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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): October 18, 1911
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): October 18, 1911 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1911 haf1911101801_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): October 18, 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. flfPMl"'; faif -'jStibscripHon mth ?EAR. rHE III $1 Per Year, in Advance. hartfoUd HERALD. "1 Conn, It; Herald of Ihiij WyH, lia iftiri Mil hl'mi 7T Lmabering it Mj Bart." All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. . . H ifARTFORD, KYM WED3SfESDAYOeTOBER a Btrlppor." That O'Rear has gone into alliance with the liquor Inter ests 'for the sake of votes, Is proven Judge by tho McCulloch letter. O'Rear Insulted all Kentucklans when he said that therd are 70,000 voters in the State who annually sell their suffrage. The McCulloch letter asks for contributions and among other things says: "Every dollar you give may mean a vote for O'Rear." This seems to mean that the Republican campaign managers are taking Judge O'Rear at his word and aro starting out to buy those 70,000 voters at a dollar apiece. Judge O'Rear claims to be too religious to travel on Sunday, but he was not too religious to assemble a gathering of political compatriots one Sunday in Paducah recently, when Mr. McCulloch was present and the liquor part of Judge O'Rear's campaign began. Tho tax raise In Kentucky of many millions, said Mr. Johnson, seems to be an effort to convict property owners of barefaced perjury. Gov. McCreary will give the people an Equalization Board which will bo fair to all and not biased against the poor man, who Is always the most acute sufferer In tax enare The Republicans listment. afraid of national politics because their leader O'Rear says he does not know anything about such things confesses he has not read noted bills In Congress nor tho President's -- 18,-1911- XO. 42 spent for militia alone. It seems to Stanley closed his magnificent adbe a characteristic of a Republican dress by saying he was glad to bo in DEMOGRATIG BULLY Governor to use armed force to run Hartford and with Ohio county peoJudge ple for tho first time, and he hoped the State Government. O'Rear tells tho voters that he to have the pleasure of coming knows enough about law and Its ap- again. HARTFORD A GREAT SUCCESS while Governor except on business plication so that when he becomes Space forbids us to glvo any fur for the State and was absent only Governor, fanners will not have to ther details of the great speaking In 34 days during his four years ser- take six cents for tobacco. which the warriors of Democracy Against He ought also be able to tell farm and thousands of people took such vice as Chief Executive. ltNWas the Largest and Most Orderly Crowd Ever this is' placed the record of Augus- ers how to sell a $4 shenp 'or $10 an active part. All those who were Gathered Here. wheat for $2.50. O'Rear present will testify to Its success tus E, Wlllson, our present Gover- or nor, who Is absent for long periods says he gave Mr. McCulloch Instruc- and enjoyment. at a time, mostly for pleasure, while tions not to collect any more money Thursday night Messrs. Stanley MULTITUDE WARRIORS OF DEMDGRACY THRILL ASSEMBLED tho peotile aro paying the salary of irom tne liquor men, uu; ue aiu not and Rhea spoke at the court house two Governors and one Lieutenant tell him to turn back what he had hero to a Bplendld audience, which Mr. McCreary said the already collected. Mr. Rhea closed closed the greatest day Ohio county Governor. bloodiest and blackest chapter in all his strong address by saying he ever saw. Kentucky history was when bayo- sincerely hopes and believes that Congressman Ben Johnson was nets were made superior to law, sol- Ohio county nnd the State will re- taken to McHenry Thursday night diers took power above legislators deem themselves from recent years by Mr. T. J. Smith, where the forand top ihlgli Court of Appeals was of Republican rule. mer spoke to a large audience. Hon. routed from Its peaceful place of The last speaker to mount the John Rhea was billed for Fordsvllle All this, as everybody stand. was Hon. A. O. Stanley, Con- the same night, but on account of abode. knows, happened under Republican gressman from the Second District. falling health and his stronuous DINNER rule. The spenker again charged He was Introduced by Judge W. H. speaking work, felt unable to go. THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE PARTOOK OF FREE BARBECUED O'Rear with active and partisan Barnes in an eloquent little speech. participation in the meeting in Mr. Stanley Is one of the most eloT 11 was Kreat, It was grand, it was ly with cash constributions, and tho Louisville when Republican leaders quent and forceful orators In the JUSTICE HARLAN DEAD event was assured y Democratic success of the $ iflorious that were plotting to have Mr. Goebel country nnd tho audience was not corally at Hartford last Thursday. from the start. It was a hearty deassassinated. If there was ever a disappointed In him. The speaker AFTER A LONG SERVICE many men Tew, If any, even, among the most operation for which political boss, It Is Saint Edward said he had tried to keep up with Republicans, will serve credit. bitterly partisan O'Rear, and if there Is a machine, all the contradictory statements of One of the most enjoyable featIdeny It. With all Democrats it provhave It. O'Rear Judge O'Rear, but had found It Had , Been On Bench Nearly 34 tho Republicans day was tho splendid ed to be as wsb intended a season ures of the showed his official boss record when quite a Job, owing to the Judge's music rendered by tho Island Cornet Years Famous for Disof general rejoicing and good cheer. he personally chose tho candidates checkered campaign methods. Mr. twenty pieces, engaged for This feeling was not shared ah"y Band of with him and dictated every Stanley also took occasion to pay a to run was faultsenting Decision. more heartily than among the hun- the occasion. The music word of the State platform on high tribute to the splendid ability children who less and the band acquitted Itself dreds of women and which he Is running. Ho refused and work of Congressman Ben creditably. They came and reattended. In fact, It was a season most In Washington, Oct. 14. The most Major Hellburn, of Mlddlesboro, a Johnson. He spoke of Mr. 's their own special large vetoes. by tho thous- turned long to be remembered the ticket with him, on acMr. Johnson disclaimed the alle- place-ogreat work In Congress and distinguished Kentucklan at the na band wagon. ands who were there. They came gations of certain Republican lead- count of the Major's liquor record especially as Chairman of the Com- tional cnpltal and the dean of Amerfrom many miles around and went and then came the McCulloch let mittee on the District of Columbia, ican Jurists, John Marshall Harlan, ers that he had said unkind or unTHE SPEAKING. away satisfied with a day well spent. complimentary things about Sena- ter. Judge O'Kear claims to do in tho Importance of which few outside died at 8:10 o'clock this morning at Judiciary of the Nation's Capital know any- his Washington residence, 1401 EucThere was no drunkenness, no cator McCreary. His very presence favor of a rousing. This element of disturb- McCreary, Johnson, Stanley and In company with Senator McCreary and yet he is running a partisan thing about. The District of Co- lid street. He was In his seenty-elght- h Rhea at Their Best. ance which usually attends a big year and had he lived until and the vehemence of his language raco for Governor while ho Is draw- lumbia, including Washington City, Whorlne was noticeably absent. tho is a big municipality whose taxes next June ho would have served was proved the utter untruthfulness of ing $410 a month aB ono of Congressman Ben Johnson Not a Jar nor an unpleasant event these charges. Mr. Johnson closed Judges of the Court of Appeals and and running expenses are not paid longer In tho capacity of a Justice was precipitated during the entire tho first to arrive, coming over tho his magnificent address by adjuring does not servo a day. Ho Is an ex- by the people embraced therj-In- , of the Supremo Court of the United M., H. & E. the afternoon before day. all lovers of good ception In the alleged line of precebut by the people of the whole States than nny other man. from Hardlnsburg, which was in the Democrats and There have been various esti- cluded In his itinerary of the State. government to go to tho polls on the dent, as he Is not running for re- country. Much graft has been pracThe last words of Justice Harlan mates upon the size of the crowd, Gov. McCreary In past years, In keeping were uttered n short time before his coming election day and vote the election. ticed there camehere from Fulwhich, being scattered all over town Mr. McCreary says he endorses up the greatest and most costly Gov- death and expressed regret tnat the straight Democratic ticket, which streets and ton, Ky., over the I. C. railroad and embraces our countyman, Mr. M. every word of the Democratic plat- ernment on earth, and Mr. Johnson members of hU HmNy grouped in large droves on the Thursday was brought to also all over the fair grounds ad- morning by Hon.Hartford .Taylor, at T. Westerfiold, who is a candidate form without reserve, that a better is ferreting this out. Mr. Johnson's about his bedside were forced to H. P. to estimate offjacent was rather hard known honesty, courage nnd service lose tholr rest last night. he tarried while for Ropresontnttva and who will one wasnover written, and his exactly. Just before the close of whose residence e icial acts-a- a " he said, faintly, "I Governor will be guided have mndo him a national characi Hons. A. O. Stanley and John vote in tho Legislature for Hon. Gov. McCreary's speech, JuBt about here. "" by Its wording. Says ho has voted ter. am sorry I had to keep you all waitJames. . from in every noon, Hon. Den Johnson, who S. Rhea arrived noon.Hartford were J The Republican? gay, said Mr. ing so long." They At the close of Mr. Johnson's for temperance legislation at speaker's stand Beaver Dam at upon the sat opportunity, starting when he- was Stanley, that we had to feed the Then he lapsed Into unconsciousbrought in by Messrs, J. C. Williams speech Mr. H. P. Taylor stepped formany years pTople and could overlook the crowd and Charley Turner. free to get them to come to ness and soon died, after an Illness ward and In a nice little talk In- Speaker of tho House has had much experience in and -ago. zxc3? .,, m, The speaking began shortly after troduced Gov. McCreary. Although hear our speakers. It Is simply an- of only four days, during the course sizing up an assemblage, was asked Mr. other Instance, like the ones re of which ho was In danger only one Before closing his speech, ten o'clock. It would be Impossible they accuse Mr. McCreary of being Mo estimate the number of people to print in full In one Issue of The say a counted Testament, night. His death was due to a In the Now old (and he Is, as years go), yet he McCreary paused to again gathered in front of and around the feHerald the speeches of all who did not look it as ho sprang nimb- good word for Congressman Ben where wo feed the people .who have bronchial attack accompanied by stand. After about 15 minutes spoke, but notes were j. .v'.w:t(l t.iiii; : ver. Johnson. He said there is no more come to hear not ns an induce' taken by Tho ly to his feet and faced the vast study ho replied that "there were Justice Hnrlan was appointed to Age has not dimmed the able man In Congress than Mr. ment, but to make them comforta Herald scribe and the pith and about 75 people to the row or in Bench by President of their utterances are re- bright lustre of his eye, the youth- Johnson, and that he Is most worthy ble. we eat tho "fatted the" Supreme tiers, about 30 deep. ' This would to this high office. calf" for many who have returned Hayes, November 29, 1877. The corded hero in brief form. Con- ful color of his cheek, nor lossenod of place the number at 2,250 gathered gressman Johnson was the first In any notlcable degree his marvel- Said Mr. Johnson is ono of the best to tho Democratic home. They're last opinion he delivered was the fathere. At the same time there were speaker and was introduced to the ous mental ' and physical strength. fitted men for this place he ever all coming back, including the old mous dissent from tho majority verfully a thousand people over behind Judge J. P. He Is the same McCreary of a dec- saw, the people have confidence in hero, Hon. Simon Bolivar Buckner, dict of the Court in the American audience by the amphitheater, on the grounds Miller. Mr. Johnson is severely af- ade ago affable, eloquent, posi- him and he should be returned and who, like Rip VanWInkle, after his Tobacco Company case, In which the and beyond "the race track course, flicted at present and suffers greatwhere he Is. Mr. Mc- 20 years of political sleep, returns distinguished Kentucklan took the tive but careful In his utterances. continued and fully that number over in town, ly as he travels about over the State Mr. McCreary said, in behalf of him- Crcary closed his fine speech by and wants to know what Is taking ground that the court had no right roaming the streets. A conserva-- ; to read any meaning in the Sherman Ii to meet bis appointments. He Is speakers, that thanking tho audience for their place. tlve estimate of the whole crowd afflicted with lumbago neuralgia self and the other law not expressly evident Ono of the most remarkable Incithey felt greatly honored at this numbers, attention and respect, and that came to Hartford on that day, afectlng the small of the back great outpouring of the people. He saying that nowhere had he been dents of modern times, said Mr. In the phraseology of the law, and in by and one generally concurred which cripples and pains him great- spoke in eloquent terms of Con- accorded a more cordial and hearty Stanley, was when the great O'Rear opposed tho Court's permission to unbiased men, was that there were ly at times. Temperance It is a brave and noble gressman Johnson who had Just reception. Convention met in tho trust to reform after a dissolupeople In more than four thousand thing for him to do, sufferer as, he preceded him. of Mr. Mc- Louisville over a beer garden, nom- tion. He lauded Mr. At the conclusion Of the service of Justice Harlan, is, to travel about over the State Johnson's splendid services as Con- Creary's speech the crowd adjourn inated an alleged temperance ticket There were 5,000 wooden dinner and make speeches In the interest of gressman, and Bald that few In ed for dinner. on a County Unit platform and sent who took his seat as associate jusplates ordered and these wore all the party he loves and has served past years had attained his distincAfter the people had been filled it out to bo aided by contributions tice December 10, 1S77, his secrelised except 750, making the num- so well. It shows the constant loy- tion and popularity, ever faithful to satiety, tho greater portion of tho from tho liquor Interests, with Mr. tary, J. E. Hoover, said ber of dinners handed out 4,250, alty and stamina of tho man to and true to tho Interests of his con- largo crowd again assembled around J. W .McCulloch, tho big wholesale "We were talking nbout that last and many wore fed who did not use rise above affliction to a great and stituents. Tho early days of Mr. tho speakers' stand, and Hon. John liquor distiller, as chief collector. summer at Justice Harlan's summer plates. This fixes the crowd at cer- unselfish task. Tho McCreary's father wore spent In S. Rhea was Introduced to the audi- Judgo O'Rear claims to bo the great home, Polnto au Pic, Canada. tainly more than four thousand. Mr. Johnson's address was elo- Hartford, and the speaker himself ence by Mr. J. P. Sanderfur with a I AM who professes to be able to re- Justice said that Justice Taney had Of course prejudiced Republicans quent, ornate and forceful. He said began his llrst canvass for Governor few fitting remarks. Mr. Rhea em- deem the whole State from all kinds' served thirty-tw- o years; Justice held the telescope of estlmnte with he had no vituperation or abuse for here. years; Justice ployed no preliminaries, but launch- of wrongs. His selfrlghtcousness Marshall, thirty-tw- o the large end next to the eye. This those who opposed his views. He years, and that If Mr. McCreary said he would nev ed into his speech at once. His re- docs not appeal to the majority of Field, thirty-fou- r was expected. But even then they was greeted with cheers when he er again bo a candidate for office, marks were both pithy and elo- the great common people. Repub- ho could servo until June 12, 1912, were astounded, dumbfounded, at Bald ho was glad to be here with has no personal ambition only to quent. He recalled the recent re- lican leaders claim we have copied he would have outserved them nil." tho crowd which It revealed. old friends and to greet Kentucky's serve the people, and he wished to mark of Judge O'Rear that the ma- tholr platform, when theirs Is simThere was plenty to eat and to next Governor Mr. McCreary. Ad- Impress the voters with the impor- chine of both parties was against ply a copy, In Its better points, of CHILD BOILED TO DEATH IX MOLASSES KETTLE everybody. If there dressing himself to the checkered tance of this election, whose out- him (O'Rear), and yet the doughty Democratic k spare, freo for platforms of other Vas one hungry person present, it campaign of Judge O'Rear, tho come will elect State officers and a Judgo had claimed that he had years. Mr. Stanley, as chairman of son of Simon Tho was because he or she did not walk speaker said the astuto Judge had "United States Senator will bo cho smashed tho machine. O'Rear said a Congressional Committee to fer up and get what was due and ready sacrificed his stated views on tem sen. He spoke In eloquent terms of there were 70,000 purchasable vot ret out tho evils of the big Trusts, Raymond, a farmer on the cast fork to be served, cooked to a nicety. perance and tobacco for party and Mr. M. T. Westerfleld, our candidate ers in Kentucky and Immediately has found that all the great corpo- of Salt river, three miles from Southvllle, In Bullitt county, met a day and all night political expediency. Judgo O'Rear's for Representative, an able man and set about to ralso a Jack-pPart of tho to rations hnve been constant contribn large forco of men under the opening speech at Ellzabethtown one who will be an honor to tho peo catch them all. Tho wljy O'Rear utors to the campaign fund of the horrible death late Thursday afternoon, being scalded In a vat of supervision of Mr. C. E. Morrison, seemed to presage tho ple who elect him. Mr. McCreary claims to be the only christian gen- Republican party, but not one time The worked diligently at the barbecue campaign which he saw before him. s a Kentucklan both by birth and tleman candidate In the field, and has ho discovered where tho trusts boiling sorghum molasses. of 45 The Judge started out as tho great life work. The Democratic party Is yet It has been proven that he Is In gave a dollar to tho campaign fund father was burned about the hands whore the carcasses pits, In a frantic effort to save his child's Bheep and four beoves were roasted saver of the human race from In- a party of progress and has given league with tho whiskey Interests, of Democrats. W.hy Is this? Be to a turn and by six o'clock,, a. m., temperance, and a few weeks lator tho people all of worth In Stato af- with the most noted whiskey man cause the Democrats are committed life. Tho child was seated on a chair were pronounced "done." Then a one of the chief managers of his fairs they now enjoy, while the Re- (McCulloch) In the State as his to a policy of " Equal Rights to All large force of willing hands began campaign was discovered to be Col. publicans have given them nothing. chlof campaign fund collector. Four and Special Privileges to None.' near the boiler. It Is believed that the carving of the meat and putting J. W. McCulloch, president of the Right hero Mr. McCreary denied years ago the Republicans promised Democrats are not pledging protec- In attemplng to rise, tho little ono It In large lunch packages, which Wholesale" Liquor Dealers Associa- without personation the falsehood In their pWtform that they would tion and Immunity to tho big pro- lost his balance and plunged headSeveral .were distributed' to the .people in tion in Kentucky, who had been that Hartford's Republican paper reduce taxation, and everybody tected Interests. The policy of foremost into tho vat. wooden plates or dishes. When the chosen to finance the' campaign of has tried to fix upon him. He knows It has been raised under the Democracy is In behalf of tho poor members of the family wero horrithe accident. noon hour came, all was in readl-- 4 tho professed great temperance ad- asseverated that he does not say guise of equalization. Ohio county people, the working men, who have fied by witnessing Bees and the thousands were served vocate and wprker. Tho notorious that all Republicans or that they, was raised five per cent, all around to look to their own efforts for They pulled tho child out as quickly as possible. with dispatch and to fullness, McCulloch letter proved this. as a party, are assassins, but he In 1910 and. In 1911 this raise was "special privileges." His body was coated with the work, of O'Rear says his party is not fight- does say that as against assassina- doubled. Taxes havo been raised way, asked Mr. Stanley, Which i la' this mammoth boiling molasses, and when an efand serving, many willing ing the whiskey business as a busi tion under Republican rule in Ken- over three quarters of a million dol are tho Republican leaders and can- fort was made to scrape It off, the hands'-tookpart and to them Is due ness. What else la there to fight If tucky, he places the peaceful rec- lars In tho last two years. This didates faced nowadays? Can anyflesh was pulled from the bone. He a you really want to abolish intempergreat credit for the" complete ord of Democrats while In power. comes from the fact that a Repub- body tell by reading their records expired a few minutes after being of the event. It ts a big Job to ance? O'Rear's ambiguous remarks The Republican record is one of ex- lican: administration gavo us a par- and watching their maneuvers? Why taken from the vat. got ub and SMwewfully "pull off" a on the stump confuse the voters as travagance in office, as the books tisan P.oard of Equalization. Re- don't they brag about their present big harbeeHe like that. It took to what he really stands for. Mr. will show. The great schools of publican State officials found the State administration while threatcandidacy La Folletto'8 for tho weeks of careful preparation and Johnson drew a nearty laugh and Kentucky both colored and whlto State out of debt, said Mr. Rhea, but ening to inflict another upon us? Presidency will be launched at once, also a big mm. sf seney. Demo- applause when he Bald Judge were given the people under Dem in less than four years they have iThe, Democratic record, both In according to his friends In Chicago crats and 6.1bm mtk at Hartford O'Rear "had not gone entirely dry ocratic rule. The Republican leadup a. debt of over a million gresa and. State, is one of which the attending the National Republican d Ohio founty: r aoaatd. liberal- - and was never anything . more, than ers cannot refer to anything they dollars, with close onto $300,000 i whole' people should be proud. Mr1. Progressive League conference. have done to reduce the burdens of taxations Instead, they have Increased taxation through a partisan Board of Equalization. Mr. MCCrcary said he never left the confines of the Commonwealth 12-ce- nt 75-ce- nt More Than Four Thousand People Hear Messrs. McCreary. Johnson, Stanley and Rhea in Their Masterly Oratorical Efforts. w it - all-da- " John-Son- n non-partis- " 01-ll- "Good-bye.- - 'trait "JJ;. Bub-stan- ce To-da- y anti-tru- st to-da- ld f be-for- o, ot criss-crosse- d - prep-arat- fe , suc-ee- Con-pil- ed yyawv wnmnff y u ytfl PAGE TWO. After much discrop of tobacco. cussion, the motion was lost. The body then adjourned to meet October 7th at 9 o'clock a. m. The house was called to order at 10:30 by President Stevens. First Item of business was tho appointment of tho committee provided for In Section 5. The following were appointed: L. B. Tlch-eno- r, E. P. Sanderfur, T,. P. Tanner, T. H. Balmain, Henry Plrtle. Tho corresponding committee was then appointed,' composed of the following: Centertown District Alvin Ross and Alney Tlchenor. Beaver Dam Llge Jackson and S. L. Stevens. Hartford T. F. Tanner, O. R. Tlnslcy and L. D. Tlchenor. Roslne E. P. Sanderfur and Will Sanderfur. Mover by L. n. Tlchenor and seconded by J. C. Massle that the election of officers bo postponed until 1 o'clock. Motion carried. Mr. T. F. Tanner then made a report as a member of tho telephone committee and urged the Importance of tho telephone. Moved by T. F. Tanner and seconded by T. H. Ralmaln that the secretary be added to the telephone Motion carried. committee. Moved bv L. D. Tlchenor and seconded by Blllle Lake that the county and local unions always be openThe motion cared with prayer. ried. The body then adjourned to meet at one o'clock. The house was called to order by vice preldent L. n. Tlchenor at 1 o'clock. T. H. Balmain led In a few mlnute3 prayer, after which D. Ford moved that the minutes of the meeting bf published. Mr. E. P. Sanderfur seconded Mr. Ford's mo tion and tho motion carried unani mously. Moved bv W. F. Sanderfur and seconded by D. Ford that no one bo allowed over two minutes to speak except bv consent of the chair. Motion carried. that the Moved and seconded election of officers be by secret ballot. Motion carried. The nrmes of the following members were placed before tho body for President: H. T. Porter, L. B. Tlchenor, T. F. Tanner, T. H. Balmain, I). Ford. Mr. Tlchenor was elected on first ballot and T. H. Balmain as vlco president. It was moved that the old secreas sectary be declared retary by acclamation. Motion car ried unanimously. The names of T. F. Tanner, O. R. Tlnslcy nnd E. E. Tlnsley were placed before the body to be elected as grader. Mr. O. R. Tlnsloy wns elected on tho first ballot. Moved by T. F. Tanner that his election be Motion carried. made unanimous. It was ordered that the auditing committee be composed of one member. On motion the secretary was mnde auditing committee. Moved by T. H. Balmain that the THE HARTFORD HERALD same stock committee be retained. Mr. E. P.( Sanderfur made tho following substitute: That a now committee except one bo elected each year. Substitute lost. successive Then the substitute was amonded to read, that' the old committee be except one. Amendment carried and H. T. Porter was elected. The office of assistant secretary being overlooked, Virgil Elgin was unanimously elected as assistant WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, 194 J, day, the vast crowd was given a few words of encouragement by Mr. Taylor and former County Judge J. over the P. Miller, who presided meeting and Introduced the visitors. Ohio county being In tho Fourth CongrcssIonalDl8trlct,Represontatlvo Johnson was asked to Bpeak first and outline the platform on which tho Democrats on the State ticket are running, and while Mr. Johnson was still suffering from the attack of lumbago with whldh he was stricken several days ago, he devoted an hour addressing his constit uents, part of which time ho spent In dwelling updn the record of Senator McCreary during his political years, and urg career of forty-od- d ing tho voters to rally to the banner of Democracy In November and help wrest the State from Republican Congressman Johnson almisrule. so discussed the attitude 6f Judge O'Rcar in the campaign, and said that It had been shown by O'Roar himself that he was Insincere and that his campaign was one of misrepresentation. Ho said the worBt mistake, In his opinion, that had been made by tho Republican candidate for Governor was when he formed an alliance with the head of tho Whiskey Trust In Kentucky to control the vote of that element throughout the State, but that tho exposure of thatSabbath-da- y conference at Paducah by tho Democrats had been sufficient to sound the political deathknell of Judgo O'Rear. He said that against the record of insincerity of Judge O'Rear was pitted the clear and able record of Senator McCreary, and that In his Judgment no one would falter on November 7 when they entered tho polls to cast their vote. Ho said that a majority of the Democrats of the State, by primary, had surrounded Senator McCreary with a set of men capable of conducting tho Government of Kentucky, and that there was no comparison between the candidates on the two tickets, those composing the Democratic ticket being far superior, in his opinion, to any set of men over named for offico In Kentucky. y was the first The meeting time Senator McCreary nnd Representative Johnson have met on the same platform during tho campaign to-da- MINUTES OF IHE COUNTY A.' S. of E. HARTFORD RALLY ION FINDS Mc GREARY And Johnson on the Same The abnormal iaumber of deaths da to wild pigs in tl909 in Eastern A gal and Assam 126 was maintained, though 50 persona wwPB victims to these .animals.. Tho total tfT nwil Recently Held in Hartford. IMPORTANT Platform. A VERY SESSION In- Which Embraced Auch of terest to the Great Farming Class. ORDERED TO UK PUBLISHED The Ohio County Union of the American. Society of Equity met In regular session at the Court house In Hartford, October G, 1911. The house was called to order at 1:30 o'clock by President S. L. Stevens. of locals, the minAfter roll-cautes of the meeting July 7 and 8 were read and adopted. President Stevens made some timely remarks and suggested that members should suggest different subjects that should be various brought before the body. Quite a number of good suggestions were made. Horshel Porter then moved that the chair appoint a committee on Mr. J. S. Cecil, second resolutions. ed Mr. Porter's motion and It was ll so ordered. The following committee was apDirks Tlchcnor, Hershel pointed: Porter, E. P. Sandefur, O. R. Tins-le- y and T. H. Dalmain. to the district The delegates meeting at Owensboro then made an Interesting report of that meeting. Tho body was adjourned to meet at 1 o'clock. 0 House was called to order at by President Stevens and tho Committee on Resolutions made the following report, which was accepted and adopted by sections: We, the committee, appointed by the Ohio County Union, beg leave to submit the following': 1st. Whereas, the local union is of the farmthe foundation-ston- e ers' organization, therefore be It Resolved, that we make an earnest effort to reorganize the sleeping locals and organize, new ones. 2nd. Resolved, that tho County Union refuse to recognize any dole-gatfrom local unions withholding their dues. 3rd. Resolved, that wc reconir mend the election of officers at the October meeting, same to be instated at the January meeting. that the body 4th. Resolved, elect one or more correspondents magisterial district, each from whoso duty It shall be to furnish the county papers with items of interest relative to the organization. that the chair nth. Resolved, appoint a committee of live to draft resolutions to report to the county secretary within 40 days, said secretary to have resolutions and forwarded to the secretaries with request that of each sub-locthey are to act on same and ratify at next countv Union. RosQlved, that wo endorso fitli. thp action of the fireon River District Union of the A. S. of E. In closing pooling pledges on November 1st and refusing to receive and grade any tobacco not pledged. 7th. Resolved, that tho A. S. of E. of Ohio county endorse tho unsystem and tho limited parcels-pos- t Secretary of the County Union forward the same to Postmaster-GenerHitchcock. Sth. Resolved, that no one bo allowed to pool their product without paying his' titles and signing tho plod co or agreeing to pay when product Is delivered. Unsolved, that we, the ,4,9th. members of the American Society or Equity of Ohio county, do hear-tll- v condemn the prnctlce of killing birds on our respective farms. L. R. TICHENOR, Ch'm'n. O. R. TINSLEi. Sec'y. Sections one, two and three wore adopted as read, on motion of committee. Section 4 wns amended so as to Instead of read "the bodv elect' 2:-2es type-writtal al the "chair appoint." Section five was adopted as read. Section six was amended so as to read the "A . S. of E. and Homo Warehouse'" Instead of "A. S. of E." Section seven was adopted as '' read. - Seotlon eight was adopted with the words "ngreo to pay when product Is .dellvpred," as substituted. . .Section nine was adopted with the' words "and forbid" stricken ,- l( , i 'Tltons- . wo. pgoy eieci a grader et once to grade the 1911 - aioifea , uiui. L BOTH SPEAK FOB THE CQHMOH by L.' B. Tlchenor and secMoved onded by T. H. Balmain that a comStanley mittee be appointed to formulnto a Cause of Democracy Motion carried and stock pledge. can, howovcr, be drawn concerning and Rhea Discuss IsT. F. Tanner and O. R. Tlnsley the work of this lancet, owing to were appointed. sues of the Day. the lack of proof that the bites It Moved by D. Ford and seconded upon were always was employed stock by T. H. Balmain that the those of poisonous snakes. Tftn A MOST MAGNIFICENT EVENT committee be given the privilege of number of cattle killed by snakes to the best addisposing of stock amounted to nearly 100,000. report.) (Courier-Journal's vantage. Motion carried. New York Evening Press. Hartford, Ky.,Oct. 22. (Special) by T. F. Tanner and secMoved onded by Blllie Lake that tho secThe Democratic rally and barbeJas. C. Dahlninn, "Cowboy" Mayor retary be given an order for $1.45 cue held hero by the Democof Oinnhn, ''Throws tho Lariat." incurred by the racy for Indebtedness Major Jas. C. Dahlman Is of an of Ohio county resulted In the wheat growers' department. Motion Interesting, and Impressive person gathering in the largest political carried. ality. Starting his career ns a cow history of the county, and whllo the On motion the body then adboy, he is at present Mayor of Omanormally Republican, It Is county Is journed to meet January 5th and ha, and has the following record to conceded by leaders of both parties S. L. STEVENS, ' 6th, 1912. his credit: Sheriff of Dawes coungive a majority for the President. that it will ty, Neb., three terms; Mayor of Democratic ticket this fall equally HENRY M. PtRTLE, Sec'y. Chadron, two terms; Democratic given Congressman as large as that Committeeman, National Chronic rheumatism contracts the Ben Johnson last November, when years; Mayor oi Omaha, six year and un- It went Democratic for tho first time muscles, distorts the joints and in 1910 candidate for Gov, was atdermines the strength. A powerful in years. The rally Writing to Fol of Nebraska. remedy tended by 5,000 persons, many of relieving penetrating and fr Phlrtaivn 1... aavn "T l.v will be found In BALLARD'S SNOW whom came from adjoining coun ken Foley Kidney Pills and they It restores strength ties, and that the voters In this secLINIMENT. have given me a great deal of relief, and suppleness to the aching limbs. tion of tho State regard tho Demo so I cheerfully recommend them." and $1 per bottle. cratic ticket and platform superior Price 25c. 50c Yours truly, Sold by Hartford Drug Co., Hart- to the Republicans, was shown In (signed) James C. Dahlman. Ky Donovan & Co., Beaver the attention given the speakers ford, m For sale by nil druggists. ' m during the day, many of the big Dam, Ky. being Republicans of the old crowd Cralldr-wPREACHERS PAY TRIBUTE school, who wore the emblem of FOR FLETCHER'S TO SENATOR McCREARY Democracy and whoso enthusiasm e was as great as that of the Fulton, Ky., Oct. 11. Senator Democrats. The speakerss of the James B. McCreary spoke hero to day were former Senator James B. WANTED FOR U. S. ARMY, day to an Immense gathering. McCreary, tho nominee for GoverAblebodled unmarried men between Senator McCreary was introduced nor; Representatives Ben Johnson ages of 18 and 35; citizens of Unitto the crowd by the Rev. W. T. Boi- and A. O. Stanley and former Repreed States, of good character and ling, pastor of the Methodist church sentative John S. Rhea, of Russell-vlll- e, temperate habits, who can speak, of Fulton, and one of the most emithe former two speaking In read and write the English laSS-uag- e. ministers In the the forenoon and the latter two In nent Methodist For Information apply te South, and the tribute paid to him the afternoon. Recruiting Officer, Beaver Dam, by Dr. Boiling was a beautiful one. Senator McCreary reached Hart30tf. Kentucky. Dr. Boiling said Kentucklans, Irre- ford this morning, after an and their arrival at the fair grounds spective of religion or politics, trip from Fulton. He wa3 this morning together was tho sigllnppy Marriages should feel proud that they had a met at Beaver Dam by a committee nal for great applause from the as- Are tho result of knowing the laws man of tho high character of Sena- headed by H. P. Taylor, and upon sembled crowd, which had been of health and nature. All the tor McCreary, who had been In pol- his arrival In Hartford he was met watting for the speakers for moro knowledge a young man or woman, itics for more than forty years with- by the citizens of the town and than an hour. That the people of wife or daughter should have, Is out a blot on his character, either county and escorted to the fair Ohio county, Irrespective of politics, contained In the People's Medical private or political, nnd that they grounds with a brasss band. Im- aro loyal to Representative Johnson Adviser, by R. V. Pierce, M. D. This should feel It an honor to vote for mediately upon his arrival tho ex was shown in his race last year, big Homo Doctor Book containing such a man. He said that during ercises began, Congressman Johnson when he wns given a majority of 1008 pages with engravings and his entire career he had never met being the first speaker. He was closo to 200 In a county which usu- colored plates, and bound In cloth, a man who had proved so faithful followed by Senator McCreary and ally gives a Republican majority of (nearly 700,000 copies formerly to the trusts given hlra by his at the conclusion of the latter's from 400 to GOO, and every mention sold for $1.50 each), Is sent free and that It was not only a speech an adjournment was taken of his name by Senator McCreary to any one sending 31 one-cey duty, but should be a pleasure of all for dinner. was the signal for applause stamps to propay cost of wrapping Every preparation had Kentucklans to again elevate him been made by G. B. Likens and from the big crowd. In referring and postage. There are no condito the highest office within the gift Charles Crowe, campaign chairman to the Fourth District Congressman, tions to this offer and the reader of tho people. Ho said men of the and secretary of Ohio county, to Senator McCreary said ho had not must not associate this book with character and ability of Senator Mc- feed the big crowd, forty lambs nnd only been honored by the peoplo of tho advertising pamphlets prepared Creary were needed In Kentucky half a dozen beeves having been bar- his district, but by Representatives by quacks throughout tho country. more at the present than at any becued for the occasion. from congressional districts through Address, 6G2 Washington St., Buffa and in time within his memory, Not In the history of Ohio county out the country when be was made lo, N. Y. presenting him he said: havo the principles of Democracy chairman of the Commltte of the says that professor A college "Fellow Christians and fellow been shown, to tho voters of this sec- District of Columbia, one of the CONFIDENCE citizens, I wish to present to you not tion of the State as they were by most Important offices under tho there are In the English language only an of your Com- the four eminent speakers Jurisdiction of the House of Repre- only two words In which the five Towels occur In their alphabetical We Back up Our Statements With monwealth, but the next Governor, and In addition to the orators of tho sentatives. Senator McCreary." In dealing with the lssuess of tho order. Ho gives them as abstemious Our Personal Reputation y Dr. Boiling was preceded by tho Sena- and facetious. campaign in his speech Rev. Charles K. Marshall, formerly tor McCreary reviewed tho records DON'T EXPERIMENT and Money. of Richmond, but now pastor of tho of the Democratic and Republican I Christian church In Fulton, and he, parties in the State in the past, positive that we can too, paid n tribute to Senator Mc- You Will Alake No Mistake if You showing what had been accomplishWo are so 4k For Infants and Childrea. no matter Creary as a man of the highest constipation, relievo administraed under Democratic Kind You Have Always Bought It may be, that we Christian type, and one of whom all how chronic Follow This Advice. tions and tho promises that had The offer to furnish tho medicine free Kentuckiana should be proud. been mnde by the Republicans, but Bears tho of all cost if we fall. which had gone unfulfilled whon the Never neglect your kidneys. Joints that ache, muscles that It Is worse than Wo think that opportunity had been given them by Signature of If you have pain In the back, uri aro drawn or contracted should bo useless to attempt to cure constiState. treated with BALLARD'S SNOW nary disorders, dizziness and nerv- the peoplo of tho Stanley CathCourt Reporters. pation with cathartic drugs. and formRepresentative LINIMENT. It penetrates to tho ousness, it's time to act and no time Knowing it to bo tho best, about artics may do much harm. They spot whore It Is needed and to experiment. These aro common er Representative Rhea discussed per cent, of the official may cause a reaction, Irritate and dur- seventy-flv- o relloves suffering. Price 25c, 50c symptoms of kidney trouble, and both State and national Issues court reporters of tho United States weaken the bowels, and make Con and $1.00 Der bottle. Sold by Hart- - you should seek a remedy which is ing the afternoon and tho attention Uncle Sam's employes write the stipation more chronic. shown these two speakers was as i recommended for the kidnoys. accom . ford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky Dono System of Shorthand taught at Is often Constlnatlon Doan's Kidney Pills 1b the rom- close as had been given the two m van & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. For catapanied and may he caused by weakIt was Draughon'B Colleges. edy to use. It has cured many speakers In the forenoon. logue, address Draughon'B Practical ness of the nerves and muscles of Notice. the prediction of those In charge of stubborn cases In this vicinity. Business College, Nashville, Tena.,.,;' the large intestine or colon. To By order of the Green River Can Hartford residents domand the rally that the presence of tho n, Tn,l,irnti TTv nr Pvnnavtllo Tnf' M ,,., W y expect a cure you must therefore District Tobacco Growers' Union of W. V.,, MUM"...., ...V, further proof than tho following four Democratic leaders here plac- - or Washington, D, C. tone up and strenghten those parts tho A. S. of E. and tho Ohio County would be the means of again testimonial? and restoro them to healthier ac- Union of the A. S. of E all tobacco Mrs. R. A. Smith, Wilson street. lnB Ohio county in the Democratic tivity. pooling pledges will absolutely closo Earlington, Ky., says: "I am glad co,umn ,n "OWMr- The discovery of tho active prin- on Nov. 1, 1911. Those wishing to to publicly recommend Doan'B KidN TIRED PEOPLE Tho best plaster apiece of flan' ciple of our remedy Involved the sign must sign before 12 o'clock p. ney Pills. My kidneys were badly ncl dampened with Chamberlain's labor of skillful research chemists. m., Oct. 31, 1911. 40t3 disordered and tho paint In my Liniment and bound on over the afThis romedy produces results such S. L. STEVENS, Co. Pres. back were so acute that I could not fected parts Is superior to a plaster A North Carolina Man Suggests as are expected from tho best known HENRY M. PIRTLE, Co. Secy. a Remedy intensely. and costs only suffering stoop without h as much. Intestinal tonics, and It Is particGroon8boro, N. CT "For a long Don't trlllo with a cold is good Tho pain often extended Into my For sale by all dealers. m ularly prompt In Its results. time J was bo run down and debiliWe want you to try Rexall Or- advice for prudent men and women. Bides and became moro severe If I tated that I could hardly drag around. "They are It may ho vital In case of a child. stood for a short time. I had dizzy INDIA'S FEARFUL 8NAKK derlies on our guarantee. My nppetlto was poor and I could not many times was obliged niTB RECORD IN YEAR aloep nights. I had tried different exceedingly pleasant to take and There Is nothing better' than Cham- spoils and tonics without benefit I ws aro Ideal for children. They appar- berlain's Cough Remedy for coughs to grasp something In order to According to official reports the advised to try your cod liver $f& ently act directly. on tho nerves and and colds In children. It Is safe and steady mysolf. I also suffered from m terrible headaches and some, davs total numbor of persons killed In Iron tonic. Vinol, and I am so gieefjf muscles of the bowels, having, it sure. For salo by all dealers. could scarcely get out of bed. I India by wild animals In 1910 was did, for It gavo mo a hearty appetite, would sQom, a neutral action on And So On. can safely say that I spent more 2,400, compared with 2,496 In 1909. I soon commenced to sleep sonMy, other organs or glands. They do ln- "What is domestic science g .tigers were moro ag- and I feel Btxong, well and mpr .acthan one hundred dollars for mod-icin- e not 'purge or cause Inconvenience. quired tho engaged girl. n and doctors' treatments, hut gressive in the Khulna district, and tive than I have for yeara. Every euro chronIf thev do npt positively, "It consists of making hash out obtained scarcely no benefit. 'On this fact Is attributed to the dimior debilitated person Bhputd ic, pr habitual constipation and thus of loft-ovmeat, and croquetts out just give Vlnol a trial." K. Allsbntelc. I procured a box nution of their natural supply, owrelievo the myr.lads pf associate or of left-ovWhat Vlnol dI4 for Mr, Allsbieek hash," explained her a friend's advice Kidney Pills and began ing to the drowning of large num- Jt will do of Doan's dependent chronic flments, your more experienced friend, ar for every weak. Try their use. This romedy cured me bers pf door in the Btorm wave debilitated person In this vicinity. To monev wjll be refunded. whfeb accompanied the cyclone of Bhow oar faith' we will furnish the A good remedy for a bad .cough In less than two weeks." Rexall Orderlies a,our,risk. Three For splo by all dealers. Price 50 ld09. In tho Central provinces, and saeaiaiaa free It It does not do as we packages, 4Pc.,-25c- , and 5Qc, Is BALLARD'S HOREHQUND SYRsizes of Berar, tigers destroyed 67 victims, tela. Ceie In and get a bottle ba Co.,' BuffaRemember, ypu can.'.pbtain Rexall UP. It heals the lungs and quiets cents, Foster-Mllbur- n Price 25c, 50c and $1 lo, New York, sole agents' for the as comparod with 102 la the preeed Reraodles In this .community only Irritation. , For Sale by , g tilng year. Six known at our store The Rexall Store iper bottle. Sold by Hartford Drug United States. gers and two panthers were killed naraoru urug uo iiartnmir Remember the name Doaa'a James H. Williams, 214 Main-- St., i Co., Hartford, Ky., Donoyaa & Co,, ,. . during the year la these provinces. 2. Wilbur MRc1m.11., Rmw Bam., VvtI m and take no other, , Beaver Dam, Ky. Hartford, Ky, secretary. mortality among human being caused by snake bite rose from 21.3G4 to 22,478. An Increase In Eastern Bengal and Assam Is attributed to snakes being driven by high floods to take refuge In tho raised village sites. B6th In this province and In the united provinces n considerable number of cases were treated jwjlh the Brunton lancet and permanganate of potash, and n high proportion of them are reported to have recov ored. No trustworthy deduction to-d- ' eight to-d- n Cry old-tim- CASTORIA all-nig- ht en nt to-da- to-da- CASTORIA 6l&&& 1 to-da- RUN-DOW- one-tent- ed Man-catln- raa-dow- er ef run-dow- n man-eatin- ,, ifjtf --- Kaggr-c- ai i, pmT irafc.fri,, fcWV WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, 19J1. y Jhat I Indorse every section of the Democratic platform", adoptat ed at the State convention Louisville on the' 16th day of August, 1911, but I will say now specifically, I am In favor of the extension of the present local option law, as applied to tho sale of liquors, so that the citizens of each and every county In the State may determine for themselves whether spirituous, vinous or malt liquors may be sold therein. These are tho exact words of the State Democratic platform. "I came to this conclusibn some time ago, when the question of the extension of the county unit law became prominent, and 'I regard it as the best plan to settle an Important question. "If Judge O'Rear had read on tho day of the State Democratic convention the published account of the State Democratic candidates for office, he would have known that I and all the other candidates for State offices were In favor of extending the county unit law. "As far back as 1874, when I was a member of the Kentucky legislature and Speaker of the House of Representatives, I cast my first vote for tho local option law then enacted, and which I believe was the first law of that kind ever passed in Kentucky. "Judge O'Rear also In his speech at Warsaw referred to tho four men who bolted Beckham and said they voted a number of times for McCreary. They also voted for various other Democrats of Kentucky. "I did not In any way seek tho votes of theso four men, or either of them, by letter or otherwise. "I was not In Kentucky during tho contest between Beckham and Bradley for United Stales Senator, but I was In Washington attending to my duties as a United States Senator, and now I have a letter In my possession from tho Hon. Gus Richardson, represen tative from Meade county, In which he tays:"I wrote you after a number of the ballots had been taken, and It was evident to mo that Reckham could not be elected, and asked per mission to nominate you If any break should come. In your reply you said positively that you would not permit the use of your name, and that you did not want any representative or senator to vote for you under any circumstances as long as Gov. Beckham was a candi to-dalong-draw-o- ut THE HARTFORD HERALD JEW MAYOR PAGE UfRiSE. GREARY LOCAL OPTION And His Position in OF ROME H vol. He works every day. His left arm is severed below tho elbow and the right between the elbow and the HAKES GOOO RULER shoulder. Is Inspired With the ONE the Ambition to Make Rome a Progressive City. Beckham Race. STAND IS AN OPEN K ffL."'tA II k Duties Kept Him Away from Richmond on Local Op tion Election Day. EXPLAINS BOTH MATTERS m In hid speech at Warsaw, Ky., Hon. James B. McCreary said, with reference to the local option quesIn his speech at Warsaw on October 4, said on 'local option election day at Richboarded a mond, Ky., McCreary train and went out of town to avoid voting.' "I was compelled to bo absent on local option from Richmond election day, which was the 3d of VJarch, because the Hon. Henry wltt, ciiairrrren 01 me aiaie uem-,'l- c Executive Committee, call- -' a meeting of that committee to Jrie held at the Louisville hotel, and It woo ototail In Mm T.nURvlU nCWS- papers and by many persons that Executive the State Democratic Commlttco would, on that day, set aside the primary election, which ordered to had been previously candidates Democratic nominate for the State offtces, and order a State convention to be held to candidates Democratic nominate for State offices. r'lf r had been in Richmond the day the local option election was held, on the third day of March, I wpuld have voted for the continuance of local option m Richmond, 't!o I informed many of my friends'. "I advocated a primary election when the executive committee ordered the primary, and I was very earnestly In favor of It, and I becandilieved that no Democratic date would bo present to oppose the setting aside of the primary election, and, therefore, I went to Louisville the day before tho local option election was held at Richmond and did all In my power to prevent the primary election from being set aside, and It was not set aside, although It was published In some of tho Louisville newspapers on the morning that the executive committee met that the committee was equally divided on the ques- tion: "Judge O'Rear, Mr. Nathan Is a Jew, so likewise Luzzattl, the retiring Prime Minister, and Sonino, the leader of tho center in the Italian Parliament. But Italians never think of these men as Jews. There Is no country in the world where a Jew so completely ceases to be a Jew as In Italy. Here the name simply Indicates his religious belief; he Is an 'Italian of Jewish faith. Mr. Nae than sits in his office on the with his back to the Forum and his face to tho first great monument of the New Italy, absorbed with the duties which his 600,000 fellow Romans have asked him to Is Capl-tolln- undertake. ' In my pos from tho Hon. George T. Farrls, In which he says: 'You requested me to ask the Democrats In person and privately not to vote for you, as under no circumstances could you accept the offlec If elected, while Gov. Beckham was a candidate I complied with your re quest and went to Mr. McKnlght and stated your request to him, and tion, and Prewltt, the chairman, men who would not vote would give the deciding vote In fa- the other for Beckham you and I had no Invor of setting tho primary election fluence with. I asked McKnlght to aside. my opening speech at Bowl- see them, and neither of thorn voted "In you after that day.' And the ing Green I said, and I have re- for a member of the peated the same often In substance: Hon. J. R. Mount, Legislature, said: 'When you made "I have already said In my speech a speech to the people of Garrard county In tho last campaign for State offices your admonition to tho A LIBERAL OFFER people and representatives of Garrard county was to stand by tho nominees, from Beckham to tho date.' "I also have a letter session We Guarantee p.v i letters ardson and Hon. George Farrls, and since reference was made to these matters, I wroto to each of them, To unquestionably prove to tho and they sent me tho statements to Indigestion and dyspeppeoplo that which I have referred." sia can be permanently relieved and Dyspepsia Tablets will that Rexall You are not experimenting on bring about this result, we will fur- yourself when you take Chamber nish tho medicine absolutely free If lain's Cough Remedy for a cold, as It fafts to glvo satisfaction "to any that preparation has won Its great one using It. reputation and extensive sale by its The remarkable success of Rexall remarkable cures of colds, and can Dyspepsia Tablets Is due to the high always be depended upon. It is degree of scientific skill used In de- equally valuable for adults and chilvising their formula as well as to dren and may be given to young the oaro exercised In their manu- children with implicit confidence, as n facture, whereby tho Pv it contains no harmful drug. Sold nroperties of m by all dealers. have been combined and Pepsin with Carminatives and other agents. Just (lie Same. and Pepsin "Tho first thing I do every mornare constantly employed and recog- ing is to tell toy wife that she looks nized by the entire medical profes- younger and more beautiful every sion as invaluable In the treatment day." of Indigestion and dyspepsia. "Doesn't she ever suspect you aro The Pepsin used In Rexall Dys- lying?" pepsia Tablets Is carefully prepared "Qh, yes, she knows It, but It so as to develop Its greatest efficien- keeps her from starting in to find cy. Pepsin supplies to the diges- fault with me, just the same." tive apparatus one ot the most important elements of the digestive Its Equal Doesn't Exist. ,, fluid. Without it tho digestion and No one has. e,ver made a salve, v t assimilation of food are ia'posslble. ointment or balm to compare with possess propS, Bucklen's Arnica Salve. . It's the The Carminatives V. ertles which aid In relieving the dls- - one perfect healer of cuts, burns, tf turbances and pain caused by Indi bruises, sores, scalds, bolls, ulcers, gested food. This combination of eczema, salt rheum.- - For sore eyes, these ingredients makes a remedy cold sdrcs, chapped hands or sprains invaluable for the complete relief it's supreme. Unrivaled for piles ,of .Indigestion and dyspepsia, Try it, Only 26c at James H. Wil' ' certain of this tha't.wa, liams. We are-bm urge you to try Rexall Dyspepsia Lose Their Freedom. Tablets ,oa our own personal gtiar-an"All men are born free and jr Thrs sizes, 25 cents, 60 cents, and' $1.00. Remember, you equal," said the philosopher.'I know," said he tnatterof-fac- t can. obtain, Xexall Remedies only at person: "But' sofaee.ot I'era get es our 1 tt'Sf e Tfc? Resell married afterwards." HVWMUmMj Hartford, Ky. sp well-know- Vgepsia. i flieuicineujsis ruining. to Relieve Dys smallest office.' "I did not preserve copies of the If We Fail the I wrote the Hon. Gus Rich- One says to him: "Mr. Nathan, how does It happen that you are Mayor of Rome?" After a moment's silence he says: "There was a tradition that the Mayor of Rome must bo a member of one df the old noble families nnd p. clerical. But New Italy thought that the time had Averts Awful Trnnedy. come for a change. They asked me Timely advice given Mrs. C. to bo the change; I accepted. I acof Marengo, Wi3., R. No. cepted the oflice to demonstrate to 1, prevented a dreadful tragedy tho world that there is a new Rome, and saved two lives. Doctors had a new Italy alive, progressive, am said her frightful cough was a "conbitious." sumption" cough and could do litYou begin to kindle with the fires tle to help her. After many remeof his personality. You begin to dies failed, her aunt urged her to understand why he Is a leader, why take Dr. King's New Discovery. "I men follow his call. Ho rises from have been using It for some time," his desk, paces slowly to and fro she wrote "and the awful cough has across the room, listening attentive almost gone. It also saved my litly to your questions, answering tle boy 'when taken with a severe frankly your Inquiries. Six feet bronchial trouble." This matchless tall, athletic build, shoulders some- medicine has no equal for throat what pitched high fore- and lung troubles. forward, Price 50c and head, clear-cu- t features, serious yet $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guarankindly pyes, n thoughtful, cultured teed by James H. Williams. m man; eager, hopeful, Independent, New l'lnu-- r Knr Little Om's. determined, spirit of the New Italy, In my family of little ones I this Is tho Mayor of Rome; this Is the breath of new life that has en- found tho old child's prayer of "Now. I Lay Me Down to Sleep" tered into the Campidogllo. This Is his creed: "I believe In really harmful. The children were democracy, tho new times, the afraid that they wojild "die before changed Ideas. I have nothing but they waked." We now say the folcontempt for n past condemned by lowing prayer, which others may history. There is burning in my like: fouI nn aspiration toward that era Father, In thy loving care of civil liberties and human prog- Keep thy children everywhere. ress through which Rome must lift Father, guard us through the night, Itself to a greatness always high- Help us ever to do right. Good Housekeeping. Tho Forum. er." Lamo back is one of the most Deafness Cannot be Cured common forms of muscular rheumaby local applications, as they cannot tism. A few applications of Chamreach the diseased portion of the ear. berlain's Liniment will give relief. There is only dne way to cure deaf- For sale by all dealers. m ness, and that is by constitutional Punish Denied Parole. remedies. Deafness Is caused by nn Frankfort, Ky., Oct. 10. The Inflamed condition ot the mucous linhas refused to ing of the Eustachian Tube. When prison commission this tube Is Inflamed you have a rum- parole James H.Parrlsh, the deacon-bankof Owcnsboro, who wrecked bling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Deafc.iss Is the Owenesboro Savings Hank and thy result, and unless tho Inflamma- Trust Company, and who Is serving tion can be taken out nnd this tube a sentence in tho Eddyvlllc penitenrestored to Its normal condition, hear- tiary. ing will ho destroyed forever; nine uliscillio for jTho Unit ford Hctnld. cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh which is nothing but an inflamed condition of tho mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured byllall's 3ES Send for circulars, Catarrh Cure. . free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo.O. Sold by Druggists, 73b. Take Hall's Family Pills for conm stipation, y, Sunderland practiced driving a team until he became an i.:per:. He twines tho reins around the stumps of his arms and controls his horses. But loading and unloading coal Ib a new feat for the handles teamster, which ho mastered last winter. With the stumps of his arms be throws big lumps ct coal Into the wagon. ' By placln; one stump In tho handle of the shovel Mid pushing with hlS shoulder, tnen rnlslng the shoveL-wittin other stump, he shovels coal. It takes him Sunderland about 16 minutes longer to load Ills wagon with coal fror--i a car than It does a man with hands, and n little longer to unload lu 'But his In driving makes up for this, and he hauls as much in n day as other drivers. Sunderland curries his horses, harnesses them, and Is his own stable boy. He Is a prosperous man as his and 'handles business carefully as he handles his team. Sunderland lost his arms In a molasses mill when he was a bov. He lias a family and owns his own home in Alton. St. Louis a-- Don't Suffer! " I had been troubled, a little, for nearly 7 years," writes Mrs. L Fincher, In a letter from Peavy, Ala., "but I was not taken down, until March, when I went to bed and had to have a doctor. He did all he could for me, but I got no better. I hurt all over, and I could not rest At last, I tried Cardui, and soon I began to improve. Now I am in very good health, and able to do all my housework." f vARDU TAKE The '' I Woman's Tonic You may wonder why Cardui is so successful, after other remedies have failed. The answer is that Cardui is successful, because it is composed of scientific ingredients, that act curatively on the womanly system. It is a medicine for women, and for women only. It builds, strengthens, and restores weak and ailing women, to health and happiness. If you suffer like AVs. Fincher did, take Cardui. It will surely do for you, what it did for her. At all druggists. Write to: Ladies' Advisory Depl. Chattanoon Medicine Co., Chattanooca. Tenn , book. "Home Treatment lor Women," tent free. J 60 tor Sptctal Instructions, and je P3 WANT a Better That question will be asked you almost dailv by business men seeking your services, if you qualify take tho Draughon Twining andbhow ambition to rise. More BANKERS indorse DRAUGHON'S Colleges than Indorse nil other business colleges COMBINED. 48 Colleges In 18 States. International reputation. Ilanklnc, Tjiieitrlllnc, lYnmamlilp. Fncll.h, Rprlllnir. Arithmetic, tatter Wrltlnr. Dullness mw Mitt: auxiliary nrantncn. uooa rusiHurouuAKAnit-kunuerreasonaDioconauions. Bookkeeping. Bookkeepers all over Home Study. Thousands of bankcash the United States say that Draughon's iers, bookkeepers, and stciiowaphets are New System of Uookkeeping saves them holding good positions as the result of from 25 to 50 per cent in work nnd worrv. taking Draughon's Home Study. CATALOGUE. For prices on lessons Shorthand. Practically all U. S. official court reporters write the System of BY MAIL, write J no. F. Dkmt.hox, Shorthand Draughon Colleges teach. President. Nashville. Tenn. For ; cat Why? Because they know it is the best, alogue on course AT COLLEGE, write DBAUGnON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Nashville or Memphis or Knoxville, Tenn., or Paducah, Ky.,or Evans villc, Ind. ggTErrarTCHT .ttt ? "t -- r.tTr.snri j Mr LLESF il j a. rokicH, Attorney at Law, T.EAVER DAM, KY. hi. v oltio'on In Oli'n and Sprcm! tltention gi.cn to ulrtnscu nlr bnal.ieaentriiHfl ir til. cure VM11 BROTHERS. W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. practice 4 a I Will PRAM L. FbLIX, Attorney at Law, Ohli. nd ii ami iv thf Coir of appealt MUlJiKCounlieft Jrlmlnal practice ind Collection a t. cliH, OfPcrlnthP HcraM bulldloi C. M. BAKNETT C P ..BLACKSMITHIKG.. H&JttTrOUD. KY pt.ctli. hi ptuleoiuu Id tRBDaifwork Horseshoeing A gj ftVITH Attorneys at Law, HARTFORD, KY. Will practice their profusion In all the Court of Ohio and adjoining conntlca and In thr Cour at Appeal!. Collection! a treclallv BARNElT L SMITH, Specialty er HARTFORD,! Kentucky. OTTO f. MA11T1X -- . I'. Ml'Ki'.NXr.Y S HARTFORD, KY. lgjggfil ..GENERAL INSURANCE.. Life. Accdent. Sick And Fire Will Also Bond You. ESTABLISHED 1868. It lis a rmfr, a diamond, a watch, jewelry or Hi . illver-war- e, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S ... P'.aW . Under Fire. "What makes you so sure that man will be firm and courageous where the bullets are flying thickest?" asked one officer. "He has a record," replied tho other. "He used to bo a guide for hunting parties In the Maine woods." Blsmuth-Subnltra- te Kothlnir Is moro Important la tho home than clear, steady light Insure this by getting the oil mac ourns ciear anu clean without a flicker down to the last drop. Pennsylvania crude oil refined to perfection. Costs no more than tho kind saves ilONESf eaves WORK saves eyes. Your dealer has SOMTB oiti In barrels direct from quc works. tanic-wag- the Lamp Oi! that Saves Eyes t's 'W'J SaBninFRTMAiiBHS Essssrrx::;: ;..va tira&:a Ithe c For alraosi nan ccmuiy wc duslvely the Southern trade. Wrle Address. (or our free illustrated catalogue. hl you can get nunlltv at lowest prices i Otto C. riartin Attorney at Ltwv II.VItTFOKI), KY. IMTIieROIITII.t& V -' G. tffife,. P. Barnes ...lat.ltf iW . net Co.. pV m oj. Every Article auormateed. ,f U"'"iO Office up stalls out Wilson .M Clowe, opposite mutt house. Will practice, his piofesslon in all the icnutts of this and adjoining counties nnd Comt of Appeals. Commercial nnd criminal practice a specialty. & CONSUMPTION! We tend FREE a bottle Germinal, a quick relief Blsmuth-Subnltra- te Is tho World Growing Hotter? Many things go to prove that It Is. Tho way thousands aro trying to help others Is proof. Among them Is Mrs. W. W. Gould, of N. H. Finding good health by taking Electric Bitters, she now advises other sufferers everywhere to take them. "For years I suffered with stomach and kidney trouble," she writes. "Every medicine I used failed till I took Electric Bitters. But this great remedy helped me They'll help any wonderfully." woman. They're the best tonic and finest liver and kidney remedy that's made. Try them. You'll see, 60c m at James H. Williams. Pitts-field, Chas. C Sfoll Oil Co. tonisvillc, Ky.j Iteflnery at "Warren, TVe tell tho celebrated Caro" Auto Oil. for lung trouble, cought, paint in cheit, and that run down feeling. ( Morion thu ptp.) rat "No We are Ready for Your Old... Box 95 OHIO MEDICAL COMPANY . . COLUMBUS. OHIO HS luuiitnt Erowlh. W.Ter Xalla to Better Oray Hair to tta Youthful Color. btlr ItUlsg. Cum xlp 1Im SOcmatm Dronrtrtt Promotcfl ClMSftt PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM, and tMotincs Ui a Fcll Clones Which you have laid back-readto make them new. iSend your old Suits, old Felt Hats, old Coat Suits to us - we guarantee our work to give satisfaction, if not no money received. Send them to y HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESl- DENCE OR PLACE OF UL'S- INESS, AND PUT YOURSELK IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH THE Good Things to Eat will hold no joys for yon if you have iadl-gestio Long Distance Lines TO A1X. STATES. FOR THE COMPANY'S' SPECIAL TO THE FARMERS, CONTRACT CALL ON OR ADDRESS o A HANDLKSS TEAMSTER GETS ALONG AT-t- i IUGHT i.' - Alton has a teamster without hands who loads and unloads his wagon. His name is Charles Sunderland. He is called Alton's most wonderful man. Is. j Store--Jam- Sunderland considered a mar- - or any ST0MAC8, LIVER or KIDNEY trouble. Youneednotpaybigdoctor'sbills, but If you suffer from any of these ailments just step into your nearest druggist and get a CO cent bottle of SEVEN BARKS, the great household remedy, the finest tonio and blood purifier known. If your system la run down and you want to retain your youthful Mercy, SEVEN BARKS will accom plish it, make your lood digest ana give you new life. Money refunded if dissatisfied. Try it and enjoy your meals. Address LYMAN BMWN,NKwny St, NtwYeTk,N.Y. Hartford Pressing Club Y. M. C. A. Bldg. FRED NALL, Mgr. irrB,frTT-"f,r!'"r J. W. O'BANON. .' unwi ' Local Manager, Hartford, Ky. W. C SEXTON. Local Manager. Beaver Dam, Ky. Subscribe fbi The Herald. Incorporated. 'j WSmszSm lllw"nl""",'MMM','t'''y'',l,!1'l',' TAGE ! ifflywiywyt" ""'wwjtKu FotK, THE BARTEQRD HERALD 3C WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, st ii iii. I ni i , i! Ur 'CM 'if 'It of bootlegging. Dearborn was taken before Commissioner Rice at Lcitchfleld and held to the The Hartford, Republican asks: WILL TAKE THE PUCE federal grand Jury, 'and lodged in MEBER MATTHEWS', FRANK L.FELiX, the. What has. become of the Daviess county Jail. EDITORS. wonderful 1'FalPIay" writer It Is alleged that Dearborn loadiRANK L. FELIX, Pub. and Prop'r. that has been helping the Of Dissolved Tobacco Trust, ed whiskey, by tho case, In grass Hartford Herald out. In Its camsacks and distributed it from the None of.WIiicli Will Conpaign waiting? .Ho failed to e back of an old mule, he owned, and, Entered at the Hartford materialize this '.week. despite the many pleadings of his as mall matter of the second class. trol Tobacco. should, and no The Republican friends, refused to discontinue the doubt does, know all about the illegal practice until he was arrestDEMOCRATIC TICKET. whereabouts of "Fair Play," as that ' New York, Oct. 14. The corrected. gentleman only a week or two ago ed report of the manner-'I- n which Guy Patterson was arrested at connections the tobacco trust will bo dissolved Caneyvllle, Ky., by V. 8. SENATOR Ollle M. James, severed his business Marshal Nichols With that paper, after getting out in accordance with the recant agree- on the same charge, of Crittenden. and was placed McCreary, their special edition. the Repub- ment with Attorney General Wlck-ersha- in the Daviess county Jail in default GOVERNOR Jas. B. to get heated up some lican wants of Madison. was given here' 'tonight. of a $200 bond to appear before the McDer-mot- t. him at more, it should address LIEUT. GQV. Edward According to the statement, the federal grand Jury. Greenville, Kentucky. of Jefferson. American Tobacco Company is TREASURER Tom Rhea, of Lo- corporations, not AFTER THE FORGERY SHE The Herald has received a letter divided into four BURNED BABY CLOTHES one of which will have a controlling can. from Mr. C. E. Woods in which he business. AUDITOR Henry M Bosworth, says that the statements contained Influence In tho tobacco will be the Cleveland, These four companies Ohio, Oct. 14. A of Fayette. by James M. GENERAL James in an article written ATTORXEV Tobacco Company, Lig- bundle of baby clothes smouldering Ross under the pen name of "Fair American company on a grave In the Monroe Street Garnett, of Adair. Play", and published In The Herald gett and Meyers Tobacco SECRETARY OP STATE C. F. September 27, (to be organized), the P. Lorillard Cemetery told a pitiful story of relative to Mr. C. E. Company (to be organized), and temptation that came In the way of Crecellus, of Pendleton. PUBLIC Woods, were not true. The Herald R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Mrs. Julia Nagy, a twenty-year-ol- d SUPERINTENDENT OF found Mr. Woods "butting Into" a mother. To buy pretty wraps for INSTRUCTION Barksdale Hamlett, political campaign and abusing one (to be organized). Tho common stock of the now her baby and food for her sick husof Christian. Without any malice OF AGRICUIi-TUR- E candidate. companies will be sold for cash at band, tho young woman forged the COMMISSIONER pubWood- whatever toward Mr. Woods, It par to the common stockholders of name of her employer, Mrs. Ezra J. W. Newman, of lished the article, of Mr. Ross, beTobacco Company, Kendall, wife of the lato author-acto- r, ford. lieving It true, and wholly without the American as an Indorsement on a $26 CLERK OF COURT OF AP- any purpose to injure Mr. Woods in making an assessment of $36,651,-92- 5 on the common stock of the check. PEALS Robert Greene, of Frank- any way. The Herald has given Company. This Carefully she divided the money. lin. much space to Mr. Woods and has American Tobacco Lawrence R. COMMISIONER no desire whatever to Injure him. sum will be used for the retirement Half of It she hoarded to secure of the existing nourishment for her husband; the B. Finn. In such n battle as Mr. Woods be and cancellation 7th DISTRICT Robt. gan, much of the spirit of "give and bonds of the American Tobacco other hajf she invested In pretty SENATOR baby things, bits of ruffles, lace and Hardlson. ofxMuhlenberg. take" ought to be Indulged. Per- Company. i ii'REPRESENTATIVE, OHIO haps ribbons. That night, overcome by FOR after the election Mr. Woods EXPERTS SURVEYING i remorse, tho woman stole Into Mon M. T. Westerfleld. COUNTY may be In a happier and all of us COAL IN OHIO COUNTY roe Street Cemetery and in the darkmood. ness burned the dainty clothes. "The Booster" Is the name of a Survey of Only the ashes remain. The State Geological THEEEPUBLICANISSIOK. at new little paper Just started Saturday Mrs. Nagy was arraign It would hardly be possible to Im Kentucky has a party In this section Heaver Dam. It Is a neat little county now, engaged In sur- ed before Judge Lawrence, of the N. Da- agine a more scurrilous, contempti- of Ohio sheet Issued by Mr. Travis y ble report of the big Demo veying the line of outcrops of what Criminal Court, charged with forg vis, Job printer. cratic rally here last Thursday than has fbeen called by Prof. Norwood ery. Lick Coal Bed," The Friends who knew that another The Court House Ring at Hart- that contained In the Hartford Re- the "Elm party consists of James H Gardner, baby soon would be ushered into the Is busily engaged in swapping publican next day. The public gen ford K. D. White and Luclan Walker. little home, signed her ball bond. and plotting to gobble all the coun- erally, who are acquainted with the working for ty offlces next year. How long will politics and present editorial policy These men have been Republicans stand this sort of the Republican, had expected a some time In tho region between CERALVO. country Oct. 1C Rev. N. B. Watson filldisparaging report of the event In Horton and Morgantown, mapping of thing? Its columns, but citizens and busi- the outcrops of this same coal bed. ed his first appointment here SunQuite n number of prominent Re- ness men alike wero disgusted (and It Is a contribution to knowledge day. publicans of Hartford and Ohio so expressed their sentiments) at that these surveyors have proved the Mrs. Price Hallows, Louisville, line of outcrops of a spent a few days hero last week. county refuse to endorse the pres- the despicable, belittling attitude it continuous paper Rough river Miss Mattlo Helsley left Tuesday ent editorial policy of their took in the matter. Its estimate of workable coal bed from published here, on account of Its the crowd was Just half the real all the way to Morgantown In But- for Bowling Green to attend school. despicable political methods. Mrs. Clemmio Everley, wife of number present, as proven by the ler county. This Elm Lick bed corresponds to No. 3 coal in all probaba single Democrat in number of dinners handed out. ility, thus lying low in the coal Dr. G. L. Everly, was buried hero If there Is Wednesday. which were easily counted by the Funeral services wero Ohio county who will not vote his measures. conducted by Revs. N. B. Watson heartily on election number of wooden plates used party ticket The party has been ordered by and R. D. Bennett. She leaves a day, he has not been heard of. The 4,230. It called Congressman Ben Prof. C. J. Norwood, State Geologarc that the largest Johnson a liar and belittled the free ist, to take up a survey of the north- devoted husband, four children and Indications a host of relatives and friends to ived by saying people had Democratic vote will be polled In dinner of this coal from mourn her loss. to buy tAiffee to go with It. The ward extension years. recent Mr. and Mrs. Mary Theory, of Republican discredited each of the Rough river toward Deanefld)d. It Hartford was one of the most speakers in turn who addressed the Is not known whether the outcrops Dahlgreen, III., afe visiting friends fortunate places in the State Thurs- people, and tried t6 make a politi can be followed In this dlrectlon'or and relatives here. not, since it must necessarily be day when Messrs. McCreary, John cal "trick" out of fact that son, Stanley and Rhea all spoke ty Judge J, !', Miller, a Baptist, was traced across the faulting of the Last Call for Taxes! Rough river uplift. If these men hnM nn tViA nflTttn flftV flttll frOIll the tYirtenn ,iu lhl.J -.Representatives of t (congressman iiiirouuro it.. u. ... ..- So far no town in nen joMnson, the gnme platform. t? trace 'f n? far . tho Count;' Sheriff's office wju b Ohio n Catholic It tried lpro a at the ,,ave o tho 80uth following places at tho tlmo Indito show dissatisfilCtlOu bSIauso a"orth as thPy the State has b'een so honored. committee was not present to re- they will have shown a continuous cated for tho purpose of Issuing Hereafter the Hartford Republic- ceive each party or person who ar coal bed entirely across Ohio coun- Tax Receipts and you will savo coman will probably know better than rived on ty which underlies the greater part ing to the. county-setrains or otherwise. or avoid the to make a bold, unqualified accusaThe whole of the Republican's of the county. It Is the same bed necessity of a visit to your home by a candidate without betion against worked at the Monroe, Howard, arranging to settle In this manner: ing able to come forward with proof comments, scattered over several Tlnsley and Tyro mines. pages, shows tho spirit of bitter parDeputy Sheriff S. O. Kepwn will of Its utterance. However, that tisanship of a paper so eager to disA bulletin will be Issued by Prof. be at . paper seemB to mind nothing and credit nnd disparage great and Norwpod In which report of this it Deanefield, Thursday, October 19 lowest almost to the has gotten successful event given by men of survey will be Incorporated. forenoon. depths In falsifying Its columns for opposing party, that It stops Mr. Gardner will bo remembered not at Herbert, Thursday, October 10 political effect. misrepresentation and bare false- from his work in this region last afternoon. Shreve, Friday, October to The Herald, hood to give Its Ideas their desired summer on possibilities of oil and 20 In a private letter Evidently tho Re- gas In Ohio county. forenoon. Mr. C. E. Woods, of Richmond, Ky., political effect. mi Trlsler, Friday, October 20 af asks that we publish the name of publican is sick at remembrance of A Household Medicine That Gives ternoon. tho author of the " Fair Play" ar- this great Democratic rally day and Confidence FordsvIIIe, Saturday, October 21, ticles which recently appeared In Its puny mouthlngs only give evi- Is Foley's Honey and Tar Com Cromwell, Tuesday, October 24 The Herald. His name Is James Mi dence of the seriousness of the at- pound. Mrs. T. J. Adams, No. 522 Ross and he was recently connected tack. Kaa., forenoon. Columbus, Ave., Kansas Prentls, Tuesday, October 24 af Fair minded Republicans and In a business capacity with the Hart"For n number of years ternoon. Wo understand Democrats alike, agreo that the writes: ford Republican. my children have been subject 'to Wysox, Wednesday", October 25. that his present address Is Green- event was a success in every way, coughs and colds. I got some of a credit to the. town and the men Cernlvo, Thursday, October 26 ville, Ky. Compound who gave It, and the low, hellttllng Foley's Honey and Tar forenoon, it cured their If some of tho Republican poli- attitude of the Republican in no and have found that SmallhOus, Thursday, October 26 ticians around Hartford who have wise detracts from this public fact. coughs and colds in a very short afternoon. time, so I keep It in tho house all been criticising the big Democratic Matanzas, Friday, October 27. durg-glst- s, the time." For sale by all TalU'i think they know how such a SHE TIPS THE SCALES Taylor Mines, Saturday, October m to be done, why don't ' AT JUST 825 POUNDS thing ought 28 afternoon. they pitch In and show us give a Rockport, Monday, October 30. ADAIJUP.G. big rally and free dinner to whites St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 15. Miss Dundee, Tuesday, October 31. Oct. 13. Mr. C. M. Patton and and blacks of both soxos, and let u Gertrude Burk, of Chicago, largest T. H. BLACK, S. O. C. Mrs. C. L. Patton were sec how It would look. They have Woman In the world, weighing two Mr. and By S. O. KEOWN, D. S. among those who attended the ralnever given any thing yet as big as and one half times as much as Presly and speaking at Hartford yestertho Democratic affair of Thursday, ident Taft, Is visiting at the homo Take Your Common Colds Seday. They report a large and enriously. and the only free things they ever of Mrs. H. W. Hayes, In Alton, 111. masterly and eloold, weighs thusiastic crowd, handed out were largo packages of Common colds, severe and fre Miss Burk Is quent speakers and lots of dinner. quent, lay hot air. 'i 825 pounds, stands 5 feet 7 inches, the foundation of chron Mrs. Dr. Patton, who has been ic diseased conditions of the nose and some of her measurements are: sick, Is better. paper Republican Hartford's and throat, and may develop Into Arm, 28 Inches; waist, 54; bast, 75. Mrs. Lena Patton was In Bell's quotes (and thereby endorses) tho She wears No4 M shoes and No. 7 bronchitis, pneumonia and conRun Tuesday, shopping. utterance of Chancellor . James R. gloves. sumption. For all coughs and colds Raymon and daughter Socialism, saying: Mr. John Day In regard to In children and in grown persons, Wheh 6h6 was 'born Miss Burk among- wllh ,us ," 1 .. Weighed 15 pounds and at 8 years Gertrey, are to tno those 'whd uave take Foley's Honey and Tar Comand Mammotn men with blind take the trip promptly. pound After exposure, s week. Is no time for the ranting Socialist " home she sfts on two chairs placed next and when you feel a cold coming of proportion or ap without sense on, tak;o Foley's Honey and Tar facing each other. For Chapped Skin. ,yH preclation of the new forces of this Miss Burk goes through doors Chapped ekln, whether on Iho Compound, It checks and relieves. mighty- era," &c. The Republican Tho genuine by turning sideways, and it Is a hands or face, may be cured In oho Use no substitutes. will find out that such abuse of the pretty hard squeeze at that. The night by. applying Chamberlain's, is In a yellow package always. For lenders of a strong and growing sen Hayeses m have an Iron bed which Is also unequalQd fori sore sale by all druggists. timent will only thin out the ranks! Miss Burk occupies and thus ob- Salve. It nipples, burns and! scalds. For1 sale of Its own party. Stato Meeting of Doctors. 'viates the chances of her dreams by all dealers. .m. The Kentucky State Medical AsRepublican can i being disturbed by crashing furnl- steam-rollThe '' sociation will meet at Paditcah, OcAGED MAN ARRESTED dldate for Representative from Ohio ture. The program, this, year FOR SELLING LIQUOR tober 24-2- 6, county la not being Aesrd !' Efforts have been made by showent'rely practical Will be alftibst I much these days. Just a candi- men to get Miss Burk to exhibit herFrank Dearborn, an aged white and of great benefit to all wtb atas he would be self, but she haB never been temptdate, that's all, Just (nothing ed. Her parents le,ft her 'an eetafe man, who Is almost blind, who haB tend. Tho doctors Of Kentucky ate an onlcIal,,wJlgurehead studying medicine 'and a wife and five small children, r> actively more) with wlrea to work his off- and she does not need the money. lbg in age fro eight years dowsHo feeding in touch 'with the rapid icial personality reaching from HartIn, the cure audprevent'loB two year's of age, was arre&Ud'ja ford to Frankfdrt, if by any misSattfrday' ef disease. Excursion rates of one Ohio county, Horton. chance he should be sent to the Leg- r<RMUliAmMKIMCYSAMDlfcMM have been made 'for moraine: by Detrat? United States find one-thiislature. 'Wonder' why his bosses do Marshal Clifcrlw T. Nichols,' oa "Hi .the 'trip, oh the certificate plah not bring him opt on the raging For classy Job printing: The Herald: 2&0 HhHjord Herald ;rM&XVvrFOUR NEW CtrMPANfES charge- - TV,1,1 a, i A Gathering of Beautiful Fall Fashions Awaits Your post-offic- Approval N N JmL2sr ? If you, yourself, had 'seledted the It to-b- e dainty PRINTZESS Styles that we are showing in our Garment Department, you would be as enthusiastic r about them as we are. Je A MK1 PvaflPHbViXsaM Aglimpso io iuuuicu iu an oi me charming color tones of Fall such as walnut brown, possum gray, empire green, guelph'blue and tus-sa-h tan, would convince .even you that here was a Fashion display that you ought to know more about and you can. We'il be glad to welcome and show you all of the really new and clever conceits of Fashiondom. Below we have described a number of beautiful models. Head the descriptions or, better still, visit our Garment Department and try on the actual garments. of the soft, from which they tes", i ( r. - HV 11 'Hi Ha V all-da- Lot No. 1 A Suit' for service, made in the latest styles and strictly tailored. It is made of unfinished Cheviot and lined with Massalihe Silk, comes in black and blue. $1 b.uu A V Lot No. 2 A Suit for most important functions, made iu the latest accepted style" and strictly tailored. It is madq of Hard,JFinished Serge, comes in blaclr, blue and tan. The Jacket is 28 inches long, lined with Massa-lin- e Silk, and has Velvet Collar. Tho Skirt is one of the new High Waist Panel Front Design. Price u - -.- ""cu $20.50 M at Carson s Co., Inoorporatod. HARTFORD, :- ' azo -: KENTUCKY. NEltfSI I-Ia-- ve - You. Seera. Big Ben? ? is tho 'daddy "'of them all. He is not an.alarm clock, but a sleepmeter that tells you in a gentle, persuasive way .when to arise. BIG BEN in the house, no mor6 missed breakfasts or getting to woric late. Ho is always on the job. Fully guaranteed. t See our show window and call and let us show you how he HE works'. s f,Mi Jcwckr md Qpt:ician HARTFORD, - "KENTUCKY. MMMMUaWMMMMi ',, PJuc. , y " HlrMtJ saB - A saH rfiar fsal er W watit WiH r iElVt 2S barrels fsH ' Yvl-sOs- fl T v t. . - M of ood- -r CiiTttv Sorghum lay IJSfc flP flff ce Cash P P Tommmtiiims at railroad station- JfM r rd HAltTFORD GROCERY COMPANY. flW P V9f W I & B "V n Pr BfB I' rui ii.niiiinpiiiijiiiiii mw mtmmtmmmmgt TjHiin SSWMttllB u WEDNESDAY, OCT. 18, 19H, THE HARTFOBU.HERALD Mr. Pendleton Tyro and family have moved from their late residence about five miles east of Hartford Into the Dr. Rhonda storeroom property on North Main street, where they are conducting a general store. PAGE FIVE. Just a Word, Please! nc ooooooooooooooooo O O'.O In. OOOOOOOOOOOOO two-wee- CIRCUIT COURT NOTES. O 'f We want just a little of Ijyis4a IC.IA tJlllU IAJ nil nhAllt JUUIIUUUK rM-- i ntl1 UUJ. v New Coact Stilts and Clocks on display. . Rev. J. W. Bruner, pastor of Hartford Baptist Church, has resigned bis charge here and will your1 ! leave with his family Monday for Center, Texas., where he has been" called as pastor of a Baptist church. there. Messrs. Emmet E. Rhoads, Point Pleasant; J. W. Baker and T. O. Baker, Render; Thos. Williams, Hartford, Route 4; Virgil Drake, Roscoe Pirtle and Clarence Pirtle, Cromwell; J. D. Cooper, Fordsvllle; G. C. Magan, Olaton, Route 1, and J. P. Harl, Narrows, wero amons The herald's callers last Thursday. Moving pictures at Dr. Bean's Opera House Friday and Saturday nights, Oct. 20th and 21st. Arrangements have been made for new pctures, both comic and catchy, also Interesting and instruccompares tive. No entertainment prices and with moving pictures, quality of entertainment considered. Mr. George W. St. Clair, who had been in declining health for several months, died rather suddenly at his residence about two miles east of His reOlaton last Wednesday. In the family mains were buried Ho burying grounds Thursday. leaves a widow, several children, many other relatives and friends to mourn his demise. About two hundred teachers and citizens left on tho L. & N. at Hart ford yesterday morning to take the trip via Louisville to Mammoth Wilson, Cave. Attorney John B who took a leading part in arranging the trip, accompanied the party as far as Louisville and Supt. Henry Leach will go with them all the way. They will be absent several days. Rev, T. V. Joiner, the new Methodist preacher In charge of this circuit, delivered his first sermons at the court house here last Sunday morning and night. His excellent sermons were highly enjoyed by the large audiences present. A special feature of the occasion was the splendid music rendered by stringed Instruments and a large picked choir. They are now in our house Ptttm No. 4281 -Price, 15 ctM A SMART FALL MODEL McCII v NS prettier line of the Newest Creations was never shown in Hartford. We want to show you, and you will greatly accommodate us by calling, whether you are ready to buy or not. Already our sales have been, phenomenal, and it's no wonder to us, for our prices and styles are irresistible. Call and see us for any Fall Wear, and always bear in mind that It Pays to Trade With a House that Saves You Money. A T$s? Piano Coupons Given With Every PjirchaseSf J&zi&l&Go. m ' ii Ok., on a prospecting1 trip and where ho will probably lo05 a.m. No. 121 XI:3i p.in. cate with his family, No. p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. Mrs. Dr. J. C. Hoover, of OwensNo 122-12:48 P.m. No. 131 8: 65 p.m. boro, was the guest of her klrispeo-piN.O. 102 ; J. K. Williams, Agt Capt. S. K. Cox and family, city, several days last week. A, OLD i'APKHS FOR SALE at Thd f O Herald office. Nice and clean, tied O LOCAI NEWS AND ... - PERSONAL POINTS O up In bundles. Five cents a bunO dle, three for ten cents. o,p tf Dr. E. P. Rodgers and Mr. J. M. Every centsnent at Pairs counts Roberts, of Fordsvllle, Were in Harta vote in the Piano Contest. ford Monday and gave The Herald a -j ave pleasant call while here. Gv C. Pirtle, McHenry,Mr. Two boys and a girl, weighing 7 Thet.Hotald'ft pleasant rail Monday. 6 and 6 pounds respectively, were Trade at Fairs', get the PJano coupons and keep your friend Jn the born to Mr. and Mrs. James W, Walker, of Graham, Ky., Tecently. contest. , Mrs. George Fu'ton, of near Pren-tl- s, fMr. L. C. Taylor, Hartford, Rout? Is dangerously 111 at the resii 1,J epve The Herald - K pleasant call dence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. -.Saturday. J. W. Wilson, of the same vicinity, Mr. A. J. Wilson', Fordsvllle, was The residence of Mr. Dan Quick, a pleasant caller at The .Herald of Fordsvllle, was totally destroyed yesterday. by fire Tuesday of last week. None J. W. Loney, McHenry, was of the household goods were savedt ?Ir. a tflf asant caller at .The Herald of- ' J. F. GASEIUER & CO., Funeral fice Wednesday. Directors and Embalmers. All calls Mrs. Alice Rial, of Owensboro, Is promptly and carefully attended to. the uest of Mr. and Mrs. EI. Crab-tre- e, day or nigjit. Both telephones. 28tf Beaver Dam. Ky. near town. 132-U:2:8 e, Illinois Central Railroad Tlmo at Beaver Ddm, Ky. South Boundf North ..Bound. Ta-bl- o Muskogee, ooooo o,b ooooooo oooooo ooooooooo the roof of the storehouse of Dr. Rhoads, on Main street In Hartford, last Friday afternoon, Mr. W. E. Nowbolt fell 22 feet to the ground and sustained serious Injuries. His ankle and three ribs were brokm and his back badly wrenched. The accident was caused by the ladder on which he was working pulling In two. He was carried home on a stretcher and Drs. Riley and Pendleton were called. Hirf Injuries were at first thought to be fatal, but after careful attention by the doctors. Tils 'condition Improved and Is now thought' he will recover all right. two-stor- While painting y i m PUBLIC SPEAKING. . . of-Ji- ob fA Work to get the Piano at Fairs'. Insist on your friends buying their fall wear from them. Mr. J. F. Vlckers, of Owensboro, a former resident of Hartford, Is in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Daye Johnson, of Providence, Ky are the guests of their BisteT, Mrs. Valeria Yeiser. property, vacant For y dwelling. lots, cottage and Sal--Town two-stor- Judge J. P. Miller has moved from Cromwell to Hartford and will make his home with his and daughter, Mr. and Mcs. Ira D. Bean. ty son-Jn-la- w A. C. YEISER & CO., Hartford, Ky. Leave your'Luadry at ray Grocery. Domestic finlih. Work Guaranteed. Called for aWpreHipt delivery. PhOB0 140. Uert Grocery. Dr. C". W-- - Fell and , daughter Mies Garnett Olaton,' visited F, JV Felix and family a few days last week. .' you examined Fairs' School Have Shoes for your children? If not,, don't put It off. They carry none' ') daughters, Ksillleen tah- - Pauline, of South Carrollton, have been the guests of thelfc kinspeople, 'Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Nofsifagen'the past few days. Rev. J. L. Price, of Providence, Ky .preached atthe 'Cumberland' Presbyterian Church in Hartford Hartford School of Music Piano, Harmony, Violin and Voice Culture. Under the direction of Miss Kathe-rl- n Thompson, of Frankfort, and Miss Margaret Nail, city. 38tf Mr. W. M. Aldington and wife, of Smallhous, and Mrs, J. C. Clellen and sons Foster and Vernon, Central City, were pleasant callers at The Herald offlqe Wednesday. Mr. Wm. Gentry, of near Bar-rotf'b Forryv meKtioMoi whose ill- ness wassuide 'i&$ieeV' columns s reifctedV'to be lm- last week. proving the rat orthe week. Mrs. Rev. A. J. Bennett and two hut the beet.' Smith, of Bowling J. Greeafwhe te doing .Sunday School missionary work In Southern Kentucky, is in Hertford and Ohio county for i; frw dW, looking after' the Interests jof the Sunday Schools. Mr. T, last Saturday night and aUBeuIak church Sunday aornjag- - at 11 o'clock and at night. Mr. M. T. Westerfleld, Democratic nominee for Representative from Ohio county, will address the voter at the following places and timer: Hell's Run Friday nltfit, Oct. 20. Sit. Morlnli Saturday night, Oct. 21. IJuford Monday night, Oct. 23. Tuesday night, Oct. 24. MnRnn Dcancflcld Wednesday night, Oct. 23. Ifeibert Thursday nlglrt, Oct. 20. Co. Everybody Invited and urged to VlrgH Trail" vs. McHenry jCoal Co. come out and hear him. Z.t Wayne Eljls vs. Smith Cooperage tp. J. W. Glasscock vs. C. G. KlmbO BAPTIST CHURCH. O ley verdict of Jury, $103 for plainO O J. W. Bruner. Pastor. tiff. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO NOTES Marvin Miller, official stenographer for this Judicial DisPrayer meeting Wednesday even- trict, Is In attendance at Court. ing at 7:15 o'clock. Visiting Attorneys: Messrs. Doyle Teachers' meeting in the Baraca Willis, Greenville; Armstead Jones, room Thursday evening. Nelson Judges J. Sunday School at 9:45, Dr. E. W. B. Rhoads, Beaver M. Porter and D. Dam, and John Ford, Supt. T. Rone. Centertown. Morning worship at 11 o'clock and evening worship at 7:15. MAXWELL. Sunday will be the pastor's last Oct. 14. New Bethel choir Is services and he would he glad to practicing for the convention at Mt. havo a full attendance of the mem- Carmel tho fifth Sunday in this bership both morning and night. month. Mr. O. E. Barr and daughter, Rowe Tinsley. The marriage of Miss Audra Rowe Hattye Mae, went to Owensboro Friand Mr. James Leonard 'Tinsley took day. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Bennett, of place Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the residence of Mr. R. A. Leis- this place, are going to move to ure. The ceremony was solemnized Owerfsboro. Mrs. J, T. Newcomb went to by Rev. Joiner, of Hartford, and Wednesday and Mrs. Forby a large number of witnessed friends, After the ceremony the rest Crowe went to the same place. bridal party repaired, to the home, of Monday. Miss Louise Riley went to Owensthe groom's father, Mr. Joshua boro Friday. Tinsley, where a nice reception awaited them. We wish for them a Tho1911 Eurppean wheat prop of bright' and happy future. eight countries of Europe will be a banner ope, equaling 1,716,905,000 Taken Up as Estrays. bushels, Two red heifers, yearlings pastv ' Owner will please call, pay cost and get same. 42tf S. O. KEOWN, Deputy Sheriff The Ohio Circuit Court convened court ball here last Monday morning for a term. Judgef T. F. Blrkhead presiding. Commonwealth's Attorney Ben D. Rlngo and'. County Attorney C. E. Smith were present. Tho following named gentlemen wenvempanefed as grand Jurors for the present term: R. C. Stewart, NatLlndley, Jno. W. Keown, James Carter, W. B. McLean, J. H. Loyd, H. .E. Shultz,. Guyman Westerfleld, Oi P'Brunton, S. H. Render, J. J. Stew-ar- t and J. W. Maltn. J. H. Loyd. wag designated as foreman of the grand Jury, S. H. Render was selected as sheriff and Nat Ltndley as clerk. The .grand Jury being empaneled, were, Instructed by the Commonwealth's Attorney In an exhaustive manner, calling, tho Jury's attention to the many things they wero expected to look after in their deliberations, admonishing them to take time to ferret out all acts of the s. The Hon. Court supplemented the Instructions with some very .timely suggestions as to. their duties and the performance of same, after which came the report of the various County and Circuit Court offlclals. The following named gentlemen were empaneled as petit Jurors for the term, viz.: W. C. Dauulierty, R. S. Jackson, J. W. Miller, R. E. Ward, John Edge, J. M. Leach, W. F. Sanderfur, W. L. Jam s, J. 0. Taylor, L. C. Moiton, J. f. Funk, R. W. Davis, U. F. Boswell, James C. Drake E, F. Render, W. L. Wllsonl J. W. Flener, W. C. Wallace, C. Y. Allen, 'lorn Chinn, Burnett McDowell, and R. W. Brown. A .few years ago It took from a week to ten days to dispose of the criminal docket. Now, however, It only takes a few hours to dispose of the criminal cases. All the cases set for the first day's docket were disposed of as follows: Com'th. 8. Mary M. Klmbley, fined one cent and costs. fined Com'th. vs. E. S. Randall $5 and costs. Com'th. vs. Ernest James, ct al., filed away. Com'th. vs. Luther Bruce, Less Hurt and Herman Young, filed away. Com'th. vs. Ernest White, Clarence Dlllard, Isaac W. Bernhelm, J. B. Atchlnson, Raymer Phillips and Lee Howell, all stricken off. The remainder of the cases were centln-ued- .' Accent Com'th. vs. Charles Condor, Alvey and b. Kerney Com'th. George Simpson were passed. , Ordinary Docket Jury Tilnls. Monday, 1st Day; J. W. Glasscock yb, C. G. Klmbley: Tuesday, 2d Day Wayne Lee vs. L. &. N. R. R. Co. J. Mi Taylor vs. I. C. R. R. Co. Wednesday, 3d Day T. J. San-davs. M., H. & E. R. R. Co. Guyman Westerfleld vs. M., H. & E. RR. Co. J. W. Koontz vs. R. C. Hunter, et al. Thursday, 4th Day Gustavus St. Clair vs. M., H. & E. R. R. Co. Wm. Murphy vs. M., H. & E. R. R. Co. Embry. J. L. Alford vs. J.-Friday, 5th Day Hiram Babbitt vs. L. & N. R. R. Co. A. D. Taylor vs. Evansvllle & Bowling Green Packet Co. Jas P. Stevens vs. Jas. P. Taylor. , WEDNESDAY 9th Day. Thos.-- Cook vs. M H. & E. R. R. evil-doer- BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder Tiade from Royal Crape Cream of artar NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE ! ROYAL THE PEACE OUTLOOK ge lowing the adjournment of court at noon, till Monday. Whether they will get a Jury out of the 800 venireIS LESS FAVORABLE men Is problematical and there Is even talk of the necessity of taking the trial to another county. Both in TurkO'Italian and China Eight hundred witnesses nre expected to he called, many living In disWars Powers Await tant States. The admissibility of Z. T. Nelson to tho Jury was not deAction. cided More arguments regarding him are to be heard Berlin, Oct. 16. ine outlook for a successful lntcrentlon to bring an Biliousness Is due to a disordered War Is beend to the Turko-ltalla- n Chamcoming less favorable, according to condition of the stomach. statement berlain's Tablets are essentially a a Italy has yielded to public opinion stomach medicine, intended especat home and Is no longer willing to ially to act on that organ; to concede a Turkish suzerainty for cleanse it, strengthen it, tone and Tripoli, while on tho other hand, Invigorate it, to regulate tho liver Turkey Is not willing to surrender and to banish biliousness pocltUely For sale by all because of and effectually. Tripoli unconditionally m the Internal danger that would be dealers. Involved by such yielding on the Tlicv Hac It. part of the Government. If the Kentucky Democrats havo hqre see Accordingly diplomats will never let no chance for mediation at present any gumption they Judge O'Rear get ahead of his name or until the attitude of the Turkish election. the approaching Chamber of Deputies Is ascertained. In to Houston Post. It Is Impossible for other Powers negotiate definitely with ConstantiTAVLOK MINKS. nople In the absence of a settled Oct. 1G. Miss Blanche Park gave Government there. a very nice birthday party at her The situation causes anxiety here. home Thursday evening and receivyesterday's report that Although ed several nice presents. RefreshEmperor William had summoned ments were served at 9 o'clock. All SIgnor the Italian Ambassador, present spent an enjoyable evening. hunting Pansa, to his Majesty's B. F. Hudson, of Taylor Mr. lodge near Eherswaldo, Prussia, for Mines, who has been 111 of typhoid a conference on the political situat- fever, Is recovering rapidly. ion, proves to have been. Incorrect, Dixie Hocker, of Tajlor Mines, the Ambassador did have an extend- who alBo has been HI of typhoid feed conference with tho German For- ver. Is Improving. eign Minister, Herr on Klderlen-Waechte- r. Miss Ethel Johnson and Miss LU-ll- o y the Emperor deDraper arrived at their home at tained Chancellor Von Bethmann-Hollewe- g Taylor Mines from Herron and Malodge In nt his hunting rlon, III., Monday morning. order that they might discuss the Misses Verna and Corinno JohnTurko-Itnlla- n He also son situation. returned to their home at Taypostponed for several days the aud- lor Mines last week from Massoy ience which had been arranged for Springs and Brownsville, where for tho they have been visiting. American Ambassador, Mr, Lelsh-maThe "hnthtub" trust must disThe Chinese situation Is n most solve, according to a decision In fadelicate one and- no surprise would vor of the Government handed down be felt here If It 'caused Internation- against the Standard Sanitary Manal negotiations to determine upon ufacturing Company by the United Joint action by tho Powers. The States Circuit Court at Baltimore. German cruiser Gnelsenau with thp commander of tho German Asiatic squadron, and a torpedo boat, have sailed for Hankow by way of NanPRICES king. The commander of tho German ALWAYS PREVAIL gunboat Tiger reports from Hankow that the American Admiral has asWITH sumed command of the foreign warii ships at Hankow the Japanese Admiral Kwashlma continuing at tho head of the foreign forces. to-da- y. semi-official to-da- y. Td-danewly-accreditn. - sSPECIAL - LIKENS ACTON TWO ALLEGED LODGE ORGANIZERS BEAT HOTEL ooooooooooooooo Llv-ermo- ro 8 Ky., Oct. 14. Mndlsonllle, Claiming to represent the Loyal Or- 5 g der of Moose, F. A. Higman and J. B Hardware, Tinware. Queensware, g R. Parsons In a few days secured seventy-fiv- e dollars In membership g Harness, Saddlery and Notions. prospective fees from members. They turned up missing leaving a large hotel bill unpaid. The proprietor phoned the headquarters of the Moose at St. Louis, and was notified that the men had g m. or been discharged for embezzling money. They wero traced to Louisville under a warrant sworn out by Mr. Noe, of a hotel at Madlson-vlll- e, i and Chief Carney, of that city, has the case. Prices, weights and measures GUARANTEED. Foley's Kidney Remedy vs. a Hope less Case. Hon. Ark J. E. Freeman says: "I Proprietors. had a severe case of kidney trouble HARTFORD, : KENTUCKY. and could not work and my case OOCOOOGOOOOOCCOOOOOOOOOOOO seemed hopeless. I used several well known kidney remedies, and had the services of a doctor, all of which gave me no relief. One large bottle of Foley's Kidney Remedy cured me and I have never been bothered since. I have also recommended It to my friends who all received tho same good results." For sale by all druggists. m y, One new three-inc- h Buckeye Road Wagon FOR SALE. Also carload of Daybreak Fertilizer and Farm and Poultry Woven Wfre fust in. We carry a full line of Groceries, i I Just Received canoaa i iniRNmmn mini LIKENS&ACTON uiiLi AUTUMN All Millinery! most attractive tjhe For Sale, Farms All sizes, froml to 300 acres. We can please you If you want to buy land. .U A. C. YEISER & CO.., Hartford, Ky. 6 SAY IT WILL TAKE NEARLY YEAR TO TRY McNAMARA heNEWS Send The Herald KMhsr lb told $1 a Tsar. appreciate it we will Los Angeles, Cal.j Oct. 14. Prethat It win take a month to get' a Jury and nine" months to try the case of James B. McNamara seemed conservative fol- dictions? d esigns, madeto youror-d- er at most reasonable prices. Satisfaction Guaranteed! newest and Miss Poppie Nail, Main Streqt. Hartford. i:Hfj' PAGE SIX. THE HARTFORD HFRAT D nm. But, as too canvass progresses, only a few weeks ago he found there were some people who entertained contrary opinions about that proposition. Then It developed that this man, better than hU party which he asks to elect him, changed front, and whiskey was not so bad at last, and now you have him, day after day,, in speech after speech;'' getting away from the proposition that whisker Is the worst thing on earth -- He now admits that ho himself Is not a teetotaler; that' ho takes a drink when he wants to; that he keeps It In his house and gives it to other people; and that be is not against the whiskey business as a business not quite so good a local 'optlonlst as Henry Wnttorson. A Democratic legislature, of which I am glad to say I was a member, passed a law and I myself voted for It most. cheerfully and willingly, to the effect that alcoholic liquors should not be shipped from one part of the state Into dry territory. That Is democratic doctrine. Local Is one of the fundamental principles of demccrrtlc doctrine. Each locality should control Itself. When any locality says that It does not want It, I said by my vote then, nnd I reiterate it now, that it should not bo foiced upon that locality. But that law, I regret to say, Is almost a nullity. A Republican congress, through a generation of agitation of this question, has said In off cot: "You can pass as many state laws as you choose to prohibit the shipping of liquor into dry territory, but we, the great Republican congress cf America, intend to see that it may bo shipped." That Is the stand of the Republican p rty, and here stands Its candldnto for governor In the state of Kentucky committed by his piriform to au approval of the action of that icsuest judge OTiear says not; the cnairman of tho Republican campaign er listing bis land at $3,000 and president says yes. Speaking of Pres- committee, personalty at $1,000, making ident Taft' attitude upon this subOh, Mr. O'Rear, I do not blame you found wlim he went to pay ject, the Washington Post says: for not wanting to discuss national his taxes that he was paying oa Republicans, Mary- politics. "Let that sleep," you say. "Massachusetts $5,000." land Republicans, Kentucky Republi- "Wo will capture Kentucky wis time Unjust Taxation. cans and the Republicans of other by keeping down those things, and My mind turns at this moment to states where full tickets are In thd then next year, when we hold every a certain matter. Mr. Garpett has field this year, would do well to heed office within the gift of Kentucky, the advice of the leader of tho party and have all tho power and' Influence just spoken to you of a plan to revise the tax laws of the state of Kentucky in his speech." that this will give us, and every ave- and that everybody was in favor of nue of money running our way, wo' revising them, and I bellove they What the Tariff Does. "Tho carrying cf these states, now will capture Kentucky again, for It are; but there Is a different method means the carrying of the United will be an easy matter then to throw advocated by each party as to the States next year' It means putting Kentucky Into the Republican col- manner of revision. Let me tell you Taft and Langlcy something that maybe you don't Taft back In the president's chair umn and that he may veto a woolen schedule; that your rights may be trodden upon know, and maybo Mr. Garnett does " It means putting him back In tho as though they were not not know, but It Is a fact, that a man president's chair that whtn the memBroken Pledges. In Louisville has been taken from bers even of his own party dare not In the Republican Campaign Hand- prominent newspaper work and put refuse to pass a bill giving farmers' book of 1907 we And this In their upon a salary of $5,000 a year 15 free Implements to the people of this platform: months in advance cf the approachcountry, he shall be back there to ing election .to advocate before the "We demand a reform In the veto the bill. What does the passage management of our public eleenoxt legislature the passage of a new of a bill for farmers' free Implements mosynary and penal Institutions, tax law for tho 3'tte of Kentucky, mean? It means that when you pay to the end that they shall bo opand the principal feature of that Is, $100 for a farmers Implement, with to Illustrate, that If you own a $10,000 erated by a bipartisan board, the duty removed, you will pay only upon proper business principles, farm and you have borrowed $5,000 $40 for the same Implement. Yet, inon It, that tho farmer who barrows nnd their Inmates treated huaugurated by the Democrats, and manely." the money shall pay taxes on $10,000 voted for so.idly by the Democrats, Hav they carried that out? Great and tho man who lends the $5,000 on that bill was passed, and after It was heavens! They promised to treat tho the farm may escape taxation altopassed President Taft vetoed It. Taft Inmates of eleemosynary Institutions gether on the $5,000. I think and I said upon a former occasion that we humanely! Have you people so soon believe every man who Is to take part must have a reduction In tho prices forgotten that only a short time ago In this fight thinks that when a man of clothing, and he cited these fig- the superintendent at one of these owns a farm and has money borures: That men's suits which retail institutions d girl rowed upon It, that ho shall pay taxqs took a for $15 bear a tax of $10.70; that and debauched her, although he occu- only to tho extent that he has acmen's overcoats which retail for $15 pied the relation of. guardianship quired title to the farm, lesal or bear a tax of $11. S3; that men's hats over her? Is that the humane way equitable; and that thpman who has wl.lch retail for $2 each biar a tax In which they are to treat our feeble- hla money loaned upon The farm shall of !)S cents each; that men's shoes minded, our afflicted, our unfortu- not escapo the tax; that Is, In anothwhich retail at $2 a pair bear a tax nates in the future? If so, God grant er form, If you have s of- of G2A cents a pair; that woolen un- that you may send none there from the farm paid for, and you havu derwear which retails at $1 a gar- the good county of Boyle! Then they money owing to another to the exment bears a tax of S2 cents a gar- said: I say, tent of the other ment, thus leaving ti.e dollar gar and tho Democrats of Kentucky are "We favor the enactment and ment costing ouly 18 cents to bear a saying, that you should pay taxes enforcement of a local option tax of S2 cents; that woolen hoso upon the three fourths value of tho law, wjth the county as the conwhich retail at 50 cents a pair bear trolling unit." farm only, and the man who has a tax of 35'' cents a pair; that cotThoy favored It then; they favor it loaned you the other ton hoso which retail at $1.50 per now. They didn't give It to you then, should pay the other of the dozen pairs bear a tax of S2V4 cents, and they won't give It to you now. taxes. thut women's cloaks which retail at They may say to you that they I know It to be a fact that they In$15 each bear a tax' of $9.SS each; it, but you had a Democratic tend to foist upon you a plan which that women's cotton dresses which legislature, and they would not pass will not tax tho money. I know from retail at $10 each bear a tax of $5 It. Let me answer them nnd say that all I have heard of the Democratic each. from the Democratic party they took candidate for the legislature In this He enumerates a lisl of other four men, and with thoso four they county that they are not going to get things which my limited time today elected the attorney for tho Whiskey that proposition past him; and I does not permit mo to read to you; Trust to the United State3 senate. think every candidate should promise jet when the Democrats passed bills Yet, fellow citizens, upon the county before you vote for him that he will cutting that tax half In two, Presi unit bill, when the Democrats gave not favor such nn unfair and unjust dent Taft, the very man who picked them nearly CO votes, they could not measure as will allow the monled Inout these Items on which tho Ameri- pass It. Were they sincere then? I terests to escapo taxation to the detcan p.'ople were unjustly taxed, ve- Fay, no. Are they sincere now? I riment of the real 'estate owner. toed the bills. Ho was one way answer as emphatically, no. " Case of Caleb Powers. and nnother way tomorrow Then they go on to say: Now, fellow cltlzenB, I am going to " You have a Republican "Wo condemn the law passed turn to the present Democratic Camcandidate In Kentucky today who was for Immoral political purposes paign Book for a fow minutes. I read: one way yesterday aud another way creating the racing commission "We denounce the action of on every proposition that tomoirow in Kentucky, and demand its rethe Republican governor for his to.ues up ' .," peal." partisan and unjust action in Xow, fellow citizens, tho RepubliDid they repeal it? No. Did thoy pardoning the men Indicted for cans are running through the state try to repeal it? No. But the man participation In the assassination telling you how easy it Is to be to who Is today their lieutenant goverof William Goebel, the governor beat "id Jim McCreary. I tried that nor voted for the passage of that law, Of our state, and we assert that M and you can prove by me and he Is today one of its strongest those pardons were granted for that It Is not the easiest thing In tho supporters In the state of Kentucky. political reasons, and not upon . world to beat him ... The only thing they have done to the' merits of tho cases." It seems to be the Irony of fate that wards the breaking up of the racing This quotation is from the Demo th? II rat speech I make In this cam- commission Is for one of their men to cratic platform. Governor Wlllson paign should be mnii on the head-wnte- tlee the country with all Its cash. went all over this state this you of Salt river Salt "The Call" Called. know saying that he would not grant river heads over here In Cousin LoThere was a paper published Ht a pardon to any man until he had gan Caldwell's Held. After the rfext election Is over, I am going to csk a Frankfort at that time that went by first been convicted by 12 men and name of "The Call." I don't know afterward found, to his belief, to be crowd of you fellows here to go with the me down Salt river and meet O'Rear whom it called, and I don't know Innocent. He said with uplifted hand It called, but everybody that It nil over Kentucky and pledged his and his crowd coming up and drown what seems called to have gone astray, own honor and that of his party to It. every of them somehow. The Republican Campaign He has violated It. Among the mpn "Long" On Promises. Handbook has this to say: that he pardoned in violation of his In 1007, when Governor Wlllson "The Call' charges that tho pledge was Caleb Powers. The Rewas a candidate for governor on the Beckham-Hnge- r adminstration republicans of the Eleventh district Republican ticket, the Republicans duced the tux to two and a half have sent him to congress. I Just got out a campaign haudbcok, and I cents and Increased the assessed said I had been in congress all this away In a safe place, knowlaid one value of taxable 'propeity 25 per time, and I had never yet made the ing that four yeais thence the Repubcent." acquaintance of Speaker Cannon. licans would have another candidate Let me read to you what tho Dem- Powers Is another man I have never for the snrae office, and that some of ocratic Handbook has to say on that become acquainted with; and furtherthe things they piomlsed to do would subject. The complaint they then more, I never will meet him. I havo not be done at the end of tho f aur made against the Democratic admin- - seen his picture in the paper, and . yeais; Just like today tho things they lstrauon was mat it raised the as- then t always threw the paper away promise jou to do If they are elected sessed value of property. The Demo- but before high heaven, will never bo done at nil. About tho cratic Campaign Handbook of this today 1 do not know Powers when I only concern with them recently, It year says: see him, nnd God knows I don't want bcems, has been to seo how much "There has been no direct In- to. But he has been sent to conthey could promise; and in order to crease in the tax rate, but as it gress. What U he doing In congress? make their promises abundant, they was necessary to raise money In I never saw him there; If I did, I have put John Langley at tho head Eome way to carry on the 'Will-so- n didn't know him, but you can read of the Republican campaign in this war,' (It couldn't well bo run the Washington papers about him, light. You know that over In the on Interest bearing warrants) and I have a copy of the Washington mountains, where John Langley they resorted to an Indirect Herald In my hand of date of Juno comes from, they call him "Promissory method of raising the rate. The 27, 1911, and under big headlines hero John." When It comes to making state board of equalization turnwe readi him chairman of the Republican comed the trick by raising tho valu"Powers Blames White Man mittee cf tblB state, I want to tell you ation of property as turned ,in For Race Troubles. that it Is most significant. from the counties. We shall take "Kentucklan Tolls Negroes to When Joe Cannon had overridden tho years of 1910 and 1911 ns F.ght For Their Rights. tho Democrats In tho house, and samples. In several counties this "Representative Caleb Powers when Insurgents of a sufllclent numhas been as great as 25 per cent of Kentucky eald last night at a ber had been created who Joined the It was as much as 20 per cent in mass meeting of colored peoDemocrats, and when some good bills a still greater number, and 14 per ple in Ebenezer M, E. church to were to come as a result of that coalicent, 12 per cent, 10 per cent and protest ngainst the hanging of kept that house In tion, Joe Cannon 5 rer cent in others. In 1910, 93 Mamie E. Lomax, that there'll be session for 36 hours. Harvey Helm counties were raised, the average many wet days and dry ones, too, Is here today, and will bear me out being about 12 per cent. In raise before they'll hang Mattle Lomax In the statement, that he, I and many 1911 72 counties have been raisin this city. Tumultuous applause others both ato and slept on the floor ed, the average raise being a litgreeted this sentiment. The Kenof the house that wo might be there tle more than 9 per cent. Thus tucky representative also advowhen occasion arose to vote Joe Canit will be seen that, while the cated equal suffrage for women. non out of the speaker's chair, If It state rate was not actually inHe Informed his audience that If were possible. We lacked only a few creased, the result was tho same there is a race question on, the votes of turning Cannon out. The in these counties as it it had white man is responsible for It; Republicans had summoned and call been raised an average of 12 per that the negroes should stand toed In from all over the United States cent in 1910 and an average of 9 gether and fight for their rights every one of their absent members; per cent in 1911. This was equlv- - , Instead of being ashamed of their and when they marched into the alent to raising the state tax rato color." chamber every fellow of them carried on these counties from 50 cent Great God, fellow citizens, we something under his coat. When tho on the $100 to 5C cents in 1910 heard of this man at Frankfort In result of the vote was announced', and 54 H cents in 1911. This avmuch the samo vein inciting a mob each and every man drew from beerage raise of 12 rer cent on 93 before he' was scarcely known in polneath his coat an American flag, the counties in 1910 and 9 per cent itics, and before his infamy had stars and stripes of this nation the on 72 counties in 1911 Is equivareached to other parts of the nation. banner of freedom and they mountlent to a flat raise of nearly ip Now we find blra sent by the Repubed, the desk tops aad waved those per cent on the entire 119 counlicans of the Eleventh Congressional flags over their heads, showing by ties In the state la 1910 and about district to the capital of the United that act that Ihoy were glad and ex6 per cent in 1911, And it must ' States, there to pursue the same ultant because Cannon had won( and not be lost sight of that these damnable tactics, and to Incite the the American neoDl had lost. Thev heavy trnlsca were certified out to negro against the white man In thU deserved the stripes? but they js-the counties, and that all county, country! Isat he a shame to his own graced 'the stars. Foremost among city and district taxes were family? His god old mother, who them all. was a, great big man wavfng thereby increased .in proportion. died a few months ago, I am t that symbol of freedom In exmkant Take, as an illustration, a count "would denouftee hl If oh worn w triumph over yaw defeat, andwthat where the raise wae 25' per et'at "nllTe. naaa was John W.'Langley, the present ob lauds and personalty. A farm Do row wast snec of ttk In Ken fy God-given.half-wittethree-fo.irthone-fourtone'-fourt- b cne-fourt- h "' rs n -- WJBTWR8BAY. OC1V "18, i19il. BEN JOHNSON ON THE ISSUES you are to help the, n.eRro. 'and ,a fW white Republicans in, the state' of Kentucky to foist upon vour state? God grant that such may not bo ttw easel. Who has done It? A Republi can governor. Who approves It? A tucky? is tMs-th- kind of cattle that Points Out the Duty of KentucKy Voters In This Campaign. Republican candldute far governor. Can you have any confidence Iu a man who promises yoi( one thin? and " does exactly the contrary? - 4 STRONG AND RINGING ADDRESS Glaring Inconsistencies, Insincerity and Artful Dodging of the Republican Candidate For Governor Revealed by the Eloquent Speaker, Upon Problems of Who Dwells State and National Import. I, Danville, Ky. (Spccls.1.) A large crowd of Boyle county Democrats assembled at the courthouse to hear the Hon. Ben Johnson mako his first speech In the present political campaign. In strong and ringing words he declared hU unqualified support of the Democratic ticket, and piomlsed .i iu occult 111 iiia i..i,.tf ui v.uuiuiet uuuuii point In the state the Democratic party snouid can upon mm to do so. Mr. Johnson's speech in full Is as follows: Ladles nnd Gentlemen: At the outset I wish to assure you that I have more, far more, than a passing Interest In the welfare of Boyle county. Perhaps It Is unknown to many of you, but It has always been n cherished memory with me, and one of which I am always proud, that this beautiful county of Boyle, with Its fertile soil and good citizenship, was ' first founded by my ancestors. They were among the first to light back ' the Indian and make It possible for you to be here today. But a half mile from where I now t stand was Crow's fort, erected by my Crow. Thsre my grandfather, Ben Crow, was born, Here, at the McConnell place, a half mile on the other side, my mother was born. Then, here, on the Bobert Evans place, my grandmother was born. So, I know that you ,1!1 believe me when I say that Boyle county Is dear to me. In addition to that, to a distinguished citizen of the town from which I come, you owe Boyle county. The celebrated lawyer, Ben Hardin, who was my father's first law partner, when ho was at Harrods-bur- g rroFoclitlng Wilkinson, from Mississippi, for having klllwl some men In the old Gait house, In Louis-Wilfelt that Harrodsburg and that portion of Mercer county had not treated him fairly during that trial. When he walked out of the court-- ' CONGRESSMAN BEN JOHNSON. house at Harrodsburg after that trial, congress. Is he carrying out that prln-- ' he said to some of his friends: "I clplo he says he stands, will build a t fence, stake and und for which abovo stands far all other quesrider, around this town; out of this tions? I say he Is not; and I say county I will make two," nnd he did. Through his own efforts and those of that If ho had boon a member of con- gicss when the election of speaker his two distinguished he came he formed Boyle county, and by that act Cannon; would have voted for Joe and Joe Cannon, I say, has he gave Kentucky Boyle and Mercer, been the greatest enemy to the cause two of the best and greatest counties of temperance, and tho greatest en- In the whole state of Kentucky. rmy to tho human family, that has Upon being Introduced to this aulived In tho I'nlted States for 30 years. dience a moment ago, It was said have seen that I wnp connected with George tyranny; I Ihave scon him In all his him in nil his Coulter. Yes, George Coulter's wife rough riding; and I am ever mindful Is my first cousin. Her mother and my mother wore sisters. I have al- of the day when ho deliberately told ways loved Anna Coulter very much the c!rk ef the house not to call my name so that I might cast a vote In until recently. I spent last night at behalf But did her home, and I am not in us good and I of the people. nnd Ithere vote, told him then th.it humor with her today as I was I would vote at any hazard, nnd If It for the reason that sho insist- was nccessaiy to pull him out of ed all afternoon, pretty chair Mt i might vote, I would that do nearly all the night and this fore- so ; aad ,. I told that clerk noon that her srandbsbr wn' prettier that he could not pass than mine. - - I can not sheet up to the ipoaker that ballot , that the re--I stand for that. suit mUht be announced until my Important Contest On. name was upon itf (hat the people of But now, wp have the Fourth congressional district had on In Kentucky, and in earnest, a po- sent mo theio with n right to vote litical contest. That political fight, in nnd I did not propose to let the tyr my Judgment, was more momentous anny of one man deprive mo of that the day it commenced than It Is now, ' ri; ht and I believe It will grow 1fs and National Issues to the Fore. less eo until the 7th of November. Now, they say that we shall not The claim of sanctity made for the national Issues. If not, then Republican candidate for goernor what? What have wo tholr consent with such a great Hare nnd blowing to discuss? Positively nothing, ba- of trumpets has exploded because of cause I say that the Republican cam-- i apparent insincority upon his part. Ho paign has degenerated into nothingwas the man who was going to stop ness. Judge O'Rear's failure to dls- -' all the drinking, and t!w c :s"Jng and CU3.S national politics himself, or to the swoarlng; thou K waa to be permit anybody elso to discuss It, re-- I elected governor of Kentucky, and minds me of something that actually finally, llUs L'lilivh. translated Ben to happened at Bardstoun. heaen. He Is most to wife had a cook, and Mrs. Tal-- j good for this world He bott hud said that Aunt Jane had Is eo good that everything u'ound stolen a rabbit from her. and Aunt him seems bad; if it does no, today, Jane went to her and Enid, "Miss Malt will become eo tomorrow. But mle, did you say I stole your beef- wnat was bad to him tho fiist day steak?" Miss Mamie said, "No, I ne started out, is worse now, and didn't say that; I said you stole my what was good then is not quite so rabbit." "Never m!n Mies Mamie, fiood now. there alu't nobody talking about rabThe most Important Issue In this bits; I want to know it you said I campaign, and that Issue made by stole your beefsteak." "No, I said Judge O'Rear, is that national poll-tic- s you took my rab " "Hold on. Miss shall not be discussed. Now will Mamie, there ain't nobody talking anybody tell mo where upon earth, about rabbits. All I come here to ask from the creation of things to this you about was whether you said I good hour. In any state, In any land ktole your beefsteak or not." ." or in any clime, has any man ever run . That Is Judge O'Rear. You can for tho governorship of any respect- eo along and talk about what you able community upon the one Issue pleaso, rabbits or anything else, but that you shall not 'discuss national ru mustn't talk about the very thing politics? In which the American people are He started out to capture the whole most interested, and that is the ques- state upon the Issue of prohibition-- , tion of feeding and clothing them-with national politics barred.'. Ho.- selves and their children. What good doesn't call It prohibition, but he ,8 it going to do you to have a man calls it tho county unit law, meaning tell yon that he Is going to wipe whls-vi course inai ne is in lavor or car- - v on me siate, or me toDacco trust rying it to the point, of where he n the map when, because by his would burn down, the distilleries, If failure to devote his efforts to other necessary. He thought that was go- - pressing questions, you and your chll- -' Ing to elect him, and that was one of dron are to be turned out to starve I the things which, in the beginning of (Cheers.) Ha; o we a right to discuss national the campaign, sounded so good to ....... I I I e, ' ton-rai- ' sons-in-la- ' i yes-terJa- v j feliow-cltizen- s Tal-bott- 's ' , I I do not often tako Issue with my friend, Jim Garnett, about anything. Ihe truth of the business Is Jlra Garnett would make a good head to our . He Is about tho ticket cleanest and best wbllo man In Kentucky. I take Issue with Jim about complaining that Governor Wlllson has been out of the state of Kentucky so much. For one, I am glad ofi It; and, like Ward Hcadly, the only thing I have to complain about Is that ho . I am will come back. willing to chip In and pay my part of his salary as governor if he will ' never come back. . I have been In Washington all the timo until a few days ago, and this 13 the first speech I have attempted to make in this campaign, and I havo not Kept up with the newspapers and their comments on the polltlcrl affairs as closely as 1 should have liked, but here Is a speech of Judgo O'Rear, made at Ellzabcthtown, and published in the Louisville Post. Ho mentioned the liquor question ofton dining the speech, and I havo marked every mention of it. Here is a news-papcopy of the speeca. You can see t looks like a crazy quilt. What did he say upon the subject of liquor7 But before I get to that part of It, down here he says: "Only about 30 per cent of the Democrats of the state participated in the primary, according to the face of the returns, while If the padding donb In Louisville and the Bis Sandy regions, not to mention others, be subtracted, not more than 25 per cent voted." For the sake of argument, let us admit that that Is true, but it is not true. Every ono of thoEe who did participate was a white man. He said he got his nomination by 50 per cent of his party being represented when he was nominated, but In that 50 per cent were Caleb Powers nnd menacing negroes. Jim Garnett talked about Bradley's unspotted nnd undented toga.' Judge O'Rear know, If h wanted to run any sort of a race at all, that ho had to have the 90.000 Kentucky negroes that Senator Bradley carries in the palm of his hand. I do not' know that Senator Bradley ever uttered a prayer in his life, but If he did his eye Immediately fell upon that part of the Scripture which, paraphrased a little by Ward Headly, reads: "Suffer little negroes to come unto me, for they are of the Kingdom " -of the Republican party." A Splendid Ticket, Judge O'Rear, In his Elizabethtown opening speech, said: "The nominations desired, planned and previously agreed upon by that committee have been made with an unerring precision that shows machine work. It may bo that the gentlemen so nominated were better than those registered. A wiso machine would not choose the weakest men In a close state." I am glad that even Judgo O'Rear admits that the machine Is a wise one and made the best pick of nil Kentucky to put on this ticket. I am not going to stake any issue with him on that, and I am prepared to say that that ticket can come nearer being elected than any other ticket that could be named. I long ago reached the conclusion that as between mo and Senator McCreary at the November election he rould get more votes I said so, than I could and when I said so I further said that I was ready to go forth and raise my volet) wherever It might do the most --- .. good towards Its election I am here for that purpose today; and I am going everywhere that tho Democratic campaign committee wants me to go. I am for that ticket because every man bn it Is an honorable man, because every man on It Is a Democrat, and. In addition to that, because every man on It Is a most capable man. The best reason I give for being for that ticket without reserve or hesitation is that ' they are Democrats; and I will tell you, fellow citizens, that there was never a time, since the oldest of you came into the world, that It meant so much as It means now. The Democrats have control of the house of representatives. They are within a few votes of having control of the United States senate, the first time for a long while. When that has been done, even though the country should be unfortunate enough to have another Republican president; we can pass a woolen sohedule, we can pass a cotton schedule, we can pass a farmers' free Implement bill over the ve of any president they can elect .. Nation's Eyes On Kentucky. Tell me that national politics should not be discussed now, when yod, la this county, on the seventh of next month, are to elect a, representative tvho will .either vote for Oille James or for a Republican to go to Washington to vote with the interests and against the welfare et the great American people! De yw say- - that national issues should a4 be discusswill be ed when ''next made to break Xeateeky loose from her former meerlBgaj'so that she may go RpbI!mui :la the presidential ef all the nation are race!'- Tke. r upc Kat4W. - From every point threat tfcta great Union people arc) the' heosetop loeklag to already ; Kentaaky aa a southern state, task ' ;er year-efforts - 0 arjjn f-- C4 y C M; 1 1 M Uhufri ""i siMiriar nm I'nMitfWar - nHtllllliif "W rrW r,V,( nffiutomiteiHmmt(m "- UAI.JBMIl mmmmmamRji h i mil IMliMsill il IsJiirfiiittstir ' 1 1 laillltfsIlttilTriii'lliill n ' Mf!PIgJ JI1JL ;. MSSBffTT18 7 "WEDNESDAY", OQT. Wr.,,wupwtt,r.Tttm;?W'tt'.tf-vi!- ! 18, 1911. any: ond In a month from today hs will be many times weaker than ho is now. He can't fool all tho peoplo all the while. If there Is any one thing on the earth that Judge ORear Is for, it is the county-uni- t bill. If there Is any one thing on earth that he is opposed to, above everything else. It Is the sale of liquor. Is not that right? He Is against the sale of liquor, Ih ho not? Isnt that what he tell you'' Until Senator Bradley got hold ot him and until McCuliough. at Owens-bo.'o- , a distiller, was made reasurer of the Republican campaign committee, that was his claim; but now, In the first speech be made, he stated. "Our party Is not fighting thi liquor Interests as a business." If the business of the liquor Interests Is the sale ot whiskey, and he Is not fighting It then what Is he doing for temperance? Ho la dolns nothing oxcept trying to deceive you. There Is nd getting away from that proposition. Here Is another statement In his speech in regard to tho liquor question, and every ono ot his statements on the subject is contradictory to the other. Ho thought, in saying alt ot .those different things he would hit It right somewhere, and that t -- minds mo of a story of a drunken fellow who was out squirrel hunting He bad a squirrel up a tree, and he took his gun. and wabbling all over the tree fired. His son. little lohnnlo. said: "Papa, I don't see why you didn't hit It for yon aimed all over tho tree." - - That la what Judgo O'Rear has done on the whiskey question In this speech. He ha aimed all over the subject fying to catch everybody but he hasn t ooled " -anybody. It Is certain that ho and his party are not opposed to the liquor business, because ho says so, and If anyone here contemplates casting a vote' for him upon that ground, he will find that he will be fooled. ,What O'Rear's Organ Says, The Louisville Post Is championing O'Rear's battle, and it Is tho cbatN-ploIn Kentucky of local option, but The Post makes this admlsRlnn: "Both parties declare for the passage of a straight out county unit bill, and there Is no evasion of the Issue, i Of the two. the Democrats go. perhaps, a trlflo further by specltl'allv Indorsing the opinion of the court of appeals, as written by Judge O'Rear and concurred In by six Pemo-cratlr- c Judges, in tho matter of the constitutionality of the bill." Later tho Louisville Poet, Judgo O'Rear's organ, sajs: "Tho statn Is already able to toll what will take place if Mr. McCrpary Is elected governo- - and McDermott is elected lieutenant governor In our Judgment, tho state will. In all probability secure by such a result one tangible reform tho passage of the county unit bill and little else." Judgo O'Rear, In his Ellzabethtown speech. In talking of temperance Issues further said: "A power that Is to be feared Is also a power to be courted by those who fear It more than thoy dare It." Then, with that suggestive thought In his mind, says: "Let us clear away first come confusing and misleading rtato-ment- s of those who are today openly fighting the battles of the In this campaign. ts proThey charge that state-widhibition Is the Issue. That Is not true. It is even not proposed by our party, as an issue, and could not bo adopted except by an amendment to the constitution. Everybody knows that no Mich amendment Is proposed. Nor Is It the Issue whether a man should be allowed to drink If he wants to. It Is not at Issuo whether sobriety or total abstinence shall bo forced on our people as a legal Instead of a moral Cam-mack liquor-Interese THE HARTFORD HERALD newspaper office and showed the notice to the editor and said, "I seo you stated In the newspaper that 1 am dead?" The edlto Bald, "Yes." The felIow said, "I am not dead, and 1 want you to correct It." The editor said, "No, we have to run our paper on thfj principle that we do not make any mistakes." The fellow said, "You have to correct It, because 1 am not dead I am very satd. Tho editor much alive." "Yes. that's all true, but we hate to acknowledge that we have made a mistake. We Just simply cant do It" Finally, after thinking It over, a new thought tamo to the editor, and ho said, "I will tell you what I can do; I can put you among the list Senator Mc of births. Creary may have been dead, and he may have been ducking and dodging this question, and that, and the other, but I am today putting him on the list of births, and he Is back here now, a new McCreary, taking a position like ho never took boforo in hla life, and says that ho Is for the county unit bill; and when he does como out and says be Is, he ts. I feel that I have kept you entirely too long, hut I would like to detain PAGE SEVEN. 1 4 v Ing to the south, where freedom reigns, where "Eqaal rights to &l amd Bpeclal privileges to none" haa 'b"oen the Watchword, They are looking to Kentucky and to the south, where the tires of freedom, have boen kopt burn-ln- g for SO years, and they say, "Ke& tucky, do your duty; we of the north, who have opposed your policies In the past, ask you not to come to us; you stand firm; you do ypur duty to yourselves and to your children, and we will come to you." They, admit that during all these years Kentucky and the south have been right; that they havo been wrong; that by the ballot they have Imposed wrongs and hardships upon Kentucky, and when they did so they Imposed them upon themselves; but they say now we are ready to break the chains and declare for freedom once more; and we aBk you to stand Arm that they may Join hands with you and break down a system of tmsts wheh has grotyn up under Republican admlnstratlon In this, country " The Liquor Question. Judge O'Rear, In big headlines, says that Kentucky must cleanse her politics and restore government to the people. God knows that Is what we want and It Is all we ask. Restore the government to the people. He need not propose any contention on that proposition. Governor 'Wlllson, with his bayonets and his troops, has taken government from every county Into which he has sent them. Rcatoro this government to the people; thero is nobody to tako issuo with him there. We all Join O'Rear there. Ho says: "Tho legislature haa failed and refused for 20 years to carry that provision into effect aa to counties having a town larger than tho fifth class, so as to make It the controlling unit In prohibiting the sale of liquor." Now Judge O'Rear has been driven from his first standpoint until ho comes to say that the constitution ot the state of Kentucky haa being violated until the county unit bill has been extended to every county In tfco state of Kentucky alike, and that any law la unconstitutional except one which docs that. Has not Judgo . O'Rear written an opinion himself which says that tho present law Is Judge O'Rear said constitutional? that the present law Is constitutional, but Candidate O'Rear says that It is not. Which one are you going to believe? ' Fellow citizens, as to tho county unit law, I havo this to say: The first vote I over cast In my life was in favor of local option, and the last vote I cast was also for local option. I have lived to the ago of 53, and up to this good moment not ono drop of whiskey, alo, wine or beer has over passed my lips. When I thought I was running some for governor, they said It wouldn't do to elect me, I came from a whiskey county. Judge O'Rear voiced some of those sentiments himself, and the Republican party, when it did look Uke I ha'd a chance to be nominated, said it wouldn't do to nominate me becauso I came from a whiskey county. Carry that argument out, and where aro you going to land? I say that you people who are extreraoly dry and are hunting for the driest candidate you can find can not, upon that argument, vote for Judge O'Rear, because ho comes from a whiskey county himself. Like charity, reform should begin at home. It he can not reform his own county, how in tho name of common sense Is ho going to make the whole state of Kentucky dry? It is an absolute impossibility for a governor of Kentucky, whoever ho may be, to make Kentucky dry unless tho Kmost votes favor It dry. No governor can be governor, legislature and tho court of appeals at one and tho same time. Judge O'Rear, whero is the constitution? O'Rear Inconsistent But a little further down ho says about the county bill: "Tho liquor interests, particularly the brewers, have prevented it. They havo prevented It by mean's of their activity in polities in Kentucky in both parties, may be in tho Democratic party particularly, by which thoy have controlled tho legislature." There is a frank admission upon his part thnt his own party failed to . vote the extension of tho county uult t' law. You havo a county unit law on the statuto books, under which nearly ,' 100 counties havo gono dry. Since 1906, when that bill was pasKed, there has been no extension ot trie county unit law. He should not complain ot the Democratic party for having made a law under which nearly 100 counties havo gone dry and which law he, as Judgo. has declared to be ., constitutional. Except for tho Dem- -' ocratlc pHrty you would not have that; and then when thero are but a fow more counties left to be made dry, be says that only the Republican " party can do it. admitting, perhaps f not seeing the effect bf tho admission, that his own party has aided and abetted In stopping the passage of the law to extend this county unit law. It you do not believe it, go take tho yotes In the last legslature. Right i 'next, to me was Greenwood Taylor, a ' Republican senator. In Greenwood's canvass for the state senate he was awful dry, and .he was to vote for tho extension of the county unit law to every county, in the stato, aa O'Rear Is going to do; but, when Greenwood got to Frankfort, I don't know whether he cot thirsty or hungry, but ho voted Just the opposite way that he promised tho people. What are yoa .going to make out of that? Is that . sincerity? Isnt that duplicity? I say , .Ihartyethave in the candidate tor. : Bjevpfser ea the Republican ticket a rwito la dealing In. nothing but du- a stronger oasa km mx kMiuag than be to-. n rnr, m-w&- s thoso whom he expects to leave the Democratic party and vote fo him because of' his temperance v'ews? Continuing ho says' "Whether prohibition Is wise or unwlBo as a policy: whether partial or total prohibition should prevail, aro utterly beside the quostlon." Mr. Extremely Dry Man, !ll talk like that Induce you to leave the Democratic party and go over to a party whose leader Is no dryer than that? Mr. Knott, tho editor of tho Post, says the Democratic platform Is all right. ' McCreary's Stand. ' You hear It said that Senator Mo dreary Is equivocal about a great many things; that he avoids taking a stand wherever he can possibly do so. Didn't he compel that convention to put a county unit plank In Its platform when, perhaps, the ronven-- ' tlon did not want to do It? They say McCreary la too old. That Is what . I said too And they say he wont live long. I believe he Is going to llvo 'long enough to see O'Rear and the whole bunch of them turn their political toes to tho daisies O'Rear Is yet to find out that he is Just as mistaken about It as I was. He Is very much alive. He may have been dead politically, and I a mrather Inclined to believe that he was too, but his death must have been like the fellow who picked up a, littles country newspaper and read' aswug 'tho. .death notiret that ne mraseu was aeaa. tie aid not want' .his frleads aad relative around to think that he was dead, when be was alive, asd he west dowa to the status." Docs that meet the requirements ot - 1 you a minute or two about another thing. Judge O'Rear before the Republican ronventlon had this to say about Bradley: ' "It Is a great privilege to be received In this manner hy the representatives of 237,000 Republicans of Kentucky and to be introduced to this audience by my friend the senator, who. In my Judgment. Is the greatest l'vlng I am proud to say Kentucklan of him. furthermore, that dpsplto the machinations of the lobby, here Is one senator from Kentucky on whoso title there Is no stain and on whose record there is no blot." Who Elected Bradley? Brad'ey has bepn elected to tho United States ienate, hasn't ho? Everybody admits that. Who elected him? There Is no tiuth In tho statement that anybody, got any money for otlng for him. Perfectlv clean, and hla title unspotted. He got every single solitary vote that was cast for him out ot patriotism, and patriot-Isalone. He was the best man for the Job. That may havo boen because ho was the chief attorney In Kentucky for the Whiskey Trust. But Judge O'Rear says It was not. Then who did elect him? I can tell you. If the Whiskey Trust did not. Judge O'Rear has not treated tho people right when ho tells them that the whiskey lobby did not elect Bradley by falling to tell them who did. If they did not, then tho opposing did. and that opposing element must have been tho Women's Christian Temperance union. You women who are here, and who belong to the Temperance Women's Christian union, ought to be ashamed of yourselves for concealing the fact that you elcted Bradley to the United And then States senate I will tell jou another thing that you good women have done. You havo remained silent these three and a half years, and you have allowed four other men, with spotless and untarnished records, to be criticised all over his country. They were the four Democrats who voted for Bradley. If you good women got those four men to vote for Bradley, why In the name of common sense didn't you come out and say so, when the world wns saying that those four votes cost $05,000? You are working In a good cause, as your name Indicates, but yon' havo not been as fair to these four people as you should havo boen. When those fellows got back home, and It took the men ot prominence A HAltllKI' OK MONEY and backbone In at least ono comAM) HOW TIIKY GOT IT munity to prevent a tarring and feathering, you good ladles should ' Some of the older and richer men havo como out and said "O'Rear and 'of Montnna goUtheir starts toward the Whiskey Trust did not elect w'enlth by trading Bradley to the Unltpd States senate, their present but we did." Then the country would 'with tho Indians. Also tho Indians hare been pacified, and perhaps your pot their starts toward poverty population in Danville might bo at through the same process; but that .,, was many yeais ago. least ono more than It is 1 One of theso men came Into a Acting the Demagogue. In Helena not long ago, and an s Now, a talk about r, In from his ranch, watch- man going over this country acting the demagogue! O'Rear went down to Glasgow the other day, n ereat tobacco growing country', and In his speech there, and he had a great number of tobacco growers around him, ho said: "There are 80,000 tobacco raisers In Kentucky. They ralsi possibly 400,000,000 pounds of tobacco, The difference between 5 cents and 12 cents a pound Is $24,000,000 a year to the farmers is the highest type of of Kentucky, and If I am gover1 womanhood. nor of Kentucky and you hao any tobacco to sell, you don't havo to take 0 cents for It If you don't want to," That Is a wonderful statement! He says the law Is ample, nnd that law was made by Democrats! It Is ample to meet the necessities. What is the use of amending It. if It Is alis the highest type of ready ample? That would be a waste curative food. of time. Just there I want to turn back to one more thing I have not The nourishing and read the speech In which ho Is allegcurative elements in ed to have said it, but they tell mo that ho said he was going to keep Scott's Emulsion are so tho legislature In session for four perfectly combined that years, or until they passed a county i all (babies, children and unit law. Do you know what It would cost tho etnte of Kentucky to have adults) are equally benea legislature sit for four years? At fitted and built up. $1,000 a day, for 1.600 days. It would amount to $1,500 000. Where in the name ot common sense is the money Be tmrm to get SCOTT'S to ,cpme from, except "cut of your 'rf' the Standard and alivaya toj)ceu? yThat, burden you 'will have' to) pay," If h 'be! elected, and he car-tieall ORuaaiara out Bis. tljreatil But If' he is a,, '& man of halt the intelligence that he tk half-clothe- d palo-cheokeelo-merosy-cheeke- d I -ho-("fellow-cltlzenold-time- gets credit for being, don't you know that he ran find out in less than four years whether the legislature Is going to pass the bill or not? If he does not know In less time than that. I know that you do not want him for governor. But. getting back tq the Glasgow yeeth. he says that the tobacco trust it taking $24,000,000 dollar? every 7tar from the pockets of the tobacco glowers to which the tobacco trust fs not entitled, or, In other words, they are robbing tho tobacco growers out of $24,000,000 a year. I wish to ak Judge O'Rear this question: If he has known during all tho years tiat this has been going on, or, at least, during the four years that he has been undertaking to make the tobacco growers believe that he was their friend, I ask him tho ouostion If he has known for at least four years that the tobacco trust wnB robbing the tobacco growers of Kentucky out of $24,000,000 a year, and in four years that would amount- - to nearly $100,000,000, If he has stood idly by with a law sufficiently ample to cover the case, and he has done nothing to give these people relief? What O'Rear 8aw and Did. He saw the father at first able to provldo for his wife and children; he saw the price drop a few cents; then he saw that dutiful husband and loving father Increase his ocreago tho following year, and with this increased acreage he saw this striving farmer bend and grow weak under a task he could not perform; then ho saw the son taken from school to help tho father raise more pounds in order to offset the still declining price; next he saw the daughter driven by stern necessity from the school to tho tobacco patch to give her feeble efforts to her father and brother In their fight with the Republican protected tobacco trust; next ho saw the mother driven from her humble homo to tto fields, place her baby in the fence corner and take a hoe now to fight starvation then at the door. All this, and more, ho saw. He proclaims from every stump In Kentucky that he saw these Bame people half-fed- , robbed of 1100,000.-00- 0 by ono ot the richest trus's In all the world; that he knew how to protect them from this outrage; that he knew how to save these hundred millions of dollars to them; that he knew how to prevent the tnt3t from ever putting the price of tobacco below 12 cents; thnt ho knew how to put the Impoverished child hack to school; that ho knew how to send the haggard mother from the field to the hearth stone; that he knew how d to tako tho baby from the fence corner to Its cradle; that he saw 80,000 families both hungry nnd cold; that ho' saw a father here, n mother there, a promising boy. a once girl, go from plenty to poverty; that he saw many n little, white coflln carried with tender hands, followed with swollen eyes to the cemetery the work of the tobacco trust which ho knew and knows now how to curb, hut has not. AH this ho has seen nnd has not remedied. He sas the law Is ample, but that only he knows how to execute It. If ho were human; If he would put ambition behind him, and not say to Kentucky's trust oppressed citizenship that ho Impose? upon them the obligation of making him governor, then ho would show himself to bo a man; then the milk of human kindness would ponr forth from his heart and ho would bo worthy of your support; but, as It Is, ho is either a knave and can not do what he says, or he should be placed bejond the pale of human r nmn TOontTini- - In tiarl for those Subject to Rheumatism. It chills tho blood and brings on an attack. Use nM Snow Liniment It is a Powerful Preventive, as Well as a Speedy Cure Rub it in on tho parts affected whenever tho conditions seem to ihalcato a spelt of this painful aliment: It will warm the nnd ward off tho trouble. If tho disorder has already commenced, the treatment 13 tho same, tho rubbing helps tho liniment to penetrate to tho scat of pain. Tho relief Ss prompt and very satisfying; tho aching Joints aro relieved, tho muscles relaxed ao that tho BuSerer feela again the strength and suppleness of youth. For flcih wounds of all kinds, it Is a wonderful remedy. Try It wlro for cuts, burns, bruises, sores, Ralls, char' pot8. barbed comcuts, sprains, swellings, frost bites. It cur - quickly and pletely. Ballard's Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per Bottle. PROPRIETOR JAMES F. BALLARD ST. LOUIS, MO. To cure humrtlnic Ejrebnllii, Sore Kyc or Wealc Sight, Stephen Uyc Suite. ue Ky. SoldAno RceoMmnatDBvi Donovan & Co., Reaver Dam, Ky. ed him for a minute and looKcd out of tho window at his big automobile. "Do you know how he got his r. "Well, start?" asked the I'll tell you. He sold whiskey to the Indians. He used to take a barrel of water, put In a gallon of alcohol to give It a flavor, some burned sugar to give It a color, a few grains of strychnine to make It go some, two plugs of tobacco to make you sick and two bars of soap to give it a bead, and trade it to tho Indians one drink for a buffalo Saturday Evening Post, robe!" old-timeCr-iIIdj-o- Jlaitlonl Diiik ( .. Hnitfort), Baker walked behind the prairie schooner that was piled high with Those who household belongings. remember the trip from Iowa to Oregon say It was a rare feat. She rode about 20 miles of the distance and carried the babe a great deal. Portland Oregonlan. JUST WORD i , ! ONE that word Lc n Cry I m -- . It raters to Dr.Tutt's Llvr Pill and 39 C ASTO R A .... FOR FLETCHER'S . WHAT THK IMOXUKItK II1 TO DKVKI.OP COUXTHV Mrs. John Baker, aged 73 years, y after a died at La Grande long Illness. She Is survived by a widower, a son, Chnrles, and two daughters, Mrs. W. S. Wines and the wife of Sheriff Chlldqrs. Tho last named was carried across tho plains, tho cavalcade of which the Bakers wore a part reaching here With a display of fortiin 18C2. tude and physical endurance that was almost without precedent, Mrs. to-da- Troubled with Indigestion? Sick headache? Vlrtlgo? Ulllousr Insomnia? ANY of these symptoms and many others Indicate Inaction of the LIVER. MEANS HEALTH. Are you constipated? TZTcyuL 3STogc3. Tutt'sPills Take No Substitute. POtlHUEUMATISM KIOMCYSAWOfJUOmE TO lStPl TOfwrrcwrfqa i For Infants and Children. ffnS'fVsf VAVlhrTif IIPM jft'cgcfable PrcparationforAs-slmilating The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of lltcFood nndUcdiila- Uiig the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digcstion-Checrful-nea- s andnest.Con'ahis nellltcr Opium,Morpliine norIiiicral. A KOX"NARCOTIC. Jbopc ofOUArSAKVELPnTJlER Hvnpkui Setd JlxSmiui Ck.lUSJtt- AoiaeXtrd Uptmint J)ibutuiJrsda 'J 1 Ctmtud&ienr I forConslipa-lion- , Aperfccl Remedy Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of A For Over NEW YORK. Thirty Years t "i. TH I I I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPED, OkNTU Scott's eoMrv m fct o w Emulsion MB)piniiMnniiniaiia)jm ,aJ3aj Xw haw mwi i an rpn dto anra ivpan Kcian J N La wV ' Light and Power (IXCOlirOlCATKII) ymhiU&ii ay E. G. BARRASS, MGR, 11-- Will wire ynin hoiine at coat. KvctHo Jjights are olcttn, hpfilfliy ti.it tl safe. JVo hojileon bufiim.s.s liov.se should be iv.lt h oil t meni xvlien within reach. wlTllUj PAGE EIGIIT. THE HARTFORD HERALD pastor, Rev. A. B. Oar WEDNESDAY OCT. 18, 1911. - 1 " attorney" "has been to'se"6 me. Once or twice Mrs. Thaw camo to tho mains wero carried asylum to see $er son, but' I havo Monday morning and placed on the WHS GIVEN NOVICES riqvcr had anything to say' to her train for Calhoun to be laid to rest nor sho to me." In the cemetery at that city. Her. WILD TERROR r, would give Tho superintendent Alney Austin, of Mississippi, arrived In time to accom- In the Italian Army by Turkish no opinion upon the sanity of Thaw, he said that Thaw's attorpany the remains to the above namForces Italian. Prisneys have forbidden their client to ed city. CHINESE COURT Young Mr. Carrol Chapman, who submit to any examination by asyoners Flogged. 0 lum or outside physicians and it is with his father and mother moved almost impossible to determine tho to Herrln, III., four years ago, Is In As News of Spreading Re- town, visiting his aunt, Mrs.' Mate Tripoli, via Malta, Oct. 15. Tho exact condition of his mind. Italian expeditionary troops receiv"But I do say," Bald Dr. May, Hunley. volt is Received. A. Gardner, of Butler ed their baptism of fire yesterday "that as far as I know thero Is no Mr. James county, will leave here for morning when a vigorous Turkish great change tn Thaw's mental, Texas, where he is going to look attack was repulsed after a sharp IS PRECIPITATED! FIERCE after some land he owns In that fight. More Tlmn Enough Is Too Much. The battle took place at Bu Mella-nState. Mr. Gardner is ihe guest of To maintain health, a mature whlclj seems to be the object of step-sothe Rev. A. B. GardFeverish Edicts Are Being Is- his At 3:10 man or woman needs just enough all the Turkish advances. ner, food to repair the waste and supply Miss Efflo Alford entertained her o'clock a single rifle shot echoed In energy to Save the Impesued and body heat. Tho habitA few seconds later Sunday School class at the Christ-Ia- n the darkness. two more shots were heard. An In- ual consumption of moro food than Church, together with their rial Throne. is necessary for these purposes is beaux, with refreshments, last Sat- stant later a heavy Turkish volley prime cause of stomach troubnight. A general good time was sent into the Italian batteries. the SADDLE urday IX 11KVOLUTIOXISTS The strength of the attacking force les, rheumatism and disorders of was enjoyed by nil present. If troubled with inwas about 5,000, The light of a the kidneys. Oct. 14. To give China, Pekln, KEXXETTS. waning moon made it Impossible to digestion, revise your diet, let reaas the rebel Viceroy Tang said toOct. 1C. Miss Hattlo .Mao Barr, estimate the length of tho firing son and not appetite control and day, " a government like that of of near Maxwell, was tho guest of line. take a few doses of Chamberlain's are Miss Lattye Sparks Saturday night. the America." The air was full of hissing bul- Stomach and Liver Tablets and you waging a revolution which, unless Several from here attended the lets. The Turkish fire aroused a will soon be all right again. For m It Is checked or is soon unsuccessbarbecue and speaking at Hartford vigorous reply from the Italian sale by all dealers. ful, will actually become a warfare Thursday and all said they enjoyed trenches, which were occupied by NO MORE STRIPES. of extinction. It fine. the Eighth Company of the Eighty-fourt- h Is still IX GEOROIA PRISON The situation visMiss Gola Cecil, who has been Regiment of Infantry. more serloUs than It was yesterday iting In Owensboro, has returned explosions and flashes, Loud Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 15. In the enThe Imperial Gov- home. or last night. which lighted up the ground, soon is drawing on Its every reernment Mrs. Ida Peters, of Beaver Dam, showed that naval artillery had en- deavor to ameliorate conditions of here, ansource to put down a revolt that Is visited her brother, Mr. Clint Ste- tered the conflict. The behayior of the Federal prisoners has made growing hourly. The rebels are vens, Saturday and Sunday.. the Italian troops was admirable. nouncement next just been stripes that will few dav.i perfecting their organization as they Farmers of this community are Two men were slightly wounded within the away with forever. For conquer new territory with the aid through threshing peas. but they returned to their posts af- be done some time stripes have only been of thousands of troops who have deMr. S. Hawkins, who has been HI ter having their wounds dressed. worn by the third-clas- s prisoners the imperial ranks. Mean- of rheumntlsm, is improving. serted At 4 o'clock the Turkish fire while the country Is a seething caulLittle Miss Opal Austin is real slackened and the Turks began to here, those who have hrckon some readron of revolution, with murder sick. retire quietly. Opposite Bu Mella-n- a of tho prison rules, and for this othand arson the chief weapons of the Miss Vera Hawkins was the guest a Hotchklss gun son ure distinguished from the the Turks left ers. fiendishly determined Insurgents. of Misses MaudIe.ond Viola Wad with a largo quantity of ammuniPekln are the piv- dle, of near Victor schoolhouse, re tion. There were numerous traces After this, however, all tho men Wu Chang and will wear dark blue suits. The otal points of the war. China, at cently. of bodies being carried away. Eight Wu Chang. Is a republic, proclaimed Mrs. N. B. Salmon and son For bodies which had been left behind stripes bave been kept this long because of the work being done around In Pekln the Manchu est, of Andersonvllle, yesterday. visited her were burled. aldynasty, by countless royal edicts, .brother, Mr. David Allen, last Sat Two of the three gendarmes cap the prison, which might have of the urday and Sunday. extermination lowed some of them to escape. Now is directing tured at Zanzur by the Turks have rebels. Mr. and Mrs. Nail and little been released' half dead, having the walls around tho prison are prevails daughter, of Island, visited of panic A condition Mrs. been given 250 lashes with a complete and there Is no danger of escape. within the Manchu court. Extraor- Nail's sister, Mrs. Thomas Chlnn, scourge. The third was hanged. have also Other improvements dinary precautions have been taken several days last week. Abdul of Ahmed, one of tho. sur been made recently, one of which to protect the Prince Regent in the vivors, said: prison Good Fann For Sole. fear of an attempt at assassination. "We wore nt Zanzur on police was the establishment of tho Containing Co acres, on Beaver duty when 20 troopers and 2 off- band and orchestra. Concerts are The imperial household Is In comgiven every Sunday and are attend Dam and Hartford pike, one-ha- lf plete disorder. icers came in, the night, made us ed by large numbers of Atlantlans. The war offlcials are encountering mile from Beaver Dam. Good prisoners and took us to the Turkhouse, good outbuildings, S ish camp, a two hours' ride from Another Innovation has 'been the esgreat dlfflculty in moving troops to tablishment of. a prison baseball the revolutionary centers, owing to acres In woodland. Plenty of water. Zanzur. games have already the precautions taken by the rebels and fruits of all kinds. Also will Pasha, command league. Several "There Munhlr to cripple the railroads except be- sell horses, cattle, htigs and farming er of the Turkish forces In Tripoli, been played and the Interest has be tween points which they wish to Implements. For further particu- questioned us nbout the strength of come Intense. The prisoners have also become reach themselves. lars call on tho Italian troops, and ordered us greatly wrought up over the world JOSEPH R. WILLIAMS, Little sympathy Is expressed for to be flogged." p series, and are carefully watching 39t4 Beaver Dam, Ky. the Manchu throne. The educated It Is expected that the last,, 20 are completely In accord Chinese transports, with the expeditionary the papers to see how the games are COBCORD. going. with the revolution. forces aboard, will arrive at Tripoli Oct. 1G. Mr. Boone Peyton, of Incoming dispatches that evade This expedition in late Yoir Votes Solicited. the Government censor Indicate sev- Olaton, was through this neighbor- cludes 15,000 men and mombers of Somo unknown frjend has placed hood Friday, looking for tie timber. new uprisings. eral general staff. Seven aeroplanes me In nomination as one of the conMr. L. T. Barnes went to Beaver the The Viceroy of Nankin has teleare Included in the equipment. testants for the piano to be given graphed for more troops, plainly ex- Dam Saturday, returning Sunday. away by Messrs. Fair & Co., and as Imperial auMr. Joe Snell and family, of Wilpressing his doubt that "DEVIL ANSE" HATFIELD I am absent from home teaching thority can be maintained In his liams Mines, are spending the week DROPS UX FOR RELIGION school, I take this method of rewith Mrs. Snell'a parents, Mr. and province. questing my friends to vote for mo Similar advices have been receiv- Mrs. J. Allen. Logan, W. Va Oct. 14. Anso when purchasing goocjs at Fair & Tho little child of Mr. B. O. FosCanton, whero an outbreak ed from Hatfield, known throughout Ken- Co. '8 Btorel Any favor extended In Upris- ter fell last Friday on a broken jug, is expected at any moment. tucky, West Virginia and Tennessee this way will ho highly appreciated ings with massacres of Manchus are cutting his head. The screams of as "Devil Anse" Hatfield, of and gladly reciprocated when Pad the mother soon brought the nearby reported from Tien Tsln and feud fame, has embracis o'ffered. 42t2 neighbors in. The bleeding was Tlngfu. ed religion. CORA L. THOMASS"ON. "Iron soon stopped and Dr. Duff was callYuan Shi Kal, China's meeting near his At a revival In ed and sewed the cut place up. The man," formerly Commander Jlr.t'j.l.s. homo, at the head of Island creek, army and navy, and little fellow Is getting along nicely. Chief of tho Oct, 10. Several from here at Hatfield made public confession and Mrs. Lesslo Barnes and daughter, who was banished three years ago was baptized by Rev. W. D. Garnett, tended the Democratic speaking at because his power had aroused the Bula Benton, spent Saturday night better known as "Uncle Detsp." Hartford Thursday. jealousy of the Manchus, has been with their cousin, Mrs. Ella Mrs. Settle Whlttaker and childThough of advanced age, Hatftold at Dukehurst. recalled by royal edict and made is able to go nto the mountains ren, of this place, vlsltod her fath still Viceroy of Hupeh and Hunan Provand shoot game, occasionally a bear. er, Mr. Felix Shaver, near Hartford, WYSOX. inces, with orders to proceed to Wu Is Hatfield says he Is tired of feuds. Saturday and Sunday. Kitty Brown Oct. 10. Mrs. royal auChang and Miss Cora Thomasson, who Is very sick and not expected to live of which he has done his share of thority In that city. The decisive many days. the gun work. It's the simple and teaching school near Smallhous, is may be Visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs, battle of the revolution Mrs. LIge Render, of Beaver Dam, quiet life for him from now on! fought there. Joseph Thomasson, here. Is at the bedside of her mother, By the same Imperial edict Yuan Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Bennett, of A Curious Hnlf-CoiMrs. Kitty Brown. Shi Kal will have the assistance of Several years ago Mr. Bunyan Beda, visited their daughter, Mrs. Mrs. Samantha Shultz, of Provo, Admiral Sah Cheng Ping, command- Ky., is visiting relatives In this com- Wells found on tho Wells farm (old Molllo Ellis, hero Friday. er of tho navy, and General Yin munity. Mr. Joe Bradley, wife and two Tom Taylor place) about two miles Tchang, commander of the Army east of Hartford, a curious "half-dolla- children, of Owensboro, aro visiting Miss Ellen Hunt, of Rochester, of the North. Tho edict also orders visited Miss Pearl Davenport Saturof rather ancient mintage. Mr. Joe Thomasson and family. supercede Tsen Shuan Suan that Born, to Mr. and Mrs. J. W. FosIt Is a half of a dollar, day and Sunday. General Chao Erh Feng as commorning, a Mr. and Mrs. Layton Williams, of as It Is part of a Spanish dollar cut ter, last Wednesday girl. mander of tho military forces In Paradise, visited Mr. and Mrs. A. J. half In two. The date of mintage seven-poun- d Szechuan Province. Miss Pearl Easterday, is 1795. The outsido is evidently of who has Davenport Saturday and Sunday. The first step by Yuan Shi Kal Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Shull, of pure silver, but the inner material been visiting relatives in Carrol of Wu will be tho bombardment , vlBlted their aunt, Mrs. seems to be copper. In those days' county for the last two months, has Chang. The residents of that city Kitty "change" was scarce and It was a returned home, and reports a pleasBrown, Sunday. are already fleeing for safety.. 'common custom to cut coins half In ant time while gone. Mr. and Mrs. John Knight and Great fear Is Telt for the foreign family, of Cool Springs, visited their ,tw0. Mr. Tallle Carson, wlfo and little Wu Chang and of residents, both of was picked daughter Bodeno, visited his father This Spanish half-coi- n mother, Mrs. R. V. Davenport, SatTho foreign Consuls at Honkow. up very near whore the first fort of and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Alec Car Sunday. city havo requested tho urday and tho latter Ky., Hartford stood many years ago, and son, Saturday. Rev. Friend, of Horse Cave, diplomatic bodies to make represenMr. Henry TInsley, of Beda, and is holding a series of meetings at In the vicinity where fights with In to the Chlneso Government tations dians were common and frequent. Miss Audry Rowe, of Centertown, church. Christian There has nsklng that the bombardment be tho It Is now tho property' of Dr. E. W. were quietly married Sunday after been ono addition to the church. conducted so as not to endanger the Eldrldge Brown, of Ford, of Hartford, who purchased noon at. two ociock, at tne borne of Mr. and Mrs. foreigners. Mr, Reuben Leisure, near here, SevMcHenry, are visiting friends and It Monday from Mr. Wells. eral wero present to witness the ceryour relatives here and attending the In the chill season see that emony. DENIES THAW IS TO BE liver is active Any derangement meeting. SET FREE STILL CRAZY Mr. Ney Rowan and wife spent organ opens the door for and Mrs. A. J. Davenport atMr. in that Sunday with Mrs. Rowan's father malarial germs. An occasional dose tended the baptizing near Paradise Newburgh, N. Y., Oct, 16. Per- and mother, Mr. and Mrs. W. C, of HBRBINE Is all that is necessary Jojit Friday. sistent reports that Harry Thaw's Bennett, at Beda. to keep the liver In sound working release from the Matteawan Asylum Mrs. Lucy Tanner is visiting her Gives Aid to Strikers. . condition. Prlco Cue. Sold by HartSometlmeq liver, kidneys and Is expected within the next threo daughter, Mrs. Walter Hedrlck, at ford Drug Co., Hartford Ky Donogo on a strike and months are denied by Dr. James V. Hartford. m bowels seem to van & Co.f Beaver Dam, Ky. Mrs. Etta Plrtlo and children, of refuse to work right Then you May, superintendent of the InstituNocreok, visited her sister.ln-law- . need those pleasant little strike- tion. BEAVER DAM. "I can state most positively that Mrs. Lattie Henln, here Saturday. Oct, 16. Miss Etta Austin, step- breakers Dr. King's New Life daughter of Mrs. S. P. Taylor, after Pills to give them natural aid and Thaw will not bo ..released betyre a long Illness of heart trouble, died gontly compel proper action. Ex- January 1, or for Bomo time atttf," on tho evening of the 14th at tho cellent health soon follows. Try said Dr. May. "Since I have Sad home of Mr. 8. P. Taylor. After them. 25c at James H. Williams, charge here elate August, not J( MCMi fjitoetJbe for The Jfawtferft BtraM. funeral services conducted by her Hartford, Ky, i The Hartjord Herald III ?r!HBPTISMDFFIBE ' The Gloak House half-brothe- " to-d- M a, n, anti-Manch- ht Of the Green River Territory WE have held this distinction for years and this year will be no ex- five-roo- m ception to the rule. We have the grandest display of all the new things in Ladies', Misses any Children's Cloaks ever shown by us. We have always satisfied you from our collection. We are prepared to do it now. More New Styles and ", a Greater Variety . of Fabricss than we have ever shown. The New Sailor Collars Rough wov- oy en fabrics in gray and tan stripes and mixtures. Plushes and Blacks in every style and trimming. . MOTHERS: Come here for your children's Cloaks. We have what you want. We are sold distributors of the famous PakerfcuTBts We take a special interest in furnishing the best makes, the best materials and the best styjesl n. r" sure-enou- Ladies' Cloaks Misses' Cloaks Children's Cloaks , $3 to $30 $2 to $15 $2 to $10 We want you to see our Showings E. P. Barnes & Bro. BEAVER DAM, KENTUCKY. COME TO-WJNDE- E MERCANTILE COMPANY Vi 3? -- V.oV Anything & !; . You Need in GEJERL MERCHANDISE Respectfully, TtiSceire'alwayB bargains to be had at our Largo Store. ' DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO., DUNDEE, KENTUCKY. -L piuaVt J AttpMcf ue ' .M . '. "--- -- - v - - L n H'AJ - - - ' - J.