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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): September 6, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): September 6, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911090601_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): September 6, 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. (. lip- - Id THE HARTFORD HERALD. SubscHption $1 JPer Year, in Advance, "I Cow, tie Herald of n M r'. a h'nj World, the Ifewi of 111 Nation Limbering at Hj Back." All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. 1.) 37th XEAR. Mi CREARY HARTFORD, KY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1911. ands gathered upon the square, and it was fully ten minutes before the chairman could restore quietude among those who thronged tho NO. 36 COMES .ni i 5, : OPENS CIVIL WARFARE NOW RAMPANT In Morgan County Men Killed. RAILROAD SUNKEN SHIPS OF as a spendthrift and his clothes plainly showed his delight in dres. The Jewelry and wearing apparel will all be auctioned off publicly at embezzled $4G,000 STATE GAMP IN CITY jist, At Bowling Green to a Crowd of 5,000. GREAT DAY FOR PARK stand. From a Democratlc. point of view this was a great day and the local campaign managers are exuberant with the results of the first day in the local field. n Prlzo Flglit. Tho One of tho biggest attractions that haB come to Hartford In recent n years will be the celebrated Jeffries-JohnsoJeffries-Johnsoprize-figh- t, CERVEip FLEET Washington. Lee Is the young Kentuckian who from the pay- BACH REPLY master's safe aboard the battleship Four May be Floated to Save the Salvage. Georgia, while she was In Havana harbor last February. Afte1 committing the theft ho got away from the ship and came to New York, whence he went to Atlanta, Ga. money-spendin- g. Says He Will Prove Peary a Fraud Sure. TRUCK DESTROYED which will be ' u tv and also all the preliminaries. BIG FEAST FOR BODY AND SOUL Those who attend will get to seo event just as It this world-famooccurred, and It will be worth goBowling Green, Ky., Sept. 4. For the second time In his political ing miles to see. It will be tho first career the Hon. James B. McCreary exhibition of this noted event that to-dopened a campaign (or elec- has appeared In this section. There ot film tion as Governor of the Common-wreat- h will be six reels 6,000 feet and tho entertainment will last when he delivered his first especspeech as the Democratic nominee. about throe hours. Ladles ially Invited. Mr. McCreary opened his first years ago, campaign just thirty-si- x in 1875. In those Democratic days lie had an easy race and was elected serving from 1875 to Governor, 1879. Never did a Dpmocratlc campaign open under more favorable conditions, nor can the Democratic standard-bearer complain from a point of Isuccess of the meeting. There is no questioning that opening of the campaign was a great success In so far as a crowd was concerned, and it is estimated that about 5,000 people SIR. G. H. LIKENS, heard his opening address on tho public square. Who haB been appolntod chairman The local managers had not left of the Ohio County Democratic a stone unturned to draw the people Campaign Committee by Chairman here. Not only Warren but tho R. H. Vansant, of tho State Comcounties were billed with mittee. The appointment came a dodgers announcing tho opening of few days ago. Mr. Likens, besides the fall activities with' an immense being one "of tho most popular men "barbecue, free to all, and Inviting of this section with all parties, Is men, women and children to be admirably fitted for this place, both present. Advance guards wero sent by experience and ability. For the through the county urging the farm- past two years he has occupied this ers to lay down their work for the place and it was mainly through his day and bring their families to the tireless energy and splendjd zeal of Democracy. reat love-fea- st that Ohio county was switched Great preparations wero made for from the Republican to the Demotho big barbecue. Each precinct In cratic column last fall. Mr. Likens has already started the county was asked to contribute either money or carcasses for tho out to perfect a fine organization event, and those of Democratic faith In this county, and he should reresponded liberally. Big trenches ceive the loyal support and assistfor the barbecuing were dug Satur- ance of every Democrat in It. His day In a vacant lot adjoining tho thorough knowledge of affairs and Xioose Leaf Tobacco Warehouse. All men has won him prestige as a Sunday night and up to the hour of party leader and he needs only the feasting, men worked laboriously support of his party men to win a over the glowing embers, preparing victory creditable alike to all. Ho carcasses for the hun- Is a square but earnest worker for the 100-od- d gry hordes gathered for the feast his party and his opponents always glvo him credit for a clean camThe feast was served In the Im- paign. By 9 mense loose leaf warehouse. o'clock in tho morning tho public METAL HATS NEWEST WONDERS IN MILLINERY square began filling with the crowd of men, women and children. An Now York, Sept. 2. Tho newest hour later the band, employed for of tho wonders In the windows the occasion, came marching up , " Main street and for two .hours the Fifth avenuo milliners is the metal hat, which tho public Is assured throngs were enlivened by music. ' Promptly at tho noon hour the will bo tho proper thing for the young woman this fall. crowds, which were more or less modish scattered, were collected together Some of the hats are reminiscent of on tho square, and, headed by the the helmet, some are flat and broad, band, a march down College' street but they are all different from hats simare to the warehouse was begun and the of other years. They cheap.notFlowple and they are not feasting commenced. To be early on the grounds of ers and feathers, lace and fur, gold activity, Senator McCreary and a and silver are employed lavishly. number of others prominent In the The metallic .effect Is obtained In a variety of ways, including such novcouncils VI mu pun., auircu m uiu iSclty at 6 o'clock Sunday evening. elties as metal fringe, silver flowwHe was met at tho dopot by a re- - ers, bronzed flowers and gold and silver meshes and laces. head- CENTER OF POPULATION Democratic improvised the quarters at the Mansard Hotel. VaIN BLOOMINGTON, IND. rious Democratic politicians called during the evening to pay their reWashington, Sept, 2. The cen-- i spects and affirm their allegiance to tor nt nonnlnllnn of thfi United the party. An informal reception fStates was announced by Director y was held at the hotel this morning, of the Census Durand to be inany women being among the call- In the western part of the city of Bloomingtdn, Monroe county, Ind. ers. An auto truck was pressed Into This Is eight miles 'further west service for the day, in which the than tho location announced July various speakers were conducted 17, when Director Durand placed ,. frnm thn harhecue to the nlaCO Of It four and miles south speaking on the -- public square. of Unionville,' In tho same county. w.w .uuu i. 111 DyCttRCl a Woman o bo Tried. yror tne occasion, as u uu uuvu. ytc-Mt. Sterling, Ky.(Sept. 2. The arranged to have the epeak- address tno auaience irom mo first trial of a white wpman for murder which has occurred In Montr fruolri MA. tfha Hon. Mills Logan, of Ed- - gomery county in years will.be hold mend son aounty, acted as master of next week, when the case against cerno(Mi, and introduced the Ansa White and his wife, Ducllla fjpakWrs of the day. In a brief but White, for the killing of James Dea-to(n Breathitt 'ceunty several pointed address he-- introduced months ago. will be called. The who was received case was transferred here, and over with great applause. will appear. The olofttag of his address was a hundred witnesses outburst ot Much Interest In the, trial la being tbeBljiMU ai;ial ' the thois- - manifested. cheers ay in When the Hosts of Democracy exhibitedOperamoving pictures at Dr. And Sheriff and Deputies Fear House Bean's It to Invade the Warwill show every movement of each Gather to Honor Their round of the famous fight until ring: Community. blow Is given the final knock-ou- t Noted Leader. DEATH LURKING EVERYWHERE Lexington, Ky Sept. 4. As the result of tho killing of four men within five days of each other, recently on White Oak creek, Morgan county, Ky letters received here y Indicate that a condition approaching actual civil war exists In that locality between certain prominent families who are rivals In business and politics there. The property of both Bides is being destroyed, and warnings have been Issued by each side to the other not to operate in that particular district again; The authorities seem powerless to cope with tho situation. The four men killed have all met death within tho last month. They were Leek White, killed In a duel with Buddy White in the court house yard at Salyersvllle; Buddy White and Jas. Harper, shot so badly by Leek White that they died In a Lexington hospital, and Jefferson Brovyn, shot through the heart by Sheriff Cottle, of West Liberty, when Cottle attempted to arrest Brown. Sheriff Cottle .was taken to the West Liberty jail for safekeeping, as Brown's friends are said to have been greatly Incensed and planned summary vengeance against tho Subsequent developments Sheriff. show that when Jeff Brown was killed by Sheriff Cottle, a notice was tacked up on some timber where he had been working, which read: "If you want to live, don't work the tram-roa- d any more." All of the trouble aroso over disputed lines between the farms of tho Whites and Browns. Brown was a one-arman, and Sheriff Cottle shot him through the heart. Sheriff Cottle and his deputies have been notified to steer clear of that section since. built by mill hands . The tram-roa- d to remove timber from the Brown farm had been destroyed, It Is alleged, by the slain man's relatives and friends. It was rebuilt by mill hands a few days ago and cut up a second time and thrown into tho creek. Threats wore then posted warning all not to rebuild the road on pain ot death. Following tho posting of these notices, which wore nailed up with 45 Colts rovolvors, an armed mob paraded the creek valley and "shot up" the highway; so many shots being fired, sayB tho report, that it made almost a continuous roar. Tho people of that section, the letters state, are in terror of their lives, and as the Sheriff and his deputies are said to be afraid to venture Into that end of tho county, further bloodshed and destruction of property is fearod. Lexington citizens have been appealed to for aid by residents of that section in tho letters received hero bringing news of the lawless condition of affairs In that section, and a revenue man arriving hero from Morgan county last night corroborates the terrorized state of so ciety in that part of Morgan county, which Is remoto from a railroad or telephone or telegraph communication, and consequently news filters through with difficulty. to-dam PROJECT RECALLS THE STORY There he posed as a rich mine WILL ALSO broker and startled the Inhabitants of that city with his Of Junkmen's Raids, When Then he came to New York, He Declares His as another beforehand heralded g Scotty," and while stopping here, made a great ImpresSearch for Gold. sion upon the hotel district by his utter disregard for money. Soon WHERE SUNKEN VESSELS LIE after he was captured by detectives In Buffalo and later sentenced to Santiago De Cuba, Sept. 4. Ave years' Imprisonment In the President Taft's recent message to Federal prison at Atlanta. Before Congress, asking that It be deter- leaving Washington, where he was mined whether the Spanl shmen-of-wconvicted, he married a telephone sunk In the battle of Santiago, oporator there. thirteen years ago, should be given away, and Secretary Knox's opinion A SPLENDID TRIBUTE TO EDITOR HENRY WATTERSON that the wrecks belong to the United States, have revived speculation Editors Herald: While I'm In here as to the possibility of refloat-ingth- e n ships. the fullest sympathy with Mr. believe his Engineers who have studied the and religiously location of the three battleships fortress Is simply impregnable, the and two torpedo boats,; are of the circumstances of his brilliant and opinion that their salvage Is prac- masterly battle for the true faith ticable, and would warrant tho ex- before the State Convention reminds me since the passing of more sepense of saving the hulks. hero, Seven miles west of tho narrow rious moods of Arlsostns' mouth to Santiago Harbor lies the who, "not perceiving he had been battleships, tho killed outright, continued to fight first of Cevera's Almlrante Oquendo. She is beached valiantly." "NOBLEST ROMAN OF THEM in the breakers of Juan Gonzales, d The future will say: of her hulk ALL!" with about "There were giants In those days." visible above tho white tops. Long ago she was stripped of so gentle and the elements every portable article by wreckers "His life So mixed in him, that Nature may who braved a watery grave for the stand up prizes she was reputed to have held. And say to all the world, "This Is a Theys took everything they could man." pry loose, Including, report has It, many thousands of golden coins May he live long and enjoy the from the ship's safe. Recent In- full fruitage of his eventful life and spection has shown that tho Alml- lofty purposes, and, when he crossrante Oquendo was sacked even of es over tho river to the Inviting the rrvetssvhlch held her fixtures In shades on the other side, there'll d place. ever be a beaten and Admiral Cervera's flagship, tho pathway to his graye tho noblest VIzcaya, lies eight miles farther monument ambition over craved, or down the rocky coast, as much a was ever reared to tho good and victim to the depredations of ocean great. XXX junkmen as tho Oquendo. A third Rockport, Ky., Sept. 1, 1911. of her form breaks the land line, IIEFLIN. and It Is believed there would bo Sept. 4. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester comparatively little difficulty in reSunday , spent covering her, with other ships of Shown, of Spanish fleet, although she with their daughter, Mrs. Robert the would be entirely worthless, It Is Ronfrow, near here. Mr. Malcom Pirtle, of Owens-borthought, as a vessel of war. Is visiting his sisters, Mrs. Nearly two hours' sail from the forty-eigLattle and Kate Heflin, at this place. Vizcaya, at Rio Torqulno, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Johnson, of miles from this city, is the of the four Spanish ships', the Nocreek, attended church at the third and dined with Chrlstobal Colon. The Colon has Valley Sunday k. been preserved from the hand of tho Mrs. Martha Rowan and Mrs. vandal by four fathoms of water School will begin at this place above her. Locked In her safe there Prof. L. C. Taylor, Is said to be a large amount of this morning. money; aboard her nothing has teacher. Mr. Ed. Bennett, of Owensboro, been disturbed since she was silenced by American guns and run Is visiting his 'daughter, Mrs. Jane Peach, here. ashoro to prevent capture. Miss Clara Ellis left for Carrier The water Is comparatively deep at the point where she lies submerg- Mills, 111., Friday, where she will ed, and tho land rises abruptly from start to work soon. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Reuben the sea, a sheerpreclplc o of considerable proportions. Her salvage Leisuro, a girl. would probably be the most difficult CKNTERTOWN. of the three, onglneers assert. Sept. 4. Farmers aro very busy The history of the fourth vessel of the fleet, tho Infanta Marie Tere breaking wheat ground after tho sa, Is well known. She was floated good rains. Mr. Alva Calloway Is preparing by Lieutenant Richmond P. Hobson, ' his dwelling on Main lost In tow to remodel of Merrlmac fame, and street. of an American war vessel on her Messrs. O. O. Williams, Esq. Jackway to an American port during a son and Mrs. O. B. Boskctt attendsquall off Cat Island In the West InIndies. Engineers have decreed her ed tho Ohio County Teachers' stitute at Hartford last week. unworthy of a second attempt at Work has at last boon started on salvage. tho Graded School building here. The two secondary vessels of Ad We are planning on having a miral Corvera'B fleet, the torpedo new flouring mill in operation hero boats Furor and Pluton, Ho submerged not far from the harbor en- by October the 1st. School begun here Tuesday with trance. The safe of the Pluton and easily portable articles from her Prof. Hoagland as principal. deck and cabins have been recoverWYSOX. ed. Tho Furor Is practically undisSept. 4. Rev. Barbee filled his turbed. Both Ho in comparatively regular appointment at the Christshallow water. ian church here Sunday. and Davenport Mrs. Rachel daughter Pearl visited Mr. and LEE'S BELONGINGS TO BE AUCTIONED OFF Mrs. Ed WilliamB at Paradise Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Cox have reNew York, Sept. 2. Secret serv ice detectives who arrested Edward turned from Illinois and aim to Valentine Leg, in Buffalo, N. Y., make their home In Kentucky. Miss Rhoda Williams, of Para-dls'- o, last June, have forwarded to the Is visiting friends and relaof the District ot Columbia Marshal about $3,000 worth of Jewels and tives in this community. , Rev. Shields will begin a .series clothes taken from Lee at the time at Cool Springs toof his arrest. Among the lot were of meetinga several pieces of valuable Jewelry, night. a couple of rings "worth several hun Misses Marian and Margaret Wilfor St. dred dollars and clothes Talued up liamson wIH leave into, the hundreds- - Lee,, was need Johns to enter school again. "money-spendinar Wat-tersoone-thirtear-stalnpo, ht Hol-brooto-d- ay -- CM OWN CASE Narrative in Magazine Vessels Wer,e Stripped in Hampton's Was "Doctored." HAS .MOST CONCLUSIVE PROOF New York, Sept. 2. Ten addi- tional charges against Rear Admiral Peary on a reiteration that Cook and not Peary discovered the North by Cook to Pole, were made the International Congress of the to-da- y Geographical Society. When that body meets In Rome In the middle of October, It will be asked to name a committee to con- sider the entire matter. Cook declares that he can now prove his case without all his missing iiroofa.which htf left in the Arc- -' tic region with Harry Whitney, and claims that he Is prepared to demonstrate absolutely the way he says he traveled In his exploration of the North pole. "I have purposely waited so that I could prepare In proper order all my material," he said, In his de? mand for an lnquln. He added, "Now I have all my proofs, and, In addition, evidence of the fraud and bribery In a conspiracy to discredit me." Cook Insists that he did not send all his material to Copenhagen, It has not been scientifically compiled, and that he now realizes that this was a most serious blunder, which he Is, at present, rectifying In the proofs he is to send to President William Smith, of the Scottish Geographical Society. book, ho record His says, shows his dally observations, and checks up his speed records, his proving "most conclusively" claims. He assailed Peary's speed record as "bordering on the Impossible," and said that it "should be analyzed by the scientists of the world." Cook declared that his narrative In Hampton's was emasculated and "editorially doctored" for advertisand that material ing purposes changes were made without his consent. he-cau-se day-by-d- j to-da- y. SMXLLIIOrS. Day, near Sept. 4. Mr. John Greenville, waB the gupst of Mr. and attended W. T. Lawrence church here, Saturday and Sunday. and wife, Overton Mr. Charlie Contertown, attended church hero Sunday and were guests of Mr. Alva Calloway and family. Mr. Lewis Fulkerson has joined the U. S. Armv. will leave Mrs. Mattie Reld Thursday for a visit to her daughter, Mrs. Dr. Ellis Miller, Monette, She will bo accompanied as Mo. far as St. Louis by Mrs. Garfield Barnard, who will visit relatives Miss Ethel Hunter spent last week with relatives at Ceralvo. Mr. S. T. Hunter and wlfo are guests of Mr. C. O. Hunter, at Hartford, this week. Kittinper visited Mrs. Opplo friends nt Island the latter part or last week. who celebrated Among those "Rob Morris Day" at Island, from this place, last Thursday, wero: Mesdames Wm. Addlngton, Bob FulRoss, Mr. Jesso kerson, Chester KIrtley and Miss Omn Mnddox. Is visiting Miss Nan Addlngton friends at Island. Addlngton and Mrs. Herman children have returned from a visit to Bevier. Picked Cartridge With Pin. Mt. Sterling, Ky.. Sept. 1. Whllo fooling with a dynamite cap at the homo of William Hlaett, J. R. Moryears, atton, aged seventy-fiv- e tempted to pick the cap with a pin, when tho usual result followed and Morton is minus both thumbs and two fingers on each hand. His condition Is serious, While awaiting tho arrival of his1 fiancee from Europe, D. E. .Garrison, a St. Louis business man, committed suicide In New York' last week because ot 111 health. there. ' to-da- one-quart- er "iwY Notice. meeting of the tobacco growers of Ohio county Is called to meot at the court house In Hart ford, Soptember ICth, at 1 o'clock for the purposo of considering prlce-roaklof tho 1911 crop of tobacco. All pooling pledges aro urged to be turned In by that date. All members of the Finance Commit tee are requested to be present. HENRY M. PIRTLE, Sec'y. A mass i i a ng n, ff idriMl"fc7 managers campaign Republican changed their plans after seeing the speaking dates ' and Democratic Judge O'Rear's Itinerary has been changed so as to send him Into the Ninth district the week of September 11. M ??V ' : ' I ?s i, PAGE TWO. THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 9, 1911. a no V '' 1 x r;. . Ijir Would Tlies Ilexra You Like to Own a Piaoio? m. . f -- I. ! S al f 3 Xa S ( t I MAGNIFICENT $350 COTE PIANO GIVEN AWAY FREE Gome to ttae Store and EycetxTraine tine Piano This picture does not do justice to the beautiful piano now on d:splay at our store. piano, A delightful worthy the place of honor in any home. sweet-toned H6RE IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY An instrument : piano, abHere is your opportunity to get a high-pricesolutely f ice,- and at the same time save money on every purchase you make at our store. T&ar We are now giving with every purchase of merchandise made at our store, a certificate or certificates for the amount of the purchase. These certificates are transferable from one to another, and may be secured by everyone who pays cash for their goods. The person or society, church, lodge, etc., securing the greatest value in cash certificates by May 1, 1912, will be presented with this piano absolutely free. d - ill Here h a short description of tills magnificent Cote plnno: It, is a large sired instrument, measuring 4 ft., 0 In. In height, O ft., 2 In. in length anil weigh, hoet ready for shipment, over 800 pounds. The finest materials and most experienced workmanship hare produced In the Cote an instrument excellent in tone, power and appearance. The case design beautiful. It Is adorned with rich carvings, standing out In hold relief, indicating nrtistlc elegance. The surface of the Instrument attracts at once with Its deep mellow color, polished and resplendent as a mirror. The keyboard is a wealth of genuine ivory keys. The action is and responsive. This piano has a fine, full singing tone, at once deep nnd tender, capable alike of producing spectacular effects, and of yielding the softest, drcamiest'melodies. It is installed in thousands of the best homes, conservatories, educational and religious institutions in thc land, nnd is well nnd favorably recommended by leading public men, women, and Institutions, by musicians, teachers, and other excellent judges of musical Instruments. Ask to see thc portfolio containing these recommendations. easy,-elastic, The Iiemo Make Yoir Purchases Get your friends interested in To-da- y and Save Every Certificate out-of-to- wn to-da- .........a.. you IRE TIME friends make their cash purchases here and transfer their certificates to you. You will be surprised how quickly these certificates accumulate, and you can win this piano if you try. Get a good start by coming to the store There is something of interest to you in every department of our immense stock and there will be special sales on various lines of merchandise every day. By paying cash for the goods you buy, you- - will save money and may get this elegant piano free. This piano will be awarded someone on May 1,1912. your behalf. Have your y, - - i 4!!!! 4 ? 5 "J J 4 J 5 S 5 5 I "J f" I" E li! ? J ? ? ! !i $ $ ! J J4 J H -- v. o iq! JjjffiC A "i ?.? If You Don't wish the piano for Yniirsplf. thpn hln a fripnn or Society get it. MONEY AND AHEDED Is take out a few feet more, but they will hardly attempt to clear the basin of mud and water, as the plan The aft was originally announced. part of the wreck which suffered lit- Before Wreck of the Maine Floated. OVERCOME DIFFICULTIES Part of the Wreck ican Port. May be Towed to Some Amer- I i FORWARD PART OXIiY JL'.VK .r Havana, Sept. 2. The work on the wreck of the Maine has not yet gone beyond the experimental stage, 11 one studies closely the different tacks being taken to carry out the plan of the cotferdam and to raise the wreck or that part of it which was not damaged by the explosion. While the general plan of building a cofferdam around the wreck and pumping out the water and mud has been generally followed, the minor details, such as making the cofferdam tight and Btrong, and able to withstand the outside pressure of tho water, have proven greater than tho average person will Imagine. In the first place, many of the circular caissons forming tho cofferdams wero very badly driven. One gave gave entirely before pumping was started. These slabs of piling are 73 feet long. Tho water nbout the wreck Is about 35 feet deep. Tho soft slime and mud is 10 or 15 feet more, and this leaves but 25 feet of the plies In firmer clay and hard-pa- n at the bottom of tho harbor. As the water was pumped lower In tho cofferdam tho prcsuro from tho outside Increased, and as tho pressure on the caissons Increased tho circular' affah-- gave In, taking an oval form to a slight extont.not noticeable to the eye, but clearly shown by tho test lines set. This trouble tho engineers tried to obviate by dumping rock on tho top of tho caissons r.nd against the inside walls of the cofferdam. Tho water pumped down to level, showed the weakthe ness of the cofferdam, and with rock dumped inside, made tho work of pumping out more mud dangerous. 18-fo- ot be able to Carolina, and John Walter Smith, of Maryland, In the Senate. The House has five Smiths. These are Charles B. Smith, of New York; J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan, and Samuel W. Smith, of the same tle from the explosion tho ship State; Sylvester C. Smith, of Calibeing literally cut in two will have fornia, and William It. Smith, of to bo floated, and to do this all the Texas. Michigan Is liberal with her bulkheads must he made absolute- Smiths and has furnished the Six Congress with one Senaly secure. That pohtlon of the wreck can be tor and two Representatives. towed to an American port and tho SKIIITS TO HE OPEX IX people, who will spend close to a FItOXT, SAYS MILLINER million dollars In ralstnE it, may be given an oportunlty of viewing New York, Sept. 2. Charles vo3)el. what remains of tho Kurtzman, a Fifth-avenu- e milliner, The forward part of the ship Is who returned yesterday on the Kaisnothing but Junk, oven to the bot- er Wllhelm II., had at his linger tom plates, not even a nmnll conends all the latest tips on the comnection holding the bow to the af- ing fashions. Listen to him: ter part. Th? destruction was so "Skirts are going to be cut open complete that It Is difficult to IdenIn front, Just enough to reveal the tify many of tho pieces, even though ankles, and as a result women will the naval constructor hero has a greater care In the selection of model of the original ship with take boots and, and, er, stockings. which to compare the pieces. There "This new style of dress," Mr. Is no chance to find any of the reKurtzman went on, "will be just the mains of those who were In this opposite of the hobble skirt. It will part of the ship, as they have unpermit free action for the limbs and doubtedly been swept away with the will be far more graceful In tho way tides and storms of years. it falls from tho hips. Tho aristoMuch mud and wreckage remains cratic Parlslenne, or New York In the hold of the after part of the woman, will dress in simple, quiet, ship, and this Is being removed, the fine style extreme water tight compartments enabling and foolish instead of the past two stylo of the the workmen to go below the pres- years." ent water surface. Many of those Curved lines will again como Into engaged on the work think tho fashion. Straight lines will be diswreck will bo towed to some Americarded, and no matter how much can port, even to tho Canal Expositia ,strlngbean n woman may apon-at Tho raising like San Francisco. pear, her costumer will make her expensive of the Maine, at least the look round and plump. manner In which tho work Is being Is the result of the sentiments done, of American people and It Is not O COUXTY FAIR PATES IX O thought that tho people will permit O O KENTUCKY. the wreck being taken out to deep OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO water and sunk beforo they have had a chance to see it. Allen Scottsville, Sept. Barren Glasgow, Sept. 27-3- 0. Diarrhoea Is always more or less Butler, Morgantown', Sept. prevalent during September. He Calloway Murray, Oct. 11-1- 4. prepared for It. Chamberlain's ColGraves Mayfield, Sept. ic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Keraedy Hart Horse Cave, Sept. Is prompt and effectual. It can al McCracken Paducah, Oct. ways be depended upon and Is pleas Pendleton Falmouth, Sept, 27-3ant to take. For sale ty all deal .. m era. Lictli Caesar. Caesar was boastlnr about havQUITE AX ARRAY OF ing divided Gaul Into three parts. SMITHS IN CONGRESS "Orcat Scott!" jxclalnied Snralus. "Three parts? Why. Is doing its I illy 1.1 The Smith family i.l Standard Oil into 3." duty by Congress and now has nine parts." men in the House and Senate. Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, is the latest addition to the Smiths. He FO FLETCHER'S . Joins William Allen Smith, of Mich' igan; Ellison D. Smith, of South The engineers may EW EOF HUMANS FOUND In the Arctic Regions of British Columbia. HUD NEVER SEEN AWHITE MAN Or Indian In Country Sup- posed to Have Been Uninhabited. IMPORTANT DATA DISCOVERED New York, Aug. 31.' A race of people who had never beforo beheld a white man or an Indian has been discovered in the Arctic regions of British Columbia by Vllhjmar 's leader of the American which scientific expedition, left here In April, 1908, according to a letter received from him in Brooklyn His letter, dated "Mouth of the Deaso River, October IS, 1910," Is the first Intelligence received from tho party within a year. Stefansson says: ''We have discovered people in a region supposed to be uninhabited and have lived a few months among people who had never seen a white roan or an Indian (though ,thoy had heard of both), and did not even know I was not an Eskimo, so little were they Informed on what white men are like. Wo have discovered Eskimo (in speech nnd habits) who are Scandinavians in appearance. "This find is tho beginning of the solution of oneNof two problems: "What becamo of some of Franklin's men? "What became of tho 3,000 Scandinavians, who disappeared from Greenland in tho fifteenth century? "Or, If nolther of theso questions Is to be answered, then we have Introduced a new problem of scientific Interest: Why do some of the people of Victoria Land differ from the rest of their race? Why are they so European in type? We have discovered the nonexistence of a stream, which the maps make the size of the Hudson river when the river La Ronclere disappears' from, the Stof-ansso- n, Mu-sumto-da- y. map, I shall feel I have done some housecleanlng. "We have found a certain cape to be an Island, and a certain island to be a cape; we know the source of Rae river, of which the mouth and lowest 10 miles were seen by Dr. Rae. And a few other odd things we have done that are In the nature of discoveries. But, of course, If we deserve any credit It will be more for our routine work than for any discoveries property so called." Stefansson left New York on the present expedition In 'April, 1908. His principal purpose was to study the different tribes of Eskimo in thc Northwest, and more especially an unknown tribe living in Victoria Land. The explorer Is about 33 years old and a graduate of Harvard University. He Is more than six feet tall, of robust physique, and has devoted many years to anthropological research, particularly among the Eskimo of tho Northwest. Stefansson was accompanied by Dr. R. M. Anderson, of Harvard. During the long, dreary Journey to the land of the midnight sun the party met with many a hardship, tho explorer writes. Once, when the food supplies ran out and no relief was in sight, he says, they ate the skins, from their fur clothing. In midwinter In 1909 Dr. Anderson fell ill of pneumonia, and lay for a month too ill to be moved. an Board of Equalization on the other side of the hall was raising the assessment on farm lands everywhere from 5 per cent to 20 per cent. The people voluntarily raised $25,000,-000.0- 0, their own assessment but GovMVillson's Board increased the assessment on farm lands $61,000,000.00. Why were the people thus taken by the throat and fleeced of their, hard earnings wrung from the soil? Here is the answer: In a little more than three years Gov. Wlllson spent $277,158.87 for an active militia that amateur soldiers might, in answer to his ridiculous manifesto, roam the State and, in Idleness, eat the money of tho It was absolutely necessary for this sum, in excess of one quarter of a million dollars, to be secured either by an increase in tho tax rate, or $ an Increase in the assessment, and preferring this cowardly subterfuge, Gov. Wlllson's Board of Equalization raised the taxable values- of farm lands $61,000,000.00. tax-paye- Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S Saved. Townley Sorry to hear that your house burned down, old man. Did you lose much? Subbubs Oh, no; the neighbors had borrowed about everything. Subscribe for OASTORIA . ooooooooooooooo 14-1- C. "I have a world of confidence In Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, for I have used It with perfect success," writes Mrs. M. I. Basford, Pooles- vllle, Md. For sale by all deal ers m . fit Herald $1 & Tear 4 JUDGE O'REAU FLATLY EXDORSES GOV. WILLSON One of the very first planks in the Republican platform is an unemilv- ocal endorsement of Gov. Willson's" administration. The Republican party Is responsible for every official act of Gov. Wlllson, and Judgo O'Rear has shown himself a true party man in accepting that burden and undertaking to carry it as If it wore only a feather's weight. When he pledged himself to carry out the orders of bis party as expressed In its platform, he stood sponsor for the work that Gov. Wlllson and his associates have'done at Frankfort a record of extravagance and inefficiency that has no. parallel. .While a Republican Franchise Board was reducing assessments of banks and corporations a Republic So Tired iim 21-2- 3. 27-3- 0. 20-2- 3. 3-- 6. 0. active t With a well conducted LIVER one can do mountains of labor Without fatigue. It adds a hundred per cent to ones earning capacity. it can be keptln healthful ' by, and only by 4 the chances are Its from an It may be from overwork, but In- H-r- c mbVI -- Un-cli- us Tutt'sPiiin TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. UWHHMHM KIDNEYS AND V.4 Gteildrwn cry OASTORIA ' . . , KUL .XTSPMBg.- - :AkA-A.'- . .'. .-- JSE '". .. ""' fCZZ. .jw i1 -- ,a ,,i.- - WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 0, 1911. THE HARTFORD HERALD reflex action in the Individual, In responding to a signal over the wlro JOHNSON the porson tested is asked to touch a revolving cylinder, and the seconds he takes to do so serve to estimate the degree of mentality. I STORM think It will soon be In common use In business to find out among tho applicants for positions, their InAeroplane andNarrowly for tho work demanded, also in schools for discovering In tho beEscapes Death. ginning what a scholar is capable of in educational effort." Geneva Cor. Chicago Record-HeralTHE EXPERIHENNL VOYAGE fitness d. PAGE TIIREE. EDISON S NO S E'S Z 4 AGNOSTIC Scientists See Play of An Eternal Mind in & WORKING OF EARTHLY THINGS ( Are You a Woman 7 1 TAKE U 1' V 18: Great Wizard of Invention Talks About Common Affairs of Life. SCOPE OP THE CHRONOGRAPH SURPRISING WISDOM OUT OP BABE'S MOUTH Dr. Kenyon L. Butterfield, president of the Massachusetts Agricultural College said at a Republican banquet at White River Junction, according to an exchange: "In politics we must bo straightforward. On the tariff question, the we must be open and above board. Any inconsistency or crawfishing will be visited on our heads a thousYea, even out of the andfold. mouths of babes shall we bo condemned." "Like the rich uncle," he resumd ed. "A rich undo of the type was riding his little niece on his knee when the child lisped: " 'Uncle, how long .does a person live?" " 'Thrco Tjcoro years and ten, my dear, is our Scriptural allotment,' rosy-glll-e- Proved Very Delightful to the Noted Kentucky Con- i 3 gressman. FIRST MEMBER Washington, TO SAIL 31. AIR X "I am not a nonbellover In God," said Thomas A. Edison Somo things ho has said have given the Impression that he was .an ag"All nostic, If not an atheist. scientists," ho continued, "In getting nearer and nearer to the first great cause, feel that about and through everything thoro Is the play of an eternal mind." "Science Is mostly Imagination," said Mr. Edison, whon asked what part Imagination plays in his work. "It Is by conceiving what might be, before one has seen the way to realscientists ize It practically, that have been buoyed during the period of experiment. the beginning of time "Since there has always been a gap In the evolution of anlma; then Imagination goes in advance to bridgo it. All Inventors have passed "over this bridge before presenting some mag- nificent utility-- to- - the world. We wait for the missing link, as it were, between what we know and what we hopo to know. In a sense the greatest discoverers blunder on what they discover." Serious workers relax, Mr. Edison believes, by indulging in a hobby. "Every man should have a hobby," said ho. "Mine Is a storehouse I started long ago In a part of my laboratory. In this storehouse" I collect everything under the sun that may be useful to me. The place i3 full of rubbish, but I got In the habit of collecting rubbish, us a boy, when my mother gave mo a cellar at home to store the varied stuff I gathered. ''In my laboratory storehouse I have unearthed relics of bird, beast, to-da- y. -- Aug. Repre piously. " 'Then you,' said the pretty little girl, 'will live to bo a hundred and forty, won't you?' "'Ha, ha!' ho laughed. 'Why should you think that, pet?' "Because,' said she, 'I heard mamma and papa say that you were leading a double life.' " -- Foley main?- - J!ilN Will reach your Individual case if you hnve any form of kidney or bladder trouble, any backache, nervousness, rheumatism, uric acid poisoning, or Irregular and painful kidney action. you reach Before the limit of physical endurance, nnd while your condition is still curable, take Foley Kidney Pills. Their quick action and positive result will delight you. Try them. For sale by tall dealers. m ho replied sentative Ben Johnson yesterday afternoon rode the storm as the guest of Lieut. H. H. Arnold, U. S. A., at the College Park army aviation field, and won the distinction of being the first member of either branch of Congress to try aeroplan-InIncidentally, another record was broken. Tho army officers pres ent declared that two men had never ridden in an aeroplane In the United States fn such rough weather. Tho wind reached a velocity of ftwenty-elgmiles an hour and storm clouds chased tho air navigators across tho sky, almost upsetting them several times. Tho weather in and about Washington was stormy all day. Mr. Johnson had been promised a trip in one of the army aeroplanes and had been asked to come out to tho High winds and rain field in the Jprejjoonand early afternoon made it impossible to go up, but he g. ht to-da- y. si The Woman's Tonic :4!ftif:;-iiiProloHaioiml Ciircln. counting on Mr. Johnson's enthu siastic support when the War depart ment asks next winter for money to J. M. PORTER, buy more aeroplanes and equip the finest air carps in the world. Every BEAVER DAM, KY. member of Congress will listen with Will practice his profession In Ohio and id interest to the only ono of their olnlng counties. Special attention siren tot' builncssentrusted to hit cite. number who has ever "tried it." i Have your old Attorney at Law, FRANK L. FELIX, STRAW HATS - MADE NEW! i ARRANGED A PITCHER TO CATCH LIFE'S BLOOD 31. Georgo A. Wastjer, 28 years old, whose homo is believed to be in Evansvllle, Ind., shot himself through tho head today in his room at the Drexel Arms-Hotel- , where he had been a guest for a week. His body was found by a maid. He left two notes, ono Inclosing $50 and directions for his burial, and the other to tho manager of tho hotel, asking that his brother, Joseph eph Wastjer, of the Indiana Tie Company, Evansvllle, Ind., be notified. Chicago. Aug. plant and crawling creatures. I have the skins of snakes and fishes, the furs of animals, the teeth of sharks and seals in fact, everything you can think of In flora and fauna. Out of it I hnvo discovered many useful things; for instance, that the hair of red deer is infinitely more delicate for cleaning cylinders than the cheaper camels' hair brushes. "One learns a lot of human naby studying the traits of animals,',' added Edison, reflectively. "I had two monkeys in n cage on my place in Florida. One was stronger than the other, and when food was put in the cage tho stronger boxed the ears of the other, which timidly left him all tho food. Such is human life. The stronger hand gets what belongs to tho brother as well as to himself. Yet I believe firmly in the evolution of human naturo when science, from known types, with better education, combined will solve tho present enormities of ture Wastjer took especial pains to avoid disorder in his room. He arranged a pitcher so It would catch the blood and not soil the linen. No motive is assigned for tho suicide. Wastjer, of tho Indiana Tie Company, Evansvllle, Ind., be notified, which will be forwarded to their addresses without being opened. -. message at received a tplcphono the Capitol about 4 p. m. from Capt. Paul W. Beck. U. S. A., that conditions wero more favorable nnd ho had better come out. He jumped into an automobile and covered the ten miles to College Park as quickly as possible. Tho rain had stopped, but the wind was as high as ever. Lieut. Arnold did not want to ascend and Capt. Beck was doubtful, too. But Mr. Johnson insisted, declaring that ho had been disappointed several times before and he was willing to take the risk. "All right, step in," said the blrdman, and Mr. Johnson did so. They gradually reached p height of 700 feet, circling the field as they went up. Then Lieut. Arnold headed northwnrd along the railroad tracks of the Baltimore & Ohio In tho faco of tho wind. They went at clip for more a than three miles and Uien swung around and started back over the same course. As they passed over tho aviation field, going with the wind, their speed was eighty miles ur WANTED FOR V. S. AR.MY, Ablebodied unmarried men between agesof-land 35; citizens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write the English langapply to uage. For Information Recruiting Officer, Beaver Dam 30tf. Kentucky. S Attorney at Law, HAHTFORD, KY. Will practice hit profession In Ohio and at lining counties and In the Court of Appeal Criminal practice and Collection! a specialty. Office In the Herald building C. M. BAKNBTT. C. B. SMITH, HARTFORD PRESSING CLUB -- 35 hi: comes down hard on A Canoy man Attorneys at Law, HARTFORD, KY. Will practice their profession In all the Court olOhlo and adjoining counties and In the Cour of Appeals. Collections a specialty. BARNETT & SMITH, Ladies' find gents' clothes alho WORK G IT A RASTEED Called for and delivered. Club rate i.0U per month. the harem skirt comes out strong against the harem skirt. "I have stuck to my wife through thick and thin," he says, "and I will continue to stick with her so long as she gets Into her clothes head first. When she gets to dressing the other way and hopping around on ono foot while she searches for tho opening In, the top of her skirt with the other 'foot, that lets me out. I do enough of that putting on my pants, and when both of us get to hopping around, bumping together, upsetting one another nnd pawing tho air generally as a starter first thing in the morning, I'm going to put my foot down, and I don't care what I put it In, either." DeKalb County (Mo.) Herald. No Need to Stop Wo ik. When your doctor orders you to stop work, It staggers you. "I can't" you pay. You know you aro weak, n and failing in health, day by day, but you must work as long 'as you can stand. What you need Is Electric Bitters to givo tone, strength and vigor to your system, to prevent breakdown and build you up. Don't be weak, sickly or ailing when Electric Bitters will benefit you from tho first dose. Thousands bless them for their 'glorious health and strength. Try Every bottle Is guaranteed them. to satisfy. Only 50c at James H. m WilllamB. run-dowI i Club. Hartford Pressing : V. Otto C. Hartin Hartford, Ky. Il. C. A. Bldg Attorney at Lswv HARTFORD, KY. Office up stall over Wilson Ciowc, opposite court house. Will practice III- - piolcssion in all the coiiits of this and ntljoiiiing ciiim- .tics nnd Cottit of Appeals. Coiiiiner-cin- l and criminal practice n specialty. v II its a ring, a diamond, a watch, Jewelry or siher-war- e, you can get tli lir&t nunlitv nt JJcthe lowest prices IS $8J I IM-r- tT . ran n ! k 'J niUILULOI 111 MIL. i ESTABLISHED 1858. tigsss Jt TK OTTO C. MARTIN tf. V. MCKl'.XNKYI 1i1 i ritiiiirv riavi (1-if- 1 cluslvcly the bouthcrn trade. Wne . ORDER HOUSE Si Til P R nil Til. i. HARTFORD, KY. forouriree uiuiiraieu caituuguc an hour. In turning again, a gust of wind struck them, and for a moment it looked ns if tho machine would surely turn over and the two men would be hurled to their death' from a height of 700 feet. They hung on like grim death as the aeroplano tipped over nt an anglo of 90 de- 6. P. Barnes 26 Box & auui. ,V.y ...GENERAL INSURANCE.. Louisville, Ky. Every Article Guaranteed. Co. Life. Accident. Sick And Fire Will Also Bond You. IHttMff V. m"rE3ZZ2ttlMZZlJZS3Z& human nature." Mr, Edison, who has a fine ideal of integrity from his own life, puts lack of honesty down to want of Intelligence and education. "Our civilization is wrong," he declared, "in all Us exorbitant necessities of living. It Is easy to be honest on $10,000 a year, as poor Becky Sharp said In Thackeray's great novel. Ono great reason why I so deprecate all this strife and strain of modern show is that under it many a man whoso natural goes down Impulses are elevated, under temptations to compromise his honor. "That la why I put personal adornment down to a vestige of barbarism in us. I havo brought my I tell family up to dress plainly. them I want them to havo higher Ideals than the Congo belle or the South Sea Islander. Many a Wall inside of Street speculator sees the State prison as the result of his wife's or hU daughter's demand for a string of pearls. "But, as I say, dishonesty is primarily a want of intelligence or education. Teach a man that honesty Is not only the best policy, but that, pathologically, every base act is deteriorating to the brain cells and those numerous fine fibers that dls- tlngulsh the developed Caucasian brain lobe from the brain lobe of r tW savage, and you take the first Forced to Leave Home. Every year a large number of poor sufferers, whoso lungs are soro and racked with coughs, are urged to go to another climato. But this is costly and not always sure. There's a bettor way. Let Dr. King's Now Discovery cure you at home. "It cured mo of lung trouble," writes W. R. Nelson, of Calamine, Ark., "when all else failed, and I gained 47 pounds In weight. It's surely the king of all cough and lung cures." Thousands owe their lives and health to it. It's positively guaranteed for coughs, colds, asthma, croup all throat and lung troubles. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free at James H. Wil liams, m ed W Fifty Young Men Wanted. Fifty more young men aro want ed to learn Telegraphy nnd accept positions as telegraph operators on the L. & N. Railroad. Address E. H. ROY, Tenn. Supervisor, Nashville, 54t5 te k r ifc t v Your Success. Tho Draughon Training will take you from the $1.00-a-da- y class of wage earners and, step by step, elevate you to the $10.00-a-da- y class, thus hastening the end of your Journey to SUCCESS. For catalogue, address Dxaughon's Practical Business College, Nashville, Tenn., or Paducah, Ky., or Evansvllle, Ind., or Washington, D. C. Digestion grees. Lieut. Arnold pulled a few PARKER'S ; lovers and suddenly they found HAIR BALSAM CTeinic, and bratitifics tti hslr. themselves sitting .upright again. lroinotef a Icitur ant growth. Hever Falls to Kestore Gray Capt. Beck Aftor they descended Hair to its Youthful Color. Cuit. pctlp d!.otis a. hair tilling said ho thought they wero gone as JOc.anJ Jlojft llnijrrlit, ho watched the aeroplane from his position on the ground. Thero were many of nlr, and seven times they dropSPECIAL notice o JO, ped Into "holes" and fell perpendico lii regard to O ularly from fifty to seventy-fiv- e feet. O OBITUARIES. RESOLUTIONS O O FIRST CHItlSTIAX CHURCH. O Time and again tho high wind O OF RESPECT, Ac. O O W. II. Wright. Pastor. caught the front planes and nearly O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O O O-OOOOOOOOOQ tipped them over backward. Lieut. Arnold said It was the hardest work Tho Hartford Herald has adopted Preaching every Fourth Sunday he.'cver did toying to keep from a new rule in regard to Obituaries, falling and steering in and out of morning and evening. of Respect, Cards of Sunday "at Resolutions Blblo School every the air obstructions. Thanks, &c, whether written at the When it was over Mr. Johnson 9:30 a. m. lodges, churches or inCommunion service at 10:30 a.m. tho behest of thanked his' pilot most heartily, and dividuals, and that Is, we shall Prayer meeting every Wednesday all of tho army aviators congratu charge at tho rate of two cents per lated him on his nerve. Mr. John- ovening nt S o'clock. lino for all such articles, except obitson enjoyed himself immensely. uary poetry, which will bo ono cent Common Colds Must lo Taken "One of my ambitions has been per word, stralght.This is tuo smallSeriously, fulfilled" he said smilingly last they sap the vi- est rate we charge for anything and night. "I havo wanted to go in an For unless cured Is only one-fift- h of our regular rate. aeroplane ever since I began read- tality and lower tho vital resistance to more serious Infection, Protect The amount, in cash or stamps, ing about their success In the news- your children and yourself by the must accompany each article, or papers. It Is every bit as Interestprompt use of Foley's Honey and it will Six not bo printed. ing as I thought it would be and I Tar Compound and note its quick words average a lino In ordiwould like to try It again. and decisive results. For coughs, nary reading and every separate "There can be no doubt any long- colds, croup, whooping cough, broncharacter or Initial letter counts as er of tho value of aeroplanes In warand affections of tho throat a word. Tho heading nnd the sigfare. In these days, an army or chitislungs it is an ever ready and nature both count one line each, navy that Is not equipped with a and remedy. valuable Remember the even if they aro only a word or two. sufficient number of them for scoutname, Foley's Honey and Tar Com- All obituary poetry, straight ing and dropping; of bombs is no army or navy at all. Their value Is pound, .and refuse substitutes. The through, ono cent per word. genuine is in a yellow package. For Contributors please remember. They are, In fact, Inincalculable. sale by all dealers. m dispensable." IplllJI G W. H. LLESPE & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. BROTHERS. cross-curren- ts ooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooo ..BLACKSMITHING.. I tfrisjUQll A And DM;e---. Work Horseshoeing Specialty HARTFORD, I Kentucky. 1 !i HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESI- DENCE OR PLACE OF BL'S- INESS, AND PUT YOURSELV IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH THE ft. and Assimilation. ta- While they did not say anything It is not the quantity of food about it, ken but the amount digested and assimilated that gives strength and Chamber-Iain- 's vitality to the system. step toward ,hls reform.- There are Stomach and Liver Tablets in asuabr of delicate threads disting- invigorate the stomach and liver human beings that and enable ,them to perform their uish 88 from the savage. functions naturally. For sale by In a new al dealers. Wl am m 'inythJn alld the chronograph,: that inutly records the time of Subscribe for The Hartford Herald. civ-Il- ls smtfa-'.iHterested you," says TO AIX STATES. the attorney for tbe defense to the FOR THE COMPANY'S SPECIAL witness, who has endured a whole for lung trouble, coughs, pains in chest, and thai CONTRACT TO. THE FARMERS, day's by the run down feeling. (Mention this mki.) I Prosecutor, "Tho State's Attorney OHIO MEDICAL COMPANY CALL ON OR ADDRESS . I.ULUMUUJ. OHIO J.W.OBANON. asked you questions that ought to box Oil For Infants and Children. haye tangled you all up, hut never Local Manage, i Yon Have Always Bought Ttii KM onco did lie trap you." Hartford, Ky. ' It, waa easy," smiled tho witness. W. C. SEXTON, Sears the "I am 'used to cottiuij homo late ' Signature Local Manager. and aaswnr.'ug my vnte'a questions." Incorporated. Beaver Dam, Ky. the army An Expert Witness. aviators are "I must compliment cross-examinati- CONSUMPTION'S Long Distance Lines CASTOR A t&z&tffflgfa - Subscribe for'The Herald; $1.00 a y'r A. 4 rr 1 'T rAGE FOUR. THE HARTFORD HERALD ave-jwund to-d- ay WEDNESDAY, SETT. ., 1U. it w Ir ' V fa smv t B hi fs( 'I ? pose you call aside any one of your Ten years ago a patriot. officials and ask woolen blankets could be bought POOLERS TO FIX OWN own courthouse . they cost $5. At him to estimate the floaters in Ohio for $3.75; Lay it away tenderly, county, and let other editors whose that time the price of five yards of PRICES FOB TOBACCO HEBER MATTHEWS, FRANK L.FELIX, righteous indignation has been' serge cloth, fifty Inches vide, ' was EDITORS. Pack it with care, aroused by Judge O'Rear'a charge, $3.75; the price now is $6.25. Ten fRANK L. FEUX, Pab.srt Prep'r. The old shiny Suit do so, and you will probably be years ago twenty yards of unbleach To Hold Meeting September 30 found on the side of the Judge, who ed cotton cloth could be bought for That has given such wear District MeetingSo- the cost is $1.40. 'Five Entered at the Hartford post-offiis painting the. State of Kentucky, $1.00; to-das mall matter of the second class. scars and all, and when he gets yards of all wool flannel could be ciety of Equity. through, we snail all admit the cry- purchased then for $2.75; the price ing need of a "Corrupt Practice now is $C23. Flour sold for $3.50 DEMOCKATIC TICKET. With a gpod attendance.the Home Act to punish the renal and pro- less per barrel during the civil war Warehouse Company and the Green tect the weak among us, who are than it does now. U. S. SENATOR Ollle M. James. such an Important element In ev River American Society of Equity Clar- held a district poolers' mass meetIt is all right for of Crittenden. ery election in every county In our GOVERNOR Jas. B. McCreary, State, I dare say! ence Woods, of Richmond, (who ing at the court house In Owens-b- o Respt., claims yet. to be a Democrat) to of Madison. ro Friday morning, and, although C. E. WOODS, LIEUT. GOV. Edward McDer-mot- t, Democrat." vote for Judge O'Rear if he thinks the larger portion of the time was of Jefferson. And so on floaters, floaters, nothing else will satisfy his con- consumed by hearing the various , pitifully-poorTom Rhea, of Lo- world without end. Just think of science. That is a privilege vouch reports, the poolers transacted Im TREASURER gan. it! One hundred and fifty thous- safed to every free born American portant business. AUDITOR Henry M. Bosworth, and of them as Mr. Woods esti- citizen to vote for whom he The most important action taken in of Fayette. mates scattered throughout the pleases. But when he so far capit- by tho poolers was the decision that GENERAL James various precincts of old Kentucky. ulates as to tumble Into the camp the poolers should fix the prices to ATTOKXEV Garnett, of Adair. He raises Judge O'Rear's estimate of his former political enemy and be demanded for the 1911 pooled SECRETARY OF STATE O. F. over 100 per cent. Fifteen hun- makes his surrender more a matter tobacco. A meeting will be held at Crecellus. of Pendleton. dred in his own county of Madison! of notoriety than of private policy, each of the pooling points in the SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC Who would have thought It? Mr. he Invites the doubts of the public entire district on the morning of INSTRUCTION Barksdale Hamlett, Woods Is so sure of it that he in- -. as to whether he is really yet a Saturday, September 30, for the of Christian. poolers to fix the prices to be devltes us to "write to any official of Democrat. OF AGRICUL Madison county for verification of COMMISSIONER With a record of county unit leg manded, and delegates will be seTURE J. W. Newman, of Wood- figures given by me." We'll take islation behind it, the Democratic lected to attend a meeting to be ford. Mr. Woods' word for It in his party of Kentucky could not, afford held In Owensboro on the morning CLERK OF COURT OF AP- home county, anyhow and then we of Thursday, October 5, when the n path-wto depart from a PEALS Robert Greene, of Frank- want to ask him a question or two. It would haVA hpen n vlnln- - action of the poolers will be ratifilin. ed. In adopting the ideas of his lead- Lawrence er Judge O'Rear we suppose he Hon of part. precedent and publlc II. II. COMMISIOXER The meeting was presided over rnnflrtpnro fn hnvo rinnn Rn Tho B. Finn. also adopts the Judge's policy along great mass of the voters of Ken- - by Price Baird, president of the SEXATOR 7th DISTRICT Robt. other lines. Judge O'Rear has re- tucky expected yes, demanded HomeWarehouse Company, and L. it, Hardlson, of Muhlenberg. N. peatedly averred that It Is both un- that the Democracy of Robertson, secretary of the I"! the State FOR REPRESENTATIVE. OHIO fair and unjust to make a public should keep Home Warehouse Company, acted W its record and advance will M. T.' Westerfleld. COUNTV charge against anything or any- along the same line by the adoption as secretary. body without following it up with of a county The reports from the various sec unit plank in its platJUDGS 0'BEAK, ME. WOODS AND proof. Both Judge O'Rear and Mr. form. It would have been an open tions of the district showed that 2 only about sixty per cent, of the Woods make the specific charge that violation of confidence to tothetail-JTHOSE "FLOATERS." have done usual tobacco crop had been raised, vinpnday The Herald there are many thousands of voters otherwise. On last but that it was of excellent quality. received the letter following below, in Kentucky who regularly sell their The Republican press Is making signed by Mr. Clarence E. Woods, votes. Mr. Woods estimates that j GOVERNOR WILLSON AN and Democrat," of Rich- there are 1,500 In his own county of much noise over the announcement EXPENSIVE OKXAMEXT Madison.. Surely out ni tils, multi- that the WpotP.r County. Times?, mond, Ky. We were not- - surprised if come at the import of its contents, for we tude of "floaters" the crime of sell- published at Clay, Ky., has having The wanderings of Gov. Augusing their votes should be easily fix- out for O'Rear, that sheet any-j- j! had heard that Mr. Woods, whom been independent. The tus E. Willson prove embarrassing )we have known for twenty years, ed upon at least a few thousand. It formerly to his fellow Republicans of tho having met him at the various meet- Is a matter too important and too editor of the Times explains this Kentucky Press Associa- disgraceful to allow to stand as It "change" very clearly In the first State ticket when they realize that ings of the his neglect of duty is daily making tion, had abandoned for the nonce is. Happily, the law takes cogni- two lines of his salutatory In which votes for the Democrats. The offlc-ci- al "The Times has, as you good old Democratic way and zance of this sort of "doings" and he says: the record shows that he has been provides a severe penalty for same, know, changed management." Nothproffered his warm personal support to Judge E. C. O'Rear In the both for the man who fells and the ing remarkable about that, but oh absent from Frankfort 239 days In journals the last three years and a half. He present race for State office. We man who buys. Isn't .It high time how those O'Rear Is now resting at Wequetonsing were done in the do grab at straws! were a little surprised, however, that something INCORPORATED. for an additional thirty days' vacaCan't this nefarious Re- premises? when we opened the Hartford A Pittsburg (Pa.) philosopher tion, and it is safe to predict that publican Friday morning and saw practice be stopped? The following and educator says that If the publlc One-Price- d before the Identical letter which Mr. Is the law on the subject, taken school teacher has the "come hith- spent his term expires he will have 300 days away from his post Kentucky Statutes Woods addresed to us (barring the;from Section 1586. Bribery Rccciv. er" In her eye, she will be an un- of duty. Every day that he is abfirst line or two of address) on the Any person guilty of qualified success as an instructor sent, the State pays him $20.00 in Iiik Hiilx?. local page of said paper. and will even get a husband. We addition to the $10.00 that the' It looked a little bad for Mr. receiving a bribe for his vote at an believe the professor is right In Lieutenant-Governo- r draws for act Woods. It looked like Mr. WopdB, election, or for services or Influence the premises. Anyhow, we've no- ing as Governor. In other words, to be a Democrat, In procuring a vote or votes at an ticed how tho "come hither" glance who still claims Governor Willson will draw from had gone Into the Republican camp election, shall bo fined from fifty to beats the "go hence" look on the Rlalto, Tenn., are visiting Mr. and the Treasury $G,000 for services ho RECRUITS FOR body and breeches, and being fear- five hundred dollars, and be exclud- human face, 'way yonder. Mrs. Elbert Hunley and other relanever rendered, and acting Goverful his precious letter would be Ig- ed from office and suffrage." tives in this neighborhood. nor Cox will draw $3,000 addition"Section 1587. Bribery Bribing ARMY nored by The Herald, had chosn a L0HL STATION Mr. Jake Jackson, of Centertown, The "let us alone" policy would al for doing Willson's work. Whoever shall bribe anRepublican Btronghold from which Another. spent last Wednesday suit the trusts exactly. Having gob night with This Is' the sort of extravagance" to fire his broadsides at The Herald. other shall, on conviction, be fined bled everything In sight, naturally Mr. Porter Hunley. and neglect that the Republican Farmers And Railroad Alen Help Does not the very affair Itself the from fifty to, ono hundred dollars, or they resent Interference. They State Convention Mr. Joe Brown has declined sellImprisoned from ten to ninety days, endorsed when it prove It? circumstances ing his farm and moving to Texas don't want it to be made public just announced its approval of Governor Swell Rush to Uncle We have the very highest person- or both so lined and imprisoned, and how they got It. The cry of "let and has bought his crop back. Willson's Administration. . al regard for Mr. Woods. He is a be excluded from office and suf- us alone" smacks of the spirit of Mr. and Mrs. Estill Greer, of Judge O'Rear says he stands on Sam's Colors. scholar and a gentleman In all frage." RocJiport, spent Saturday night with concealment which no honest busi every plank of that platform, and With such certainty of numbers ness can those terms Imply. But wouldn't afford to employ. her brother, Mr. Alec Russell, of necessarily he endorses the expenThe Courier Journal of Friday this place. It have been treating Tbe Herald and dennlteness of locality, why sive wnnderlngs' of Augustus tho says: cannot Judge O'Rear, with the ablo with a little more respect as a newsClarence Woods, of Messrs. Jim Davenport, of WoodNot since the Spanish-America- n paper and an old friend, to have assistance of Mr. Woods, corner up Richmond, may be a Democrat yet, First, and thank God, the last. bury, Ky., and Jim Miller, of Wila few thousand and enrich the (as he claims) but he Is not a Dem given us a chance to print and reWar has the local army recruiting liams Mines, were the guests EASTVIEW. of ply to his letter (a thing which wo State's coffers with fines, at tho ocrat still. He is making more Sept. 4. Mr. B. J. French spent offlce done such a rushing business Squire Miles last Sunday. same time disfranchising an army noise through had already planned to do) before the newspapers Friday with Mr. and Mrs. B. C. as during the month of August of Mr. Albin Shull is repairing his establishing headquarters In the of conscienceless voters who are not (mostly Republican) about his po Austin, this year. According to Capt. O. H. father's house putting some new at Beaver Dam. worthy of the name? Why not litical change of heart than a new citadel of the enemy? Calling himMr. Marshal Crowe, of Adaburg, Dockery, Jr., 106 men were accept- sills under" It, the old one having ed and the Captain and his assist- been there about 60 years. self yet a Democrat, wouldn't It make proof a vindication of the di- convert at a Methodist camp meet- was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. ants are much pleased with ing. have looked better for him to have rect charges made? the T. French Sunday. We repeat as in a former Issue showing made, as It places Louisraised his voice entirely within the Not a Word of Scandal jL Mr. and Mrs. Sam Lake, of d, that we are skeptical in regard to Judge O'Rear seems to have had political lodge hall rather than to .. spent Sunday with Mr. and ville near the head of the list of all Marred thn mil nf n niinkhn nJl . . . ..v.buuut UJ the immensity of the charge made. .some trouble in maintaining the have yelled In at the window? recruiting stations in the United Mrs. W. P. Snauch. of ManvlllnA V-- i BUI Smith. power Mrs. But to tho aforementioned letter. Wo are not yet ready to accept the brilliancy of that Mr. Dave Saddler spent Monday States, It being exceeded only by Wyo., who said: "She told me Dr. figures without a largo measure of1 halo which ho placed around Col. Here it is: New York, Philadelphia and San King's New Life Pills had cured her and Tuesday at Owensboro. head. Probably "Richmond, Ky., Aug. 29, 1911. substantiation In material proof. Wo W. O. Bradley's Francisco. of obstinate kidney trouble, and Mr. Bill Westerfleld, of Mason-vlll- e, some way. "Editors Hartford .Herald: I Invite Mr. Woods to the task of got An interesting feature of last made her feel like a new woman." was in this vicinity Wednesnote your disagreement with Judge verifying his allegations with defimonth's enlistments was the fact Easy, but sure remedy for stomach, Last Monday was Labor Day in day. O'Rear's charge that "there are "0,-00-0 nite proof, In which laudable amMrs. Bertha Ware, of Philpot, that the applicants were, for tho liver and kidney troubles. Only every newspaper office throughout voters over Kentucky who will bition he should be ably assisted by most part, farmers and railroad 25c at James H. WilllamB. m his county officials, whom he cites tho country. Next Monday same spent Thursday and Friday in this sell their suffrage In tho market." men. vicinity. us as having knowledge of thing. righteous Indignation Your Is to MAXWELL. Information has been received at Mr. Charlie Westerfleld, df Ma- Sept. 2. Prayer meeting at tho and you same. aroused over this cha-g- e, A. S. of E. Xotlcc. sonvillo, was In this vicinity Thurs the local offlce that the entire Tenth M. E. In any event. In anything he may Church here is progressing think 'this untrue statement should Infantry Regiment, which was form Tho Hartford Magisterial District day. say or do, Tho Herald offers Mr. be resented by all parties.' erly stationed at Indianapolis, Ind., regularly and, nicely. A. S. of E. will meet at Bennett's H. S. Ward was arrested Wednes Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Jarnacin and "I was astonished at Judge yoods space in Its columns, rather schoolhouse at 10 o'clock a. m. day evening by Jailer W. P. Mid-kl- ff and is at present on duty in San children, than that he should imperil his O'Rear's bold allegation as above Brierfleld, spent Sunday Antonio, Tex., has been ordered for Saturday, September 30, 1911. We and taken to Hartford, charged described, which he mado In his honorable record by appearing as a garrison duty to tho Isthmus of un air. ana .Mrs. Walter Watson, Insist that all local unions bo rep- with Incest. of this place. Ellzabethtown speech. But, ray bolter, flaunting his defiance from .The remains of Mrs. Dona Miller, Panama, on the Pacific Ocean side. Everybody Invited to atMiss Lattye dear brother editors, after a little the stronghold of Democracy's worst resented. who died at Ensor Thursday, w'ere This regiment will be the first of a spent Sunday Sparks, of Hartford, G. P. JONES, Chm'n. tend. reflection I am astonished he did enemy a Republican camp. night with Miss Hat-ty- e full brigade which Is to bo Bent to brought to Bell's Run Friday and O. R. TINSLEY, Sec'y. Mae Barr, of this place. not say there were 150,000 'floatThe last Issue of the Hartford Interred in the Bell's . Run ceme the Isthmus by the War Department Mr. Renzo Payne, of LIvermore, ers' in Kentucky. In my own coun- Republican contains a Annual Colt Show and Barbecue n for the protection of the big canal. tery. Is visiting Miss Kathleen Owen, ty of Madison, the home of candi- article (supposed to The annual Colt Show and Barbe of be furnished to Capt. Lawrence D. Cabell, who Brierfleld. date McCreary, I have often heard all tho Republican papers of Ken cue will be given by Thompson Good For Biliousness. until recently was on duty at the by officers of tho county tucky) Mr. Ed. Crowe and sister Ella it stated "I took two of Chamberlain's Quartermaster's Depot from Mr. C. E. Woods, Bros, in the beautiful grove on heir in Jefferson-vlll- e, Lee, of this place, went to who had the very best reason for Hartford former Mayor of Richmond, Ky., stock farm at Horton, Ky., on Sat- Stomach and Liver Tablets las and who has many friends in Thursday. knowing, that thoro were fifteen addressed to night, and I feel fifty per cent, betAn the editor of the Mur urday, Sept. 9, 1911. the Falls Cities, Is quartermaster of Misses hundred (1,500) 'floaters' in that ray Gazette, in which Mr. Woods atWinnie barbecued dinner will be ter than I have for weeks," says J.J. the Tenth Infantry, and Jennie and will go with Blucgrass county. That is 25 per tacks the political career served on the grounds. The Colt Firestone, of Allegan, Mich. '"They the regiment to Panama. Duty Humphrey, of Livia, spent Thursof Mr, Mcday night with Miss Ella Lee Crowe cent of Its total voting strength! As Creary. After signing his name, Show will take place at 3 o'clock are certainly a fine article for bil- there is looked forward to as very hero. there are, I believe, as many good Mr. Woods also signs himself In the afternoon at which time the iousness." For sale by all dealers. desirable, as fine barracks and postB people in my county as in the next m will be built and the climate id conRichmond, Ky., Life Mem following premiums will be award- Sample free. M -! Best Treatment for a Barn. best county in Kentucky and you ber of Kentucky Press Association; ed: sidered very healthy, since the FedStanding by tho Pool, i If for no other jeaBon, ChamberJrtfaw" tbdre are 119 counties in all $10 for first best colt and $5 to Editor and Grand Recorder of the Tho farmers of Webster county eral authorities have done so much lain's Salve should be kent In nror-Just multiply the same by 1,500 Sigma Nu Fraternity of the United second best colt sired y Bayleaf In their meetings held Saturday de- to bring about better eanltary con- household on account pf and you have the appalling sum of States since 1894, 'vice President Hal; and $10 for first best mule its great clared in favor of the tobacco pool ditions. value in the treatment of burn, t? 'men on the market' in Madison 178,500 County Law and Order colt and $5 for second best mule and a continuance of allays the pain almost instantly, the associaKentucky! As Madison Is above League; Vice President Kentucky colt sired by Dill Gladstone. and tion. The indications are that the nOPEWELL. unless the Injury Is a the average In size, we might scale State Law and Order League; Mem Good music and all kinds of re Sept 4. Mr. Tom Engler is on heals the parte without severe leaving a . the figures down to 150,000 or 125,-00- ber Fileon Club; Annual Orator freshments on the grounds. No in pool will stick In all the other coun- the sick list. ties, with Hopkins possibly, except Thte salve Is also unequaled but It Is absolutely a most con- Kentucky Press Association." toxicants will be allowed. EveryTaylor, waB In this com- - for chapped hands, sore nlnni, It Providence Enterprise. servative figure which Judge O'Rear should be an easy matter now to body Invited and a good time la as- ed. munlty last week, looking after the diseases of the skin. Price, 25 names an the sum total of our pur- identify Mr. Woods. sured. Exchi-sIoRates, roada and bridges. cents. For sale by all .iDai,, " You are at , C. H. & R. B.THOjrPSON, chasable citlaseBsfehip!, To Louisville 9 State Fair, SepC Mr. Albert Taylor spent last President Taft vetoed the Wool liberty to write to any official of HortOtt, Kr. to 16: Fare'-$3.4for ,round trip. Thursday night with his Buraan Bade a new world'a t- Madison county for verification of Bill and Congress adjourned, In P. 8. Mule and colt buyers will Dates of sale 0ept. 9th to 16th in- - Scott Taylor,' of Hartford .uncle, Mr. erd Bf 1:37.87 for two mil, l. tk meantime, how about prices? (be on the grounds, figure gives by me. But sup-'th- e the 3St2 H. E. MISCHKE. AEt. . Misses Rosie ari ..,., u..i. elusive. ! uioHOBiie race at Brighton Beaek. jf5 Hartjord Herald vm&&&&&&&k 1 1 ay Now I or For Something New i For the man who is not so or so recklessly rich, we Fancy Cheviots, have Suits Worsteds, Cassimeres, Plain Cheviots and Tweeds at $10 $12.50 $15 well-beate- ar Every Suit is Worth the Money we ask for and every man who buys one of these Suits be i "ex-May- or fFall well satisfied. You can pay more money l you'll get no better suit. or, but We would like to show you the new Styles, even you have no of buying. Come in, how, just for a look, oh-ro- ar Carson & Co., Clothiers, Hertford, Kentucky. gSSSiS MM ? or Bu-for- 120-cand- short-circuit- 4 "Ex-May- VJ ..- U one,'5 ... 0,' Ex-Jud- b 0 ' T.i .,,,, ., ...iSiiii..!. J..- -, .ar... .. KT. j U4U1ujyUaBHaSakaiaB4B( ... ?: Jttiili rfff &Jofcifi2iLiic "WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1011. THE HARTFORD HERALD prices on Get our cut-rat- e Medicines and Prescriptions going elsewhere. We can save you money. OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO. Miss Minnie is one of the most capable telephone operators in the country anywhere and her services are highly appreciated by the patrons of her exchange. cently. Prof. W. S. Taylor, who has been teaching In the West Kentucky Normal, Bowling Green, Ky., will leave for Lexington, Ky., next Monday where he will enter the Agricultural Department of Kentucky State University to complete the course. Paradise; Messrs,. L. O. Coleman, Raymer Tinsley and Douglas Felix, Hartford, will also return to Lexington next week to resume their work in State University. s PAGE FIVE. u m n it T LADIES' J. F. CASEIHER & CO., Funeral All calls Directors and Embalmers. Suits AND promptly and carefully attended to, day or night. Both telephones. Beaver Dam, Ky. 28tf 'you get the latest Remember goods and the lowest prices at Fairs', also a coupon for tho amount of your purcahse, in our piano contest. service There will be an at the Methodist Church at Roslno the second Sunday in September. All are invited to attend and to take their dinners. Mrs. Sam Barnctt left Sunday for all-da- BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL i The only Baking Powder Tiade from Royal Grape Cream of artar NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE J y ' f " nv to. ytf Wk TK&. !5&4 t d HJtr T Revs. J. N. Jarnagln, Birch been "coached" beforehand as to Shields and C. D. Chick, Messrs. H. JUDGE O'REAR SPEAKS what to say here, and being fearful B. Taylor, J. C. Brown and J. W. of giving offense, confined himself Martin, Beaver Dam; G. P. Trout, TO A to generalities, making few points Cromwell; J. W. Paris, Hartford, with special effect. On the whole his speech was a good presentation Madlsonvllle, Ky., being summoned Route 3; T. H. Tatum, Hartford, Manifested of the Republican position, but It to the bedside of her aunt, Mrs. D. Route 2; S. O. Coleman, Paradise; Little Enthusiasm Ola-to- n; did no harm to the Democratic A. Bondurant, who is very old and J. C. Dugan and Jim T. Felix, for Republican Party's Sam Morton, Ceralvo, and J. cause here. While his speech evidangerously ill. N. Hudson, Beda, and Rev. L. W. dently did not have the effect inDr. and Mrs. E. G. Rhoads and TIchenor, Centertown, were pleasant Noted Leader. tended, it Is well for Democrats to Sheffield, Ala., callers at The Herald' office Montwo daughters, of 1 remember that they have a big have been the guests of the former's day. d According to the fight on hand, and that they must near Rhoads, brother, Mr. Will After a thorough renovating and announcement, Judge E. C. O'Rear, be alive to the Importance of the town, for several days. repair work, Hartford College open- Republican nominee for Governor, situation If they succeed. The ReThere publicans are led by their ery best The full speech of Hon. James B. ed up for a year's work Monday. spoke at Hartford .Monday. McCreary, Democratic nominee for The Collegiate Department Is under was a good crowd in town, but not man a man of ability and who will at Bowling the supervision of Prof. H. E. near as many people as were ex- probably draw the full strength of delivered Governor, Green last Monday, will appear In Brown, Prof. A. E. Ellis and Miss pected. As court hall began to 1111 his party. tho next Issue of The Herald. Winona Stevens. The work In the up, tho managers announced that peoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO and other grades is under the charge of the house would not hold the Alexander Mrs. Wayland O MARRIAGE LICENSE. family, consisting of her grandchild- Prof. W. R. Hedrlck, Prof. W. F. ple and they were then turned back O to the east end of the court house OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ren, have moved from their late Anderson, Miss Hattle Glenn and spoke on Clay street to Dr. Miss Anna Eliza Kcown. The com- yard, where Judge O'Rear resldenco platform near Simmons, to from an Improvised C. B. Schroader, mon schools of the country are also Bean's property on Union street. the entrance. Tho court house Delcy Daugherty, McHenry. starting out with very bright Mrs. Dr. Z. H. Shultz, of Pleaswould have easily held all the peoWillis Flener, Cromwell, to Ella ant Ridge, and Mrs. J. O. McKinney ple who wanted to hear the speak- n. Wallace. Cromwell. and children, of Taylor Mines, vis- LABOR DAY CELKRUATIOX ing If the managers had given them Perryman Embry, Beaver Dam, to ited their parents, Judge and Mrs. WAS A GRAND AFFAIR tlmo to get seated. Bessie B. Torrence, Beaver Dam. J. P. Sanderfur, a few days last John Whoberry, Hartford, Route Tho court house and all the busiweek. The Labor Day celebration at ness houses In town were gayly 1, to Effle Wysonp, Hartford. Byron Hurt, Narrows, to Rosa Mr. M. H. Tappan, of Madlson- Williams Mines Grove, Ohio county, with bunting, giving evivllle, who was In the Jewelry busi- last Monday, was a success In every dence of the generous and general Ford, Olaton. H. M. Austin, Beaver Dam, to ness in this city several years ago, particular. It Is estimated that welcome which Hartford always ac1 of custowas the guest of his brother, Dr. J. there were from 2,500 to 3,000 peo cords to every public speaker, no Lena Johnson, Taylor Mines. R. B. Acton, Olaton, Route 1, to B. Tappan and family Monday and ple on the grounds and It was one matter his political views. m-made of the most orderly gatherings of Tuesday of last week. There were between five and six Mrs. Dona E. Martin, Olaton, Route the kind ever held In the county. hundred people present to hear No. !. Mrs. C. R. Crowe, Mr3. B. F. AtHon. Walter Lanferslek, Socialist Alfred A. Appling, Cincinnati, O., of daughter, Floy, of candidate for Governor, and Hon. Judge O'Rear. About and kinson these were women and children, to Jessie R. Henderson, Fordsvllle. Louisville, Ky., who had been vis- E. L. Davenport, National President Depend on Democrats and the baliting relatives at Dundee, Sulphur of the Dark Tobacco Growers' As TO THE FARMERS. Judgo O'Rear's ance Republicans. Springs and other places In Ohio sociation, and who Is also the Sospeech was rather a disappointment county, have returned home. Jones' Pure Aninuil Mutter cialist nominee for Representative to most of those present, even some Fertilizers, manufactured by Mr. D. R. Graham, who had been from Muhlenberg county, were bill- Republicans. It was distinctly lackvisiting his brother and sister, Mr. ed as the speakers of the day, but ing in that vim and lire of eloquence Jones' FertiWzcr Co. Touis-vill- e and Mrs. Alf Carter, Concord, and unfortunately Mr. Lanferslek could Which was expected. Only two or Ky. Have on hand a nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. C. not meet the appointment made for three times did the speaker arouse car-loaA'so 10 tons of E. Morrison, Hartford, for several him by his friends and he sent Na- his listeners to tho enthusiasm of pur Bone Meal. AY ill ap- days, left for his home Albion, 111., tional Organizer Gregory, who, to- feeble applause. preciate your patronage gether with Mr. Davenport, spoke yesterday. Tho speaker was Introduced by W. E Elms, during the entire afternoon. Both Mr. Silas Stevens In a nice little Messrs. Ike Johnson, of Spring The Produce Man. of speakers addressed the crowd In be sneech. Taklnc Labor Day as his tf Grove, Ky., and Hulett Johnson, the Illinois Central Railroad Tlmo Ta-bl- o Leave your Laundry at my Grocery. Pleasant Ridge, came to Hartford half of the Socialist ticket and was tart)ng theme jU(jgC O'Rear took Institute IJojs Won. up , t j.nlf nf h,B Dam, Ky. Work Guaranteed. a few days ago to see tneir Kins moor movement in general. It at Beaver Domestic finish. In the strongest contested game a big day for the labor element and speech in a review of man's labor woman, Mrs. Valeria South Bound. reiser, wno Called for and prompt delivery. North Bound. of baseball of the season at this along all lines, going back to tho place the Institute team won over ller'a Grocery. has been very 111, but Is now im highly enjoyed. No. 1324:05 a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. 'Phone 140. 1 time when It was first ordained that the Hartford team Thursday afterproving. SPECIAL INDUCEMENT No 12212:28 p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. WANTED Lady or gentleman to FOR THE TEACHERS' TRIP "by the sweat of his brow should he noon by a score of 5 to 4. Battery No. 1022:48 p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. take charge of small Dr. Bean's Opera Ho at earn bread." J. E. Williams. Agt. of tho Institute: Greer, who pitchtel. Address, Dr. L. B. Bean, Hart- House the famous Jeffries-Johnso- n lady who heard tho ed for Owensboro Grays A young The following merchants of Ohio . last season fight will be shown In moving pic35tf ford, Ky. "lecspeech aptly described It as a and for a Southern league team this tures. This is one of the best films county, Ky., will give one railroad OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Mr. and Mrs. John W. Taylor and being exhibited In tho moving pic- fare, worth $3.00, for the teachers' ture," which In a great measure It season, and Thorp, of McHenry. O was, delivered In a pleasing, well O LOCAL NEWS AND Httle daughter Vivian, are visiting and one never and trustees' trip to Louisville, modulated tone, and satisfactory to For Hartford: M. Taylor, of BeaPERSOXAL POINTS O relatives at Blrdseye and Union- - ture world O Mammoth Cave and Bowling Green, ver Dam, and Wakeland. Time of exhibited In this city. OOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOO town, Ind. to any teacher or trustee who" pur- thoso who Hko that sort of thing, game two hours, ending at 0:20. Judge Largest Mr. Ed Johnson, of Buel, McLean chases from any one of them goods, but tedious throughout. attendance of any game In Messrs. Dudley Plummer, Pren- - county, met with a painful but not between Sept. 1 and Oct. 1, 1911, O'Rear Is a man of broad knowl- years For School Shoes visit Carson & In this city. Wysox, serious accident last Sunday mornBerryman, tis, and J. N. Co. amounting to $25.00, for which edge and he gave his audience the callers at The Herald ing. While attempting to climb a cash is paid: of For bowel complaints In children Tho Hartford Drug benefit of It. But as at Carson & were pleasant New Suits for Ladles office Friday. slat and wire fence, his foot slipped Co., Barnard & Co., Carson & Co., an orator, his speech seemed to cre always give Chamberlain's Colic, Co's. Misses Evelyn and Maggie Clark, and he fell, his side striking the New York Store, of Hartford; S. J. ate little Interest. He touched up- Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and Trade at Fairs' and get the piano Sunnydale, visited Mr. and Mrs. U. slats, breaking one or two of his TIchenor, McHenry; The Wilson ofr State Issues In a general way, castor oil. It Is certain to effect a coupons. & but did not say how many voters cure and when reduced with water city, from Wednesday ribs. Co., (Incorporated), Lanum S. Carson, and sweetened, Is pleasant to take. School until Monday. " good, substantial For Messrs. A. D. White and Douglas Cobb, Abraham Shapero, C. E. Ford there are In Ohio county for sale ,jf Shoes, call at Fairs'. Felix have each added a new gaso- & Co., (Incorporated), C. B. Car-de- n, a charge which he has made In oth- No plnslclan can prescribe a better Drs. W. B. Armendt, of Owens-borer towns. It was the opinion of remedy. For sale by all dealRough river fleet of Fordsvllle. We are now prepared to supply and Joe Jett, of Fordsvllle, line launch to the some of his hearers that he had ers, m of this species of craft. They are your needs with new goods. gave us a pleasant call while in Cnuglit by Falling Fence. g"ood now boats. There are both CARSON & CO. Hartford Monday. While the crowd was assembling eight gasoline launches which are !55 MonFOR Sale Cheap Good work V Miss Addle Edge, of Whltesvllle, owned and moorings to hear the O'Rear speaking i have their day afternoon, quite a number of buggy and harness. guest of Miss Ozona Mose-lo- hero. horse, was tho people were leaning against the R. R. WEDDING. city, a few days last week, re29tf A series of meetings will begin at Iron fence that surrounds the court us show you our School turning home Saturday. Let Independence Baptist church, near house yard on tho east end when, Hart- McHenry, Ky., on Monday night afS6.75 G bars Big Deal Soap 25c Shoes and Clothing. Messrs. B. F. Sullenger, without warning, the fence fell, 100 lbs. Gran. Sugar CARSON & CO. W. E. Newbolt and ter 3rd Sunday in September, at catching several of those along the 14 lbs. Gran. Sugar ford, Route 1; 1.00 G bars Lenox Soap 25c y Joe Bozarth, city, gave The Herald 7:30 o'clock. Rev. G. H. Lawrence, fence on the outside. Fortunately Enter Fairs' Pano Contest 5.50 6 bars Magic White 25c Saturday. of Depoy, Ky will assist the pas- no one was seriously hurt. Mrs". C. 50 lbs. tin Pure Lard and enlist your friends to work for a pleasant call J. 40 G bars White Splasher 25c tor, Birch Shields. All are invited U. Taylor, of near Rochester, was 49 lbs. Victor Flour you. When you need Drugs of any G bars Fels Naptha.... "..... 25c caught by the falling fence and con- 24ilbs. Victor Flour please don't forget THE OHIO to attend. 70 Dr. J. S. Bean and wife, Olaton, kind qualMr. Tom Brown and wife, of Cen- siderably stunned, but after she 48 lbs. Bob White Flour 1.25 Gbars Ivory are the guests of Dr. L. B. Bean, COUNTY DRUG CO. has the 25c ity and the price is right also. tertown; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trath-e- n was released from the fence and tacity. .Go G bars Nisa 25c ken to Dr. Riley's office, it was 24 lbs. Pjob White Flour and little daughter, Rev. Reginald Bennett, of NarMiss Nellie Smith, of Central not been serious- 1 bbl. Town Talk Flour.. 4.50 6 pkg. e 25c rows, Ky., will preach at the court Brown Trathen, of Bevler; Mrs. C. found that she had City, visited in Hartford a few days ly injured. Jesse Hincs, son of R. house here next Sunday morning G. Crowder, of Williams Mines, and G pkg. Gold Dust Town Talk Flour 1.15 25c last week." Miss Arble Brown, of Hillside, Ky., T. Hines, of near Horton, was also 48 lbs. and night. Everybody Invited. were the guests of Mrs. Isaac Fos- caught by the fence, but not se- 24 lbs. Town Talk Flour .00 10 bars White Floating... 25c We have new Clothing, new reporter Mr. L. V. Armentrout, riously, injured. ter, city, Sunday, Shoes, neV Hats, new Dress Goods for the Louisville Daily Herald, CARSON & CO. Notions. and The marriage of Mr. E. J. CarIMPORTANT NOTICE! and Mr. Allison Barnett, city, paid ter, of Simmons, to Miss "Bernlco B. , Compare Fairs' qualities and The Herald a social call Monday. TV ill sell the best Patent Yqu will Miller, of McHenry, will take place i prices with other houses. Rev. T. H. Balmain will speak at at Independence Baptist church near Flour at $4.25 per barrel, spot " And them lower. : Thursday, McHenry, Sunday, September 10th, cash, schoolhouse McGrady W. E. Ellis, Mrs. Mary J. Cave: Upton Ky., September 7, at 7:30 p. m. Ladles at 8 o'clock p. m. Rev. Birch tf The Produce Man. Mrs." Dudley visiting Mr. and and children are Invited to attend. 8hields, of Beaver Dam, will perEast Hartford. , Leg Broken. Mr. J. H. B. Carson, of the Arm form the ceremony, MERCANTILE COMPANY Mr, Steve Bennett, of near Beda, COME TO DUNDEE Mr.. A. P. Bowell, 01tpn, Route of Carson & Co., returned Friday Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Pate, city, met with a very painful accident liyas a pleasant caller at The.'Her- from the East, where he purchased served dinner last Wednesday t to a ittpffice Wedneeday. in a mammoth stock of merchandise. few of their friends, as follows: while blasting" stumps with dynamite on his farm last Monday mornBorn to the wife of Mr,, John All sizes, from Mlse Lula and Mr. Willie Walker, of ing. He lighted a fuse and before For Sale, Farms on August 6 to 300 acres. We can please you Lexington, Ky., Mlse Fern Curtls.of be got to a safe distance the charge w boy. 28,VaAJlne Centertown; Mr. Cyrus Patin, of went off a piece struck him on his If you want to buy land. ' - V A.4C. YBISBR. & CO., There are always bargains to be had at Mr. Walk- leg Breaux Bridge, La., and m. iir.it.. T nitrmrllla or. between the ankle and knee, '"' Ky. er Carter, city; It was a very pleas- fracturing the bone. Dr. E. W. ' Is' t Hertford, Hartford Saturday and ,, Respectfully, our Large Store. JOha ant occasion. Ford was called and set tho fracture Messrs. "Wt O. Holbrpok, Miss Minnie Mclntyre is back at and at last account Mr. Bennett, Thomas, W,. H. Jtyore and fparold Hofbrook left yesterday 'on the gas- her post in the" Beaver Dam, tele- who is 7(1 years of age, was getting CO.,incoRpobATed. L. ft N.'oM, ItJUf.ft attending along as well as could be expected. a few phone exchange, after from Evansvllle, oline house host "Smile"-fo- r" DUNDEE. KENTUCKY. the funeral of her sister, MrsStur-geo- n, Dr, Roes Bennett accompanied Dr. .A5PWW(!BJWfl0P8l9jsSft!v" " JH.A.,--- ! ! whd died at Beech Grove re-- Ford to see Mr, Bennett, B nays. , . w W' "B JlOl. 'WT & ' -- !ji Olvlr to OUR Sample much-heralde- Book HAS JUST PERFECT ARRIVED! Shows over 250 patterns of cloth, 72 styles of making. Made to your own measure. We guarantee A FIT dec-ocrat- ed We are now ready to show you our Fall stock Ladies' Suits from SIO UP Barnard & Co., one-four- th one-four- th )s,,tf,$,itf4$,tf4$$tf 4:4.4. I . ' two-hou- rs te To-nig- ht to-da- y, o, y, nj SPECIAL CASH PRICES to-da- $ I Vl-gl- llub-Xo-Mor- ll HARTFORD GROCERY COMPANY. 61; Mtf1 J , l- For Anything You Need near-Maga- n, GENERAL MERCHANDISE ten-pou- irinftii , ftlol it, ' HiiitiMifiii-"1"-'--''- if ""$ ta0 DUNDEE MERCANTILE W W mP B '' m B W W .'v 'a 1 TAGE SIX. THE HARTFORD HERALD ' bench, all of them Democrats, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1811. The Hartjord Herald M. II. & and E. RAILROAD TIME TA- BLE AT HARTFORD, KY. The following L. & N. Time Card (rom Monday, Aug, Slst; "" North Bound No. 112 duo at Hartford 7:19 a. m. No. 114 due at Hartford 3:40 p. m. South Bound No. 115 due at Hartford 8:45 a. m. No. 113 due at Hartford 1.46 p. m. H. E. MISCIIKE, Agt. 1? ?ft?Ctlve of this question that Judge O'Rear did, and It was the unanimous opinion of thlrf Court, made up of six SUSPEND LIFE Democrats and one Republican, which was approved by the United Stntea Supreme Court. if Mr. Mayo was benefitted by ! For Hoursand Days With- that decision, then all otner mnu out KHIingSubject. owners In Eastern Kentucky were benefitted, but it cannot be truthfully said that Judge O'Rear made WITHISH Mr. Mayo or any of these property HIS EffEJIIIIENB owners rich, and if his decision did increase the value of their holdings, And Animals Show Life to be they were entitled to It. that all of them took the sarao view HE GUM EASILY ciw his wife has been a dally" visitor. The Jailer noticed they seemed and began to take note of tho visits. When he caught Welsse passing her tho bundle, ho examined it and found It contained the food allowed Weiss by tho county. Weiss acknowledged with reluctance that he had been giving his allowance to his wife every day to keep her from Facts for Weak Women sicknen tome Nine-tenth- derangement or dis s of women is due to of all the ease of the organs distinctly feminine. Such sickness can be cured is cured irery day by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription " Makes Weak Women Strong, It Well. acts directly oa the organs affected and is at the same time a general restorative tonic for the whole system. It cures female complaint right in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations and local treatment so universally insisted upon by doctors, and so abhorrent to every moaesc woman. We shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but thoso wanting full information as , to their symptoms and means of positive cure are referred 'to the People's Common Sense Mcdical( Adviser 1008 pages, newly revised and Edition, sent free on receipt of 21 stamps to cover cost of mailing only; or, in cloth binding for 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. r starving. Weiss was charged with stealing a pair of loaded dlco from a saloon keeper. Ho was being held as a witness against tho salodn keeper. Prosecutor Russe when he heard of the Jail Incident, ordered We"Iss released and procured work for him. O It Sick Women BRIDE AGED NINETY-SI- X "STAK-SPAN- GROOM IS TWENTY-FOU- R LED BANNER" WAS HISSED IN CANADA A One of Constant Forces one-ce- of Nature. LOW Sixth Husband for the Health. greeted Lady-- Has storm of hisses Retained Her Good f k n Troy, Mo., Aug. 31. Mrs. Nancy Edey, 9C years old, was married for to Reo Inlow, the sixth time y 24 years old. The bride's fifth husband died six weeks ago at the Poor Farm. Tho throng at the depot cheered as tho pair stepped lightly aboard the train bound for Hanni bal. The couple appeared oblivious of tho staring crowd. The bride was gowned In a plain black dress, with a belt made of a pleco of leather and a clothesline. She wore a sun bonnet and appeared happy. Inlow, a hurley fellow, wore overalls and a hickory shirt.. He was coatioEs, and smiled aa he helped his aged bride aboard the train, surrounded by eager spectators. The bridegroom, too, has lived, near hero nearly all his life, and Inlow stated he was marrying her because of his love for her. Lincoln county has been practically keeping Mrs.lnlow for the past She has been living In five years. a tent between Sllex and Whitesldes for the last few weeks. Mrs. Inlow drove to Sllex this morning and their brief After Joined Inlow. wedding Journey they will return to her tent, where they will make their home until winter. Tho bride has retained her good health and can see without the aid Her hearing Is also of spectacles. good. Mrs. Inlow is familiarly known to Sllex residents as "Aunt Is Tho bridegroom Nance." on a farm near Sllex. to-dacm-ploy- ed Quebec, Aug. 31. the playing of tho "Star Spangled Banner" at the Theater Royal here last night. Round after round of applause followed a minute later when tho perplayed "God Save the formers King." The incident Illustrates tho deep passions which have been stirred by the annexation cry which Is' being used to tho exclusion of all other arguments against the reciprocity pact which Is at stake In the pending election. A few Americans In the audience tried to counteract the demonstra tion by applauding the national anthem of tho United States, but their efforts were drowned In tho disapproval salute. The situation was saved finally by tho performers, who adroitly switched from tho "Star Spangled Banner" to "God Save the Montreal, TEMPERATURE THE IDEA O 000000000000000 YOU'LL ENJOY. POE.MS L 4 King." HOW'S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. We, tho undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations mads by his firm. Waldlng, Klnnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, o. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. nood Housekeeping WANTED Magazine requires the services of a representative in Ohio county to renewals look after subscription and to extend circulation by special methods which have proved unusuSalary and comally successful. demission. Previous experience Whole sirable, but not essential. time or spare time. Address, with references, J. F. Fairbanks, flood Housekeeping Magazine, 3S1 Fourth 3Gt2 Ave., New York Cltv. SAID TO HE THE WORLD'S .MOST FAMOUS POST-OF niaiige of Kalli'oiKl Rates. Effective Sept. 1, 1011, rates will be charged on tickets to following points on M., H. & E. to prices' named below: Hartford to Centertown, Ky....lSc 32c Hartford to Kronos, Ky Hartford to Smallhous, Ky....37c 4Cc Hartford to Moorman, Ky 5Sc Hartford to Bremen, Ky C4c Hartford to Lynn City, Ky 90c Hartford to Anton, Ky All other stations same rate as In effect prior to Sept. 1st. H. E. MISCHKE, Agt. 'ICE best-protect- ed Children Cry if; Table Talk. "Tho more I seo of men the more I like dogs," declared tho pessimisand is chained to the rocks of tho tic boarder. "Have some sausage, Mr. WomCNtremo cape In such a mannor that It floats free, opposite TIerra del bat," suggested the landlady. Fuego. Each passing ship sends a boat to take letters out and put o others In. This curious G000 NEWS. is unprovided with a Postmaster, and Is, therefore, under the protection of all the navies qf the world. Many Hartford Readers Have post-offlc- and the world is It has in tho Straits of Magellan. been there for many yearn. It consists of a small painted keg or cask, post-offlc- The smallest, simplest o in C ASTO R A 1 FOR FLETCHER'S iw sprained Heard It and Profited anklo will disable a man for three or four weeks, but by applying Thereby. Chamberlain's Liniment ''roely as soon as the injury Is received, and "Good news travels fast," and the observing U1.3 directions with each thousands of bad bnck sufferers In bottle, a cure can be effected In from two to four days. For sale lv Hartford are glad to learn that prompt relief Is within their roach. m all dealers. Many a lame, weak and achlni; back Is bad no more, thanks to Doan'a CLAIMING CREDIT FOR Pills. Thousands upon O'REAR'S DECISIONS Kidney ' thousands of people are telling the Li5" Judgo O'Rear's organ, the Louis- good news of their experience with ville Herald, which is owned by a the Old Quaker RemedyvHero Is an Republican who doesn't, example worth reading: Chicago Mrs. H. C. Smith, Earllngton, published even vote In Kentucky, "I was afflicted with an article recently giving Judge Ky., says: .O'Rear credit for the decision n kidney trouble for years. I had sethe Eastern Kentucky Land case vere pains in the small of my back ;. ,,Vwhfch It says mado John C. C. May6 and whenever I stooped or lifted, ncn. Of course, evervoody but tho tho attacks were particularly acute. i ubsldlzcd and foreign owned Her My back ached at night and when I ald .knows that Mr, Mayo made his arose in the morning I was very fortune In Eastern Kentucky long lame. I became tired easily, felt before the Court of Appeals and the languid and was frequently troubled Supreme Court of the United States by headaches and spells of dizziness. passed upon the land titles in East- I know that my kidneys were disern Kentucky. ordered, as tho kidney secretions Dut Mr. Mayo is not a candidate were unnatural. Learning of Doan's for Governor or for any other of- Kidney Pills, I began their use and fice, but ho deserves tho right as a the contents of two boxes cured me. Democrat to support the Democrat- I shall recommend this remedy at ic ticket, and he is doing so in his every opportunity," For sale by all dealers. Price 50 'usual earnest and vigorous fashion. FosteT-MllbuCo., Buffa The Herald would like tho voters cents. of Eastern Kentucky to believe that lo, New York, sole agents for the this decision was rendered solely by United States. RteraetribOT the name Doan's Judge O'Rear, but it happens that there were six other judges on the and take vo 'other. As rn usually treated, a "Life is Just an ordinary natural force, like weight." Such Is the revolutionary theory tho well Of Prof. Raoul PIctet, HIb conknown Swiss biologist. clusion, ho relates, was reached by a series of remarkable experiments, in which living organisms woro submitted to the most intense cold for hours, and, on being gradually thawed out, resumed normal life as if nothing had happened. with life "My first experiments under low temperatures woro mado almost IS years ago," said Prof. PIctet. ''Going from ono deduction to another, I have come to tho conclusion that if one could manufacture, a seed chemically, life would come to it of Itself and animate it. "If this be not true, I do not see how to explain the results of my studies, for I have been able to interrupt all the chemical reactions of various organs living without injuring those organs in any way, and keep them Interrupted for a long period; then, on removing tho cold, the cause of the interruption, I have seen them reanimated. So far as I can prophesy now, lower forms of life can bo suspended for an Indefinite period, without being entirely slain. "My most satisfactory experiments have been made with fresh water fish. I have been able to freeze them through and through, and then thaw them, without their dying. Ono day, at tho Unlerslty of Geneva, I put 28 fish In a deep glass bowl. I left them 24 hours In water at freezing point; theu, by gradually freezing, we werotable to form a single compnet cake of ice with the fish Inclosed In it. By continuing freezing we reduced the temperature of this block to 20 degrees centigrade (4 Fahrenheit) below zero. We broko off a piece of the glass and removed the Ice from ono of tho fish. It was so brittle that It broke easily Into tiny pieces, as If It were Itself made of Ice. Two months later we slowly began to melt this Ice In which tho fish were Inclosed. The fish, restored to their normal state, began to swim about as If nothing had happened. "With ordinary enrp tho experiment does not succeed at temperatures lower than 20 degrees (centigrade) below zero. Frogs, how-evo- r, can stand a coagulation of 28 degrees (centigrade) below zero without dying; centipedes can stand 50 degrees (centigrade) below zoro; snails, still more resistant, havo en dured without dying a cold fromi 110 to 120 degrees (centlgrado) be low zero during many days. Coming back up tho animal scale, we submitted guinea pigs, dogs and rabbits to intense cold. A dog was ablo to stand a temperature of 110 degrees (centigrade) below zero for ono hour without dying. "All these researches," concludes tho professor, "havo convinced mo that the study of vital pheno'mena by tho systematic use of low temperatures will permit us to classify life as among the constant forces of nature a force over present and all pervading, waiting only the proper' organic conditions In order to enter a seemingly dead mass and animate It." Paris Cor. Chicago Nows. O Tho Herald's Special Selections. FOOL NO. 0072. V 1 O O O OO A fool OO there was, and he mado his prayer, .' the O 000000000000000 CHEER. HE OF GOOD Be of good O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cheer, brave spirit; steadfastly serve that low whisper thou hast served; for know, God hath a select family of sons now scattered wide through earth, and each alone, who are thy spiritual kindred, and each one by constant service to that inward law, Is weav ing tho sublime proportions of a true monarch's soul. Beauty and strength, the riches of a spotless memory, the eloquence of truth, tho wisdom got by searching with a clear and loving eye that seeth as God seeth. These are their gifts. And Time, who keeps God's word, brbngs on tho day to seal the marriage of these minds with thine, Ye shall thine everlasting lovers. be the salt of all the elements, world Ralph Waldo Emof the world. erson. A Great Advnntngo to Working Men. J. A. Maple, 125 S. 7th street, Steubenvllle, O., says: "For years I Why Not Read The ! Even as many more, To a thingamaglg that sailed air People said wire would break somewhere, Dut the fool he said that ho didn't care, And It proved a terrible affair, Even as many more. O, tear Or the piano that tho planes would Courier- l"kflift"lol J J U llld! 4 HENRY WATTERSON J I the lives we pay for our sport to- day, And the idle tears we shed Grieving for some one who was bound To rise four miles above the ground And fall upon his head. A fool there was, and his goods ho 3cLl3o:n, WE CAN FUKNISH YOU The Hartford Herald AND THE spent, - Even as many more, For a wooden frame and a piece of tent, And a motor to assist ascent. He soared and soared until his something bent And the whole thing hit the continent, Even as many more. And it Isn't tho lives, and it isn't tho wives That sometimes make us glum, But the fact that we've devised the means With which fools making thrilling scenes May knock themselves to smithereens For all tlmo to come. WOMAN ItECOMES AN Weekly Courier -- Journal suffered from weak kidneys and a We can also give liberal severe bladder trouble, I learned of Foley Kidney Pills and their won combination rate with Daily derful cures, so I began taking them or Sunday Courier-Journa- l. and sure enough I had as good re - Wr!fo f!nnripr..Trmrmil Horn- suits as any I heard about. My LouiBVllle, Ky., for free backache left m0 and to ono of my P business, expressman, that alone Is Sample Copy of edition you a great advantage. My kidneys act- - desire, Ullt be SUl'e 10 SQlld. ed free and normal, and that saved y0ur subscription order to the me a lot of misery. It Is now a rr "VOT fr wv vf pleasure to work where it used to Aiaitiiuui xj.4iinijv Courier-Journa- l. misery. Foley Kidney Pills the be a have cured me and havo my highest praise." For. sale by all dealers, m I BOTH ONE YEAR A FOB ONLY$l.oO. ,.,,.,, Very Serious Had Tried the Dog. "Don't you think children aro a It is a very serious matter to ask for one medicine and have the Chicago, Aug. 31. Thirty years great help in keeping husbands and wrong one given you. For this are sufficient to disqualify a woman their wives from drifting apart?" "Well, perhaps they are. I havo reason we urge you in buying to from tho appellation "young," acto get the genuine cording to an edict of tho Young never tried children; but I am Woman's Christian Association, is- quite convinced that It Is useless for a lady to expect a pet dog to keep sued BLack-drTugh- T Likewise, they bar her from the her husband from drifting away." "OLD MAID" AFTER THIRTY to-da- y. , protection of tho Association" home for young women. r, Tho theory of Mrs. M. E. superintendent of theN Chicago branch of tho Association, Is that when a woman has reached the ago of 30 she ha3 attained enough discretion to take caro of In tho future, the homo herself. will not admit women who have passed tho prescribed limit. Mrs. Cochnower thinks the limit of 3o, fixed at Cambridge, Mass., is too liberal. Coch-nowe- Xatno Miulero For President. Moxlco City, Aug. 30. Francisco I. Madero was this afternoon nominated for President of Moxlco by the progressive party without a dissenting voice. Ho has accepted and will address tho convention morning. The Vice President has not been chosen yet. Liver Medicine The reputation of this old, reliable medicine, for constipation, indigestion and liver trouble, is firmly established. It does not imitate other medicines. It la better than others, or it would not be the favorite liver powder, with a larger sale than all othera combined. SOLD IN TOWN F2 A Dreadful Sight BiTffiliT"il ii'n.ri'i,WTH!" To H. J. Barnum, of Freoville, N. Y., was the fever sore ' that had plagued his life for years in spite of many remedies ho tried. At last he used Bucklen's Arnica Salve and wrote: "It hns entirely healed with scarcely a scar left." Heals burns, bolls, eczema, cuts, bruises, swellings, corns and piles llko magic. Only 25c at James H. Williams, 214 Main street. m CLAY COUNTY WOMAN 'iimnffl whtw K m , CASTORIA For Infants and Children. AS ASfcgetable Prcparaltonfor As- The Kind You Have Always Bought sof similating llicFoodnndliegula-luigUicStoiMchsardBowel- GIVES RIRTH TO FOUR Ky Middlesboro, Aug., 31. Mrs. George Lawson, of Bright Shade, Clay county, gave birth to four children Sunday morning. Two are alive and doing well, and so is the mother. RESULT OF SNEEZING , IS CAUSE OF DEATH Oklahoma City, Okla., Aug. 31. Stephen Froesel died hero as the result of sneezing. He began to sneeze on August 24, and his noso began bleeding at the same time, The physicians failed to stop the flow, so he bled to death. to-d- ay Promotes Bears the Signature Digestion-Cheerfulness yfefAwn GAVE FOOD FROM JAIL TO STARVING WIFE "- WOTl'lARCOTIC. cindRcst.Contains neither Opium,Morphine norIiacraL of AXv tlfv In - - . Lawrenceburg, Ind., Aug. 31. Louis A. Weiss, twenty-eigyears old, a prisoner In tho county Jail on a charge of petty larceny, was caught yesterday passing ft 'bundle containing food to his wife. Wolseo has been In Jail several weeks and ht JtevearoUJOrSiKUILmaKIt staueJmt ft Apcrfecl Remedy for Constipa-Tlo- n , Sour Sloqiadi.Diarrhoaa Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish-nes- s fit ondLos9 of Sieep. uiciiiuwiuiuvuici u pais ana aeiicatef , How can the babv stow !..' I .uungu k. m. ..! Scott's Emulsion make the mother rtronff and wall; increases and nchea tit ebaby't food. , h wiffliiTi r TO SUBSCRIBERS. ordering the address of your paper changed from one f place to another It Is absolutely necessary to state where you have been receiving the paper as well as where jou want it chang-- ed to. Please bear this in mind, fr NOTICE Facsimile signature of In 4 HEW YORK. lis ft For Ovqf Thirty Yearsn! Alt f 'WRAPPER X CASTORIA , 4 i M -- J, WC MMTMIIt aoMMftT. MWVMMliM Subscribe for Toe Hartford Herald. imt(iimi' nimrAf .v i, n ' VrnliiiHiriSVtflfin -- r i " ?w WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1011. CREATING No Hard and V- l''ii - THE HARTFORD HERALD A PAGE SEVEX. WAR WARM WORK The Phrase "Heat of Battle" Not a Mere Figure of Speech. FIGHTING VIOLIN. FIRES THE BLOOD. j: M fc An Old Veteran' Story of an Early Morning Attack In Zero Weather and the Change the Sklrmiih Wrought In Hie Half Frozen Body. i "Tbo expression 'heat of battle Is more than a mero poetic Qguro of speech descriptive of the flerco glow of emotion tlio soldier feels when In tho midst of conflict," said a southern soldier who was an offlcer under Colonel Mosby. "It describes exactly the sensible, physical condition the soldier feels, no matter what the temperature may be. "That this Is true was evidenced by my own experience during tho war between the states. It was in February, 1S04, and Colonel Mosby. with soma hundred of us. was camped near a village In Virginia about thirty miles south of Harpers Ferry, lato one afternoon our leader received a dispatch from General Leo to make a forced march that night and attack a body of Federal troops that was stationed on Loudon heights, which overlook Harpers Ferry. The weather was bitter cold, tho coldest that bad been known In that section for many years, ffhe mercury was coquetting around zero, a six Inch fall of snow, half melted and frozen again, made the roads almost Impassable, and a stiff north ,winL added to these other evils, made tho outlook for a pleasant dash of thirty miles a most dismally improbable one. "It was about sunset when, muffled to the eyes against the biting frost and bitter wind, our column ie'ft camp at .TJppervIIle. For the first ten miles, our squadron, made up of veterans Inured to all manner of hardships, did not suffer much, and occasionally soma one I would even essay a Joke. Out In the second ten miles tho cold, that bad slowly eaten Its way through overcoat and jacket and shirt, began to bite Into our bodies. To restore life to our numb legs we would tako our feet from tho stirrups and let them hang until tho circulation was restored an old trick With those compelled to rido much In tho cold and we would keep our bands and arms In some measure warm by beating them against our bodies or clapping them soverely together. "Tho second ten was bad enough. I say, but the last was well, a polar nightmare. The vitality seemed to be - frozen out of man and beast. For hours the horses stumbled through tho snow bearing a troop as silent as tho dead save for an occasional thumping of some poor devil's half frozen arms against bis side as be sought to restore life to the deadened limbs. When I took my feet out of the stirrups to help tho circulation I (would have to take my bands and lift my legs np to get the feet back in place, so lost to all sensation were they. "At length about 3 o'clock in the morning we saw tho lights of the enemy's picket fires and could distinguish the muffled forms of the sentries as they paced their beats. There was a small strip of woods that ran to fwlthin a hundred or less yards of the Federal camp, and In this we formed lor the nttack. My bands were so cold that I was unable to cock tho hammers of my revolvers with my thumb, but was compelled to effect It with my teeth, holding the pistol between my numbed fists and drawing back the hammer by gripping It In my teetb and pulling It back until It caught. y "At lengtu an was in renuineis. a.u I sat there, barely able to grasp my revolvers, the 'Charger rang out, and the next moment we were In the midst of tho enemy, who were too astounded at an attack on such a bitter night to offer much resistance and for the most part fled down to Harpers Ferry to tho main body. Some of them, however, put up n stout fight for men awakened from warm sleep to fight to the death in the bitter night air, and for a couplo of minutes we bad all wo could do, but It was soon over, and we were In possession of the camp. "When I came to myself I found I Tvas sitting with ono leg thrown over the pummel of my saddle, my overcoat and Jacket flung wide open, while my shirt, opened to the last button, allowed a grateful zero zephyr to play upon my bare sweating breast. In my band, from which I bad pulled the glove. "moist with sweat, I was holding my hat, with which I was vigorously fanning myself. "And less than five minutes before I had been so chilled tbat bad I been in a comfortable house with a physician at band bo would have filled me full of hot drinks, wrapped me in blankets and kept me in bed a couple of days. "No," concluded' the veteran, "the heat of battle is something more than a mere figure of speech." New vork Times. faet Rules to Quids the ArtUt Mechanic Violins are tho most delicate and uncertain of musical Instruments to make. There are no hard and fast rules to follow. It Is Uko making a human voice. Tho quality differs according to tho wood, the seasoning and tho construction of the few parts In It. The violin contains the fewest parts of any musical instrument Invented, and It seems like tho simplest of them all to mnke. But, nlns. It defies tho expert, the practical mechanic and tho musician! Anybody can make n violin, but few can make n good one. So, with the exception of comparatively few factory violins, most of them are produced by Individual Instrument makers, who spend more loving care over them than a mother does over her first child. A violin maker Is an artist mechanic, a sort of anomaly In this ngo of machinery. With a pot of glue, a few sharp tools, n cabinetmaker's bench and n few sticks of wood he will labor diligently In the creation of an Instrument that may give forth the sweetest, tho wildest, tho weirdest and tho strangest musical notes. He will glue his Instrument together and then take It npart twenty times to adjust, tho fraction of an Inch, tho bass bar or the sounding post A creator of a violin may spend weeks on a single Instrument and then find, to his disgust, that It does not satisfy. point where tho sounding po3t a stick of wood only a little larger than a match should be placed can never be determined In ndvance. It Is a mystery that over recurs in eacb new Tho-ex-a- DRESSING SHIP. A Man-of-W- ar m at the affected parts, you the attack. When the bones acho and the Joints are Inflamed, with much tenderness need a powerful penetrating agent to overcome 111 Wears More Than One Suit of Clothes. INNER AND OUTER GARMENTS. Besides Its Coat of Armor Plate It Has a Special Set of Underclothes to Protect the Vital Parts of Its Anatomy. Mineral Wool Mufflers. SNOW LINIMENT IS A PAIN RELIEF OF GREAT EFFICACY. Its wonderful penetrating power affords a most gratifying senso of relief to tho afflicted. It cases pain quickly, subdues alt Inflammatory conditions and rapidly restores strength and comfort In the achlns Joints. It Is equally effective In rclle..tg neuralgia and sciatica. Rub It in well, gently but thoroughly: its healing and strengthening influenco Is manifest as soon as It reaches tho nerves at the scat of tho disturbance. A few applications controls the disorder and restores normal conditions. As a household remedy for curing cuts, wounds, burn3, sores or the hundred and ono accidents that are always occurring to tho flesh, It has no superior. BALLARD'S I ,r i ) ? Battleships wear coats of stout armor plate, as everybody knows, but everybody does not khow tiat they wear undergarments which aro produced cblclly from cocoanuts. Your Is really a most powerful very delicate object and requires special underclothing so tbat some vital parts of Its anatomy may not be conic too cold nnd so that other equal ly vital portions may not become toe. mnn-of-wui- 1 m Put Up in Three Sizes, 25c, 50c and $1.00 per Bottle. james f. n.xi.i.Ann rnorniETon ST. LOUIS, BIO. violin. Then the wood Is of so much Importance to the violin maker none of your fresh timber nor kiln dried stuff! It must bo seasoned by years, even by decades and centuries. Every time a century old bouse is demolished somo musical maker Is likely to appear on the scene and make n quiet bid for some of the thin old rafters. To the novice they may seem worthless, but tho violin maker may find in this century old timber Just tho wood for his fireproof. beloved Instruments. Chicago Record-Herald. From stem to stern, which Is nnother way of saying from head to too, your Is envelenormous oped in an undergarment placed Immediately behind Its topcoat or armor plate. This is Its special mackintosh, or, rather, waterproof. Which acts as a protection from fire us well ns water. In tho ordinary way If a shot pierced tho sldo of a battleship water would pour In at tho hole and possibly the ship might sink, but this Is obviated by providing a backing to the armor. Great secrecy Is kept In tbo various navies regarding tbo material used and Its arrangement In many of the latest battleships, however, the coating Is made of cellu lose, which again Is obtained from tho fibrous cocoanut rind. Celluloso possesses the peculiar property of swelling Immediately If It comes In contact with salt water. Therefore the moment tbat water pours In at a hole at the ship's sldo tbo cellulose almost and so closed the aperture. Of course tbo cellulose Is especially treated In order to render it A man-of-wa- hot For Sore Eyes, Granulated Mill, llcdneii of the Eyeball, Weak SlKht, Smarting SenUon use Stephens Eye Salve. It U n remedy of proven merit. In the Kyes Wi"W --Mr'llMBILSWISot.r HARTFORD Ann RgcoMMCNCicoBTl DONOVAN At DRUG CO., HARTFORD, KY CO., HKAVKR DAM, KV. Educate For Business Private instruction from expert teachers in all departments. Day an3 night school in session the entire year. Books free. Free employment agency. Not a graduate out of a position. Write for catalogue and terms. Mark the Studies You Are Interested in. ...Shorthand ,. .. ...Itapld Calculation. .. .nookkeeplng. .Penmanship. .Commercial Geogniphy. Heading. Commerce. .Typewriting. ...Civil Sen ice. ...Commercial law. .. . . ,. . .Spelling. .Arithmetic. .. .. PATRICK HENRY. Thomaa Jefferson's Opinion of the Orator and Patriot. When William Wirt was engaged in writing tbjc memoirs of Patrick Henry ho turned for Information to Thomas Jefferson, who had been associated with tho orator for many years, nsk-In- g his aid In furnishing biographical material for the work. The correspondence between Wirt and Jefferson, published In tho Fennsylvnnln Magazine of History and Biography, from the manuscript collection of John Grlbbel, has a decidedly Interesting passage showing the opinion Jefferson held about his famous colleague. In answer to Wirt's first request Jefferson replies with nn assent and adds a general and unfavorable summary of Henry's character: "He was certainly the man who gave tho first Impulse to tho ball of revolution, were I to glvo his character In general terms, It would bo of mixed aspect. I think bo was the best humored man in society I nlmost ever know, and tho greatest orator that ever lived, he had a consumato knol-edgof the human heart, which directing tho efforts of his eloquence enabled him to attain a degree of popularity with the people at large never perhaps equalled, his Judgment in other matters was inaccurate, in matters of law it was not worth a copper: ho was nvarlclous & rotten hearted his two great passions were tho lovo of money & of fame; but when these camo Into competition the former If the work you propose Is not destined to come out speedily I will endeavor to recollect what may be of use to It" o longer a title of reproach. Tho highly paid specialist who presides over tho kitchens Is a chef with an International reputation. Tho menu at the end of tho longest sen voyage gives no Indication that the ship has not been supplied from land. Immense stores of fresh meats, vegetables, fruits and even flowers must be curried. Tho kitchens are Incredibly clean, with their tiled floors, glass tables and shelves, as aro also the cold storage rooms. To keep a kttcben In order Is a far more difilcult problem at sea than on land. Cassler's Magazine. Located It Exactly. With his Jaw swollen so ns to nearly closo his eye, n sailor rushed Into a dentist's office and told tho dentist to extract nn aching tooth us soon as pos sible. After getting the man seated In the chair tho doctor asked which tooth be.wished pulled, and the sailor, nearly crazed by pain. Jost no time In saying. "Upper deck, second one from nft, port sldo." Cincinnati Commercial Tribune- A man cannot servo two masters," Modern Kitchens at Sea. Tho term "son of a sea cook" Is no It Often Happens. I V ' quoted tho wise guy. "Oh. I don't know," added the Earthquakes. Pills to Prevent simple mug. "A man may make a god "l remember," says AddteoD In the of money and also serve time." Philatwo hundred and fortieth Taper, delphia Itecord. "when our whole 4sjand was shaken .wttb an earthquake some year ago A Sour Critic there was an Impudent mountebank Miss Vallmore I was told to take rwlw sold pills which, as be told the Tery good lemon Jnlca fomy singing. Mr. (SouBtuajm people. we aajn&sc an earthquake ia rlyHaven't you got. will, power enough to stop singing without the aid of jiterlew. Xgafe Saturday lemon Juice? Chicago News. "Wi it a, practice to put all It Is usually set so touch the great-lie- s Mx'wIrrWtlWB. is the bottom of my &' smile- .of our trouble aa the littleness of bmrtfimt aor spirit .tiMMMkas m eoespiala. &fflnpgr etter, $, efntlwIU V . . . Grammar. has Its vitality enormously diminished If certain portions of It become too cold. In much the Name same way as Its human tenants. AcAddress cordingly Its boiler nnd steam pipes nro clothed with "Jackets." In somo enscs tho Jackets are made of ordinary blanketing, others of n fibrous clay-lik- e composition or even of close grained wood. In general the material used "Acknowledge the College." E. B. Miller, PreS. for a ship's underclothing of this deOwensb oro, Ky. scription consists of mineral wool. However, the great ship Is more likely to sutler from tho effects of heat than from thoso of cold. There Is alMYSTERIES. ways the danger owing to tho newer SCIENTIFIC type of machinery employed that the powder magazines may get too hot The Problems of Mind, Life, Gravitatho stores In the latest tion and Electricity. are surrounded by a thick coating of A most remarkublu suite, condition mineral wool. Mineral wool, by the or point in nature, the ubsolute zero way, has nothing whatever to do with of temperature, has been reached to wool, as it consists of a mass of snowy within three degrees. This Is conthreads of a kind of glass. It Is made sidered to be n great scientific achieveby blowing Jets of high pressure steam ment. Hydrogen gas was solidltled (INCOIU'OIIATKD) through the furnaces In tho manufacInto pure white Ice. and this was emture of Iron nnd steel. ploye! In tho process of cooling heEnormous quantities of this strange lium, and nil works of the band of variety of wool aro used on board for man were surpassed. The temperature the purposes of underclothing the bulkpoint heads and the more delicate portions sank lower and lower until a was of tho ship's body. This Invaluable only three degrees from absolute substance acts equally well as a pro- reached, but tbo obdurate helium did tector from heat and from cold. It Is not even liquefy. be The Imagination, however vivid, cansucb a remarkable nonconductor of bent that It Is used for covering the not encompass what thl," Intense cold refrigerators and the cold storago Implies. It may be theXleath of tbo chambers and therefore the explosive activity of matter Unit Is, a state of rest so far ns chemical reaction Is constores. In tho dockyards all men who nro cerned. Thus if the true zero of naemployed In packing the mineral wool ture can be reached it mny obtain that In tho spaces on the ships are obliged matter will put on new aspects and to wear masks. This Is to prevent the hitherto unknown properties, or It may sharp needlelike particles from being expire, become chemically Inert, totalThat question will be asked you almost daily by business men seeking your inhaled and o causing chest troubles ly devoid of bent and lifeless. of fatal character. Still even then the stnndlng mystery services, n yuu iuiiiu) uiku uic ii.iuuuu j. mining .uuimjuw .iniuiuuu lu rise. More BANKERS indorse DRAUGIION'S Colleges than indorse all other bus), The ammunition rooms themselves over confronting man. always awaitare kept cool by a refrlgpratlng plant ing explanation, gravitation, will act. ncss colleges COMBINED. 48 Colleges in 18 States. International reputation. ltanklnir. Tjpoifrltlnir, l'emnanslilp. FinrllHh, Npclllnc, Arithmetic. Letter Writing1, Dullness In addition to being clothed In mineral Nothing known can nffect tbe uni- Lar-Ht- hU auxiliary liranchei. Good POSH IONS GUARANTEED under reasonable conditions. wool, tho same applying to the ammuHome Study. Thousands of bankcash- Bookkeeping. Bookkeepers all over versal attraction, forever directly as to wool is also mnss, whether hot or cold. tho United States say that Draughon's tcrs, bookkeepers, and stenographers are nition passages. The packed between tbo double bulkheads However, tho three degrees may New System of Bookkeeping saves them holding good positions as the result of, which separate the boiler spaces from never bo overcome, or, Indeed, they from 25 to 50 per cent in work and worry. taking Draughon's Home Study. CATALOGUE. For prices on lessons Shorthand. Practically all U. S. offitho other portions of the vessel. Alto- may, for it Is now thought that sclenco uses of the mineral wool on has no limits, the scientific mind being cial court reporters write the System of BY MAIL, write J no. F. Dk.utohon, gether tho Draughon Colleges teach. President, Nashville. Tenn. For fiee cat board nre extremely numerous. Even capable of solving all problems so Shorthand Why Because they know it is the best, alogue on course AT COLLEGE, write reindeer hair Is to bo met wtb on salth some mentologlsts. PRACTICAL, BUSINESS COLLEGE board In the capacity of a particular Tho capital problem Is first to dis- DRAUGIION'S or Knoxville, Tenn., or Poducnh, Ky., or Evantvillc, Ind. NmUviIIo or Memphis sort of underclothing. This material cover what mind Is, then life, nest Is very light considerably lighter than gravitation, next electricity, nnd reach cork, for Instunce and It Is not so sub- a climax In finding how It Is tbat gaseject to decay. For this reason among ous masses glow nnd Issuo light when Its many uses It Is of great value ns a existing in frigid voids at zero ubsoBoston Ailing for tho life buoys. lute. Transcript The kind tbat makes you look good In tbe eyes of tbe wholeThere Is no solution In sight for any problems nnd harsale dealer and tbe city merchant' ihat makes your neighbors of these perplexing Smoking Before Meals. assing. No progress whatever has been proud of you, Increases respect and sets you right in the minds People will persist In smoking, even made in finding what mind is. the reaof all people; this kind is they have read tbe following son being doubtless that mind is unafter from tbat eminent authority, the Lon- able to Uilnk of Itself. On trial it will don Lancet: soon discovered thnt one Is unnblo Smoking Just before meals is to be be or reasoning regard-lu- g up n And promply delivered by the HARTFORD HERALD. Everydeprecnted. because the pungency of to set own trainnuother's mind. "His or his body in any kind of business needs Printed Siationery Note pyrolgncus products contained In the own" Implies an owner, but no fnct as tobacco smoke renders the buccnl mu- to who this owner .Is ha ever been Heads, Cnrds. Envelopes, Statemenis, Etc. nowadays. Prices cosa Insensitive to alimentary stimuladiscovered. Humans nre not perfect. the lowest; work the best, fall or write us. tion. In fact, the effect Is to dull or Edgar Luclen Lnrkln In New York reflex, abolish the "She HERALD. Hertford. Ky. us of whut Pawlow American. thus depriving calls "appetite Juice.' IJrnwIng the Credit Line. Tailor I must have caah down Confidence. Self JJ $ J $ J Je j tj J j J ifi "Do you bellevo In all the views you for your woddlng suit, Mr. Parks. H Customer But haven't I always taVocateJT PEOPLE 'WRITING ANNOUNCEMENTS "Yes," replied Senator Sorghum, paid my bills on the minute? For THE HERALD will please Of progranis or nny event to sfter some hesitation, "1 do. but I Tailor Yes, Mr. Parks; but regot their articles to us prompt- doubt whether n less skillful reasoner member thnt after this you won't take place In the future,' mat- than myself would be able to convince have tho handling of your own ly. Matters intended for pub- ters of general Interest but not mo of the correctness of some of money. ( llcation In our regulnr Issue exact qurrent news, should them." Washington Star. (Wednesday) must bo In our reach The Horald Jurt ns soon The paper consumption for tho hands on Monday without fall- as possible after being decided His Conclusion. year 1910 In tho United States, ure, to Insure publication. upon. Please don't delay. Mrs. Gnaggs I'll never forget the Great Britain, Germany, Prance and night you proposed to me. You noted Italy amounted to 5,270,000 tons, . .. Ilka a perfect fool. Mr, Gnaggs-Th- ot of which, the, United States consumRecord wasn't B ed more',' than half, or 2,730,000 as bad as tav tons. Talobcirers are Just makers. Sheridan. Subscribe for. The Herald. $1. year. r .Use or Adding Machine and other iilllce devices. .Punctnatlon. Daviess County Business College men-of-w- urcrcicH" Licht and Po wer Company E. G. BARRASS, MGR., Will wire your house at cost. Electric Lights are clean, healthy and safe. No home or business house should 'without them when within reach. YOU WANT a Better JOB? JOB PRINTING- - NEATLY DONE it! olfucto-gustator- y acting.-Philadel- phia :V r Hartford Herald . - Only $1 Per Year h rAGK eight. X THE HARTFORD HERALD Superintendent for the wl,, election of Dr. Fred Mutchler, ot'jLtowl" ing Green, to conduct our "Institute, and wish to say that we approve his work and desire him again next year. Second, That we favor the adoption of Elementary Agriculture In the public schools of Ohio county. Third, That we appreciated" the presence of a number of visitors who were hero in the interest of especially Prof. H. H. education, Cherry, of Bowling Green. Fourth, That we extend a vote of thanks to our worthy cltlons, Mr. J. B. Wilson and Supt. Leach for their great ingenuity in the plan- -' nlng of an educational trip for the teachers of Ohio county and wo urge that all teachers avail them' selves of this opportunity. Fifth, That we approve tho efficient work of our Secretary, Miss , Keown. Sixth, That we, as teachers, strive In every way possible to increaso the average attendance in school and Join with our most excellent Superintendent in his effort of cre ating a greater educational spirit. Seventh, That we express to the cltlens of the town of Hartford our appreciation for their cordiality, and the kind and hospitable way In which they have received us. MAY E. ROGERS, E. Y. ALLEN. MATl'YE E. MOSELEY, Sec'y., Committee. Chairman made a few announcements and adjourned the Institute until its next year's term. HENRY LEACH, Ch'm'n. ANNA ELIZA KEOWN, Sec'y. WEDNESDAY, SUPT. , lfll. IM J i' i r u ' cess. The first number after recess was v "Sources of Good Order" by W. F. ing Session. Anderson. Miss Mae Rogers read a paper on "Character and Goodwill as a means to Good Order." She Tuesday's Session. Institute met for Its second day said that a teacher should have morning. Boupd Ideas and morals. Miss Alt a session at 8:30 Tuesday gave us some good Devotional exercises were conducted Mao Likens How to A few an- points on "Writing, and by Rev. Virgil Elgin. nouncements were made by Super- Teach It." Mrs. J. H. Loyd outlinintendent Leach, after which Mon- ed the course of study In an interday's minutes were read and ap- esting manner. The Institute was thon adjournproved. Mr. H. C. Crowder gave some practical ideas on "The Phys- ed until Thursday morning at 8:30. Tlmrsdny. ical Qualifications of the Teacher." The Instltuto met for its fourth "The Legal Qualifications of the Teacher" were, given by Mr. S. P. session Thursday morning. Devotional exercises wcro conducted by McKlnney. Next was an address on "The Pro- Dr. Mutchler. Supt. Leach appoint Qualifica- ed a Library committee composed fessional and Cultured tions of the Teacher," by W. C. of Mr. II. E. Brown, Mrs. J. H. Shultz, In which he says that pro- Loyd and Mr. W. R. Carson. Mr. W. C. Shultz acted as chair fessional training should be required of teachers. The teacher who man until recess, ns Supt. Leach knows his work, demands and com- had some Important business to attend to. mands the respect of his pupils. Mr. W. R. Hedrlck ably discuss Mrs. Mary White gavo us a few minutes talk on "Obtaining the Po- ed "Proper Assignment of the Lesson." sition, and the Reconnaissance." The next number being omitted, The Instructor made a few remarks concerning the importance tho Instructor addressed us on the and value of knowledge before re- subject of "Corn." He said the suming his subject of agriculture. points to be considered In a ?od We are shown that soil Is the most head of corn are: Shape of ear, fundamental of all our natural re- length of the car, circumference, WM. WILLIS, sources and the careful study of tips of the ear, butt of the ear, col soil should be taught In every rural or of kernel and cob. shnno of tho Real Estate, Rochester, Ky., office school, so that It may be preserved. ! kernels and spacing of the kernels. Green River Deposit Bank. Has for sale two good river farms, two IJRecess. Recess. Miss Bedford, of Owensboro, re- smaller farms near Rochester, also After a few announcements Mr. selections which were Rochester Hotel, which is in good C. B. Shown gave a good talk on cited two repair and trade established. Well very much appreciated. "Relation of the Public School to Supt. Leach appointed Miss Mat- - located on valuable lot, 17 rooms, Government by the People," followFor further pared by nn Interesting and helpful dis- tye Moseley, Mr. E. Y. Allen and no other hotel. cussion of "Relation of the School Miss Mao Rogers as a committee on ticulars address WM. WILLIS. 36t4 to the Parents, and how; to secure resolutions. He then made an earn helpful to both par- est appeal to the teachers to be abADAnuna. solutely worthy of tho profession In ties" by Mrs. S. O. Keown. Sept. 2. Mrs. Lena Patton and The "Alms of the School" were which they are engaged. InMr. W. R. Carson, Osnsi Shu' z Miss Oda Raymon attended the discussed by Mr. Everett Llles. ' Dr. Mutchler again took up his and W. C. Shultz made a few re- stltuto at Hartford Wednesday nnd meeting. discussion of the soil. He went marks urging tho teachers to take report an interesting Messrs. Ronda and Nelmer Milmore Into detail and explained the advantage of the trip offered them. Motion made and carried to the ler, Magan, passed through hero kinds and physical properties of the to visit their sister, Mrs. Deo effect that a picture of the Instisoil. He emphasized the Importtute, together with Its history, be Whlttaker, below here. ance of having humus In the soli. Mr. and Mrs. Clarenco Patton, Superintendent Leach announced and paid for out of the Instltuto Taffy, are guests of his father, C. M. that Dr. Mutchler will lecture on funds. Motion made and carried to the Patton, here "Conservation of the Soil," at court The residence and meathouso of hall Wednesday evening. He also effect that the picture and the Mr. and Mrs. Dee Whlttaker, near together with Its history bo appointed a committee to choose destroyed by fire recentthe players who are to play against published in the Industrial Edition hore, were ly. Thy saved only a few houseof the Hartford Republican. Hartford baseball team. Noon. hold goods. Tlmrsdny Afternoon. The House was called to order at daughter of Mrs. Dona Miller, a few announcements, Supt. one. Motion made and carried to After Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weternold, the effect that the Institute would Leach was absent on account of busadjourn at 2:15 to attend as a body iness and Mr. H. C. Crowder took here, wa3 burled at Bell's Run yesterday. Wo have learned no parthe chair. the funeral of Dr. Alexander. Tho first number of the after- ticulars of her fatal illness. Mr. E. Y. Allen reported that the Mr. and Mrs. Basil Westerfleld, committee had decided that tho ball noon's program was taken up by game would bo played Thursday at tho Instructor In which he contin- Fordsvllle, passed here enroute to 4 o'clock. ued his discussion on corn. This Bell's Run to the Interment of his The only address of the after- nation grows more corn than all sister, Mrs. Miller. Miss Oda Raymon left y for noon was by Dr. Mutchler, who dis- other nations. He showed the val Knottavllle, where she begins school cussed In his usual Interesting man ue of the corn crop to Kentucky. ner how soil may bo depleted by He emphasled that we ought to Monday. Wo are glad to report Mrs. wasting away, bleaching, taking grow more corn In Kentucky. ReHelms, who underwent a serious away everything and putting back cess. nothing, system of single cropping After a few minutes recess, Dr. operation nt a hospital at Owens Mutchler urged that a corn club bo boro, Improved. Wo hope sho will and careless husbandry. Supt. Leach made some few and organized In this county. Ho dis- soon bo able to come home. fitting remarks concerning tho life cussed in detail proper cultivation Notice to Creditors. of the corn and how to prepare the and death of Dr. Alexander. All parties having claims against The Institute was then adjourned soil for a drouth. the estate of Joseph Gentry, de Adjourned at 3:30 to attend the ceased, are notified to present same, until Wednesdny morning. Wednesday. ball game. Tho score of the game properly proven, to mo or my atThe Institute wnB called to order was u to 4 In favor of the Institute. torney, .0. B. Likens, Hartford, Ky., by Supt. Leach at the usual time Friday. on or before the 15th day of SepWednesday morning. The Instltuto convened for tho Devotional tember, 1911, or they will bo for exercises were conducted by W. R. last tlmo Friday morning nt 8 ever barred. Roll-ca- ll Hcdrlck. showed a mem- o'clock. Rev. Virgil Elgin conductWILLIAM GENTRY, bership of 140 at that time. ed the devotional exercises. 33t4 Administrator. Supt. Leach made an announceon The Instructor discoursed ment regarding a trip planned for tho "Teachers' Helps" In tho sub- CONDITION OF STATE the teachers and trustees of the ject of Agriculture. He impressed TREASURY IS SHOWN county. They are to visit the us with the fact that nothing takes schools of Louisville, Mammoth the place of plowing things. Frankfort, Ky., Sept. 1. The folCave, schools of Bowling Green Library committee reported that lowing Is the monthly statement of and the State Normal. Judge Wil- they will meet again September 23d tho condition of the State Treasury son discussed tho plans of the pro- and urge that all the books that are at the close of business yesterday: posed trip In detail, stating tho ex- out be sent In by September ICth. Balance In sinking fund, .5191,366,-2- 4; pense and time required In taking Tho sum of $11.50 has been colbalanco In school fund, $434,-203.0the trip. II. H. Cherry, President lected for the Industrial Edition. deficit In general expendiMr. Wilson made a fowmoro sug- ture fund, $347,504.26; balance In of Stnto Normnl, gave his hearty approval and will assist them In gestions concerning tho trip. treasury, $278,005.05. ' any way possible. Motion made Mr. II. C. Crowder was appoint and carried that tho plan be ac- ed as a commltteo to secure Mr. W. Foley's Kidney Remedy (Liquid) O. Stewart to write the history of Is a great medicine of proven value cepted. Recess. Dr. Mutchler continued his lec- the Institute to be printed In the for both acute and chronic kidney ture on the soil and Its needs. Ho Industrial Edition. Mr. Stewart and bladder ailments and for antold of tho composition and real has taught In one district 35 years. noying urinary irregularities. It is to elderly value of commercial fertilizer, and After a few words by Supt. Leach especially recommended Dr. Mutchler's lec people for Its wonderful tonic and how the physical condition of the commending soil may sometimes be destroyed on tures, wo had a few minutes recess. reconstructive qualities, and the Dr. Mutchler finished the weok'B permanent relief and comfort It account of It. with a talk about tho gives them. L. McConnell, 117 Wo were very fortunate indeed program to have President ILJI. Cherry nd- - course of study In agriculture and Catherine St., Elmira, N. Y., says: dress us. In his enthusiastic way, hoped that next year he would find "Five bottles d(d the work for me. corn club organized most effectively and beyond doubt which Is characteristic of him, he a successful Foloy's Kidney Romedy Is tho most told us the educated man Is the man here. 'who wlnB In battle. Tho day has kidney Tho committee medicine ever on resolutions reliable come In Kentucky when Kentucky submitted the following which were made." For sale by all dealers, m to employ qualified adopted: Is honor-boun- d We, the teachors of Ohio county teachers, who hare tho ability to The Joint maneuvers of tho reglead the Commonwealth In higher in Institute assembled, feeling the importance of our' work, desire to ular army and the organized mili llfo. Noon. and nobler Atone o'clock the Institute was publish the following resolutions, tia next year willI ,cost $1,300,000. H called to order by Chairman Leach. therefore bo It Resolved: First, That we extend The usual Bong service was rendered, followed by an address by Judge our sincere thanks to our worthy mriMMWiR HHUrrSANB lUMM "State Board of Ed 'The ucation." He told of what the Board Is composed, Its duties and some things It is doing. The InBALANCE PROCEEDINGS structor now took up the second topic of his outline which is "Good Ho said that it Is as imTEACHERS' ENSTITUTE Seed." portant to have 'good seed as good soil. Great stress was laid upon tho importance of selecting seed. .ReHeld in Hartford Last Week Hartjord Herald J. S. Glenn on NEW FALL SUITS FOR LADIES AND MISSES! We have the first showing of the new fall garments and it will please 14s to.show them to you. We sell the famous Was a Very Interest- - PALflER GARMENT which never fails to satisfy, and in such points as CORRECT STYLE, HIGH QUALITY WORKMANSHIP, DESIRABLE MODELS, SNAPPY CREATIONS, PERFECT FIT, 4 We are abundantly able to. please you. E. P. Barnes & Bro., BEAVER DAM, KENTUCKY, ducted by Rev. Mell, after which was sung our national hymn, I oooooooooooooowO BAPTIST CHURCHES. ' O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ' "America." Each of the High School teachers, Mr. O. L. Shultz, Mr. Homer Wilson, Mr. F. T. Shultz, nnd Mr. C. P. Austin, made te to-da- y. to to-da- 7; fTmOMEPDlS The thirty-secon- d annual opening of Hartford College took place Monday, September 4. A number of friends and patrons of tho school wero present; some former pupils and graduates and a large student body was enrolled. wero conexercises Devotional ducted by Revs. Elgin and Bruner, after which Prof. Brown outlined the coming year's work, pledged the best efforts of the entire faculty and asked for a continuation of honest work on the part of tho pupils and RALLY DAY, of tho parents and Hartford Baptist Bible School, nevt the Sunday, Sept. 10. Tho members of patrons. Col, Barnett, as chairman of the tho church, mnln Bchool, Home Department and Cradle Roll are ex- Board of Trustees, heartily endorspected. .New pupils nnd visitors are ed the past year's work and adInvited. Everybody welcome. Be- vancement, pledged tho loyal supgins 0:13 n. in., Including teaching port of the School Board and bennd preaching hours. Special pro- spoke for tho present faculty a successful year's work. gram, but come early. Judge Ed C. O'Rear was present J. W. BRUNER, Pdstor. and addressed tho school. He disE. W. FORD, Supt. cussed the needs of the Kentucky O O OOOOOOOOOOO O O schools and offered some suggesiMETJIODIST CHURCH O o tions for their betterment. He Virgil Elgin, Pastor. O o gave some Interesting statistics conO O OOOOOOOOOOO o o cerning the schools of the State and urged earnest, united effort along Thero will bo preaching at Mt. educational lines. Mnrlnh Mnthnrilnt rhiirph Thnrndnv After the organization of classes night, the 7th, by Rev. Virgil El- - and the assignment of work, school gin. Everybody Invited, It Is desir was dismissed until Tuesday morn ed to see a large representation Ing. Quite a number of from the community. At eleven o'clock a. m next Sun- students enrolled, with others to day there will be "Old Folks Day" come in during the week. at Mt. Hormon Methodist church. Dwelling and Contents Burned. Let all come, but the older pcoplo are especially Invited. Mr. C. D. Whlttaker, living on Hartford route No. 6, lost his dwelling and most of its contents by OPENING EXERCISES OF WEST KENTUCKY SEMINAltY fire last Thursday, Loss about $1,400, with $800 Insurance with Tho annual opening exercises of A. C.'Yelser & Co., agents of the West Kentucky Seminary, Beaver Continental Insurance Company, X Dam, Ky., were held Monday morn ing, Sept. 4th. The patrons ,and The new battleship Utah, one of trustees all came out to lend en the, most powerful warships afloat, couragement to this year's work. was placed la commission at the Devotional exercises were con- - Philadelphia Na,vy Yard last week. out-of-to- The Mission Board of Ohio County Association held the first session In tho assoclatlonal year In Hartford, Monday morning. Eight of were members the present and much Interest was taken In the work. Rev. C. D. Chick, of Beaver Dam, was elected ns the missionary for two assoclatlonal months. He will spend most of this time In and near McHenry, trying to put that work on a permanent basis. If It meets with the approval of the people In that community, he will go to work at once to erect a church house In McHenry and move the old church from Rendor. Ho will be on the field all the tlmo and hold services every Sunday. Pastor J. W. Bruner will preach and hold a business meeting at the old church In Render next Saturday night, which will be his last service. Rev. R. E. Fuqua will preach at Concord church next Sunday at 11 o'clock and maybe at" night. Hurt ford Prayer meeting and meeting of tho church business Wednesday night. Teachers' meeting Thursday night. "Rally Day" In the Sunday School next Sunday. Let everybody cornel The program will extend through tho preaching hour. Preaching at .the evening hour by ' tho pastor. out-of-to- Interesting talks along educational lines. The music teacher, Mrs. O. L. will be In Wednesday to Shultz, take charge of the large music class of which Beaver Dam Is justly proud. With the hearty of her patrons, with two University graduates for high school teachers and three experienced grade teachers namely, Miss Sophia Williams, Miss Grace Williams and Miss Alta Mae Likens Beaver Dam can look forward to one of the most successful school years In the history of her existence. SPLENDID OPENING OF HARTFORD COLLEGE the disappointment. Our Baptist Sunday School had a rally last Sunday, We;had quite a large crowd. Tho exercises were very Interesting and the school is so large that w0 did not get through with the exercises until the night service. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Chapman entertained some of their old friends last Tuesday. Those present were: Mrs. Chapman's sister, Mrs. Eliza Austin, of Sugar Grove, Ky.; Mrs. Zell Guffy, Mrs. Charlotte Forsythe, Morgantown; Mrs. Clyde Jackson, of Lake Arthur, New Mexico; Mrs. Fred Taylor, of Princeton, Ky.; Mrs. W. R. Gray, of Liberty neigh borhood? Mrs. Duck Daniel, Mrs. A. K. Miller and daughter. cMv nnd Mrs. Lestlan Reed, of Prentis. Quite a pleasant day was enjoyed by BEAVER DAM. The show that was advertised for this town on Sept. the 1st, did not put in Its appearance. It was rumored beforehand that they had made an assignment and would not bo present on tho day set, but notwithstanding that, thero was a large crowd in town all day. Many had come from other counties, thinking It was John Robinson's Big Show. No doubt the county was a thousand dollars better off by Sept. 4. ' all present. Mrs. Dave Smith, of Rlvorsldp. Ky., and Mrs. Sam Johnson, of were visiting Dr. S. D. Taylor last week. Mrs. Mollle Reynolds, of Greenville, "visited friends in town last week. Mr. Herbert Austin and Miss Lena Johnson Were united In marriage at the home of the bride at Taylor Mines last Saturday evening, Rev. C. D. Chick pronouncing the words that made them husband and wife. Misses Rosle and Lovell Mulr, Rlalto, Tenn., who had been visiting their aunt, Mrs. Mate Hunley, for tho past weok, have returned home. Mr. Birch Hodges, of Herrln, III., Is fcj y., ? visiting Hodges, hero this week. Mr. Virgil Gary and wife, of Horse Branch, visited the family of Mr, John Alford last week. Captain and Mrs. Stanley, who have boon on a visit to Colorado through the summer, returned last week. Captain Stanley Is 80 years old, but he and his good wife stood the trip fine and have come home much Improved after spending the sumtnor with their children ; in that State. V? V1) Old "Aunt Carry." widow1 of' MWe Colflmnn. nt rtln At. a ici.i . " Cl - ui uuny " . .' uauzan, or eaier,l uuue of troubles Incident-t- o old ageTShe was 90 years old and was In her early days a slave. his brother, John .. i.i '"" ' s. For lots, cottages ,aad paJe-Towm :' , property, vacant dwelling A. O. YEI8ER.& CO.,. Hartford, K7. , two-stor-y