most masterful articles on tho political situation of the day that has lately appeared In any Kentucky paper Is found on the by third page .of The Herald It Is our Rockport correspondent. especially pertinent as regards the liquor question. Although differing somewhat from The Herald's expressed views on the matter, the facts are so plainly stated and the review Is so conclusive in its gen eral summing up, that it presents a most attractive and convincing argument. This able dissertation is well worthy the perusal of every patriotic citizen. to-da- y, .Rapid Calculation. ...Penmanship. .. . m .Typewriting. .Civil Service. Commercial law. . . . Arithmetic. ,. . .Spelling. ... . .. .. .Commercial Geography. Banking. Commerce, ...Reading. . .Punctuation. . . . Ufce of Adding Machine other olllco devices. .English. Nairn o and ...Grammar. .. tary. The following resolution nating Hardlson, as a Democratic candidate for State Senator In said district, was adopted: We, the representatives of the party of the Seventh Democratic Senatorial District of Kentucky, assembled In a regularly called delegate convention to nominate a can didate for State Senator from said district, resolve as follows: 1st. We approve tho call for this convention and believe that the interests of the people of said district require that a nomination for said office shall be made by us. 2d. We endorse and adopt as our views upon party questions the Platform and declaration of principles this day made by tho Demoand our cratic State Convent'nn, nominee, If elected, will support all measures set forth In spld Platform and will endeavor to have them wrjtten Into thejstatute law of the State. 3d. In a representative government the question of supreme In the election of a public official is his ab'lltv to dischargo the duties of the offico to which ho Is elected, and this question of competency of the public official overshadows In Importance all partisan questions upon which political parties divide. The larger part of the measures that come beforo the General Assembly for Its consideration are of a character. The business Interests of the Seventh Senatorial District are extensive and diversified and tho legislation needed by tho people of the district Is assentlally and such as demands a competent representative in the We nominate Rob State Senate. ert Hardlson, Jr. for tho State Sen ate from said District, and present him to the voters of the District as a suitable person to discharge the duties of the office. G. B. LIKENS. Ch'm'n. E. A. TAYLOR, Sec'y. Robert nomi Jr., of Address Greenville, Daviess County Business College "AcknowIedg6 the College." Searcy Stewart, pitcher. The game was witnessed by a large crowd of BIG BRITISH E. B. Miller, Pres. Owensb oro, Ky. Interested "fans." Success to The Herald and the Democratic ticket, from McCreary down, is the wish of your scribe. HEFLIX. Aug. 21. The W. O. W. Camp at this place will dedicate their new hall August 26. An elaborate program has been arranged. The entertainment will be closed with a big ice cream supper at .night. Mr. and Mrs. Azro Rowan, of , spent . Sunday with his brother, i!r. Robert. Rowan, at this, place. Mr. Alfred Borah and Miss Irene Shown, of Hartford; Mr. Curry Wallace, Miss Gerdic Bennett and Miss Iva Wallace, of Beda, visited Mr. Robert Renfrow and wife Sunday. Mr. Joseph Thomasson and wife y to visit went to Owensboro relatives. They will return tomorrow. Prof. Al. Tanner and wife, of Pleasant Ridge, spent Sunday with his brother, Mr. Tom Tanner, at this place. Mr. S. L. Whlttaker, wife and children visited Mrs. Whlttaker's father, Mr. Felix Shaver, near Hartford, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Alee Carson spent Sunday with their son, Mr. Tallie Carson, of Hartford. Mr. Moten King, wife and little 'daughter, Edith Belle, of Beda, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Mollie Ellis. Miss Pearl Easterday has gone to Carrollton, Carrol county, to visit friends and relatives. She will bo gone until Christmas. ' ue non-partis- n, called it forth might be unable to allay it. Under tho agreement tho railFINALLH1ES Tfl END roads are to tako back all the strikers without prejudice. A tremendous wave of relief Due to the Efforts ot Joint Com swept over England when at 11 o'clock announcement was mittee Victor for Trades made from the Board of Trade that the railway strike had been settled Unionism. and that the men would return to work Immediately. London, Aug. 19. "Tho Joint Committee has settled the strike. Notice to Creditors. Victory for trades unionism. All All parties having claims against, men must return to work Imme- the estate of Joseph Gentry, diately," . notified to present sanw, The foregoing telegram, dispatch- properly proven, to me or my ated to the 1,800 branches of tho rail- torney, G. B. Likens, Hartford, Ky. way union throughout the country, on or before the 15th day of Sep telU tho story of the sudden and tember, 1911, or they will be for dramatic ending of Great Brltaln'i ever barred. spectacular strike. WILLIAM GENTRY, Whether the leaders can now 33t4 Administrator. control their men and get them back to work, remains to be seen. Granulated Sore Eyes Cured. It Is a significant fact that in the "For twenty years I suffered from agreement signed the lead- a bad same of granulated sore eyes." pledged ers themselves merely says Martin Boyd, of Henrietta, Ky. "to use their best endeavors to inIn February, 1903, a gentleman duce the men to return to work at asked me to try Chamberlain's once." The leaders on both sides Salve. I bought one box and used who signed the agreement realized about of it and my eyes that the strike fever which has have not given me any trouble gripped the country has become so since." This salve is for sale by all violent that even those who had dealers. m STRIKE ht ht two-thir- V. M,MMMBlBMWMMsMMBiMMWWWWMsi1sMsMt t'Y Make Your Cooking Tho Sentinel Is the name of a now daily paper that has Just been established at Mayfield, Ky., by Mr. N. P. Bonny, of Cornlth, Miss. It Is apparent from the first Issues that Mr. Bonny Is an experienced newspaper man who will give tho public his best efforts In his now field of labor. Tho Sentinel is a good paper and deserves success. On the second page of The Herald will bo found the Democratic State Platform complete, Including tho substitute liquor plank which Mr. Watterson fought for eo hard but which was defeated. The Platform Is one of tho most comprehensive and explicit over enunciated by a great political party and is worthy the support of ev ery patriotic citizen. It deals with tho leading questions of tho day In emphatic manner no a most equivocation or evasion. It Is simpof good governly a symposium ment. Read it all. to-d- SPEEDY ENGLISH BOAT CLAIMS WORLD'S RECORD New York, Aug. 18. The Maple Leaf III., Mackay Edgar's speedy motor-boa- t, which will fly the flag of Great Britain In the Internation al raortorboat races at Huntington Bay, Septomber 4, 5 and G, reached New York Tho Maplo Leaf lays claim to tho world's speed record, having attained a velocity of forty-nin- e and one-haknots or miles an hour last March. She was designed by Sir John ft to lift the British cup from America. Sho has two twelve-cinder motors, developing each. y. lf even Thor-nycroyl A King Who Left Home Set the world to talking, but Paul Mathulka, of Buffalo, N. Y., says he always KEEPS AT HOME tho King of all laxatives Dr. King's New Life Pills and that they're a bless ing to all bis family. Cure consti pation, headache, indigestion, dysIn his opening speech at Eliza- pepsia. Only 25c at James H. Wil O'Rear, Judge said: liams, beth town m "Take tliem over Kentucky, and more," than 70,000 men Representative Olllo James anthere are who will sell tbelr suffrage in the nounced that he would open bis market." This la a bold and a, campaign for Senator on Sept. 11. What Is Best for Indigestion? Mr. A. Robinson, of Drumquln, Ontario, has been troubled for years ,w,th Indigestion, and recommends jChamberlaln's Stomach and Liver Tablets as "the best medicine I ever used." If troubled with indigestion or constipation, give them a trial. They are certain to prove They are easy to take beneficial. and pleasant In effect. Price, 25 INDEPENDENCE. cents. Samples free at all dealAug. 21. School opened at this ers, m place on Monday, Aug. 7th, with BENNETTS. Mr. Ozna Shultz as teacher. Tho Aug. 20. Mrs. B. A. Bean, of first two weeks he enrolled 70 puIs visiting relatives pils In n district with a census en- Owensboro, rollment of only C3. Pretty fair, here. Miss Vera Hawkins, who has we think, and certainly shows that patrons and pupils are Inter- been visiting In Paducah for the the past month, retujned to her home ested in the cause of education. Mr. R. P. Beck moved his saw at this place Wednesday. Mr. J. A. Anderson and wife, of mill last week from our neighborhood to n new "set" near Mr. Wil- Owensboro, visited his brother, Mr. Thomas Anderson, Friday night. liam Maddox, on Lewis creek. Mr. and "Mrs. Clint Stevens and Mr. Will Phelps recently bought a farm from Mr. Otis Stevens, of family, visited Mr. Stevens' sister, tho Clifton neighborhood, and will Mrs. Ida Peters, of Beaver Dam, movo In a few days to his new Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chlnn and home. AVe regret very much to see him and his excellent family daughtor, Wllda, visited at Center-tow- n Saturday and Sunday. leave our community. The school which was to bo The earth Is so dry and hard that breaking wheat ground is being taught by Miss Katie Hawkins Is being taught by Mr. Fred Anderson greatly retarded Miss Hawkins Messrs. W. B. Chinn and Will with good success. will take her place tho first MonPhelps each bought a new up-tdate riding plow last week and aro day. delighted with their purchase. Moro people, men and women, Mr. Dick Moseley was a welcome are Buffering from kidney and bladvisitor at school one day last week. Bro. Shields will conduct a re der trouble than ever before, and each year more of them turn for vival meeting at this place, beginning on the 4th Sunday In Septem- quick relief and permanent benefit to Foley's Kidney Remedy, which ber. has proven itself to be one of tho Quite a number of our farmers have baled their hay and report a most effective remedies for kidney and bladder ailments that medical poor yield. One of the most interesting scienco has devised. For oalo by all m events In this community recently, druggists. . v was a match game of baseball on Up Two and a Quarter Miles. last Friday1 evening between tho Chicago. Aug. 19. Oscar A. boys of Independence school and Brlndloy made a new altitude rec-th- e boys of tho McHenry Graded ord for the world when he renehd School, resulting in a tie score of the height of 11.726 feet this af. 2 and 2. The game was umpired ternoon. The former record was In a very satisfactory manner bylo,761 feet, made at Mourmelon, Mr. Virgil Trail. Batteries for Mc- - France, an July 8, 1911, though Henry: Lonnle Maddox, ,atcher; Capt, Felix claims to have ascend-Oharl- le Smith, pitcher. For Inde- - ed 11,152 feet at Etamps, on the pendence: Noah Phelps, catcher; fifth Instant. o- Bites of poisonous insects that cause the flesh to swell up must bo treated with a healing antiseptic that will counteract tho poison and heal the wound. BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT answers every require- ment In such cases. Prices 25c, 50c and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by Hartford Drug Co., Hartford," Ky., and Donovan & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m Hi t oi M ffyrt 1iW Ti n " BBsisisisisisMsisismssiSB By Jiuying one of our famous 0. K. Cooking Stoves. For years we have been distributors of this make of Cooking Stoves. We carry in stock everything from the small top, fust big enough for two, up to the mammoth Steele Range that's big enough for a whole regiment. Every one gives satisfaction up to its highest capacity. Why should you be worried with a half-wa- y cooker when yoa can get the best here for a very little more than you pay for an ordln-ar- y makeshift? You cook over one thousand meals In a year. Over a thousand times a year you use a cook stove. Why sh&uldn't you have a good one? Learn to depend on us to relieve year cwk-In- g troubles. Stovee from BEAVER VDAM, 512 to $65. E. P. BARNES & BRO., WlK KENTUCKY. .rwm "X '"''''i.'i.'Vi- u Jh:w -- s iVAJ'vVryiW'V WEDNESDAY, T'lfl ."l'l"'l"l imi)rnwj ''D'H gjgrjg AUGUST 33, 1011. Dr. Geo. mention of was made week, was heard from THE HARTFORD HERALD Ceralvo, M. Everloy, whose serious illness In these columns last no better when last PAGE FIVE. these children survive him. Ho also leaves ono brother, Noble Bean, of Sulphur Springs, and 22 grandchildren and 29 n. " SPECIAL CASH PRICES lBjlbB- - $6.50 1.00 Gran Sugar. 50 lb. can Pure Lard..... 5.50 1.40 49 lbs. Victor Flour 4? lbs. Bob White Flour., 1.25 48 lbs.Town Talm Flour 1.15 70o 24i lbs. Victor 100 lb. Gran. Sugar Postmaster M. L. Heavrln, Cir60o lbs. Town Talk cuit Clerk E. G. Barrass, city, and Matches 200 Postmaster E. P. Taylor, of Beaver 6 boxes 20o Dam, left Wednesday for several 8 lbs. Best Rice stay at Atlantic City. ,10o days 8 lbs. Keg Soda Prof. F. D. Perkins, President of 3 boxes Table Salt .10o Bethel College, Russellvllle, deliv 3 bars WhiteFloating Soap 10c ered Interesting talks at tho Bap24 tist Church hero last Sunday morn ing and night to good audiences. Tho remains of Prof. John C, Barnard, who died several weeks ago in tho Philippine Islands, have arrived at Beaver Dam and will bo Interred at Liberty burying grounds to-da- 24 lbs. Bob White 65c yesterday. ner Coal company, of this city, was DEATH OF A NOTABLE arrested late this afternoon on the CITIZEN AND PREACHER charge that he Is at the head of a band of thieves who havo stolen After a lingering Illness of dropsy nearly 8,000 chickens In the city and other diseases peculiar to old during the past few months. Guen- age, Rev. G. J. Bean passed away ther Is a wealthy man and. has a at the residence of his family. His arrc3t created great Mr. J. II. B. Carson, in Hartford, surprise. last Thursday evening. For about CONGRESS ADJOURNED five years ho had been an invalid SOME THINGS IT DID and his remarkable vitality was all that bore him up during the closing According to announcement, the days of his illness. son-in-la- His funeral occurred at tho Christian (formerly the Methodist) Friday morning and the church houso was packed with sorrowing relatives and friends. Services wero conducted by Rovs. Virgil Elgin and R. D. Bennett, of the Methodist church, which denomination ho began serving as a preacher in tho year 18C1. The Masons had charge of his remains and interment was at Oakwood, our local cemetery. A noble, consecrated llfo has end ed and n pure spirit has gone to be with the Master It loved and served so well. Excursion Rates, To Louisville State Fair, Sept. 9 to 16: Fare $3.40 for round trip. Dates of sale Sept. 9th to ICth In clusive. H. E. MISCHKE. Act. HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY. COME TO DUNDEE MERCANTILE COMPANY y at 3 o'clock. For Anything You Need in GENERAL MERCHANDISE There are always bargains to be had at our Largo Store. Respectfully, , Mr. W. T. Woodward left yesterday for Louisville, where ho will engage with his son Paul, a contractor there, in tho carpenter business. Mrs. Woodward left also to visit relatives In Missouri. Mr. M. L. Heavrln, Hartford's DUNDEE MERCANTILE Illinois Central Rullrond Time Table at Heaver Dam, Ky. South Bound. North Bound. a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. No. 1324:05 No 12212:28 p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. No. 1022:48 p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. J. E. Williams. Agt. Fairs' 25c now 19c. DUNDEE, KENTUCKY. CO."!, o, postmaster, left for Washington, D. C. and Atlantic City, N. J., where he will spend ton days or two weeks. Mr. Heavrln will likely return homo tho latter part of this week. special session of Congress closed (Tuesday) afternoon. Tho following aro some of tho things it did: reciprocity pact with Passed Candada. Passed campaign publicity law. Admitted Arizona and New Mexico to tho Union. Enlarged tho National House of Representatives to keep pace with tho growing population. Started Investigations of trusts and inquiry Into tho spending of money in tho executive departments. Tho farmers' free list, wool and cotton tariff revision downward, wero passed, but wero rendered null by President Taft's veto. Election of Senators by popular vote was burled In the Senate. yesterday Bro. Bean was a notable man In many ways. His strong personality and upright life drew to him peo-pl- o of all natures and classes, and none knew him but to admlro and respect him. He was of a sunny disposition, always genial and companionable. For many years ho was a preacher of tho gospel and perhaps had performed more mar-rlag- o ceremonies and officiated at more funerals than any man In this section. He was liberal In all that ho did. As a preacher ho accepted whatever remuneration might bo tendered him, and if it was meager, For Sale Town property, vacant that made no difference In his zeal- lots, cottages and dwelling. ous work nor did he seem to notlco A. C. YEISER & CO., It. He believed In the theory that Hartford, Ky. the gospel is free, and his services wore evidence of It. If a couplo wanted to get married, Bro. Bean rtQQQQi"W"V"W"VW"Q"V"4QMQ'Q'l two-stor- y Woodw ard-I'ett- y. quality Wash Goods Enter Fairs' Piano Contest. Begins Sept. 1st. "No excellence without labor." Read Fairs' ad. about the big Piano Contest that begins" Sept. 1st. Enter the Piano Contest at Fairs, go to work and get your friends to FOR Sale Cheap Good work work for you. horse, buggy and harness. R. R. WEDD1NU. 29tf Mesdames Alex Curtis and U. S. moving Faught, of Centertown, Ky., gave Thero will be in electric picture show at Olaton, Friday The Herald a pleasant call while in town Monday. night. Mrs. Josephine Miles, of Fords-vlll$2.00 and $2.50 Ladles' Oxfords visited her daughter, Mrs. J. now $1.59 at or Strap Slippers, A. Thomas, Tuesday and WednesFairs'. day of last week. Remember .The Herald Is always Mr. Cyrus Patin, of Breaux ready to do your Job work at lowest Bridge, La., a former student of prices. Hartford College, is visiting in Prlcesrjust as low as anybody's at Hartford this week. Fairs' andtho Piano coupons Mr. W. II. Mooro, who went to thrown lnT the Dr. W. E. Patterson Sanltoriuru Mr. J. T. Felix, Hartford, went at Rochester, Ky., last week for to Olaton yesterday on a few days treatment, is improving. business trip. Mr. Lonnie Stom, wife and childMlM'Katharine Rogers, of Quin-c- ren, of near Madlsonville, are tho .111., is tho guest of Mrs. Alex guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nat Shultz, Barnott, city. at Shultztown, this week. Mr. J. F. Vlckers, of Owensboro, Miss Margaret Nail, who has gave us a pleasant call while In beep visiting relatives and friends Hartford Friday. In Owensboro for the past week, It doesn't cost you a cent more will return home to trade at Fairs' and you get the Mrs. Dr. Moore and daughter, Piano coupons free. little Miss Emma, of Beaver Dam, Mr. Cercia Thomas and little sis- were tho guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. ter, Miss Ruth, aro visiting rela- P. Turner, city, last Thursday. tives at Morgantown. When you need Drugs of any Mr. Gilbert Bell has taken charge kind please dop't forget THE OHIO of one of tho chairs in J. "V. Tay- COUNTY DRUG CO. has the quality and tho price Is right also. lor's barber shop here. Mr. J. A. Anderson and family, Mr. L. M. Render and family, of Louisville, spent Sunday with Mr. who have been visiting relatives hero tho past week, returned to Rendpr's parents here. Monday. get tho Piano their homo In Owensboro Trade at Fairs' and For Sole, Farms All sizes, from coupons. Give them to your friends to 300 acres. Wo can please you who will be In tho contest. It you want to buy land. R. T. Her has tho best and cheapA. C. YEISER & CO., est lot of Saddles ever brought to Hartford, Ky. 32t4 Hartford, Come and see. o prices on PatGet our Hev. L. R. Barnett, of Gatesvtlle. ent Medicines and Prescriptions becounty the Tex., has been In Ohio fore going elsewhere. Wo can save past week visiting relatives. you money. o, y, to-da- y. Miss Gertrude Wright spent Sunday In Hartford, on her way from a Monday, August visit to relatives In Hopkins county In Hartford next session. Dr. to Cincinnati, where she will study 28, for a five-daGreen, will tho fall fashions before returning Mutchler, of Bowling to bo with Barnard &. Co. for tho be the Instructor. coming millinery season. Mrs. Marvin Moseley, of Owens-borMessrs. J. L. Lee and W. O. Lee, and Miss Helen Ralph, city, Tho Herald with a call Olaton, route 1; W. D. Stratton, honored Horso W. H. LItsey, Neafus; Friday. Branch; Mack Daniel and Van May, Messrs. L. R. Coodall and son, Hartford, route 2, and George Centertown, were Schroader, Hartford, route 1, wero B, H. Goodall, pleasant callers at The Herald of- pleasant callers at Tho Herald office Friday. fice Saturday. Mr. Arthur Petty, of the mechanical force of the Hertford Republican, and Miss Nellie Woodward, both of Hartford but tho latter recently holding a position as stenographer with a law Arm In Ky., surprised their Burkesvllle, friends hero by getting married In Louisville last Wednesday. Tho event took place at tho residence of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Woodward, the latter a brother of the bride. The happy couple returned to Hartford Friday. Ir. Petty was formerly with The Herald and is a splendid printer and gentleman. His bride Mr. Frank Foreman, who has Is one of Hartford's prettiest and young for most accomplished ladles. been serving as able seaman several months past, touching at Their many friends wish them much some of the principle ports In Eu- happiness. rope, Is at home with his parents here. He will probably return to OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O MARRIAGE LICENSE. the Continent In the same or hlgh- - O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO capacity soon. fer Esq. C. V. Miles and family, of B. F. Peach, Hartford, to Ida Fordsville, left last week for Ark- Schroader, Hartford. ansas, where they expect to make Homer Albln, Roslno, to Rhoda their home. Tho resignation of Atchison, Roslno. Esq. Miles as Magistrate of that J. E. Ling, Sorgho, Daviess coundistrict was accepted on August 15, ty, to Xora Leo Durham, Curds-Vllland Mr. Grant Pollard has been recDaviess county. ommended to Governor Wlllson for Sunnydalo, Wysong, e, G cut-rat- " i i Old Now spapers Plenty of them, nice and clean, tied up In neat packof Morgan-towMiss Hazel Tanner, ages. For sale at Tho Herald office was the guest of Miss Cova 5c per bundle or 20c per hun a few days recently. Anderson here dred. Come and see the Piano at Fairs'. Mr. M. T. Westerflold, Pleasant It's a beauty and is going to RidKO. Democratic nominee for Rep home in a few months. from Ohio county, gave Burch, frledaland, resentative a pleasant call while In A Rev. H."D The Herald. and Mr. T. L. Loyd, Narrows, gave Hartford Monday. The Herald a pleasant call Monday, of Miss Katberlne Thompson, Leave your Laundry at my Grocery, Fordsville, returned to her home Domeetio finish. "Wk Guaranteed. Wednesday after spending several Called for and prompt delivery. days In this city, the guest of Mrs. ll"ar,'g Grocery. 'Phone 140 B. M. Woodward. WANTED Two glrls to , help Mrs. Florence Mauzy, of Hart with cooking andhouse wprk.. Ad- ford, widow of the late W. H. Mau- WEAImY MAN CHARGED Gov. Wlllson has appointed W. dress Dr. L. B. Bean, Hartford, zy, has been granted a pension of WITIf STEALING CHICKENS G. Collins Police Judge of Sebree, 34tr Ky.- Ky., vice B. M. Sutton, who resign$12 per month and also a pension Evan8vllle, Ind., Aug. 17. Frank ed to run for County Judge of The Ohio County Teachers' Instl-- . for "two of her children of $2 each. Guenther, vice president of the Ban iuteuwill convene at the court house until they are 16 years of age. n, orna-inent.-sold . FOR SALE Two milch cows one Jersey, on0 Holsteln. Address Dr. L. B. Bean, Hartford, Ky. Only a feWof those Men's $4.00 Relow-cShoes loft at Fairs'. $1.50 buys' a pair now. member Mr. Jennie D. Hamilton and son, Greenville, Mr Duncan Hamilton, are the guestB of Mrs. F. L. Felix. your candidato and' Nominate send tho name to Fairs' who will enter you lnttho contest Sept. 1st. ut OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO. J. F. GASEBIER K CO., Funeral Directors and Embalmers. All calls promptly and carefully attended to, day or night. Both telephones. Beaver Dam, Ky. 28tf Mr. Bank by his a few here. T. J. Morton, cashier of tho of' Island, Ky., accompanied Ilttlo son, Thomas, Jr., spent days recently with relatives to' Pearl Murphy, Sunnydale. John B. Goodwlnc, Roslne, to Miss Mamie Bennett returned Martha Arnold, Horso Branch. visit to Monday from a Alfred L. Crabb, Paducah, Ky., her sister, Mrs. Ed Johnson, of to Bertha L. Gardner, South Hill, Buel, McLean county. Mrs. Ed Ky. Owensboro, to Bennett, S. W. Johnson and Mrs. Gus Johnson accompanied Miss Bennett home. Mrs. Louisa May, Hartford, Route 7. Ed Johnson was taken suddenly ill E. T. Taylor, Simmons, to Daisy on her way and is yet very ill at Baker, Echols. tho resldenco of her mother, Mrs. Arthur Dartlett, Utlca, to Annie Lora Hardin, Utlca, Ky. Ann Bennett. Kentucky can No newspaper In For Sale. boast of a better corps of country One saddle and harness mare, correspondents than Tho Herald. also one standard bred pacing Tho present issue Is a fair samplo Dr. J. S. BEAN, of their numerous and personal ex Olaton, Ky. good correspondent A cellence. takes a largo part in tho life and O LODGE RESOLUTION'S Interest of a country newspaper O and their work Is always appreciat- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ed, especially In The Herald offlce. Hall of Hartford Lodge No. 075, County Fair The Breckenrldgo F. & A. M.. is Is on this week and Hartford, Ky., Aug. 19, 1911. tho last day. Large crowds aro atWhereas, Our dear brother, Gayear sees a flno extending. Each briel J. Bean, has been called from hibition with special attractions. It on earth to everlasting reonly fair left for labors Is probably tho freshment In tho Paradise of God, people to visit this Ohio county an honorable life of more year, and tho opportunity should after eighty-seve- n years, moro than than be Improved upon. Reduced rates Ilfty years of which ho lived a zealon railroad. ous and upright Mason, and endeavMr. S. W. Bennett, of Owensboro, ored to cultivate at all times the and Mrs. Louisa May, of Maxwell, noblo tenets of our profession, were married last Wednesday even- therefore be It ing at tho residence of Mr. and Mrs. Resolved, That in his death tho L. P. Turner, East Hartford. Rev. lodge has lost a beloved brother, R. D. Bennett performed tho cere- an honored Past Master and a true mony. The newly married couple Mason whose Influence for good has visited In this neighborhood until not died, but will live on and on. Saturday, when they left for tho Resolved, That we tender to tho homo of the groom. Tho groom is family our heartfelt sympathy and a retired farmer of Daviess county commend them to that Father who and the bride Is one of tho foremost never forsakes those who put their ladles of her home community. trust in Htm. They have many friends to wish Resolved, That wo endeavor to them much Joy. emulate tho virtuous conduct, the piety to A card party was given at the zeal for the order and tho Mr. and Mrs. H. E. God, of our departed brother. residence of Resolved, That these tokens of Mischkc, city, Monday night In honupon our records, of "their visitors, Misses Lola esteem be spread or published In the county papers and ReMlschke and Nora Smith. a freshments were served and a very Masonic Homo to Journal, and tho family, and copy presented pleasant evening was Bpent. Those present besides tho hostesses wero: that we wear tho usual badge of days. MIses Tiny Yeiser, Ruth Riley, Be- mourning for thirty J. P. SANDBRFUR, Haynes, Catherine Pendleatrice C. M. CROWE, ton, Mary Spalding and Wlnnlo G. B. LIKENS. Simmerman; Messrs. Casslus SpaldCommittee. ing, McHenry Holbrook, E. Y. Park, Harold Holbrook, L. T. Riley, For Sale, harness mare. W. T. Pendleton, Sydney Williams, Good city, and Wilbur Haynes, Whites- - See John Jackson, Centertown, Ken tucky. 31tf vllle. pired term. two-weed. appointment to till out the unex- J. Richard was always ready to officiate, and u If tho bridegroom saw fit to reward him it was all right. If not all right again. Ho always gave to tho limit of his finances In charitable and religious matters. Bro. Bean was a zealous Mason, but ho thought most of tho great Lodge Above, Into whoso membership he was Initiated In early life My Fall Stock of and whose ritual ho carried in his heart and exemplified In his dally life. He Is now gone to take up his perpetual abode with me membership of the sainted spirits. Ho leaves behind a pleasant memory an honorable record. He was known simply as Brother Bean brother AND In love, respect and friendship whether uttered by grown persons or the lisping tongues of children. Bro. Bean was born on Septem- g The most complete line ber C, 1823, therefore was nearly I've ever had. Come In 88 years of age. On October 17, O (3 1844, ho was married to Mary J. Q and hear them. Acton and to this union thero were (5 . born eight children as follows: Mrs. Martha Ross, Mrs. Josto Duke, Mrs. B. TAPPAN, J. H. B. Carson, H. B. Bean, Marvin 8 Bean and T. H. Bean. Nov. 21, p Jeinhr uud Ojliciuii. 1S97, he was marrfed to Sarah Francis Hocker, who died several -:- years ago. To this union was o born one son, S. M. Bean. All of oocxocck:cx3ck3cxooo!:-oooo- Just Received 2 ctA 4 Minute Records Phonographs! " $ o J. I g I Hartford, JjV. JJV. Ky. Jf, Jf Jf trt rli r4" rta rfa JJV iSta r$r r& JJ Wf. JJ. Jft tfa r$n tfa eta rjw rt St"cv' Jf Jf yfr J$w JJV JJV, LADIES Suits -- ooooooooooooooooo AND- Skirts! OUR Sample Book HAS JUST ARRIVED! Shows over 250 patterns of cloth, 72 styles of making. Made to your own measure. We guarantee A PERFECT Depend on FIT Barnard & Co., HARTFORD, KY. 0i(tii(t(atii(5 r PAGE SIX. THE HARTFORD HERALD This is the cheapest ?1.40. In conjunction with a high magazine we have ever made. Cosmopolitan is one of the greatest illustrated magazines of the country, abounding in action by the most capable artists famous In all Its departments. Better take advantage of this offer, which is also good on renewals of The Herald. Subscribe now! only offer class The WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 38, 9U, "V. The Hartford Herald M. II. & E. RAILROAD TIJIE BLE AT HARTFORD, KV. TA- s RE ASKED OR 11 w.Tiino table effective Sunday, Dee. 4th,contalns the following schedule: To Be Built Across Ohio No. 112 North. Hound duo 7:20 a. m. Daily except Sunday. Near Henderson. No. 114 North Round due 3:40 p. m. Dally except Sunday. MEN WHO CItV OX THE No. 115 Soutli Round duo 8:55 a. m. STREET THE REASON WHY TO BE DPENEDSEPTEMBER 7 Daily except Sunday. No. 113 South Bound due 1:40 p. m. "I was standing on tho street Dally except Sunday. waiting for a car," In Louisville First of Series corner H. E. M1SCHKE, Agt. said a caller at the Deaconness Between Louisville and Home in Chicago, "and I saw a man walking along with bowed head, Lower River. crying: No, he had not been drinkHUMAN HANDS ing. He looked like a respectable age. I ESTIMATED COST IS $1,810,000 man of middle working wanted to speak to hlra, but I Evansville, Ind., Aug. 18. Bids didn't. What do you suppose was for the construction of lock and the matter?" The deaconess whom he was ad- dam No. 48, In tho Ohio river, 18 dressing said nothing; but she miles below Evansville, aro being A Vast Array of Workers knew why some "respectable middle- advertised for by the war depart-aged men" walk tho city streets ment of the United States. The Ever Busy crying. Visions rose before her: completion of this costly structure rivA man who had Just visited his will give this city a nine-foFURNISHING READiHB UTTER boy, In jail for stealing a man er stage the year around. With a who had been hunting work for clear title to tho property constitutthree weeks and "lost out" every ing the site of tho proposed dam, Various Emotions and time, till the dearly loved wife and Major Lyle Brown, of Louisville, The baby at home were literally starv- has Informed local people interested ing a man who had Just had a of the intention to open bids In his Acts of Human Kind flashlight of his own degradation ofllce September 7. Make the Record. The dam Is to be 2,310 feet long and was comparing It with the Ind lad and tho lock, which will be on the nocence of the A STUPENDOUS UNDERTAKING that used to cuddle Into his Indiana side of the stream and will mother's lap. Tho men go' 'weep- consist of a single chamber, is to bo The August American Magazine ing along tho streets sometimes; 110 feet wide and COO feet long. an interesting editorial but oftener far, they go too dead at The estimated cost Is $1,840,000. contains Christian Herald. The Henderson dam will be the talk In "The Interpreter's House" heart to weep. first of the series to bo constructed newspaper. In closing the on the OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO between Louisville and tho lower talk the editor says: O river, and in cost and importance, it reader to see in his O THE EDITOR'S PRAYER. "I ask the of OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO will rank second only to the dam Imagination what a multitude and locks at Louisville. The pool beings " are busy with the .human "Gle me, dear Lord, the sweet mado by the new dam will have a printing press. There are In the surface elevation of nearly 33S feet or 30,000 reg- philosophy United States "That will enable me, with above the sea level or about nine ularly issued publications, In which friendly eye. feet higher than that of tho lower tens and tens of thousands of peo"To view the things that have pool at that point. Four or five ple write, from time to time, little Joys for me years will be required to complete or much. One of our great metro- no "The ways of other men that the dam, locks and buildings. politan dailies recently boasted that pass mo bv. Construction of tho dams and reg1.F.00 people wore more or less at folly, sol locITs was provided for by the last "I contributors to its columns, emn-wis- would not frown ular Congress which made a cash approcounting Its great staff and Its corshrewdly to priation of $330,000 and authoriz "And bo content respondents scattered all over the ed an expenditure of $900,000 addi criticise. world. As many people write for "Give m? tho wide philosophy tional under tho continuing connewspaper, therefore, as read that finds In each poor Jest and an- tract system. some of our small country week- that a nine-foThe dam provides tic, something good; lies. In other words, the printing "Show me the tie that me to slack water harbor for both Henmonopolized of press Is the least derson and Evansville and will put It Is completely In others binds, any invention. "That makes men lovable, when eight feet of water on tho lower sill people. It is one the hands of the of lock No. 1 In Oreen river tho understood. of the most Imposing democratic a "Too long I've had the narrower year around. It will back-watworld one of Institutions in the distance of 30 miles and Insure easy to br twilight star; the most completely democratic. "Clad In the garb of cold auster- navigation over a number of bars You can hear them sing by the That Is Its great strength. that now Impede tho movement of ity. moon's white shore "Now, what's the meaning of all "Give mo a faith, Just for each vessels during the summer. These levNay, never look back! this? It simply means that through common day. The Henderson dam Is to bo one eled gravestones press you transfer to the printing "Not In vain things beyond my of a series of dams In the Ohio river They were landing steps; they were paper an astonishing picture of all ken and care; by the engineering recommended steps unto thrones the varied emotions and character"Let me believe that down life's corps of the Wnr department with a Of glory for souls that have sailed istics of all human nature. Confine darkest wav stage view to creating a nine-fobefore, vourself for a moment to the 1,"The grime and dust hide some from Pittsburg to Cairo. Tho en-tl- And have set white feet on the forgreat system comprises 54 dams and 500 people who write for that thing good and fair. tunate shore. dally referred to above. Imagine comtemplates oi "Lt me find something In each $G3,731,4S8.The anexpendlturo near And what are the names of the Forthem segregated Into n community. sordid scene first six dams tunate Isles? What an assortment! In their "Of hidden good that is, or Pittsburg have been completed. Why, Duty and Love and a large Dam No. 7 Is being constructed. midst would be love, hate, loyalty, might have been." content. jealousy, splto, cruelty, gentleness, Earn No. 8 near East Liverpool, O., and all the v.iii:n man crows old generosity courage, 4C miles below Pittsburg, has been Lo! these are tho Isles of tho watery miles, philosophy completed. Five other locks and a other attractive nnd unattractive1 That God let down from the firmqualities found among human bedams between that point and Louisament. ings. It Is a law as old as the first man, ville have been completed. Lo, Duty and Love, and a truo Take the one point of differences that when "old age comes over man's Trust; of taste and refinement to bo found him," or begins to sot Its seal on his ALL GRADUATES SECURED EXCELLENT POSITIONS Your forehead to God, though your among them. Some of them would mental make-uthat the man feet In the dust; shudder at the thought of mention- turns to tho soil for rest and The Lexington Leader says: Lo, Duty and Love, and a sweet with a wedding recreation. to make ing In connection He wants The graduates of tho College of face's smiles, the fact that the bride's first hus- something .grow; ho wants to smell EnginAnd these, O friend, are tho Forkilled himself three years be- the earth; he wants to do some- Mechanical and Electrical band tunate Isles. pleasant eering of the State University of fore. Others of them would not thing that encourages Joaquin Miller. much about It. Even the thoughts of long ago. This, too, Kentucky.class of 1911, have all sethink bride, remember, might not feel as whether he has pushed the pen, fol- cured good positions and most of OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO badly as you do about it. It is lowed tho sea or Jockeyed with the them will enter Immediately after O COUNTY FAIR DATES IN O commencement upon the duties of amazing how differently people look professions for a living. He wants O KENTUCKY. O at things. In all candor, I must to work In the garden; trim trees these places. A graduate of this OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO department of State University can things or do something like that for exersay that I have published which I was afraid would displease, cise and recreation; ho wants to en- feel perfectly certain that when ho Allen Scottsvllle, Sept. only to discover later that thev courage procreation In all earthly has completed his course of study, Barren Glasgow, Sept. 27-3approval of tho Universipleased people. A short time ago I things. Maybe it Is the opening with tho 2 Boone Florence, Aug. to the ty, there Is an opportunity immepublished the picture of a man with strain of the benediction, Bourbon Paris, September diately awaiting him for renumera-tlv- o a caption under It which held the solemn measure of which he goes to Breckenridge Hardlnsburg, Augpractice of his profession. man sharply to account for certain his long home. Working tho soil , great engineering concerns ust The Tubl'lc lifts. The only recognition and the Increase thereof Is tho purButler, Morgantown, Sept. est calling known to man; maybe It of the country have learned to reI pot from the famllv was a pollto August Germautown, Bracken note from the man's wife saying Is instinct of the highest and purest gard Stato University of Kentucky which turns his waning activities' as one of the most efficient technithat they liked the photograph, and Calloway Murray, Oct. soilwards. It Is the Inborn desire cal schools of tho country.Nearly all could they get one? Campbell Alexandria, Sept. to do better that prompted some old of tho members of this year's class "Now, Is It discouraging to take Carroll, Gallatin, Owen, Sanders, were selected by representatives of this view? Not In the least. That sport to writo of two contrite old various engineering and manufac- Sept. Is my unequivocal answer. On tho men: Franklin Frankfort, August 29, turing concerns who came to State contrary, tho prospect seems to mo "King David and King Solomon University for tho express purpose September 1. Led merry, merry llre3; most encouraging because tho prob Graves Mayfield, Sept. 27-3of procuring efficient engineering lem of how to produce a better And they had many, many lady service. Hart Horse Cave, Sept. 20-2friends press is so clearly defined. Wo shall Jessamine NIcholasvlllo, August The industrial works of this And many, many wives. have a better press when we have But when old age comes over them, country have long come to tho con- 29-3better men, and, God bo praised, wo Knox Barbourvllle, August 30, clusion that in order to enjoy the With many, many qualms, already have frequent Illustrations King Solomon wrot the Proverbs; greatest development they must fill September 1. of a good, courageous press In tho LaRue Hodgenvllle, Sept. 7. King David wrote the Psalms." their engineering corps with comnumerous cases where decent and petent young men who have the McCracken Paducah, Oct. sympathetic men aro at work in the August Monroe Tompklnsvllle, foundation of a thorough technical profession. Human beings have education. 30, September 2. I the power in their own hands to August 30, Nelson Bardstown, OIL FEVER RAMPANT netter themselves, and' In thousands Por Infants and Children. September 2. IN HANCOCK COUNTY and thousands of cases they have Pendleton Falmouth, Sept. 27-3the inclination to exercise that pow- The Kind You Have Always Bought Pulaski Somerset, August 29, The oil fever Is sweeping Han- Soptember 1. er, and they are actually exercising Bears tho cock county as never before, says every day." Mt. Olivet, Sept. Robertson Sigaaturo of the Hawesvllle Clarion. fhreo Simpson Franklin, August 31, Magazine Combination. companies are busily engaged' in Soptember 2. sena- me nnruora ner- - ...if You Want the Ncwext News--:. taking leases of landp practically in we Wayne Montlcello, Sept. i all parts of tho ouuty. ,iamos H. n ii aid and Cos'tnopolltan Magazine $1 i. IS&T Suowden, who n.anJed Mlsi Marian Subscribe for The Herald. $1 a year. both one year to any address for eUDSCZlCS ICT IQS to-d- 1 ANDJHE PRESS ot clean-hearte- e, ot er Adair, of this city, two years ago, and who has many wells in tho Illinois oil region, with 30 wells on a single farm of 160 acres, is In tho lead so far, with 85 leases taken, and his agents, Messrs. W. C. Kelly Woman' most glorious endowment is the power and Popo McAdams, are. still at to awaken and hold the pure and honest love of a worthy man. When she loses it and still loves on, work. Next In importance Is J. M. ' HLssF ao one in the wide world can know tho heart agony McCoach of Huntington, W. Vn., she endures. The woman who suffers from weakwho Is representing the McQuIre ness and derangement of her special womanly organism soon loses the power to sway the heart of syndicate, and he has already taa man. Her general health suffers and she loses ken 30 leases. The other lessor Is Iier ood looks, her attractiveness, her amiability D. L. Wilson of this city, who has end her power and prestige as a woman. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with taken 27. In each lease thero is an the assistance of his staff of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured many thousands of women. He has devised a successful remedy for woman's obligation requiring the lessor to It is known as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is a positive drill within a year or forfeit the specific for the weaknesses and disorders peculiar to women. It purifies, regulease, and k is said that at least lates, strengthens and heals. Medicine dealers sell it. No honest dealer will advise you to accept a substitute in order to make a little larger profit. the first named two will begin work at once. In fact, the drilling maMAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, chinery of Mr. McCoach has alSICK WOMEN WELL. ready been shipped to Hawesvllle. Dr. pferve'a Pleas at Pellets regut&to and strengthen Stomach, Liver and Bowel. Six years ago a well was sunk here In the suburbs of the town, and oil flowed freely, but the well ed I would gradually become entirewas closed, and few, if any, know PRAYERS ANSWERED ly paralyzod and die.. My prayers why. In addition to tho above, It were answered as I knelt before tho is said that Mr. Hcnnen Jennings, on 21. I arose and IN a former Hawesvllle man, but for JWCIILOIIS WAT shrine for July first time In years walked the many years with a gold syndicate without aid. I added my now usein South Africa, has made arrangements to drill on his large tract of And Former Cincinrmtian Leaves less crutches to the large pllo uow resting In the holy citadel." land above town. His Crutches at St. Anne's Mr. Lynch is a brother of Mrs. A Scientific Question. Oscar Onken, and Misses Hattlo Shrine. "Nothing 13 ever totally lost or and Maude Lynch, of this city. Othdestroyed," said the professor of er local persons who were at St. physics. The Cincinnati Enquirer says: Anne Novena, In Canada were C. H. "In that case," said tho simple and Miss Katherlne Catholic clergymen of Cincinnati Wcsterman and frank person, "how do you ex- are greatly interested In the ac- Mesch. plain tho fact that everybody loses counts of his miraculous euro from According to tho Canadian papers umbrellas and you never meet any- a fatal disease, told by R. the case of Mr. Lynch has created body who has found one." E. Lynch, formerly of this city, but widespread attention In that part of now a resident of Bowling Green, Canada, although it is said many OOOOOOOOOOOOOO Ky. Mr. Lynch, who Is visiting in slmlllar instances of some wonO POEMS YOU'LL EN.IOV. ascribed : o Cincinnati, is enroute to his home, derful cures are of pilgrims to tho to tho after making a trip to the shrine of faithful prayers The Herald's Special Selections. O St. Anne Do Beaupre, near Quebec, shrine of St. Anne Dc Beaupre. OO O Canada. He left his home hob- Novenas of St. Anne have been held THE FORTUNATE ISLES. in bling on crutches, the lower por- recently at both the churches Ky., Covington, and tion of his body being entirely crip- Cincinnati You sail and seek for the Fortunate pled from paralysis. Yesterday he when hundreds of persons Geekingv Isles, physical ills made pil freedora'from Iked steadily without crutches. Tho old Greek Isles of the yellow-bird- 's "I am certain that my miracu- brimages to the local shrines. song? Then steer straight on through tho lous cure Is due to nothing but the J Stepping on a rusty nail has been intervention of God, through my the cause of many cases of lockjaw. watery miles, prayers at the shrine of St. Anne," The nail was not so much the fault Straight on, straight on, and you said Mr. Lynch, speaking of his ex- r.9 neglect of the wound. If such can't go wrong. Nay, not to tho left; nay, not to the perience, which has been corrobor- wounds were promptly cleansed and ated by a number of his Cincinnati BALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT ap- right, But on, straight on, and the iBles friends, Including Rov. Father Buse, piled there would be no lockjaw, as of St. Peter's Cathedral. "Four the antiseptic properties of tho linare in sight. yel- years ago, when I Was employed as iment would counteract the poison The Fortunate Isles where the a railroad engineer, I was a victim nnd low birds sing, the wound would heal quickly. collision. I received Price 25c, 50c and of a head-o- n And life lies girt with a golden $1.00 per botInjuries to my spine and of internal tle. Sold by Hartford Drug Co., ring. nature. The result was that doc- Hartford, Ky., and Donovan & Co.,. These Fortunate Isles they are not tors sworo on tho witness stand Beaver Dam, Ky. m so far. that my case was hopeless and that They lie within reach of tho low- as the disease of the spine progress Subscribe for The Rnrtford nerald. liest door; by the You can see them gleam Woman's Power Over Man ilk ': r IT "" y M T. TM li A sallow or yellowish complexion Is a symp tom of a Torpid Liver, and o Torpid Liver la the causo of many serious dlisases, of which the most frequent aro Pneumonia, Brlght's Disease, Typhoid Fever and M.i'.urla or Chills'. ot ro Is a Liver Medicine and Bowel Regulator of Great Pover and Effectiveness. Torpid Liver which has resisted all manner of cathartlo medl-clnIs forced Into activity by Hcrblne. This marvelous preparation not only puts tho liver In healthy condition, but it strengthens iho stomach, helps digestion, purifies and regulates tho bowels. When these three Important organs are In a sound, vigorous condition, sallowness, bad breath, Indigestion, dizziness and General languor or tired feeling: Boon disappear and aro replaced by a fine feeling of exhilaration, or strength, energy and cheerfulness, 'A ea HERBINE Price 50c per Bottle. little p, 4 ST. LOUIS, K0. JAMES F. BAUARD PROPRIETOR Stephens Eye Salve U a aafe and speedy remedy for Sore Eyes. i. im WICQMMINDtDBVl Hnitford Drag New Model UOUPND Co., Hartford, Ky., Donovan ,i Co., Beuvcr Dam, Ky. 14-1- 6. 0. 27 31-Se- REPEATING RIFLE The only gun that fills the demand tor a trom bone ("pump") ac tion repeater in .Z5-Zand U Utarlin wcu-tnud- Shoot rush ve leu locity smoke- cartridges. 4-- 9. also black and low pressure smokeless. Powerful enouch for deer. safe to use in settled districts, ex cellent for target work, for foxes. geese, woodchucks, etc. IU eicWre faatemi die muck sooth working "pump" action I the Sptclal Smokdeu Stetl barrel; die modem totii. top 29-3- 0. 21-2- 3. 23-2- C. 11-1- 4. .32-2- 0 9. calibres. and cjtcht lot rapid, accurate firing, increaied ufetT and n II hat conMructioB ted Ivory Bad (root eoarenMiK. aght; theie coil extra on odxi rifltr of time calibres. iu 6-- 9. line Sent for three) stamp Our 138 page catalog- deecribee the full 7crrln poetage. Write foe it. 0. MsgggggggggggggMsgSggggggWsgggggggggggMSSgMStMSgWSilSMMllMgggggiSgHSMI 3. 1. 5-- YOU "" 3-- 6. WANT a Better by business men seeking;. your t.e ana snow amDiuon to rtst. .. Vts." ,mu muwtiju nuvhuci uuai 48 Colleges in 18 States. International reputation-i- Sj .3 ii w p. CASTOR A 0. &&u 5-- 8. pi, - 5-- 8, vrw aaiakuau tuuvftpv ness colleges COMBINED. 5fDmT!"y,AJs5!.lMs 'SEVA ."S!J1M, y ...uiiiiira uuuu lUMiiuna B0aklra!niiia. Hnnlflrpprwra nil mo- tho United States say that Droughon's New System of Bookkeeping saves them from 25 to 50 per cent in work nnd worry. snortBana. rracucauy ail U. b. offi cial court reporters ,write the System of Shorthand Drauglion Colleges teach Why? Because they know it is Vie best. m -- J tOl DRAUGHON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE wc wr or nwBTuii iatfmi ihBoxTuie, holding good positions as the result of taking Draughon's Home Study. CATALOGUE. For prices on lessons BY MAIL, write Jno. F. Drauchon, President. Nnsrivllliv fmn 1?. alogue on course ATCOLLEGE,jntits A-.-.. SWIllnti, Arithmetic, letter Trritlnc, BislaeM returnable condlUnni Thntltnnrf nf Xth&,S. bookkeepers and stenographers are ters, bUAKAfl rfcfcu under Homa Studv- - ' t nn., raaueaji, Ky, r Eras villa, lad. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 33, 1911. protection of its government and its laws and guards his property against fire and other losses. A man should trade In his homo town. Its business men are courteous, willing nnd progressive their stock of goods Is large and varied, and it there is something one wants which they do not carry, they are always ready to procure It. Unlike catalogue houses, the home merchants help to pay taxes ot a town, they contribute to churches, im provements and entertainments. Without tho business men, the town would stagnate and property decrease In value. The schools of n town provide ample and satisfactory education for one's children, and its churches meet and satisfy his religious needs and conserve the moral and spirit ual Interests' ot the community. Its newspapers keep him inform ed on local matters, enlarge his knowledge, help him In business, minister to his enjoyment and that of his family, and promote every wise effort put forth- - to help the best Interests ot the town. THE HARTFORD HERALD ADAM AND EVE IN the picture of our first parents that It Is more profitable for us to consider than the picture of their first Ignorant, Indolent eswas not earth ere sons of men appeared"; and it was not placed under our human feet and hands and eyes to be merely a pleasure ground, an Arcady or a forest of Arden, whatever the Socialist's Utopian dream of it may be. It is not too much to say that It Adam, after the fall, was less of an angel, he was more of a man, and Evo was far better qualified to Philbe tho mother of tho race. adelphia Ledger. uncivilized, PAGE SEVEN. 1Y LEGISLATION ES IHRDEN tate. "Earth When It Passes Through Congress Channels. PERSONNELOFSURROUNDINGS MustHave BeenFree From Worry and Care. SOME THINGSJHEY ESCAPED HfcKI fl - hi d" iOf the President is Such as to Insure Certain Things Being Done. SOME W MEN NOT CONSULTED (By Clyde H. Tavenner, Special Washington Correspondent of The Herald.) Washington, Aug. 19. When the history of Mr. Taft's administration Is written, his failure to win tho of the people will no sympathy doubt be attributed to his selection as advisers, men who are not In sympathy with the needs of tho people of the country. Let us see who the men are, surrounding President Taft, who know exactly what "they" want; and who, through having practically a monopoly of the President's ear, have been able to decelvo "him Into tfthe belief that he Is acting the part t of a real statesman If he vetoes legislation of the very character that lie promised the people before election In order to secure their votes. In his cabinet Mr. Taft has Secretary ot State Knox, former steel trust attorney; Attorney General WIckersham, former sugar trust attorney, and Secretary of Commerce and Labor "Nagle, fdrmer attorney (Standard) for the Waters-Pierc- e Ol( Company. family Then In his Immediate circle the President has Brother Charles Taft, who Is so constituted temperamentally and financially that he can view legislation only 'tYfom tho viewpoint that "Big Busi- ness" views It; and also Brother Henry W. Taft, a member of the New York law firm of Strong & Cadwallader, which represents the sugar trust, Wall Street and the Invents New Cement. Aug. 19. A. Lexington, xKy., HImes, the Lexington caterer, has invented a cement that promises to play a part in the building Jrade of tho future. In its hardened condition it Is smooth as marble and so hard as to successfully resist blows Friends of with a heavy hammer. tho inventor say the material Is likely to be widely used In decora-tlv- o art, as well as In building. During tho winter he will experiment with the material with a view to making it resist changes in the weather. Hay Fever, Asthma nnd Summer Colds Must be relieved quickly and Foley's Honey and Tnr Compound will do J.t, E. 'M. Stewart, 1034 Wolfram St., Chicago, writes: "I have been greatly troubled during the hot pation may be, your earning power will be greatly Increased If you take Training. It will th0 Draughon equip you for a better Job BIGGER PAY. More than one hundred and fifty thousand have taken the Draughon Training during tho past ate. years. For catalogue, And here is a list ot the men twenty-tw- o whose advise Is not sought by Mr. address Draughon's Practical BusLaFolIette, Clapp, Cum- iness College, Nashville, Tenn., or Taft: mins, Brlstow and all genuine pro- Paducah, Ky or Evansville, Ind., or Washington, D. C. gressive Republicans. These facts tell their own story. Bcwnro of Ointments ror Catnrrh There's no chance for the President Tlint Contain Mercury. to do anything for the people so As mercury will surely destroy the long as ho has present advisers completely derange around, and from present indica- sense of smell and when entering it the whole system tions ho has no Intention of taking through the mucous surface. Such ar on a new sot of advisers. ticles should never be used except on TUTE PATRIOTISM ten fold to the good you can possibly S BEGINS RIGHT AT HOME clans, as the damage they will do is N ten fold to the good you can possibly 'Why should I support my own derlvo from them. Hall's Catarrh town?" Is a question every one Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney should put to himself and honestly & Co. Toledo, 0 contains no mercury consider. The result would be ben- and is taken Internally, acting directeficial both to the Individual and the ly upon the blood and mucous surtown. Hero are a few of tho many face of the system. In buying Hall's reasons he would be sure to find: Catarrh Cure be sure you get tho genThe town is his home and a uine. It Is taken Internally and man's first duty is to his communal made In Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheuoy homo as well as to his domestic & Co. Testimonials free. Price, 75c. per Sold by Diugslsts. Again, local patriotism deTiorae. mands It. Love for nnd pride In bottle. f'kone's town Is the duty as It should Tako Hall's Family Pills for constiOh-e-r ni be the Jov ot every citizen, and pation. Jfeat patriotism should find conOn Her Own Ground! stant oxprerdon in furthering Its "A woman can't drive a nail." interests. His town affords him tho "There haB been too much slandering of women. A woman may not be able to drive a nail with a A FACT hammer, but you glvo her a hair brush and ""she can drlvo a nail as ABOUT THE "BLUES" well as anybody." What Is known as the "Blues" Many n Suffering AVonian Is seldom occasioned by actual existing external conditions, but in tho Drags herself painfully through her great majority of cases by a dls- - dally tasks, suffering from backache, erdered LIVER. headache, nervousness, loss of appeTHIS IS A FACT tite and poor sleep, not knowing her ills are duo to kidney and bladder which may bo demonstrated by trvlnz a course of troubles. Foley Kidney Pills give quick relief from pain and mlsory and a prompt return to health and strength. No woman who so suffers can afford to overlook Foley Kidney Pills. For sale by all drug-fi m They regulate LIVER. gists, Du-Pont great Industrial corporations. For substantiation of any advice tho President may receive from these sources, he has but to call In Senator Llppltt, Aldrlch's successor from Rhode Island. Mr. Llppltt is one of tho millionaire beneficiaries of tho struggling cotton trust, and knows exactly what ho wants. Others who know what they want and upon whom tho President relies are Penrose, Smoot, Guggenholm, and the balance of the ring of special privilege servers in the Sen- summer months with hay fever and find that by using Foley's Honey and Tar Compound I get great re lief." Many others who Buffer similarly will be glad to benefit by Mr. Stewart's experience. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound Is effective for coughs and colds In either children or grown persons. No opiates, no harmful drugs. In a yellow package. Refuse substitutes. Sold m by all druggists. "Vou Want n Better Job?" That question will be asked you almost dally by business men seeking your services, if you become qualified and show ambition to rise. No mattor what your future occu- I Hit Si .- HIS the c$HtroIaaJ ie i They brlaghopeaadbouyancy to the Glorious. elasticralad. They bring health and "While wo were in Londdn mamity to the body. ma and I were presented at court." tho stern warfare with hard mate- "How grand It must have beon." rial conditions, leaving behind them TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. "Oh, It was perfectly glorious. I the lire of least resistance and tho was so near the Queen that I could i primrose path of dalliance for the 'V, -. nntnallv tall urtiaf lrtn.1 if tnlfMim rocky, uncompromising way that powder she used." leads from Life to Death this Is , NfcBMM0WiKfaaHKTNSH-aai- r;Zrr",a,r;rr.t As Between Tho Trades. In a court room may call a man a liar, scoundrel, villain or a. thief, and no one will make a EDUCATION IIEGAN IN EDEN complaint when court adjourns. prints such reflecIf a newspaper In these days of many needless tions on a man's character there Is complications of the problem of liv- a libel suit or a dead editor. This ing, that was already sufficiently is owjng to the fact that the people complex without the addition of believe what an editor says. What man-mad- e embarrassments, it Is In- a lawyer says cuts no figure. teresting to try to Imagine what the Wills Point (Ind.) Chronicle. new and unspoiled earth was like In tho eyes of our first famous progen- A NEW SHELL GAMF HOW IT WAS WORKED itors, and to speculate as to their probable mental attitude toward A new shell game Is being playthis wtfrld thaf'was all before them beaches. where to choose." It is a question ed at the posltlvo or the negative Let there be three or four girls whether the blessings of the pair that wandered gathered together under a striped hand in hand through Eden's bow- awning or parasols, and a young ers were the better reasons for con man appears displaying three shells Says he: tinued thankfulness. Their minds "Girls, how many shells do you were unvexed by tho multifold tur seething agita see?" moil of a thousand "Three," say the girls. tions that twentieth century men "I say there are four," says the worry and women think they must young man, and he shuts his hand about. "Now how and opens It again. There was In that golden age no many arc there?" women, there question of votes for "Three," say the girls, stoutly. were no perturbing Court decisions, "Three." there were no fluctuating stock "But I say four," ho declares. markets. There was no fire insur- "Will you each gUb a dollar to the ance, and there was no politics nor Children's Outing Fund If I'm any mayorallty campaigns. There wrong?" . wero no book agents, no telephones, "Yes," they all agree. no bills overdue, no policemen, no "Then give It." says tho suave professional baseball. There wero young man, "for wrong I am no schools, and It was not necessary there are only three. I've caught for there was six persons with tho same dodge to be public-spiriteno public. Neither was It neces this morning." New York Telesary to start any reform associa graph. tions for any purpose, for there was nothing to reform. The same blessAttack Like Tigers. In fighting to keep the blood pure, ed absence of the public made pubquan- tho white corpuscles attack disease lic opinion an unknown the expensive germs like tigers. But often germs tity and saved bother of public utilities, public multiply so fast that the little fightservice corporations, public libra- ers aro overcome. Then see pimries and everything that suggests an ples, boils, eczema, salt rheum and agglomeration of persons for tho sores multiply and strength and ap supposed communal welfare. There petite fail. This condition domands Bitters to regulate the were no newspapers, and there was Electric no one to roport tho antics of the stomach, liver and kidneys and to leviathan in hl3 reedy covert or tho expel poisons from tho blood. "They doings of tho megatherium In the are the best blood purifier." writes Calif., "I No C. T. Budahn, of Tracy, heart of tho ancient wood. Invaded tho have ever found." They make rich faunal naturalists verdant solitude, and the great an- red blood, strong nerves and build imals were not captured for cir- up your health. Try them 30c at m cuses or slaughtered for museums. James II. Wllllanms'. In the midst of the unimaginable flora and fauna tho first man and Subscribe for Tho Jlnrtfonl ITcrald. the first woman had all tho room Exercise nnd 'Food. they wanted, and there wore no "What do you want?" demanded no crowded cars, no raised rates to be maintained or Mr. Newlywcd, as ho confronted abated, no smoke nuisance, no un- the tramp at the door of the bunganecessary noises, no hot pavements low, "breakfast or work?" "Both, sir," replied the wayfarer, or crowded tenements. Tho grars was of untrodden greenness, tho timidly. "Well, eat that!" returned tho four waterways of Eden ran crystal clear whero cities wero un- other, savngely, handing out n bisknown; the trees had never felt tho cuit and a piece of steak, "and of the ax. The dinosaur you'll havo both." incision Whereupon Mrs. N e w 1 y w e d was os harmless as tho dove, and glanced reproachfully at her husato like a kitten from the hands of tho first gardener and his wlfo. band, for ho was giving away tho Since there was no fire, one could first fruits of her culinary studies school. dlspenso with cooks, and the ser at the cooking n . m vant problem was nonexistent. comes from Sallow complexion Tho positive blessings of Adam bilious impurities in tho blood and In tho the fault lies with the liver and and Eve were numerous. first place, they wero perfectly suit- bowels they are torpid. The meded thoy were made for each oth- icine that gives results In such er. In the next placo, they were cases Is HERDING. It Is a fine livborn grown up, and thereby escap- er stimulant and bowel regulator. Juvenile ailments Price 50c. Sold by Hartford Drug ed such human n3 teething, the multiplication ta Co., Hartford, Ky., and Donovan & ble, practicing, and all the intellect- Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m ual and physical growing pains of There Arc Othern. idea. Whatever thoj tho young First Fan That fellow behind taking did they could do without counsel with lawvors or Important the bat must havo been vaccinated relatives or trustees or aught ex- good and strong somo tlmo or other. Second Fan Why? Thoy cept their own inclinations. First Fan It seems imposslhlo bo commiserat were, porchance, to anything. ed upon tho fact that thoy were or- for him to catch had Seamed to give Mm a New Stonmcli. phans: ,hut. Inasmuch as thov never known the care of fnthor and "I suffered Intensely after eating mother, they could not miss tho par- and no medicine or treatrhent I ents that never were. tried seemed to do any good, "writes Why did thoy go and spoil It? W. H. Youngpetcrs. editor of tho Why could they not havo rested Sun, Lako View, Ohio. "Tlio first content as thoy wore? Why did few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach they pull down tho laden branch and Liver Tablets gave mo surpris- and nibble at tho fruit of the tree ling relief and tho second bottlo of wisdom, when the pomologlcal .seemed to glvo mo a now stomach diet thoy knew would havo for Its .and porfectly good health." For m salo by all dcalors. Dcnuel lasting unhapplnesa? And yet somehow, as wo reflect upon these things, tho vision of an Adam and an Eve going forth from A lawyer d, strap-hangers, Including All That Has Come Since Our First Parents Lived. Tlio Kind Yon Havo Always Bought, anil which lias been in use- for over 30 years, lias homo tho signature of and lias heen made under his per- eonal supervision slnco its infancy. Jj Allow no ono to deceive you in this. aro hut All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Experiments that trifle with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. rtt2z- Just-as-goo- What is CASTOR! A Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms and allays Fcverlslmcss. It cures Diarrhoua and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, curc3 Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural bleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of ALWAYS (zYCcAU The KM You HaYe Always Bought COMMHV, TT MUNHAV In Use For Over THCCtHTAUN TflCET. NEW YORK CITY 30 Years. ZSZEZSTTTJ-Cnz.- - Urn m Power Cora ! I (lNCOllI'OKATinj) E. G. BARRASS, MGR., IKIr. IrHIarjctirZonra-.- , Will wive your ho if so at cost. Electric Li (flits arc clean, hvaliliy and safe. Xo home or business house should bo tvifhoitt them 'when within reach. WINTERING IN GAMP QUARTERS IN ARMY AfierWhichCameSome Desperate Fighting by Our Kentucky Boys. (Reminiscences of the Ohio county boys of the Confederacy, continued.) Beaver Dam, Ky., Aug. 17. Arriving at Dalton, our boys once quarters. more went into winter Dalton was a beautiful little city of somo 2,000 Inhabitants, US miles and 110 miles from Chattanooga from Atlanta and on the Western and Atlantic Railroad. Hlthorto wo could hear nothing definite from our homes, but now airangements wore made by the two Governments to exchango letters, so whllo wo wero In our winter quarters wo wero receiving letters from our homos regularly. It was a great treat to tho boys to hear from tho "dear ones at home" once more. Tho winter of 18C3 and 'CI was a cold, snowy winter nnd the two great armle3 lay Idlo through that winter without any movements being made by cither side. So the winter woro slowly by, with nothing doing except now and then a prize drill by somo of tho regiments. soldiers wero reTho Southern ceiving presents from their homos, such as clothing nnd provisions, but our boys could receive nothing, ns there was a great hnstilo army us nnd our homos. We could only look at our Southern comrades receive their presents and It Is claimed by some that bore wrs whore tho Kontueky Brlgado rocelv- od tho nnrao of "Orphan Brigade." Anvhow. while thoy wero enjoying their good things, wo woro enjoy lng our boot and corn biead Issued by our Government. through Tho hard campaigns which our boys had peno had thin- en two great armies for another campaign. General Joseph K. Johnston bad taken command of the Army ofTennessee and was having the army equipped and everything in readiness to meet Sherman with his host. So on the first of Jlay the cavalry that covered our front was driven In, then the army was put In motion and on the 4th day of May the 9th Kentucky.wlth the bal-aiiof the brigade, took a position on Rock Face mountain, two miles from Dalton, on tho left of Snake Creek Gap, where the railroad ran through fiom Chattanooga to Dalton. for one We held that position week, when Sherman made a flank movement on Johnston and Johnston mot him at Rosacea. Here one of the most desperate battles of tho Sherman, thlnk-fci- jr war wns fought. that hn had Johnston in a trap, niprie a furious attack, but he was mot my Hardee's Corps which hurled Mm hack in great disorder. But he renewed the onslaught and this time his main attack wns against They made Biigade. tlio Orphan several desperate charges, but each time tl'oy were hurled back with great slaughter. Horo Sergeant J. K. WIck'.lff, of our company, was killed and some of our ooys were wounded, but we held our position when night put an end to the fighting. Just at nightfall, when everything hnd become calm, the 4th Kentucky hrnss band came out on the picket line nnd played "Dixie." Everything was perfectly still till the music ceased, when they fired a volley, but to no effect, as our boys wero In tho ditches that night. Johnston wlthdrow his army across tho Ostenrola rlcor and took a In Cartersvllle. co po-slt- on , An ordinary case of diarrhoea can, as a rule, lit cured by a single doso of Chamberlaln'sColIc, Cholera This rem- .and Dlarrhooa Remedy edy has no superior for bowel com plaints. For salo by all deal m ers. Subscribe for The Herald; $1 a year. QY.. ITIflllfllQ ..W.....W, JOf www. Children Cry Fifty Young Men Wanted. Fifty moro young men arc want" ill?. "" u,r, ? ed to learn Telegraphy and accept uui nun liiu iiujiiuui liiui, t.un jij wero positions as telegraph operators on In at Russollvllle. Wo endeared to each other as brotbors tho L. & N. Railroad. Address E. Nashville, and If one of the company wont to H. ROY, Supervisor, B4t." the country nnd made a ralso ot Tonn. to eat pa3t common, ho alanything r. od I N f -- &- -- , M CASTORIA FOR FLETCHER'S ways divided with tho boys. As the spring ot 1864 opened arrangements were being made by the Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA t I.' PAGE EIGHT, THE HARTFORD HERALD 6 J. Bniner, Tastor. O WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1911. H The Hartford Herald ooooooooooooooooo O O BAPTIST CHURCH. AV. 1 ADABUItG. Aug. 18. Mr. nnd Mrs. C. L. Patton, who havo been away on a llshlng trip for the past month, have returned home. Thoy report a great time and a catch of more than two hundred fish, the largest weighing Blxty pounds. and Miss Mr. nnd Mrs. Gordon Dora Hines, of Taffy, spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. John Itaymond here. Quito a number of people from hero are attending the Cox meeting at Mt. Morlah. Mr. and Mrs. Almon Duke, of Pa-l- o, spent Thursday night with Mrs. Duke's sister and brother, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Patton. Bernard Taylor, son of J. W. Taylor, Is very 111 of typhoid fever. Mrs. Albert Helm left last week for Owenscoio, where she will remain and undeigo an operation. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Miller, of Dun- dec, and Mrs. C. E. Miller and of Magan, daughter, Kathleen, Epeiit Friday with Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Patton. MAXWKIjIi. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Prayer service Wednesday ing even Elegant Cote We Give Certificates lil IE UU USE! EC Bible school Sunday at 9:45 a. Dr. E. W. Ford, Supt. Morning worship at 10:45 a. m. Preaching by the pastor. Themo of sermon: "The Training of Children." It Is tho purpose of tho speaker to discuss tho responsibility upon parents, the tendencies of the present day and tho Dlblo admonitions against tho way children are being reared. worship at 8 o'clock. Evening Themo of sermon: "A Practical m. Teachers' meotlng In the Daraca room Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. at 8 o'clock. " Pino Yoi HE DC K Free! Til Your Friends Will Help Get It y with every ca8n Purcnas0 made at our store and soon this community will have many thousand dollars worth of these certificates in its possession. It will be easy for you and your friends to secure a largo percentage of these certificates it you get busy at once. Line Ud Your Friends and collecfc a greater amount than anyone else and secure for, your very own this Christianity." B. Y. P. U. at 7 o'clock. The public cordially Invited to worship with ub. A Piano Worth Owning Here is a short description of this magnificent Cote piano: It is a large size instrument, measuring 4 ft. 9 in. in height. 5 ft. 2. in." in length and weighs, boxed ready for shipment, over 800 lbs. The finest material and most experienced workmanship have produced in the Cote an instrument excellent in tone, power and appearance. The case designed is very beautiful. It is adorned with rich carvings, standing out in bold relief, indicating artistic elegance. The surface of the instrument attracts at once with its deep mellow color, polished and resplendent as d is a wealth of genuine ivory keys. The action is easy, elastio and responsive. Tho piano a mirror. The tone, at once deep and tender, capable alike of producing spectacular musical effects and of has a fine, yielding the softest, dreamiest melodies. This elegant piano compels admiration for its massive showy qualities, and likewise proves itself friendly to deepest, tenderest feelings of the heart. It will win its princely way in any home. It is installed in thousands of tho best homes, conservatories, educational and religious institutions in the land is well and favorably recommended by leading public men, women and institutions; by musicians, teachers and and other excellent judges of musical instruments. Ask to see the portfolio containing these recommendations. key-boarfull-singin- g K OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO There will be a church conference In connection with the prayer meeting Wednesday at 8 p. m. full attendance of members is sired. Pleaching at Goshen next A de- METHODIST CHUBCn Virgil Elgin, Pastor. o O Aug. 19. Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmle Flelden, of Owensboro, are visiting relatives nnd friends of this neighborhood. Mrs. G. E. Barr, of this place, Is visiting her father In Owensboro. Mr. and Mrs. Bog Nance went to Hartford Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Crowe and Mr. and Mrs. Jlmmle Flelden, of Owensboro, spent Thursday with Mrs. Bob Hudson here. Misses Fannie Delacy and Barbery Cox, of Glenmllle, are visiting Mrs. Clayton Morgan. EASTVIKW. Quito a crowd from this place attended the W. O. W. barbecue at Sugar Grove Friday. Mr. Karney HInton went to Waco, Texas, Monday, to mako that his future home. Messrs. 1. J. and L. D. French made a business trip to Owensboro Thursday. Mr. J. T. Taylor, of Henderson, lslted friends and relatives In this vicinity recently. Mr. and Mrs. S. F. McKlnley, of Auburn, spent the past week with relatives In this community. Mr. J. C. Taylor, Henderson, Is spending a few dajs with relathes here. Our school is getting along nicely with Miss Sally Crowe as teacher. M. Martin, Mrs. Sally of this place, died of consumption of the year of bowels In the skty-secon- d her age, August 10th. Funeral services were conducted at Bell's Bun churcli on the 11th by Bev. N'orrls Lashbrook, after which her remains were laid to rest In tho Bell's Bun cemetery. Mrs. Jane Mitchell died August lGth of old ago and complication of diseases. Her remains were Interred In tho Barnett's Creek cemetery on the ICth. Aug. 21. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O BHOADS. O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Alvah Clayton, son of David S. and Lula Loney Bhoads, was born May 22, 1892. He died July 21, 1911. Ho united with the Baptist 'church In Beaver Dam, Ky No vember, 1908, and lived a faithful member, loved by all, until death. He had prepared himself to teach in the schools of tho State, and was a success In his profession. His alms in life were high, but God called him to live In "tho better land" when his career on earth had just begun. His many friends mourn his loss, "but earth hath no sorrows which heaven cannot heal." His Pastor, A. B. Gardner. GIBIi WIFE OF ELEVEN 3IOTHEK OF BABY GIRL Probnbly Kentucky Is Mrs. Ben Thomas, of Calvert City. Mrs. Thomas gave birth last week to a girl baby which weighed nine pounds. Mrs. Thomas In only eleven years old and will not be twelve until October. Mother and baby are doing well. Benton, Ky., Aug. 18. 1V. Get it For Yovir Home This piano will make your for1 home more .attractive rest of the yourself, for the family, and for your many friends. It will beautify the' parlor, keep the children at home; teach the daughter a fine accomplishment, make home life pleasant to the son, entertain your friends, brighten the lonely hours, and promote sociability and good Or For Your Society If not for yourself, then you will want this piano for your lodge, literary society, schoolroom, church, Sunday school, or labor union. A will secure a larger membership, bring out the members every meeting, make the program more impressive, add to the beauty of the room, and promote the friendship of all the members. pi-an- o the youngest mother In How to Secure this $550 Pioaio Free- Cut out the coupon at the bottom of this advertisement, fill it in properly, mail or bring it to our store. ' Then buy your goods at our store, get your friends to buy, and have your friends to get their friends to buy. Collect all their certificates and place them to your jVith your friends help you can secure several hunown credit in our store ballot box. dred dollars worth of certificates every week. The piano will be given to the one securing the greatest number of certificates between September 1 , 1911, and May , 1912. 1 NOTICE! have moved my office to the drug store of J. H. Williams. 1 E. B. PENDLETON, Al. D. Notice. Camp No. 198, W. O. V vWunvC'1 tlle monument of Sovereign .1. L.V Hooer, deceased, on Thursday, September 7, 1911, at Clear Bun. y An session will bo held. Vnvelllng will take place at 2 o'clork, p. m. The public generally Is invited to bo present and all Woodmen who can conveniently aro especially requested to bo present and nld In the services. All persons living within convenient distance will kindly bring a filled basket, etc., as dinner will be served on the grounds. h. E. WADE, Con. Com. By J. W. GBAY, Clerk. Clear Biu"1 all-dant-te- nd "V FOR SALE, One hundred and four acres of land, mostly cleared, In full state of cul tivation, half bottom, half hill, 14 acres of which Is well timbered. This land is In two tracts, adjoining, underlaid with a vein of No. 11 dwelling, coal. Good ilno stock barn, good young orchard, two good wells nnd stock pond of everlasting water. Near Hartford and Beaver Dam pike. Will sell as a whole or In two tracts. Terms reasonable. For further particulars call on or address, John M. Chlnn or Mitchell Baldwin, Beaver Dam, Ky. Clt4 Accused of Stealing. E. D. Chamberlain, of Clinton, Mo., boldly accuses Bucklen'a Arnica Salvo of stealing tho sting from burns or scalds tho pain from sores of all kinds tho distress from bolls or piles. "It robs cuts, corns, brufees, sprains and In juries of their terror," ho says, "as a healing remedy Its equal doesn't exist." Only 2."c at James II. Williams, m (7 OUR PRICES WILL REMAIN AS LOW AS EVER. REMEMBER: It will not cost you one penny more to trade with us. Our priceB stay just as low besides, we offer many speoial bargains. Our goods will Btil be of thoroughly reliable quality, our styles and patterns all modern and at the height of fashion. There is every reason why you should do all your trading at our store. l!i COME TO THE STORE AND SEE THE PIANO Play on it test it, then enter your name in the contest which TO-DA- Y BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1, 1911. Jolm McPnnloI Dead nt Mnvwoll. Following an Illness lasting sev eral weeks, John McDanloI, ono of tho best known residents of his sec (Fill out, cut out and mail or bring to our store.) t tion, died of n complication of dis eases at the homo of Daniel Blsh-mn- n, near Maxwell, Thursday after- noon. He was eighty years of age. CEUATiVO. Aug. 21. Dr. J. M. Evorloy, who and, although having been married, has been dangerously 111 for Bovcral was a widower and Is not survived by any children or Immediate rela weeks, Is no better. Miss WIlllo KImmcll, Rochester, tives. Is !sltlng the family of D. W. KImBuy It now. Now is tho timo to mcll. buy a bottlo of Chamberlain's Colic, and Cholera and Diarrhoea Bemedy. It Messrs. Bon Morrlwoather , visitJohn Richardson, of Is almost certain to bo needed beed tholr sister, Mrs. Larkln Baker, fore tho summer Is over. This rem last week. edy has no superior. For sale by Mr. Clyde Klmblcy and family, all dealers. ra Bowling Green, aro visiting relaFor Snip, tives here. m A portable sawmill, County Unit Indorsed. In good repair. Will sell reasonaTrankfort, Ky., Aug. 19. Tho ble, on easy payments. For further action of tho Democratic State Con- particulars call on or address W. Incorporating tho county P. Her, Bockport, Ky., or Adam vention unit plank In tho platform at Louis- Fulton, Beaver Dam, Ky Route ville was Indorsed by tho Franklin No. 1. 32t4 Association of Baptists Veteran Offender Fined. After n long debate on a motion Ben Johnson, a to psbs the wool tariff revision bill man of Christian county, has been over President Taft's veto, tho convicted on 17 accounts for bootHouse lata Friday failed to pass the legging and received fines amounttwo-thiring to 1,G69.50. bill by tho necessary He Sold his liqvote, the result being 227 to 129r uor from a jug and Bold It at ten centa a drink. This killed the wool bill. to-da- y. sixty-year-old ds Cut Out Sign Name, JF"1 Bring to Store I docs not obligate me NOMINATION COUPON wish to nominate as a candidate in your piano contest 1.. Faik & Co., Main St., Haktfokd, Ky. I understand this is merely a in any way. nomination,not a vote, and Name Bale Address. To-da- y u d ii ir ii MMiMIHMIHMBafHHMMHNifeNMliMM4lMHia if a r TJrcn rk Vm, v. m. JilGb, ti ir 311 &QSE , iT rtail -- 1 w jtmt yj t ; IE SF1EKy!J tr v rv ' -