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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 14, 1912
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 14, 1912 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912021401_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): February 14, 1912 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1912 $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. a I 'V- THE HRTFQJRD HERALD , 1 a Subscription $1 Per Ymnftj&AdiHfaoe. "I Cww, Ik hnl f i Koij Ewk," .thjJAll Siww-LaitKria- t Hj Back." 17 Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. NO. 7 Ramsey boys by Schural Barfleld, a negro, a few weeks ago. Since then there has been a disposition on the part of a fow whites to force nil negroes out of the county. 88th YEAR. " i est and finest sort of wwh, about one day out of. M$, thirty, AGE-OL-D DYNASTY days but that, the' other tweap-Mriewould be hell for hi la:" At the railroad statM, Burrte ReYIELDS UP POWER iterated thd statement wkleh be had made to the Court at ,tee time he was sentenced, saylnrcthat he wa lnaeMftt of MT wrong-do-Ai.'Hcndrson, in Pokirfft entirelythe ease and mi In no way Edict of Abdication Issued 1b with the pol4nlng of the by Manchus. Murder Cast.. lly: He said: "Some day the beks of all will be opeaed up and ACeHIES BLANCHE H0T5TER the accounts of each balanced. At VAST EMPIRE TfflUi5FOR10 that time, my record will bo clear ant bright, but the record of at d least one other will be Into a Republic Sarredder tif Complicity in Crime-- Girl , x HJKijEfORi), KY., WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 14. 1912 IWM ' ... SINBU1S :Baahfng bread and growing corn as the President eats gome of Miss Ed- meads' bread he will declare hor the beitpread baker In the country, Tqls young lady, who looks to be net pore than nine years, has been , 535,000 DINNERS. a party 1 for three years. The Is In charge of Professor F. C. Biitwp, of Ames Agricultural oCl- lejwjand Mrs. Edmonds, mother of $6EK WAGES Are Examples of Inequal- ity of Living. , ihcj pim:pahatioVfor confederate reunion Mls'LoIse. V . WGJK8T WEATHER IS OVER, SAYS WEATHER BUREAU blood-staine- Finally Loses Faith in Him. andblack." ij THE PRISONER TALKS OF WIFE convinced that ho was a cowardly degenerate, fallen so low that, not ' Henderson, Ky., Fob. 9, Philip content with murder, would still at4V E. BurrU, charged with the murder tempt to throw the blame on the one perron who had 'sought to bei of Henry Royster, the brother of. the girl to whom he was engaged to be lieve In film. married, and Rctta Davis, a colored serVant In the, Roystor home, was COL. E. 1'piiK JOHNSON COMPLIMENTS HERALD "found guilty by a Jury here - and was given a sentence of life lm. Louisville, Ky., Feb. 9, 1912. .prlsonment. The Jury had the case Editors Hartford Herald, Hart. for exactly two hours and twenty-v.nv- e minutes and op. the. 'first' ballot ford, Ky My Dear Friends: I do the voting was eleven' for the life not know which of you to thnnk for sentence and one for the death pen- a very pleasant reference to myself alty. The case went to the Jury at and my work as a historian which 1:49 o'clock, and the verdict was appeared in your paper of the 7th brought Into court at 4:15 o'clock. instant, therefore I thank you both. Thero was an Immense crowd In It is vety gratifying to an old fellow y the court room during the trial and when ho Is remembered kindly by much Interest In tho case was main- "tho boys' who are wearing, tained during tho time that the jury the harness of active newspaper was considering Its verdict. Before men, which It was his pleasure td' the Jury reported.the Court request- wear In the days when he was ed that the crowd make no demon- -' younger. In my tlmo, I havo taken very stratlon, whatever verdict was rendered. There were numorous signs many news Items from The Herald that the verdict, did not meet with and It is pleasant to obsorve, from the approval of the crowd, the mem. tho copy you klndlyijent me, that bors of which wero expecting that the news fedltorsvamong your ex- the death penalty would be Imposed. changes can stj)rpnd'in Us columns The offense for which Burrls was matter wqrtny tneir attention. For tho sake of old times, I am convicted was the poisoning of Hen-t- y ry Royster and Retta Davis, and at going to make one more clipping tho same time that he, caused their from Tho Herald, but as I have no death lio administered a"' quantity of newspaper In which to print It, I shalUnle- lUcarefully awayswlth bth. ,beeri!that had previously been from the other members of the or kindly expressions Royster household, with trib excep- newspaper men of tho State-whtion of Blanche Royster, to whom havo for many years been so kind to me as to make me their lasting he was engaged. It was brought out' in the testi- debtor. Again thanking you and wishing mony that Burris .had threatened member's of the household for you both and for The Herald the other nnd ho had also been receiving the fullest success and happiness, Sincerely your friend, Royster. I am Blanche money from B. POLK JOHNSON. Blanche Royster know that Burrls had a living wife, but expocted that 8ho would marry the defendant as TERRIBLE DEATH OF to-da- y, -o Miss Royster was told of the statement that was made to the nowspapers by Burrls and burst Into tears, saying that she was now fully of the Throne is conditional. CHINA IS NOW A Un- REPUBLIC Pckln, Feb. 12. After centuries of absolute rule.the Manchu dynasty yielded up its power at noon and abdicated the throno of China In favor of a representative form of to-d- ay & . 7 t ' soon ns tho first wife died. Since "the arrest of Burris, his wife died of tuberculosis In Tennessee. Burris Accuses RUinelie Royster. Ky Fob. 10. DeHenderson, by friends and with no apserted parent courage remaining in him, after being sentenced to serve a term of life Imprisonment for the murder of Henry Royster at Rob-ard- s, Philip E. Burrls, handcuffed to a follow prisoner and walking between Deputy. Sheriffs Marshall Royster and Fred Durbln, the for mer a cousin or toe murncreu Doy, .boarded a train here at 1:30 o'clock this afternoon and was taken to tho Eddyvlllo penitentiary. During tho five days' trial of tho case, although everyone believed that Burris was the perpetrator of the dastardly poisoning, he was in a way for the splendid nerve that he maintained, but when the sentence was pronounced and he stated that he was going to a life sentence to shield another, whom he knew had committed thei crime, it was seen that all his nerve and seeming courage and fearlessness had deserted him and that he was the Weakest sort of a craven. In an Interview given out by Burrls before he was taken from the Jail, he Btated.that Blanche Royster Ho had administered the' poison. hurled tho bitterest denunciation against tho youiig woman and said that her soul was mean and black. He said that she had insisted on his killing the Royster family and that he had prevented It on moro than one occasion. -When the prisoner and escort were ready to go to tbo Jail, Burris absolutely 'declined to walk, saying that he was afraid ho Would he shot. a short tlmb before ho had stated that he would not have caved a snap of his fingers. If the .sentence had been; death and he would have gone to the chair. Ho stated, how ever, that It was hard for a man to liavo to suffer for a crlmo that he had never committed. Tn speaking of his wlfo who died Jn ,Tnno?see slnco ho has been In the Henderson county Jail, BurrU Bald that at tlme3 sho was tho "dear ed AX INVALID MOTHER Lawrenceburg, Ky., Feb. 11. Despite the efforts of her little daughter to savo her, Mrs. Robort Taylor, wife of a section foreman for the railway, was burned to Southern death In her homo at Salvlsa, Mercer county, late last night. Mrs. Taylor and her daughter were alono In the house when her clothing became Ignited as she sat In front of an, open fireplace. She wag partly paralyzed and her clothing burned so quickly that her daughter wob unable to extinguish he flames before she had Buffered burns from which sho died. The child, who Is only eight years old, provented the house from burn ing and then ran to the homo of neighbors to whom sho sobbed the 'story of her mother's death. These persons thinking that tho daughter might be mistaken summoned a physician In the hope that Mrs. Taylor might bo saved, but when they arrived at tho home they found she v was dead. Mr. Taylor was prostrated when he returned home later. Ho said that ho had Intended not leaving the house .earlier in the evening and' then decided to go to the downtown section for only a short tlmo, but had been delayed. Mrs. Taylor formerly 'lived at Norwood, Ky and the body will be taken there lor Intorment. Tax Notice ' " : All persons knowing themselves lndobted to the town of Hartford for taxes for the' years of 1909, 1910 and 1911, or for either year, will call at my office at First Nation, al Bank and settle and theroby savo cost of lovy and sale. Please give this your prompt attenlon, as the matter must bo closed up at once. J. P. STEVENS, M. T. H. 4tf government. This was proclaimed in three simultaneous edicts; tho first announcing tho abdication; tho second declaring that the throne accepted tho Republicr'while the third approved all the conditions agreed upon by Premier and tho Republicans. DYING .MAN'S PRAYER This edict, approving of all the SURELY ANSWERED agreed upon by conditions and the Republican repreMafflen, Mass., Feb. 10. With sentatives, created even moro as- tears of joy streaming from eyes to tonishment. It had been expected Which sight had been restored mithat the .Manchus would demand raculously after eight years of conditions which would safeguard blindness, Mortimer Harrington, 75 many of their privileges, but. ac- years vpld, died here last night. For cording to the proclamation, their weeks during his last Illness surrender is unconditional. prayed continuously that lie The third edict Informed the might fcec the mombers of his family viceroys and provincial Governors once more before he died. A fow of tho retirement of the throne from hours beforo his death he suddenly political power and instructed them 'sat up In bed and cried: "I see! to continue doing their duty and to I so'ei" preserve order throughout tho land. Tho family gnthored around, and It declared that the step taken by one' by ono thu dying man recogniztho throno waj In order to meet the ed his loved ones. Tho respite from wishes of the people. his blindness was brief, but Harri's abdication of the Chi- son .died with n smile on his face. nese throne by Pu Yl, tho child Em Jill- ''- HICKETTS. peror, bringB end the pffWerTurr Hoover, Feb. 11. Mr. Rannle Manchu dynasty which, has reigned y In China slnco 1G44. Tho boy ruler from Oregon, has returned to to raako Ills home for awhile. has been on tho throno slnco Novem. Mr. Willie Daniel has moved into bor'14, 1908, when the Emperor Kwang Su, his uncle, died. His Mr. Energy Moore's house to make father, Prince Chun, was appointed a crop this year. Mr. Joe Griffin, of Central drove, regent and was the chief figure In spent Saturday night nnd Sunday China for three years. Surrounded by a large number of night with his father here. Mr. Jim I'atton was in.Olatou princes of the Imperial clan and Manchu officials with reactionary Saturday on business. Mr. Fred Patton was In Beaver Ideas, tho regent wan brought face Dam and Hartford Saturday on busto face with a revolutionary movement In favor of modern reforms. iness. Mr. Emmet O.rllTln, who Is on the Ho endeavored to placate both par-tic- s, but ended by causing general sick list, is no better. Tho leap-yeparty at Mr. Thud dissatisfaction which led, to his resBarnard's last week was lnrgely atignation on December ,C, 1911. The promise of n constitutional tended and all reported a good time. Messrs. Bud and Lawrence Bargovernment made bv the Dowager Empress on her death-be- d In 1908 nard have moved their sawmill back was not fulfilled in any way until to the old mill place, Just below May, last year. In that month an their coal bank. Imperial edict abolished the old grand council, which together with WEARS DIAMONDS ON HEELS OF HER SLIPPERS the court held absolute power, and o. constitutional cabinet. substituted Washington, Feb. 10. Mrs. C. H. Revolutionary Ideas had been n winter spreading in tho meantime and tho Anthony, of Muncle, Ind., surpassvisitor in Washington, has southern provinces declared against ed Mrs. Nicholas Longworth in the continuation of Manchu rule unique shoe heels. Mrs.Anthony was and broke Into open revolt. After the cynosure of all eyes at the much fighting, the revolutionists reception Tuesday proclaimed a republic at Nanking in White House night, for although the people are December and Dr. Sun Yat Sen heels Mrs. used to tho the presidency on December Longworth wears on her evening 29. slippers, they were dazzled to see Negotiations botween tho Repubtho heels of Mrs. Anthony's licans and the Imperialisms follow- that slippers were studded with diaed and an armistice was arranged. which wero monds. The slippers, This was not strictly observed, but gown, worn with an omerald-grco- n the negotiations continued with tho trimmed with Duchesse lace, were result that the Manchu rulers, see- made of tho same lace, and between ing that China proper was almost also entirely In favor of tho Republican the meshes of the lace, which brilheels, shone the Idea and that the outlying depend covered the liant stones. encies of Tibet, Turkestan, Mongol- has gono Mrs. Mrs. Anthony la and Manchuria wero' breaking away, decided that It was their best Longworth ono better, too, becauso policy to yield to tho popular de- she wears tho ornnto heels on her walking shoes, while Mrs. Long-wort- h mand and abdicate from power. keeps hors strictly for oven-ln- g wear. Mrs. Anthony wore on F MISS TO HAKE BREAD FOR TAFT street nnd Connecticut avenue the other day a brown velvet 'suit, tho be10. LoIbo heels of her brown velvet shoes Washington, Feb. ing set with rows of brilliants. Edmonds,- eleven years old, accomYuan-Shl-Kai Yuan-Shi-Kal Har-rlngtoi To-dayto-a- n Ken-luckar cut-glass , NINE-YEAR-OL- D Washington, Feb. 11. The most severe and protracted cold spell of many years probably will bo broken this week, and the unusual winter which has partially paralyzed transportation on land and sea, taken many lives, and caused untold suffering In all parts of the country, will give way to more seasonable temperatures. Observeis of tho weather bureau do not promlso there will be no more cold wavos thls;winter, but they predict that the next week or ten davs will bo the forerunner of a spell of moderate weather. At times, bqlow zero was recorded as far South as Tennessee, Arkansas, Northern Texas and Oklahoma, and frosts wero recorded in Miami Florida, whero they rarely occur. Macon, Ga... Feb. 10. (Special) Gen. V. E. Mlckle, Chief of Staff of the United Confederate Veterans, on Tuesday vislteu the city o' MaIS POSSIBLE BRROTECIION" con, tlrei Eeat or the Confederate Reunion to bo hold .May and during his sojourn In this city, gave In neantlme Everything But out an Interview regarding plans for the Reunion. General Mlckle favors the big Y. M. C. A. building, Workingman'sWages In this city, as general division is Increasing. headquarters. The Smith Building nt Central City Park, where will be WEALTH AND POVERTY MIXED held tho encampment, was selected 7-- 9, (By C. H. Tavenncr. Herald Cor.) Washington, Feb. 10. While 30, 000 men, women and children mill workers at Lawrence, Mass., were out of work because of a strike to prevent a cut In their $G, $7 and $8 a week wases, Mr3. Evalyn Walsh McLean, mcthcr of tho baby that is htlr to JIOO.000,000, gave a $33,-00- 0 dinner to 50 guests at Washington, the nation's capital. The hostess at this banquet wore diamonds that actuallv cost moro than hnlf million dollars. In hnr hair was displayed the famous , which cost and at hor throat another celebrated gem, "Star of the Kast," which Is even larger than the Hope diamond. Tho cost per plate at tho MoLoan dinner was $700. One Item hi the expense was for 4,000 yellow lllllns Imported from abroad nt $2 each. One of tho highest paid mill workers at Lawrence would have to work 84 years to earn the cost of thnt banquet. The carnjng of a dozen mill workers for half a century would not purchase tho gems worn by Mrs. McLean. A Lawrence worker would have to lnbor twenty years to pay for the yellow Hllles alone. The strike of the men, womcr. ard childron nt Lawrence, nnd the $700 n plate dinner at Washington, is a striking example of conditions existing under a syatem of excessive protection In tho year of our Lord, 1912. Neither the Lawrence strike nor tho McLean dlnnor nro exceptions. They are but samples of many similar illustrntlous which could he cited If space permitted. Only recently, Wm. M. Wood, the head of tho Woolon Trust, whos? employes are no on a strike nt Lcwrcncc, was arrcste-- for knocking down and running over a pedestrian with his automobile. When arraigned In court he was asked how many automobiles ho owned, and his reply was that ho did not know. Imagine a man so rich that ho doesn't know how many auto3 he has on hand! Fortunes which make it possible for one woman to wear half a million dollars' worth of diamonds at man ono time, and which enable to own so many automobiles he Is unablo to keep track of them, necessarily como through the power to place an artificial price on tho things which the common people must havo In order to live. It Is significant, tin this connection, that tho tariff, the cost of living, S700 a plate dinners everything but tho worklngman's wages havo Increased hand In hand, revealing the Intimate relationship of one to the other. "Hope-dlamond- departmental headquarters. General Mlckle stated that tho names of the sponsors for tho Reunion would bo announced shortly. Grert praise was also given Macon citizens for the work already done In preparation fothe big na - event. Especial commendation was made bv General Mlckle o' the work of the ladles of H" city, tho Executive Committee and the Puh-l'clDepartment. General Mlckle left for his home In New Orleans at four o'clock Tuosdny afternoon. ty picK.vnss. Feb. 12. Rev. N. I!. Watson failed' lb fill liis regular appointment here yesterday. Dr. D. Plummcr and son Earl went to Hartford last Friday. Miss Mary Cascbler has recovered from a severe attack of throat trouble. Mr. and Mrs. David Tumor's oldest boy, who has been sick of pneumonia for some time, Is no better. Hobdy, who has been Mrs. Visiting her son near here, returned to her homo at Williams Mines Saturday. Mr. S. N. Patterson, of McIIenry, visited relatives near bore rocently. Messrs. H. C. McCrocklln. R. Simmons and J. D. Baugh, of tin Little Bend, passed by here Thursday with a carload of hogs, taklnjf thorn to Beaver Dam to ho shipped. .Miss .Mary Rogers, will teach a spring school at Shultztown, commencing the 20th of this month. Mr. A. I'attorson went to Hartford Miss Barbary Sliultz has been vlp- Itlng relatives at Ileavcr Dam tin past two weeks. Mcasrs. Robert and O. Penly, of Piovo. lsltcd Mr. Morgan Penly u i! d fam"y, nop.r h"- , r,oei,t'v. y. - I RUtRKTT'S FERRY. Feb. 12. Mr. Slaughter Good-meof this place, has bought a farm near Cane Ford, Grayson county, and has moved to same. Born, to tho wife of Wm. M. Foreman, last week, a fine boy. Mr. Henry Thomas has sold his farm, near the Catholic church, to .Mr. Clyde Mngnu nnd Mr. Thomas and his daughter, Mrs. Berkley, will move to Narrows. Mr. G. M. Harrison, who has been sick forseveinl months, Is Improving blowly. Mr. Joseph Mltchel, who has been quite 111 of heart trouble, Is some better. Mrs. Owen Qulsenberry, of this place, who has had rheumatism for some time, is Improving. Mr. Ed Foreman Is still confined to his room from tho effects of a saw-lofalling on him. n, CKRALVO. Feb. 12. Miss" Sallle Barnard, after spending several days with For Sail' or Hvchiiiixe. Tbo noted stallion Klngdon, by her sister, Mrs, Mattle James, of General Wilkes sire of Geo. Mutauzas, has returned home. Mr. Will Curtis has moved to the S. 2:084, Bessie Wilkes 2:17, and 2.' moro. Is sound nnd nas no Virgil Curtis farm, near here. Mr. nnd Mis. Leslie Miles, of faults 7 years old. Will sell for visited relatives $450 or exchange for pair splcudld Louisville, here Sunday. mules or good mares. GEO. McMANAMA Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Wood visited Calhoun, Ky. 5t4 Mr. nnd Mrs. S. T. Hunter, of Small-hou- s, 2:21, NO NEED OF TROOPS IN FULTON COUNTY last Thursday. Mr. John' Durham has moved to tho Shiewsborry farm, near South ten boys, winners In a To My Friends. contestJjj, Iowa, has Having accepted a position in arrlvod In WashUftton to see tho Bloomfleld, Ind., It was necessary sjghts. for me to leavo at once, and I was Miss Edmonds Is ono of the elev also called away sooner than I had en best in the Stato expected on account of tho death of of the battleship of Iowa, tho champion bread maker, my brother. Being unablo to call Tho wreck go to tho White House on my frlenda and tell them goodby, Maine;, was floated free of tho mud nnd she will and demonstrate to President Taft I tako this method of extending to In Havana harbor and soon will be and his cooIcb how to make good them ono and all my very best outside tho cofferdam. corn-growicorn-growe- rs panied; by- bread. wishes. BEN T. TAYLOR. rTVtrt iiin Knva Cn fVirt nnctv niA cm Id Kentucky has 35 pauper counties Hartford, Ky. out of tbo 119. Only 34 are self- - to bb the befl't corn growers In tho r supporting. West. They claim, too, that when For classy Job printing: Tho Herald Hickman, Ky., Fob. 10. The report sont out from Paducah that Gov. McCreary had been nsked to to Fulton county to send troops suppress Is without lawlessness obably foundation In fact and grew out of. the fact Gov. McCreary has been requested to offer n reward for tho arrest of tho unknown murderers of R. J. Bugg, who was killed two years a'go. Judge Nay-lsaid that he was able to handlo any Bltuatlon that Is likely to develop without calling upon tho Governor for military aid. Tho lmmedlato cause of tho present unrest is tho killing of the two or Carrolltou. Mrs. ZUla Barnard fell and Bpralned her ankle very badly last week. Little Mies Tholfra Tlfls. of Nelson, Is visiting' Mrs. (W. D. Barnard, of this place, Owlngs bill, appropriating for new buildings at tho Kentucky Stato Fair Grounds, was defeated In tho House by a vote of 43 to 41. A motion to reconsldor carried, and tho frlenda of tho S'ato Fair hope to reverse tho action. Tho Kentucky Children's Homo Soclatv got an Increased appropriation of $20,000. Tho $GG,000 Q.L (!- - .i TAGK TWO. THE HARTFORD HERALD whether the man loves the dog or not; a dog submit to any and all impositions without protest; tu dog does not consider itself a man's oqual; a dog lets n man have his own way; a dog doesn't want to voto; a dog is Just as glad to see a man when he gets in at 3 o'clock in the morning, almost holpfess, as if he badri'b gone out at all; a dog has no mother in sight, and a dog can't talk back can't talk back, mind you, nor won't talk back; That is why a man likes a dog." NeW WEDNESDAY, FHB. 14, 1?1. Stand of tho community from ouc hand to the other. Horptofora, the counties SAYS THE TRUST GOOD DEEDS OF have provided homes to which cl lldrcn falling of support by their parents have been consigned oy the FLOGS CONVICTS WILLIAM GOEBEL Juvenile Court. Tho average cost of such support Is founa to bo $10 r a month for each child. If now tho proper of children can be left underinothors, Investigator Tells Out Like home Influence with their thoro Is surely nn economic advanCommittee. Heavens, tage In distributing the money in this way. BRIGHTER Tho mothers' penilnn of Illinois THE 0FFENSE5JLL TRIFLING PASSES ASJIME tu communism Is an experiment which appeals to reiiou as well as Beautiful Tribute of Mr.Stan-le- y to seiulntent, and which a'sirls with Men are Given 15 Lashes for Uoj.,1 Post. good foiplse. URGED TO - 61 LEAF Gen- THE MUD Stars Stanley type of Tobacco for eral Market, BECAUSE ed; an egg a day old will be submerged, but wllj not sink, while the 'strictly fresh'egg"'' which every grocerjrman claims to sell, ought to sink to the bottom like a stone! These phases are due to a decrease In tho density of an egg as it ages, a decrease occasioned bjr the evaporation of water through the pores of the shell. . the OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO ' IT IS MOST SALABLE Im- York rforald. 0000000000000 Is O TIPS FROM TEXAS. 0 0,0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O Yellow Pryor, Henderson to Kentucky's Martyred Governor. DYING oooooqocooooooo o ooooooooooooooooo To r -.- - 0 strength and .skill. . Failure to Accomplish Tasks Expected.- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Health, wealth and wisdom are promised to the Individual who goes to bed early and gets up early. This axiom was written by ono of the ancestors vof the modern helpful adviser who tello how fond ho is of his employees who do not watch tho clock and who go to work n few minutes too early and quit a few minutes too late, thus giving Him something extra. History does not record tho names of anv of theso encouraging gentlemen who stuffed tho pay 'envelope any thicker than tho contract called for. However, that has nothing to do with health. Health may bo obtained by sleeping out of doors all the time. Also, to presorvo health, you should aV wavs sleep under shelter. Health may bo secured by eating nothing but vegetables. Also, no man may expect to bo strong and vigorous unless he cats plenty of meat. Health is that which the palo person in tho vegetarian restaurant Is pursuing, but you can't got up speed on u handful of nuts and a glass of water. Health Is what you pay tho doctor S2 a visit to tell you yq,u have impaired. Lots of people drink your health, thereby Impairing their own. Anything you llko to do or to eat Is bad for your health. It Is better to travel with your health than to allow It to elude you so that you will havo to travel for Chicago Post. It. Deafness Cannot be Cured as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness- Is caused by nn Inflamed condition of tha mucous lining of tho Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and Is when it Is entirely closed, Deafc.i-s- s tho result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to ltj normal condition, hearing will bo destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured byHall's Send for circulars, Catarrh Cure. by local applications, - HEALTH. O proved and Lily Are Good Types. OF INTEREST TO FARMERS cast a weight farthest; to Washington, Feb. 9. Cruelties Lieutenant Governor McDormott vault i tar highest' to stick a bull ami Congressman A. O. Stanley, of downward between the shoulder of the United States Steel CorporaHenderson, were the speakers at tho blades, clean to tha heart these tion toward the convict labor it In Its Southern plants was memorial services In the Kentucky things command applause. by Special InvestiTo llvo a considered lite; to do a rovcnlcd Legislature last week In honor of and a better one gator Shelby Harrison, testifying Cov. William Goebel, Congressman cood Job to meet your brother every before the Stanley committee. Stanley spoke of the great and valIlairlson testified that in May and iant Eorvlccs of Governor Goebel, time you meet anybody; to stand nnd Enid ns an advocate of remedial with your feet In the Inevitable Juno of last year ho entered the Coal and laws for the benoflt of tho people, muck of convention and suck with camp of tho Tennessee tho Governor was 10 years abend of your nostrils tho high air of sane Iron Company In tho Birmingham Ills time. Concluding his eloquent Idealism theso things Justify a district and at that tlmo 360 State man to his own conscience and convicts and 240 county convicts tribute, Mr, Stailcy said: every decent tribunal. "Every once In n while In a cenwere omployed. It Is a man's business to bo strong Ho declared that tho convict latury a statesman arises towerlike above bis peers with a clear and an- and to bo trained. Man Is his own bor system Is primarily responsible ointed vision. It is a great pow-- devil. When ho Is strong enough to for tho making of laws which desalmost divine. Jefferson had It, whip himself, nil other enemies are ignate comparatively trivial acts sind Lincoln had It. It was one of as straw, and may bo laid flat by the as serious In order that- tho ranks of convicts may be swelled. ihc pcculla- characteristics of Wil- nush of a knuckle. The real Is the one In which the musliam Goebel. "The convicts nro divided Into "He wroto his history In tho stat- cles of the soul are made competent. 'task groups' 'according to their material physical condition," he said. "Thoro In tho last analysis, utes of his country. Ho labored for "be lights of tho masses. He sought tasks are wrought by spiritual nro four such classes and at the but oven so, the flesh Is not to time I made the Investigation the to render the common carriers, pubis y to-da- v be-fo- ro GOV. GOEUEL'S WORDS ADEQUATE BLOW TO UNIONISM r, - - gym-raslu- m s; to the citizens for the conduct of soed 'while tho soul stirs within. 3 So let us get both soul and ihelr business. lUo nn rotate of strength and The thought ho wa3 ?. dema Tho big premiums go gogue, a disturber of tho peace, a ' cleanliness. corrupt, selfish fellow.seeklng to ar- to skill, and skill Is the firs, born ray classes against classes the rich from the womb of the Ideal. Skill against the poor, tho employe 13 the child of passion carried with :igalnst the employer, the corpora- iat lenco through many tollsomo tion ngainst the citizens and the cit- days. Tho great man Is strong; the izens against the corporation. "Why, why, at that time, why, In great man Is skilled; not flawless, lils young manhood; why, In the always human, but strong and skillBusiness. vreferment of his mental equipment, ful. in the height of his strength and ULi:SSKI) PHOFANITV vigor, when he had just placed his GLAD TO HEAR SWEARING hand upon the helm of the ship of state, when tho old Commonwealth Dlsljop This is terrible, Captain! and every liber felt the master of Ills mind, the Inspiration of his high is there great danger for us? Tell Ideals; why, nt that time, should he mo truly. car-"?-- lic service corporations, responsible liave been done to death? 1 can say only this: The will of the allseelng Providence Hod Is a mysterious which wo cannot fathom. "When the hour camo which he lmil been expecting for weeks, and the assassin's bullet went crashing through his flesh, ho took It as a matter of course, and in the midst or great agony, In the presence of Ouath, he reached out his arm and took to his marble breast all the suffering and tho oppressed in Kentucky, and in a volco with the rattle of death In Ills throat ho said: 'He lirave and loyal and true to the Kreat common people.' "How long, oh, how long shall Kentucky remain Kentucky? How long shall Kentucky be the brightest star in the constellation of States? How long shall this be the land of the free and the home of the brave the Mecca, tho refugo of all those who seek liberty and freedom? "I do not know, but this I do ltnow, that so long as Kentucky Is Kentucky, so long as tho flag Is unpolled and waves over the land and Ma, so long as our fair daughters succeed their mothers as mothers, so long as a high aspiration remains In every human heart, so long as we shall love purity In women nnd courage In men, so long will William Goobol's heroic figure command the unspeakable reverence of Kentucky and Kentuckfnns ev- erywhere." You nre probably aware that pneumonia always results from a void, but you never hoard of a cold tesultlng from pneumonia when Chamberlain's Cough Remedy was used. Why take tho risk when this remedy may Vor sale A bo had for by all dealers. a trifle? m MOTIIL'lt'K PENSION VKW LAW IX ILLINOIS Thcro Is no more grateful, moro extension of tho pension system than that which Koes Into operation In Illinois this Deserving women, widows week. the tolo support 'of children, are $r to'$10 a month for the maintenance of each child, t bo paid f'om county fundi. Invct'gr.-tlo- n cf tho applicants a3 to need sind j to merit Is mado by of tho .Turrnllo Court, and payment . is mn'le accordingly. It Is reported that In the city of Chicago 40 of Much I'arBlor.orti yestcrlay iccelved checku for amounts ranging fioi SIX to $120. ThIsJfljiotchnrIty n the sensa of KlvIngjrBpmo'tlilngi for nothing; It Is lilmrl." atttugfar of tho obligations truly economic, ed n-- ofT-eljls Itself Is company paid $40 a month for each man of the first cla33. Tho wage scale decreased proportionately until when the last or fourth class was reached tho State received only County convicts $10. no a month. averaged $12. 50 a month." Attorneys for tho Steel Corporation declared that when the present contracts for convicts expire no new contracts will be made. According to Harrison, the men were stripped and flogged unmercifully when they failed to accomplish the tasks set for them. "That was the punishment for tho first offense In Mine No. 12," he said. "If the man persisted In fall ing to accomplish tho labors set, he might be placed In solitary confine" Captain Oh, no, Bishop, we'ro ment for thirty days. "On the other hand, tho company "omlng out o' It all right. Bishop Tell me truly Captain; offered a bonus for all coal mined a certain amount," ho said. vou nre keeping It from us. Tho above "The men are flogged with a storm Is more awful every minute! three-plfive-foleather thong," My wife Is in terror! Tell mo the ho said. worst! many "How licks did they Captain We're all light. Here, strike?" asked Mr. Stanley. Bishop, come hero to the forecastle "Fifteen." and listen down the hole. Do you "Who strlkos them? hear tho sailors down there swearlu tho pay of the com"A ing nnd cursing? That means It's pany."warden all right. When they stop that, Harrison testified that he had then ou may know there's danger never Been a man florged, but had ahead. Their Bishop (fifteen minutes later, seen several afterwards. who has been again to the forecastle backs were black ar.d blue. "Then the Tennesses Coal & Iron to listen down the hole and has come bnck to his wife) Thank Company whips Its own convicts. The men are actually flogged for ofGod, Mary, they're still cursing! fenses like playlnt; golf or tlomlnooi Harper's Weekly. on Sunday." How Cold Allects tin Kidneys. The committee brought out the Avoid taking cold If your kidneys fact that the lawi of Alabama are are sensitive. Cold congests the directly against suci and n m-- v kldnes, throws too much work s'lgHOHted thin have upon them, and weakens their ac- ueei only Isolatol 'as'is. tion. Serious kidney trouble and Asked what advinUge convict oven Bright's disease may result. Is regarded as liavlig over free Strengthen your kldnoys, get rid of 'cbor, Harrison staid : tho pain and soreness, build them "Machine mlnlrj; has equalized up by the timely use of Foley Kid- tho Inexperlenco of convicts. Conney Pills, They will cure any case vict Inbor Is regular and can bo roof kidney or bladder trouble not be- lled on from day to .lay and It is an yond tho reach of medicine. No adequate blow to union l'.bor." medlcino can do moro. For sale by Harrison admitted that ho had all dealers. m talked over tho conditions 'with officials of tho Tennesseo Coal & Iron t . Interruption. Company. Yesterday morning n rather unHo also told how officers of the usual incident occurred In tho Crim- law made thousands by tho convict inal Court room while Judge Mclabor system and by reviving CO Gregor was engaged In charging tho cents n day to feed their charges grand Jury, which disturbed tho digand spending only 7 or 9'cwnfs. nity of the occasion. While the . Court was dilating on an Interesting How to cure a cold Is a question point In his charge, a countryman In which many aro Interested just .with n basket on his arm walked now. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Into tho space between the rostrum has won Its great1 reputation and and tho Jury box, and, looking over Immense sale by Its remarkable tho grand jurors, startled them cures of colds. It can always bo somewhat when he said: "Do any depended upon. For sale by all of you gentlemen want to buy some dealers. m fresh sassafras?" When the Sheriff hastened to romovo him, he said: SUFFRAGETTE EXPLAINS "Oh, excuse mo, I didn't know anyWHY A MAN LIKES A DOG thing was going on." Parkers-bur- g (W. Va.) Sentinel. "Why does a man like a dog?"re-sponde- d the suffragette lady, fierceItching of the skin anywhere on ly, and repeated: "Why does a man 'ho body stops Instantly when rubllko a dog? Well, thcro are nubed vyh BALLARD'S SNOW LINImerous reasons, though a dog is not MENT. Ono or two applications a reasoning being. A dog will lick cures permanently. Price 25c, 50c tho hand that beats It; a dog will and $1.00 per bottle. Sold by Harteat a crust and a bone and bless the ford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky Dongiver! a dog thinks whatever a man ovan & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m does Is right and proper; a dog has no rights Uiata man is bound'to respect; a dog asks no embarrassing FOR FLETCHER'S questions; a dog Is always grateful, no matter for what; a dog does not I apk tho man to stay at home nights; Subscribe for The Hartford Herald, a dog 'is satisfied to Iovo tho man )0 despised. The carcass y, ot free. F, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo.O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for conm stipation, pw'-iU-c- s Ha-rlio- la-h- m It Is Ho Easy To Learn, Too. Nowlywed I didn't see you Sunday. Did you stay home? Oldhubby Yes. My wife taught me a now game called Bushmarah. Newlywed How do you play it? Oldhubby You hang a carpet on a line and seo how many times you can hit It with a stick. WHY HESITATE? To the Tobacco Growers of the Green River District: The question is being asked almost every day, as has been bofore at this time of tho year, by the tobacco growers: Which is tho best typo of tobacco to grow? There aro two matters to consider In answering this question. One Is tho quality and nature of your soil, and tho other is tho trade to which you dispose of your tobacco when ready for market. While wo would not attempt to try to tell which would o tho best variety or type of tobacco to grow, we can tell you, in our Judgment, which would bo the best not to grow, from the experience wo have had slnco we havo been connected with the association. There are two kinds of tobacco grown here, or In this district however, not to a great extent known as the One Sucker and the Tennessee Red, both very undesirable to our customers and if wo expect to maintain an organization, wo ought to use every possible means of catlsfylng our customers. Spcncor county, Ind., slnco sho has been a member of our organization, has grown more of tho narrow leaf type than any other county that belongs to us. Practically speaking, south of the Ohio river the growing of tho One Sucker type,. with the exception of Hancock county, has almost been - eliminated. Owing to the fact that such a large per cent, of tho tobacco grown In Spencer county, Ind., last year was of tho narrow leaf typo, the association was unable to make a sale at tho same prlco of tho tjroad leaf, while, onUho othgr hand, we, had to take, much less money or no sale. While there Is not much grown in this part of the district, tb,o principal part Is grown In Hancock county, and It is our honest opinion that In tho future tho association will not be nblo to get tho same prlco for tho narrow leaf typo that It will for tho broad leaf. As to tho very best to, raise, we cannot say, but wo can name some varieties or types thnt aic very desirable to the tobacco trade, namely: Yellow Pryor, Henderson Improved, and the Lily, nnd on very rich land the Little Hill Is a very desirable kind, being p very thick, heavy tobacco, medium, size, and a most oxcellont manufacturing type. So, In order that wo may be able to maintain ono schedule of prices in this district, we ask the farmers to eliminate the growing of the narrow Iea'f types, and instead, to grow only the bioad leaf... Wo hope this will bo done, not only for the sake of relieving tho Board of Control of being placed In tho embarrassing position of making two schedules of prices the corn-typ- e of tobacco grown all over tho district that suits the trade. '' Respectfully, W. G. RINEY, Pres. WALTER ATHERTON, Sec'y. G. R. T. G. A. Whon a girl is perfectly happy it a sign that she has moro candy in tho box than she has under her . ' bolt. v f There are some people .who do & hot care to hear any man speak un- - f, less he knows how to appeal to tholr J ' prejudices. When Satan goes into good society he probably tries to let on like he Is growing a tall Just for a fad. . thing no young man Another who has an eyo for colors ought to try to match a peroxide blonde ngalnBt r light pocketbook. It haB Just about got so In this country that p. fashionable woman won't have a big heart for fear Bhe can't get her corset on. man Anyway, the who couldn!t write his name with- - 9 out walloping his cheek with his tongue, didn't sign many petitions to accommodate tho petitioners. . Dallas News. ed i A Surprise Illrtlulay Dinner. , On Monday morning, January 22, 1912, a numbor of frlonds and rela- tlvcs of Mrs. Pruo Taylor Cox gath-- " . ered nt her homo, near Cromwell, to. celcbrate'hor 78th birthday. It was' ' a great, surprise to "Aunt Pruo". Sho tbough't Just a fpw of her friends had come to spend tho day with her, until sho went into tho kPchon to make preparations for dlnpcr, and thcro sho saw tho tabloV-loade- d with well filled baskets. And ' as the baskets and friends kept coming, quite a nice dinner was served. Every ono spent a pleasant day and wish for her many more happy -- birthdays. . Mr. and' Those present were: Mrs Jim Cox, Mrs. Silas Stevens and son Glendone, Mrs. John Allen and children Francis and Ethel, Mrs. Carl Taylor and daughter Corlnne, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Taylor and children Audra, Exa, Zeecy and Euva, Mr. and Mrs. John Coleman and son Joe, Mr. and Mrs. Esker Coleman and little daughter Winona, Miss Olive Gordon, Mr. Charles Taylor.t-Mr.'To- m Cox, of .MtPleas-an- t, Mr. Newton Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Smith, of Select. n.VR PPESENT. V Tho Sound Sleep of Good Hrnltli Is not for those suffering from kidney ailments nnd Irregularities. The prompt uso of Foloy Kidney Pills will dispel backache and rheumatism, heal and strengthen core, , weak and ailing kidneys, restoro't normal action, and with t health and strength. Mrs. M. F. Spals-burSterling, 111., says: "I suffered great pain In my back and kidneys, could not sleep at night, and could not raise my hands over my head. But two bottles of Foley Kidney Pills cured me. Pills havo my heartiest endorsement." For salo by all dealers, m y, Fol-Kldney gon," he exclaimed. Herewith none wondered that he remained aboard only three daysv A Short Ride. Jonah entered the whale. "This is tho original water wa- -, BLOCKADED Every Household in Hartford Co-M-- '' rr Children Cry C AS T O R A lfl If you have dizzy spells, attacks of momentary blindness, with ringey Risk if You Accept It. ing noises in the ears, It Is an unfailing sign of a torpid liven a conWe are so positive our remedy dition which brings on some serious will completely relieve constipation, sickness If iiegleced. HERBINE no matter how chronic It may be, Is a powerful liver tonic. It puts that we offer to furnish It free of strength and activity into the liver, all cost if It falls. purifies the bowels and restores a Constipation Is commonly caused feeling of health, vigor and cheerby weakness of tho nerves and mus- fulness. Prlco 50c. Sold by Hartcles of the large Intestine. To ex- ford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., Donpect a cure you must therefore tone ovan & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m up and strengthen those organs and restore them to healthier activ- THE TESTING OF EGGS ity. FOR THEIR FRESHNESS Wo want you to try Rexall Orderlies on our guarantee. They are Whether an egg Is fresh or stale eaten llko candy, and are particu- can bo readily 'enough ascertained larly good for children. Tney seem by holding it up to a lighted candle. to act directly on the nerves and In order to do this, it is best to have muscles of the bowels. Thoy ap- a funnel made of something which parently havo a neutral actldn on will exclude the light, and with the Thoy do not small end at tho eye, look at tho other organs. purge or cause other Inconve- the egg nt tho larger' end, holding nience. Wo will refund your money it directly between jou and tho If thoy do not overcome chronic or light. If a dark spot, however habitual constipation and thus aid small, Is visible, the egg is unfit to to relievo the myriads of associate eat; a fresh egg must appear transor dependent chronic allmentB. Try lucent when held up to a candle. Rexall OrdorltctJi at our risk. Throo Another test Is the buoyancy of tho sizes, 10c, 25c and 5Uc. Sold only egg. A very old egg will rest; on nt our storeThe Rexall Store an ogg salt water Hko James H. Williams, 214 Main St., a week old will float, an egg half a Hartford, Ky Wcok old will float simply immors- - An Offer That Involves no Mon- Should Know How to Resist It. Tho back may ache because the Kidneys are blockaded. Holp the kidneys with their . j work. fcT Tho back will ache no more, Lots of proof that Doan's Kld- noy, Pills do this. It's the best prodf, for It comes from this vicinity. C. W. Bethel, 120C Eleventh St.. Owensboro, Ky says:. "I had ' heard of Doan's Kidney Pills and as I was having lameness across my kidneys, I procurea a box and took thorn carefully as directed. The result was that my trouble dlsan- peared. A relatlvo also suffered from an attack of lumbago that made every movement painful and his kidneys were disordered, t irfS ' slsted upon his taking Doan's Kid' noy Pills and it was wonderful how quickly they disposed of a.i the pain and lameness. In a few davs he was at work and tho kidney dlf- ucuity nan disappeared," . For sale by all dealers. Prlco CO Foster-Milbur- n cantB. Co., Buffalo. New York, "solo agents for the United SUt.cs ' Romombep tho na,me Doan's ' and taka no other. -- . I "" ""' ijmh i ll,.J t y';, .i.....," - 1 . "f WEDNESDAY, FEB, J4, 1- - THE HARTFORD HERALD the fact that If made a cut of closo to $2,000,000 In tho. District of Columbia appropriations, as compared wllh recent years. Despite all of tho efforts to load the bill down with additional appropriations the Increase added In tho house was only $5,150, While the prolonged fight was going on citizens of the District sat In the galleries and swapped sulphurous comments on the militant- Kcntucklan. Chairman Johnson has only begun to fight, and back of him Is a largo rnd growing element of bpth Republican and Democratic members who are getting tired of tho Idea that one city In the country shall bo showered with special favors and shall be permitted to live off the government all of the time, for that Is what it practically amounts to. Chairman Johnson boldly challenges both the Justice and the legality of the " principle under which the government Is milked annually for the benefit of the District. When that principle was first recognized government property approximated 60 per cent of the real estate values of the city, but since then the city has grown and expanded until government property is but a small proportion .or tho total valuation. The Injustice of tho taxpayers of the country paying half the, expense Is apparent to everybody except a typical "half-and-half- PAGE THRiffK. WASHINGTON HAS I FEW FACTS ABOUT PRESIDENTS Which Are Not of eral Knowledge BUCHANAN STAYED TREASURY HOLD Congress Gets Wise to Hoggish-nesof the District. s Gen- IhsufTlciency of the salaries paid to the Judges and Justices or the Federal Courts. But In another nnd bettor respect thoy can bo read with a genuine pride, for they attest that the Republic does not lack for men of tho highest order of ability to give their lifelong work to her for tho love they, bear her and for the New York honor of serving her. World. tho Gave Up Hope "I suffered five years, with awful pains, due to womann, ly troubles," writes Mrs. M. D. McPherson, from N. C. "They grew worse, till I would often faint I could not walk at all, and I had an awful hurting in my side ; also a headache and a backache. I gave up and thought I would die, but my husband urged me to try Cardui, so, I began, and the first bottle helped me. By the time the third bottle was used, I could do all my work. All the people around here said I would die, but Cardui relieved me." Chad-bour- APPETITE HARD TO SATISFY BACHELOR NECESSARY TO REMOVE BOTH OF NEGRO'S EYES The Owensboro Messenger says: Dr. D. M. Griffith performed an operation on Robert Taylor, a colored coal miner, at the city hospital on Tuesday afternoon, In which ho removed both of the negro's eyes. Tho operation was rendered necessary because of an explosion in the Fern Hill coal mine that occurred a week ago Monday. The negro has been at the hospital for tne past week. The accident was tho result of a premature explosion of a charge of powder In the mine, but the negro wns the only one that was injured. It was stated last night that ho was resting well and that he would He was frightdoubtless recover. fully burned about the head and face, and It was thought nt first that ho would not survive his Injuries. Bowling In Green Business University, Bowling Green, Ky. For further particulars call on or address, HARTFORD HERALD. ltf A Kentucky Congressman Leading the Fight Against Excessive Appropriations For the District. The Terro Hauto (Ind.i Star of Jan. 30 says: The everlasting hogglshnesa oftho District of Columbia has at last call ea forth repressive measures from congress. Long ago the District of Columbia and tho city o Washlngion, In paron ticular, acquired a strangle-holtho United States treasury. That hold l'as been slightly broken at this session of congress and tho result Is a succession of howls and protests and angry comments as never toforo have been heard In tho national capital. Congress has been amazingly good t- to tho nation's capital. Money has been poured out in the District to au extent that Is positively astonishing i8 well as grossly unjust to the taxpayers of the United States, who, In the last analysis, nro tho source from which federal revenues originate and who must keep the larder supplied. By an act of 1879, tho legality of hlch never has been conceded, pays half of the cost of running tho District government, halt the cost of street and alloy Improvements, vyater and light bills and all of the multiplied expenses of a great municipality. Not content with that vnexamplod beneficence the District continually comes to congress for more money on ono pretext or othor nnd the complaisant lawmakers have heaped tho platter high, Naturallv tho national capital has como to regard congress as a big, cow that can bo milked whenever sustenance Is wanted, but at last tho cow Is beginning to kick and hold back Its milk. This is creating great disgust and ugly manifestations of HI temper In Washington. An example oj the light In which the federal taxing power is regarded as a municipal asset in the District came out a few days ago when about 1,100 temporary clerks who had been engaged In the compilation of tho Thirteenth census wore dismissed by - Director Durand. They already had been held on for considerably longer r period for which than the they were employed. Merchants Make Protest. The order of dismissal raised a great howl In tho District, not because 1,100 men and women were to turter from a lack of employment but because the merchants and business pcoplo would feel the loss of the money which these people had been paying out at the stores. A crusade was started to secure- another lederal appropriation of 11,000,000 In order that tho clerks might be continued In the service to the end that the storekeeper might enjoy their turther patronage. Ono Washington paper published an Itemized estimate of the loss that would result to various retail Interests In the city If con gress should brazenly refuse to grant Congress did retho appropriation. fuse, on tho ground that the work assigned to these clerks was completed and tho public service did not i equina them any longer, but the city (T of Washington regards this as il thin and veiled excuse to deal tho national capital another blow. Congress Is finally beginning to thow some signs of standing by the people of the United States as against the rapacious greed of the District of Columbia. Representative Ben Johnson cf Kentucky, chairman of the house committee on the District of Columbia, Is the 8partan-llkfigure standing between the treasury-raider- s of the captal and the federal Regardless of politics, treasury. Johnson's firm attitude Is attracting the admiration of men of all parties, and as a pioneer In the direction of breaking up the District's stranglehold on the federal resources he Is 5n receiving the backing of Republicans and Democrats alike. He Is making himself a target of all kinds of attacks, some Insidious and others open, but he refuses to be or bulldozed. cajoled, He Is scathingly assailed every day by the local press and the interests that benefit by excessive appropriations have gone so far as to undertake to break up. the District of Columbia committee by Inducing member to resign or to threaten to re- -, sign, thus creating the Impression that Chairman" Johnsbn's course Is creating much dissatisfaction among hit associate on the committee; but conplraeles of this kind, do not feaze and chairman the Imperturbable treasury "watchdog" Interests Well Intrenched. The Washington, Interests are still strongly intrenched In congress, as was .shown during the consideration of the District of Columbia appropriation bill. It required ten days of t' the hardest kind of sledding and fighting o get that bill through the house; and all of the time Chalr-ma-a Jonson was on the firing line. Tthe resistance to the bill came from d -con-pregood-natureone-yeao brow-beaten con-ttan- John Quincy Adams Was Only One to Bathe in Potomac Each Morning. PECULIARITIES OF GHKATNKSS CARDU I VomatrsTonic For more than 50 years, Cardui has been relieving woman's sufferings, and making weak women strong and well. During this time, thousands of women have written, like Mrs. McPherson, to tell of the really surprising results they obtained by the use of this purely vegetable, tonic remedy for women. Cardui strengthens, builds, restores, and relieves or prevents unnecessary pain and suffering from womanly troubles. If you are a woman, begin taking Cardui, today. Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dept. Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga, Tenn., book, "Home Treatment lor Women," sent tree. J 4? for Special Instructions, and CHIMES An IN KANSAS AS SHOWN HV OLD LAWS explanation of the law books shows that Hutchinson has about as many blue laws as Boston had in tho early days of this republic. Hero are some of tho crimes and penalties affixed: To fall to clean a hen house once every 24 hours, $25 line. To sell a dime novel with an account of crime, $100. To keep tame pigeons, 475. To talk back to a policeman, $100. To "sic" oflo dog on nnother.J sioo. To hitch a horse to ft weighing less ?23. than thirty weight pounds, To throw rlco at nowly wedded couples, $100. To whittle on a fence, $25. To spit a wad of gum In a street car, $25. To have a barbed wire fence around your premises, $25. To carry a stono out of another man's yard, $50. To throw a banana peeling Into Cow creek, $100. To watch a corn doctor work his Jaw on the street, $50. And thero aro others. Kansas City Journal. He Won't Limp Kow. No more limping for Tom Moore, of Cochran, Ga. "I had a bad sore on my Instep that nothing seemed to help till I used Ducklen's Arnica Salve," he writes, "but this wonderful healer soon cured me' Heals old, running sores, ulcers, bolls, burns, cuts, bruises, eczema or plleB. Try It. Only 25 cents at m James H. "Williams. For Sale, acres of well Improved land In Rough river hottoms, 2 miles west of Hartford. For further particulars, address X, care or The Herald. 2tf Slxtj-tv- o Ciibbngc nnd HIiwsp and Joy. Cub-lag- e License to wed: Gilbert and Hattlo Sheeso. Doth of Joy, 111. Hock Island (111.) Argus. Washington, Jackson, Van Duren, Taylor, Fllmorc, Lincoln, Johnson and Cleveland are the Presidents who wore not college men. Duchanan was the only bachelor President who remained so, Clove-lan- d marrying while In office. Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, John Quincy Adams and Duchanan each held tho office of Secretary of .State before being President. During his career Van Huron was Senator, Governor, Minister to Eng-lnnVice President and President. After being President, John Quincy Adams sat In Congress, Andrew Johnson became rt United States Senator, John Tyler was elected to the Confederate Congress and James Monroe became a JusNo tice of tho Peace of Virginia. other former Presidents have held public office. Cleveland was sworn In as Governor and aB President on a Bible irlvrn to him by his mother In 1852. Pierce was tho first President born In the nineteenth century. Jcfferpon, John Adams and Monroe all died on July 4 the first two In 1826. Washington nnd Jackson were the only Presidents to deliver farewell addresses. Van Duran was the first President not born n British subject. PresGarfield wns a ident. He studied for the ministry and often preached, though ho was never ordnined. Theodore RooseveTt has a larger collection of college degrees than any other President ever acquired. Roosevelt and Taft figure as the only Presidents given to regular and systematic athletic practices. Washington nnd Jefferson were both notdblo riders on horseback. John Quincy Adams, like no other President, rose before sunrise in worm weather to go bathing In the Potomac. Tho crowd cheered at his vigorous handling of the spade when, in 1828, he broke ground for tho Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. There Is a pleasant description of Van Burcn In old age small, quick walking briskly and white-hairethrough the streets In New York. Jackson walked and rode, but was not an especially active man. Lincoln, despite warnings, would walk at midnight, with a single, companion, from tho War Department to the White House. Washington, In eight years as President, took 181 days to himself. John Adams was away from tho seat of government a year and 20 days In four years. Jofferson left the capital 706 times in eight years. Milwaukee Sentinel. d, left-handd, &raK3SgHH $20 For Snip. scholarship YOU I WANT a Better JOB? GREATEST OFFER The Clilrngo Examiner, YET. the Kient Dciuorintir Daily, nnd The llmtfonl Herald will both be sent to any address oik your for only J.!. Tills offer Is koikI only tliiriiiK the months of Jnnunry nnd February, 11)11!. The Exumiiii'i' is a groat home paper, us well us political ndvocnte. Besides nil the news, It lias n, powerful page, eiiunliiK the efforts of the best writers. Don't delay now--. It'x n great lmiynln. mill fVl to The Send joer It." Hatt foul Herald. nl That question will be asked you almost daily by business men seeking yout services, if you qualify take the Draughon Training and show ambition to rise. More BANKERS indorse DRAUGHON'S Colleges than Indorse all other business colleges COMBINED. 48 Colleges In 18 States. International reputation. rtinUnir, Tjprnrlllnir, lYnmaniililp, Vncll'ti, Spelllne. Arithmetic, letter Wrltlnr, BasiatM un milk auxiliary uranmci. uooa rubinuNsuuAKANibbuunaer reasonable conditions. Bookkeeping. Bookkeepers all over Home Study. Thousands of banieasff tho United States say that Draujrhon's let's, bookkeepers and stenographers are New System of Bookkeeping saves them holding good positions as the result of from 25 to 50 per cent in work and worry. taking Draughon's Home Study. CATALOGUE. For prices on lesson Shorthand. Practically all U. S. offi cial court reporters write the System of BY MAIL, write J.vo. F. Dkavchok, Shorthand Draughon Colleges teach. President, Nashville. Tenn. Fornrfcat- Why? Because they know It Is the best, aloguo on course AT COLLEGE, write DRAUGITON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COIXEGIS Nashville or Memphis or Knoxville, Tenn., or Paducah, Ky., or EvanavUlc, lad. ProtHMHicmii) , Oirln. oaoo(io2osooc'jaot.jo"i2ocs.'ioc' Grippe, Then llioiuhltis. Such was the case with Mrs. W. S. Bailey, McCreary, Ky. ".My wife was taken down with a severe attack of la grippe, which ran Into She coughed as though bronchitis. she had consumption and could not Bleep at night. The doctor's medicine gave her no relief and I was advised to try Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. The first bottle gave her so much relief that sho continued using It and three bottles effected a permanent cure." Mr. W. S. Bailey says ho Is prepared to answer all inquiries promptly. For m sale by all dealers. Flint Lu Attorneys At Law - KENTUCKY. HARTFORD, MnitrH. W. II llnriifn unit (!. K. Smith iiiiiiounct tlint tliry lmv fm meil h partner hlilp fur tlie Kfiiffttl practlto if law, except criminal himI ilUiirf.cf, Mr smith prrvvnteil hln County tliirney, I Mr Hriie4 from will uh rHMrn, prartlrH Ottlre 1ritctlrlni: Hcrrpt urh In lliirirnrif llrputillcun liullilluc. Hi. Ky. Barnes & Smith I Gillespie Bros., flira 'V Rv." & Ti I v2grw 8 g J. M. PORTER, Attorney at Law, BEAVER DAM, KY. olnlng counties. Special attention Riven to ' huslnensentruited to hit care. Will practice his profession tu Ohio and o W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. I ..BLACKSMITH1NG-fl 1 Q FRANK L. FELIX, A Change of Diet. This Incident happened at camp, when a corporal, who was making up tho rations, was approached by tho tent orderly, nnd tho latter suggested a change In the dietary. "We should like to have some rhubarb," ho said. "You may have It," replied the corporal, who with pencil and paper then commenced trying to record tho order. Ho began "Ru," hastily abandoning that for "Reu," and then put "Roo and "Rheu" reThoroughly exasperatspectively. ed at last, tho corporal exclaimed: "Rubub bo blowed! You'll have cabbage." London Telegrnph. Attorney at Law, HABTPOED, KY. Will practice hla profession In Ohio and ae lining countlea and In the Court of Appeal, Criminal practice and Collection! a ape claltT. Office In the Herald building OTTO C. MAKTIN B. Repair Work b A -i Horseshoeing Specialty .. 11 ADTrrtnri mmn i ir ii ft iXiWWX Wlw, P. MCKKNNKY MARTIH Si MBIT tv i ... i w CCCCOOCOCOCOOGCCOCOCOOCOOU HARTFORD, KY. ..GENERAL INSURANCE.. Life, accident. Sick And Fire Will Also Bond You. Otto C. Hartin fESSweSTABUSHED HfcjST'TS, If MMLtiumm HAIR HEALTH. Trou- If You Have Scalp or Hair ble, Accept This Offer. When we promise your money back for tho mere asking If Jlexall "93" Hair Tonic does not do as we claim It will, you cortalnly have no reason for even hesitating to try it. Wo do not ask you to obllgato yourself In any way. We could not afford to so strongly endorse Rexnll "93" Hair Tonic and continue to sell It as wo do, If It did not do all wo claim. Should our enthusiasm carrv us away, and Rexall "93" Hair Tonic not give ontlr.o satisfaction to tho users, they would loso faith In us and our statements, and In consequence our business prestige would suffer. Therefore, when wd 'assure you that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will promptly eradicate dandruff, stimulate hair growth and prevent premature baldness, you may rest assured we know what wo aro talking about. ' We honestly believe that Rexall "93" Hair Tonic will do more than, any other human agency toward restoring ,ha!r growth and hair health. It is not greasy and will not gum tho scalp or hair or cause permanent stain. It Is as pleasant to use as pure cold water. It comes in two sizes, prices 50 cents and $1.00. Remember, you can obtain It only at our store rThe Rexall 8tore James H. Williams, 214 Main St., Hartford, Ky. Shocking Sounds In tho earth are sometimes heard before p terrlUlo earthquake, that warn of tho coming peril. Nature's warnings are kind. That dull pain or acho In the back warns you the kidneys need attention If you would escapo those dangerous maladies, Dropsy, Diabetes or Brlght's Take Electric Bitters at onco and see backache fly and all your best feelings return. "My pon received great bonoflt from their uso for kidney and bladder trouble," wrltco Petor Bondy, South Rock-wooMich. "It Is certainly a great kidney medicine." Try It. m 50c at James H. Williams. dls-ois- e. d, For Sale. Cheap. A full Bookkeeping Course schol- or silverHKawlaB jewelryyou can Ret- IxBzytcKssm RttI"!!"?. ware, (iuallt at U""V"al"H VTCS7?Xv:U bebt the the lowest prices from the GaW'.a&Oossssi 2gf'-wir- 1058.fSd55H fYTjhlffi its a aTing, a .'WtHJiaTB w atch, diamond, arship In tho well known Bryant & Stratton Business College, Louisville, Ky. For further particulars call on or address, Tho Hartford Hcrnd. tf Attorney at Lwv IIAItTKOItl), KY. j OLDEST MAIL ORDER HOUSE at tt- M 1I Uflire tip Mulls over Wilson .V Ctoue, opposite court house. Will practice his piofossion in nil the courts of this nnd adjoining counties and Court of Appeals. Cdiiiincr-cia- l and criminal practice u specialty. .!. clushclv G. Js- - for our tree Jlluslraiea catalogue. hoiithrrn trade tup en waTil. Ainnt iMUlsville, Ky. hiVA Wr!,e Auarcsa. arvwl I r P. Barnes & GoJ Bo20 JSvery Artldo Ouaranteeil. yV GHIIdrn Cry I THE ONLY LIFE RAVINGS OF MAT? OF MUCH NOTE C A STO R A FOR FLETCHER'S has helped countless thousands of thin, weak, delicate children made ! IH ROT . t ClttnMi Itomotei HAIR BALSAM th Vc.ftndtlO" DrurcUu PARKER'S Never FaiU to Reator Oray Hair to Its Youthful Color. Curti icalp diiritei k hair tailing hair and beautlfiei ft la xu riant growth. We arc I?eady for Your Old... HAVE A IGH RIVER Fcll Glomes Which you have laid back-read- y to make them new. Send your old Suits, old Felt Hats, old Coat Suits to us -- we guarantee our work to give satisfaction, if not no money received. 4 5. The petition of James S. Harlan for tho administration of the estate of his father, the late Justice John Marshall Harlan, sets forth that the entire estate consists of personal property valued at $5,700, llfo Insurance $7,200 and an arroar of salary amounting to $480.11. There Is no real .estate whatever. So that tho total amount of tho fortune loft by tho Justice is $13,386,11. of a These are the montal, moral and man of first-claphysical Btrength who gave many years of arduous long, laborious In one service to tho Nation. they make an unpleasant impression, for they bear witness to life-savin- gs ss ct them strong, plump and robust. It creates an appetite, aids digestion, fills the TELEPHONE IN YOUR RESI- CK Oil PLACE OP DCS- h'SS AND PUT YOURSELF IRECT CONTACT W'TH Al'ED veins with rich red blood. I.' A" vl t "Stance Lines VI.L STATES. IMVANY'S O After illness or loss Send them to of weight from any cause, it brings strength and flesh quicker than anything else. ALL (.' I SPKCIA1 THE, FARMERS t 'DRESS l.ocnl Manager, Hartford Pressing Club Y. M. C. A'. v. O'BANON. , Bldg. I FRFD NALL, Mgr. - Haitford. K. Local Manager, DRUGGISTS 11-- 16 C SEXTON. 'pfivr Dam, Ky n Subscribe for The Herald. V."5 fr&aiKf l&. " - ' ,&&jte? a -- . , .A-t- e. - V SW. ,, ME, o,.,,;,,;,. if j i'v'p(Ai PAOR FbUR. THF HARTFOPn MPaj n WEDNESDAY KEK 14, X9f2. ta t, 0rd wi:roXrJ''"J."l" Its proceedings session or without much A embracing HCBER MATTHEWS, FRANK L.FELIX, iOITOKfr PRANK L. FELIX, Pub. and Prop'r. e Entered at the Hartford as mall matter of tho second class J ed t0 for re(jrcg8 that seems othcr- What may wise unobtainable. you read nn account transplro of this character outside Frequcntly the knowledge of, tho courts.ls probof a "quiet" bedding, but somehow No doubt the courts with brass lematical. affairs tho connubial nevor hear of all that occurs along accompaniment band or firearms lines of alleged violation of chastity never get Into print. and honor. Dut let us hope that these cases Hotel menliB and doctors prescriptions arc probably gotten up In are not without their evident warna foreign tonguo for ono and the ing, their righteous quickening of same reason' to prevent people conscience and their moral, albeit from finding out Just exactly what there bo some persons who would seo no lesson In them of morals or Is coming to them. of justice. There are few things Country corrqspondents will have more serious than that which may 'ii little careful about to, begin to bo Involve the good name of a citizengiving accounts,,p(. people making ship or tho welfare of Its souls. country or These fow cases are not a sample of "flying trips" across the their news will bo taken literally, tho whole In any sense, but the rewith no biplangs or aeroplanes to flection they cast Is not socially back It up. wholesomo nor yet without remedy If they should Imbue people with All honor to the boy corn-groThey are dem- - effort to prevent recurrence, country! crs of the thoir fine ability as farm. cd by knowledge of prayerful and ors In a most emphatic and convlnc- - careful observation. ing manner. Truly they nre making a stack of cars grow where only ono TEXTILE STRIKE LOSS grew beforo. post-offic' Insplr-onstratl- particulars to wife or family, It certainly denotes a. cancerous growth upon our social system Tho aspect of serious somewhere. ness Is when tho courts are appeal that ono would blush to recite tho burn TIchenor, Richard and Clar- lenco Ward, James ABhloy, Plummer Bennott and wife, Coramodoro AshIN FEDERAL COURT ley and wife, Mrs. Hannah Ward and Mcrtlo Jones, Harlan TIchenor, wife and daughter Margureno.-Contractor Suing Citfzens, Ask- "Music nnd games were tho features of tho ovenlng. Tho music w&b furing $5,000 Balance for nished by Claudo Webb, Jim Ashley and Clarence Ward. All reported a Digging Ditclu . nlco timet BIG SUIT IS FILED . Advan.ce SoJe -- OF- t When tho word "tax" Is used, tho peoplo realize what It means. They know they pay It themselves. Therefore the word "tax" should be sub stituted for tho word "tariff" In dls- cussing tho protection theory. Tho tariff Is a tax and It la certainly paid by the people. The West Nocreek School 1m- provement League of Ohio county iuna ntinn inpnn inr fiiii;Liif iit?A.L day night tho subject, "Resolved, that a Uroom Is More Useful Than a DIshrag." Before hearing the discussion, wo aro rather inclined to tako tho affirmative side, especially If the articles are used as missiles In a family scrap. j." i- ESTIMATED AT MILLION Troops on Duty at Mills Say Only 700 or 800 Men j Are Employed. , ,, The past fow years have witnessed the greatest change In political alignment perhaps ever known In the history of this country In the samo length of time. Old lines especially Republican affiliations have broken away, and we hear rather strange declarations from party adherents. It all speaks for thought and a more Independent better day for tho people of all par-tiand classes. cs j Press dispatches gave out the Information that 2,000 peoplo assembled In the court room at Henderson to hear tho proceedings of the nurds murder trial. We take it that tho Henderson court room Is not bo powerful much larger than the Hartford court room which "failed" to accommodate the COO or GOO people who camo to hear Judge O'Rear last fall and wqre finally bunched In the rather small space on the east 'side of tho building. A SERIOUS QUESTION. in Hartford lately about ? certain class of cases that have occupied the time and attention of our Circuit litigation Court oT lato years which Involves tho chastity of woman and the alleged criminal Intent of man. There has apparently been a series too largo "a number for tho good name of the county of these cases In our courts of lata years. It Is enough to set one wJ at some thinking wondering outsiders may opine of our county as a municipality, anyhow. To put It mildly, these cases do not conduce to the well bolng or good where of any community they happen or nro brought to public notlco through the courts. Too much they make It a case wherein tho Innocent suffer with the alleged guilty; whore thousands of peoplo of both sexes who lead virtuous and upright lives aro classed as belonging to or living in a community where excesses of Immorality aro of too frequent occurrence. It Is a matter to attract tho attention of the father and the mother, especially those who have daughters and sons growing Into womanhood and manhood. It all embraces a hideous lesson In morals, so plain that It would seem to need no advlco as to action In any supposed premises. Rut will the rop-utatl- it has been a matter of comment bcplnnlng of incther month In tho strike of more than 20,000 mill operatives for an Increase In wages, was one of gen eral activity. The Central Labor I'nlon officials drow up tho demands which aro to be made upon agents of each mill, while the Industrial Workers of the World leaders spoke at a number of meetings, urging solidarity among the strikers. It Is estimated that the financial loss due to tho strike, n major portion of which falls upon the strikers, already approaches the $1,000,-00- 0 mark. The mills arc said to have protected themselves against great financial loss by having their work performed at thefr factories by elsewhere, or on which they receive a share of the profits. declare that Some mill officials 10,000 operatives are now at work, but the military observers, who are Hill on duty with their troops at the factory gates, say only seven or eight hundred hands go In where usually 5,000 aro omploycd. Leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World assert that this strike la but tho beginning of an Industrial revolution. Thnt there will be some accessions to the ranks of workers in the morning Is cer-'ainllls Members of tho Loom Fixers' Union, employed In the Arlington mills, have voted to return to work, ind their decision has boon Indorsed by the entiro Loom Fixers' Union, which Is Independent of both tho Industrial Workers of the World and tho American Federation of Labor. n. ' ,.... m The Owensboro Messenger says: Edwin E. Watts, of Indiana, Hied suit In tho District Court of the Saturday "morning United States, against William A. Rplchert, porgo M. Posey, William E. Griffin, C. A. Sawyer and Larkin W. White, of Henderson, for $5,000 balance on a contract for tho digging of a large ditch In what Is known as tho Blam Flat district of Henderson county. Tho complaint sets out tbatj the plaintiff entered Into a contract (n December, 1909, with William A. Rolchert and, Georgo M. Posey, trustees, for t"e excavation of a ditch 5,500 feet long. Ho was to be allowed, under his contract, sufficient time for the excavation and rebuilding of all bridges necessary to be removed in the construction of the ditch. While tho ditch was In course of constructlbn tho contractor was to provide suitable pass-wafor travel. Tho trustees under this contract gave their bond with Wm. E." Griffin, C. A. Sawyer and Larkin W. White as his sureties for the payment of tho work, which totaled $18,000, and the complaint states that he completed tho work according ito contract, which was accepted, but that tho defendants and their bondsmen have failed to paythe full amount of the contract, by $5,000, and for this amount ho asks Judgment. This is the first suit filed In the court since tho change fiom a circuit to a district court, undor the reorganization the first of tho present year. ys OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO pointed John D. Wilson , was ap na Commonwealth's Attor ney pro tern., in tho absence of Hon. Judgo o,o o oooooooooo NOTES. o o CIRCUIT COURT O SPRING GOODS purchases for spring a?P&Mnn$ ' day and we are giving you the opportunity of selecting snappy, 'Upt6-datmerchandise from the season's offerings. O Den D. Rlngo, who was called away on account of the 'sudden1 ' death of his mother, Mrs. Rlngd, last Wednesday nlgKt. Mr. Rlngo returned to Hartford yesterday and resumed his work. The grand Jury, which is yet in session, have reported fouV-tee- n indictments, classified as follows: Seduction, 1; selling liquor to a minor, 2; selling liquor without license, 5; gaming, 1; robbery ,1 1; petit larceny, 1; carrying concealed a deadly weapon, 1; cutting In sudden heat and passion, 2. vs. Oscar McKlnney, Com'th. charged with seduction, under promlso to marry, verdict of jury guilty, and punishment fixed at from one to Ave years In tho peni1 OUR -- e; OUR NEW Spring Ginghams7 IndiaLinens and Embroideries' t - .,. ; Are now ready for your inspection." tentiary. (JRAVK CHARC5KS ARK SUI'IMIKK.SKI) IIV TAKT Washington, Feb. 10. C. Urlg. Gen. retiring paymaster general of tho army, told the House committee, on expenditure in the War Department that charges of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman against Maj. Deecher D. Ray, of the army pay corps, had been suppressed at tho suggestion of President Taft. Ray, It Is charged, took an active part In the Taft campaign of 1908, and his political activity has been under investigation by the congressional committee. It has been charged that Maj. Ray acted as a "walking delegate" for tho H. Whipple,, y Republican party. Gen. Whipple said that twice Maj. Ray has escaped trial on charges which he, the General, believed warranted prosecution. He said he went to Revcrly in 1910 to 3ee the President, and that Mr. Taft had dictated a letter in his, presence advising that for the honor of the army and tho good name of a woman, stories 'of tho Major's acquaintance with the wife of an employee of the pay department be kept from tho record. MKF 'IK CHILI) SAVED IIV RACTKRI.V vs. Mont Daugherty, Com'th. charged with Incest, plea of guilty goods to entered and jury fixed his punishat from 10 to 20 years. ment is Com'th. vs. Charles Condor, bond time, of $750 forfeited and summons awarded. is fail to The Jury trials have been disposed of as follows: visit. Emerson Rogers vs. W. C. Dlank-enshl- p hung Jury. . J. R. Howard" vs. M., H." & E. R. R. Co., continued. Wayne Leo vs. L. & N. R. R. Co., verdict of Jury, $5,000 for plaintiff. Eva Hawes, et al., vs. Advance Stovo Works, default Judgment, , $12. L. T. Rarnes vs. M., II. & E. R. R. Co., verdict or Jury, $4C for plnln- -' tiff. John Henry Tucker was granted naturalization papers. P. L. Alford vs. G. W. Embry. et al., continued. P. J. Ithoads vs. I. C. R. R. Co., verdict of jury, $275 for plaintiff. Robert Robertson vs. Broadway Coal Company, verdict of Jury $5,-1, for plaintiff. Ed Nail vs, John Taylor, verdict . of jury for defendant. of-7- 7 Visiting Attorneys: Mr. J. Van Dyke Norman, Louisville: Judge T.1 J. sparks and Mr, Newt Belcher, Greenvlllo; Judges J. M.' Porter and D. B. Rhoads, BeaVor Dam; 'and 'Mr . -- ' ' ,J John T.' Rono; CemtBrtoWn'.' tL 'Messrs. W. W. Simmons, '.Mem phis, Tenn., preslderit of' the' Broad' ' Creager and Isaiah Miller a public' way Coal Co., and' Mr. Geo. "Wi 'Biir- QfaPfllajid Chinas, including bred 5Qvp? and; young Boars, ton, superintendent "of fcdld compalV ny, are-Iattendance at courts in'Elizabethtowii, February ID, 1912. Mr. Geo. W.i Feagfcn, 6f Cynlhln-anYou will find some as good individuals "and good" blood I' formerly -- chief engineer' of 'the " M. H. & E. at Hartford, lain 'at'; be bought any where; in this sale.' ' ,l ' ' cpurt. , tendance at v Come-an- The early buyers will get the pick of these purchases. The prices we are mak- ing on these ought move them out quickly. Now the while our stock complete. Don't make an early You will not be disappointed. Respectfully, CARSON & COL, Inoorporatcd, Hartford, Kentucky. 25 Public Sale Head w c Fine Poland Chioa Jlogs ' 38 - --- - 38 'F.W. 'll'hold $ke 'L o, asan " d ' "WANTKI), ' STOCK PEAS. Lexington, Ky., Feb. 10. The fast run of an automobllo bearing bacteria from this city 'o Frankfort several nights ago, it la Nice Whippoorwill Seed Peas ilton, tho youthful daughter of Repfor sale fn Hartford by resentative lElwood Hamilton, of Franklin county. The call for. tho BLACK &BIRKHEAD. . said, saved the life of Hazel Ham- Notice. All persons having claims against the estate of Silas H Rolling, deceased, aro hereby notified to pre-iethem, properly proven, to me at my office In Heaver. Dam, Ky., on or before the 16th day of April, 1912, r they will be forover barred. ,t4 D. R. RHOADS. Admr. nt x Suliscilbo for Xlio Haitronl Herald bacterln was received over tho telephone by a Lexington drug com-nan- v about 10 o'clock at night, and though It was In time to send the medicine by tho Interurban car, the child was so critically III that Mr. Hamilton Insisted on Its'betng sont by a special automobile, although Villa service would cost him $40. Tho run to Frankfort was made over the slippery and d roads In forty-fiv- e minutes: arriving in time to relievo the child, who Is 'now on the road to recovery. snow-covere- Horsemen to know that 1 liavo, purchased "Gilded Clique,'' no 'combined saddle and 'harness horse formerly owned by the lato Mack Smith. This horse is bred in tho purple. Was sired by Sensation 2419, 1st t'am by Kentucky Prlnco. Como and see this horse. Seeing is believing. This horeo has never been defeated but one time in a model ring. Will make the season of 1912 at my barn In neda, Ky,, In each week, at $10.00 to Insuro colt to stand up and suck. I wish to thank my friends for their patronago In tho past.. Yours for business, W. H. PARKS, 5t4 Hartford, Route 3. VKST XOCItKEK SCHOOL guaranteed. ; get y6u a good pair of Hogs, .,,',,' Satisfaction .1 To Our Farmer Friends and Patrons: Now i'b the time to begin "to anticipate your. Fence, wants. We have just received two" tar" .loads of the c6h" bratcd American Steel Wire Fence. We bought it right, so .we can give. y oil a very low price on any Specifications you may need.. Call npd see us about your fence. Yours, truly, t ' , , 1 DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO., DUNDEE, KENTUCKY. . IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE V- BLOUNT'S "TRUE BLUE" rising generation or their pnrents heed It? Must tho suffering nnd Ignominy of tho accused and their alleged victims, In court, pass only ti3 a matter of course and without any Inquiry of conscience, or possible action to prevent recurrence of such things among a naturally good nnd jgjijptentloned pooplo? Should tho plain moral go unimproved? Without any Intention of attempting to fix blame In any case or upon anybody, yet It becomes pat-nto tho observer that something Is wrfng with our social fabric some abnormal condition that permits these things to happen with such alarming regularity and frequency. It comes to such When nt Roll-cal- l. Roadlng of Minutes. Oponlng address J. P. Foster. Rec Stump itation Girdle Dennett. spoech Dudley Westerflleld. Whistling Curry Wallace. Solect reading Marllssa Speech Foster. Loreno Greer. Old business. Recess. You could not please us betSinging. Now business. Dobate. ter than to ask your doctor Subject, "Resolvod, That a Broom is More Useful Than a DIshrag." Afabout Ayer's Cherry Pectoral firmative: Mertle Wllllford, Filyd-i- a i for coughs, colds, croup, bronFor Miss Raymond. FoBtor, Mrs. P. A. Foster, Bortha chitis. Thousands of families Mr. and Mrs. Harlan TIchenor en- Lewis. 'Negative: Iva Wallace, always keep it in the house. tertained on last Friday ovenlng In Marllssa Foster, Bessie Renfrow, The approval of their physi- honor of Miss Gertrey Raymond, of Gl-d- lo Bennett. Comic surprise Those present were: Honry Tinsley and Talbott Miller. cian and the experience of Adaburg. Mabel many years have given them MissesDavis, Porter, Pearl Shown, Solo S. P. Sandorfur. Stump Amy Merle DenVascoo Balrd. Duot Iva great confidence in this nett, Mabel Ashby, and Louleno How speech and Bessie Renfrow. Speech Mary Delle Wallace standard cough medicine. land. Lotha Ward. Loney Young. Tressla Sanderfur, Paper, ReadAlice Hoover, Sold for seventy years. Willie Dennett; ing of program. Criticism. B" 0 FILYDIA FOSTER, Soc'y. "A, "ouafna Any good doctor will tel you that anted!-- 1 cine Tike Ayer's Cherry Pectoral cannot shown. Estls Hudson, Clyde Dela-d- o By MARLISSA FOSTER, Pro Tern. Its best work if the bowels are con- - ney, Ernest Moxley, Claude Webb, stipated. Ask your doctor If he knows Ell and Godfrov nnnn.t. Hnrmnn- Automobllo owners from, all over Kentucky aro to meet in Lexington ww ut i o. iixa og., mwiii, juu, j "" "u n iimud, au- - 'March 1 to form a State federation. . Coughs and Colds Illumed n Good Worker. "I blamed my heart for severe distress In my left side for two years," writes w. Evans, Danville, Va., "but I know now It was Indigestion, as Dr. King's New Llfo Pills completely cured me." Best for stomach, liver and kidney troubles, constipation, headache, or debility. 25c, at James H. Williams. m Program for Friday evening, ruary 10, 1912. - Feb- STEEL BtAM PLOWS TO 16 INCHES 6V4 Acknowledged by all as thePlowof Quality LONGEST LIFE FINEST MATERIAL , BEST WORKMANSHIP PERFECT FINISH1 Strong Light Durable Easy Running -- SOLO BY-- HARTFORD, LIKENS & ACTON KT3NTUCKT H T jv ' l&!SlSSSS&&iS"t'ff:""" Plenty of Good Reading .hi HiDjicifliu mm h uumj. mil umy ujiB uouar a Tear. o WKDXESDillt FEff. 14, 10i2. ijy THE HARTFORD HFRALD I PAC1R FIVK. A More Left we-have Sanders, n special bailiff, who had been sent from Missouri to take tho ADDITION OF GYMNASTICS defendant back. It Is said that the TO HARTFORD COLLEGE, cbargo against Cameron Is grand larceny. CRACRAFT-LEICBuy THE Telephone and you will escapo the trouble and work cause by hav. ing a poor and defective telephone. They are guaranteed. Sold by A. Ct4 E. Pate, Hartford, Ky. H Dui:ing,pui:Jate Kum Down Sale we had a pn'6ipoinal run on our Ladies' Coat Suit Starts "Tempest in a Teapot" Some Objection to and Cloak department, Notwithstanding all this a few left that we to make a still deeper cut on, to disposal: .them. LISTEN: Choice of our Ij.aaes'.'SuitST-som- e sold for $15, soml-fotiro-bo- se Movement. Considerable Interest and objection has been stirred up In Hartford lately over tho action of the School Board In taking some of tho Hartford College Library money and diverting It to tho maintenance of a gymnasium for basket-ba- ll games, Wo understand that $100 of &c. tho over $200 In the Library fund has thus been appropriated. This Library money has been accumulated frorrt tho admissions charged at commencement entertainments, and it was understood that it was to bo used for a specific purpose. The objectors' "contend that the School Board had no right or authority to divert the Library money into the gymnasium channel without the knowledge of the patrons of the school. ForJyears there has been more or less objection to tho charging of admission to Collego commencement patrons of the entertainments, school claiming that it seems hard on them to liavo to pay to see their own children do their parts In the exercises. There Is conrlderaltle expense In tills mntter, however, which It hardly neetts fair that the teneh-or- s and managers should havo to bear. It was to meet this expense that admission was cliaiged, vlth BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder Tiade from Royal Grape Cream of artar NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE k bo spread on the of this Sf.VNVDAM';. court and a copy sent to the bereavFeb. 12. Mr. Marvin Durbln is ed brother and to the county papers. very 111 of pneumonia. OTTO C, MARTIN. Mrs. Stella Lee's little child also order-hoo- ROYAL r Oand some for $25 -f- or only Dollars Why not take .advantage of this ridiculously, low price? It's money in your pocket. Esq. J. H. Miles and daughter, Miss Beulah, of Paradise, Ky Miss Olga Hunley, of Echols, Mrs. Ham Barnes, son David, and little Miss Dorcas Lyons, city, gave The Herald a pleasant call Saturday. MY. Ben T. Taylor, who for several years has been in the barber business in this city with his brother, loft Wednesday morning for Bloomfleld, Ind., whero ho has accepted a position as barber. Mr. I. W. Wood, representing tho well known Arm of Rapier Grain & Seqd Co., Owensboro, is in Hartford looking after the loading of n four-ca- r shipment of hay being loaded here far 'shipment over the L. & N. JNO. B. WILSON. J. P. SANDERFUR, Committee. GARLAND BLACK 1)1 KS OF NEURALGIA OF HEART has pneumonia. Mr. James Gray and family havo returned homo from Owensboro, v he"o they have been visiting his sister. Mr. James Logan, of Hardin county, lr visiting friends in this u OUR LOSS IS GAIN Remember this and bear in mind that it pays to -- railroad. t nagtlmrt Hear "Alexander's Uand," "You af'e the Ideal of Mj DroamB," "Bill," etc., on the Victor Talking Machine. You might own this machine by making a purchase at the Ohio County Drug Co.'s store. 4tf 25-ce- nt tall y.HJ'.i. 1 Ward, of Fair-burMessrs. Herman 111., Seymour Bennett and Godfrey Bennett, of Beda, gave The Herald ." pleasant call Friday. After a visit of several weeks to relatives and friends In this county, Mr. Ward left Friday evening for his home in Illinois. y, Trade' with a House -- Tell yesterday JUl tf xmt A IMnnair Ciuac thit javio inn luviiiy. mat juu S(6b. r-7-- Mrs. E. T. Williams, of Hartford, for Earllngton, whero sho was caller on account of the illness of her niece, Miss Ada ShaVcr, who was thought to be dying yesterday of blood poisoning. She had been HI o' typhoid fever about three months. Having secured the requisition papprs from the Governor, Shorlff T. If, Block loft for Springfield, 111.. Moriday. whete ho went to bring Leslie Thomas back to Ohio county, where he hns been Indicted charged Mr. Black will arwith seduction. rive In Hartford with his prisoner this afternoon. Tlch-oppj- Wo wish to return our thanks to ", Messrs. T. J. Tooley and J. B. Centertown, end Mrs. Nora Woodward, of Louisville, who kindAnyone contemplating buying a ly sent Us a copy of The Herald o o o o O OOOOOOOOOO O Telephone, would do well to comO LOCAL NEWS AND dated Jnnuary 10, which we adverPEUSONAL POINTS'O municate with. A. E. Pate, Hartford, tised for last week. We can uso one O ElecOO OOO OOOOOOOOOO 6 O Ky., agent for Cracraft-Leic- ' h or two' more copies of that date, If 5t4 tric .Co. supply them for us. .. : .. . friends caro to 't. J. 00 iocKer ana miss jicck U. S. Carbon Rants' your 'Furs itf.Mrs. Miss Qertrudo Wrights wno has Pure .Genuine New Orleans Mo- Hocker, of McHenry, and Miss Gola btei head mllllnpr .for Barnard, & Cecil, living near Hartford, wore Co. for the ,past several years, will Hartford Grocery Co. lasses. pleasant callers at The Herald office leave y fort Cincinnati, to, aN Fresh Staple Groceries at.I Moore's Thursday. 1WW millinery prep-- t tend tho Oil eat MaTket. ' aicaars, W. H. Nelson, BeaveH nrailon thpre :SJie has, flot. yet.de- Mr. Ellis "Foster spent Sunday Dam, Route 2; J. B. TIchenor, Cen-- j c(dod, where she, ,wJU locate, for. the ' with relatives In Central City. rauerson, coming season., MIss Wright, dur tertown, ana Aioort Mr. and Mrs. Mont McKinnw, bt Prentls, were among The Herald's ing her stay lieroi has made many' ' McHenry, honored The Herald with Icaljers Monday. ' reidB, whq. regret to, gee'-Jic- r loavo.-a call Friday. The' remains of little May" Bell Miss Fannie Whittnghlll, who dauchter of Mrs. Bottle Itlcheson' Vanfl son formerly held a position in this city Word, tho John It., of Deda, paid Tho Herald as stenographer, has accepted a p'o- - Afrt'alnd Mrs. A. Word, were brought to the home a call Saturday. ' j,.,., IflUlon, with Attorney Claude Mercer. frorruthelr of Mrs. In Texas parents, Word's residence of Hardinsburg. Mrs. E. L. Miller, of Chicago, is ,l Mr. and Mrs. Lon Bennett, of Beda, Carroll-fon- ', the guest of her. mother, .Mrs', Way-lan- d ' Mrs,NSallIe-Drake,Soutarriving there yesterday. The little tho mother of our townsman, Alexander, on Union street girl dledi of diphtheria some days Is quito sick of my Grocery. Mr, T, R. Barnardi since and the body was embalmed. Leave yonr Laundry at erysipelas. Mr. Bernard went to It Is not, known Just when Interment .Work Guaranteed, Domestic .finish. see Ills mother yesterday. will tako place. tilled for and prompt delivery. . ' If you are going to buy a Iler'g Grocery. 'Phone 140. Mr. John W. Taylor received a you can't do better when you Don't fail to try a sack of Jrying-to- n buy the CRACRAFT-LEICtclRgram Tuesday of last week from They Flour. Satisfaction guaranteed. make telephones that talk and sure Uoonvllle, Ind., notifying him of tho exclusively by W. H. Moore ''& Sold ring. Sold by A. E. Pate, Hartford, death of his brother, Mr. R. S. Tay 6" Son. lor, after an illness of pneumonia. Ky. .St Tho burial took place Thursday at Messrs, P.. J. Stratton, Neafutf, Messrs. John H. Barnes, cashier and Albert Cox, Hartford, Route 1, of tho Beaver Dam Deposit Bank, Blrdseye, Ind., tho old home of tho called on The Herald while in town Beaver Dam; C. C. Klmbloy, Equal- deceased. He leaves n family consisting of a wlfo and three children. Saturday. ity; Clarence Jones and Ray J)unn, On account of the demands of his n, AlIerT-ElglMiss Annie Cromwell, were among The Herald's business hero, Mr. Taylor was unav' Ky has been visiting callers Wednesday. ble to attend his brother's funeral. relatives and friends in Hartford the Fresh Beefsteak, Beef Roast.Pork days. past few EAST VIEW. Sausage Steak, Chops, Home-madFeb. 12. Quite a numbor from Messrs. Walter Parks, Beda,' and (pure Pork), Pure Mome-iriW- e Boscoe Wilson, DoaVer Dam, U. 3, Lard (fine), and Cured Meats of all this vicinity attended court at HartTeVe pleasant callers at The Herald kinds at W. H. Moore & Son's Meat ford last week. Mr. B, J. French transacted busi .' office yesterday, j, Gtf Market. 'Phone 47. ' ness at Owensboro Thursday. 7 purchase at the Make a Messrs. Warren Shields, Cnrtn- Messrs. V. T. French and EH Ohio County Drug ..ponyjatyand well; L. A. Stevens, Beaver Dam Martin went to"Owensboro Friday, , Victor "tako a guess fgr Route 2; M. W. Crowe and Walter rcturplng Saturday. tf Talking Machine. W.atson, Hartford, , Route 7, and S. Mr. Albert Taylor and Mrs. Lane M. Ddxter, Centertown, were among Smith spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. ula Coppage, of Loltch-flelhas been the guest .Of 'her our callers yesterday. Mrs. J. Jackson, of Clear Run, s Mr., Will Rldgoway and family, of daughter MrshOtt) jCIarlin, city, Messrs. A. Ross, Centertown; Masonvllle, spent Thursday with Mr. the past jewYdkyS. Robin. Bell, Llvia; J. N. Oldham, and Mrs. W. H. Mayfleld. Mr. H.JN. Tate, who has been con- Bearer, Dam, Route 3; JohniT. ReV. J. E. Taylor, of Maxwell, ft restaurant here lor Borne Hocker, McHenry, and L. E.' Chari ducting busi- let, Livermore, were callers at Tlio spent Friday and Saturday visiting 'time past is moving with Ids In 'this vicinity. Herald office Thursday. ness to Madlsonvillo. Mr, Ben R. Chapman and family, Don't forgot that W H. Mogre & of' Masonvllle, spont Saturday and All 1'ndB of Telephones, and Switchboards' ''repafrfcd, .and new Son will do all in their poworjto Sunday with relatives In this vicin parts furnished wh'ep nedded. by A. please you. If for any reason you ity. Mr. Lon Coots and family, of Llv 5t4 are not satisfied with any purchase E. Pate, jlartford, Ky, made of them, don't tell others hut ia, spent Saturday and Sunday with Hagerman, Hart- tell ub and we will treat you relatives and friends hero. Messrs.'- - J, Y. ford, Route 1; V.M."St'ewart, Harf-fnrr- i. right. Mrs. Hannah Taylor, is on the sick 6tf Rnufn 7: J. M.'ShuItz and B. list. Pat-toDolphuB Cameron, who was ar. . W. Shultz, Prentls;, Esqrs. J. L. Hartf&d, jRoutapdjThpnjaB rested by"' Deputy Shorlf.Geoi?'jP., s Sixty-tw- o minors, who were im Sanders, OlatW, Jlbuie 1 w?re call- Jones, noar Taffy, this county; Sand prisoned by a cave-i- n of a Callfor-- t ers at The " Hbrald office while in lodged In jail, was taken to Slkes-to- nla mine Wednesday, were .rescued t .." Missouri, yesterday by (fames uninjured. town Friday. 'to-dasemi-annual ld Tele-pllone, -t .n, of'Jef-fersontowe. 25-ce- nt Garland II. Black, one of tho most highly respected and Inlluen-tla- l citizens of Fordsvllle, this county, died of neuralgia of tho heart, at 3:30 o'clock Tuesday morning of last week at tho family home, after a long Illness. Mr. Black was .IS years of age and wa3 known In Hartford, whero he has many by two Ho Is survived friends. daughters, Mrs. Nat Alsop, o Owensboro, and Mrs. Bottle .Miller, of Mlsslcslppl. Mr. Black was born In Hancock county, and for a number of years was rue o' tho leading attorneys of the Hancock bar. For the past tho understanding that whatever number of years he has lived In money was left over should go to a Ohio county, whero he was tesldlng -- - at the tln-.Library. fund. crfhls death." Recently " gymnasium or basketAt ,1 meeting of the Par of tho ball organization was perfected In fee O'-iCircuit Court, held nt Har'-forHartford, with membership placed at SI and ilOp per mouth Kv., on Monday, February 12. dues. .Admission Is charged to all 1!U2, tho following resolutions were contest games, but members are per. unanimously adopted: Whereas, mltted to take exorcise In tho hall. Garland D. Black, a A complete gymnasium outfit has member of this bar, was, during tho been ordered which will be placed present term of this court, called to In n hall already leased. the Supremo Bar ' abovo, therefore Tho understanding or contract of be It tho school managers with tho gymResolved, that In his death Is lost nasium association Is that boys un- to the profession a lawyer who wast der 1.1 years and all the girls of the strictly honorable In 'his dealings College shall bo permitted to exer- with clients, courteouslo his legal cise free In the gymnasium Eovcral opponents and respectful to the evenings or nights in the week, and Court at nil times. That the symthnt tho Institution shall bo known pathy of this bar be extended to his as the Hartford College Athletic As- family nnd that a copy of these ressociation. B It Is contended by the olutions he entered on the order-boo- k supporters of tho morcmont that the of this court, and a copy furaddition of the gymnasium to the nished tho family of the deceased. curriculum of the College will add J. S. GLENN, prestige to tho school, and that It Is ERNEST WOODWARD. In conformity with modern advanceW. H. BARNES, ment in college affairs. As might Committee. be expected, people arc "taking Attest. H. P. TAYLOR, Ch'm'n. sides" In tho'matter. with room 'for argument on both sides. C. M. HARNETT. Sec'y. B o d. neighbrrhood. Mr. J. V. Hagerman, o! Concord, was in Sunnydale Saturday on business. Mr. In J. A. Daniel, of Hnrlford, jvas our little town, last SaturJay to put up a gasoline engiroifor J. T. Lowe. J A musical entertainment wastnlv-e- n by Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hlnesjast ' Saturday night. MAXWELL. Feb. 10. Mr. J. Y. Newcomb left y to visit his parents at Maceo. Horn to Mr. and Mrs. Ed Joll. of Nuckols, twin gills. Mr. Ellis Johnson wont to -- week, Misses Pearl and Myrtle Hudson visited Misses Clyde and Clabu Bennett, of Oreonbrlcr, Monday and Tuesday. Mr. Loo Johnson, of Owensboro, Is visiting Mr. Sam Bonnctt, of Greenbrier. Mr. Albert Humphrey, of Llvia, left Monday for Colorndo. Arkan-.BJis.lnst t A - . piece of flannel dampened with Chnnihorlaln's Liniment and bound on to tho affected parts la superior to any plaster. When troubled with lame back or pains in the side or chest, give It a trial and you are certain to be more than pleased with the prompt relief which it affords. Sold by all dealers. m Time will soon be at hand for you to begin tilling yonr soil. If you need anything in the Plow line, we have a Farmers: TO THE DEATH OF ,M.HS. MAKTJIA . RI.VGO AT OWENHHOUO i'SM d, n', n, '. John D. Hell Demi. TYPEWRITING aai Mr. John D. Bell, who lived on TELEfiRAPHV his farm near Matanzas, died about wTlrUFr. SMITH BUSINESS COLLEIE Bifwwir. ta4 Tuesday last It! Dtnklnff hi y4rof 32 ton OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO nine o'clock suffering night oj days ToiinFrt.lfont blllltiM.. .!.n cxprrlrnca l...iu.tnini vr Id mercantile' week, after for live jnjn jmiT women for .nrreii now. ORESOLVTIONH OF RESPEECTO He was eighty-seve- n OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO of pneumonia. had been In splendid years old and Whereas, the news has reached us health this winter until about three of the death of Mrs. Rlngo, tho weeks ago, when be was taken sick T mother of our Commonwealth's At- with la grippe. X torney and brother lawyer, Bon D. Mr. Bell was ono of the most subRingo, and whereas in tho death of stantial citizens of this county and this beloved .woman, Mr. Rlngo and was highly respected. He leaves a X his good family have suffered a loss wife and three grown sons. Tho FOR which no human sympathy can sup- funoral took place Thursday at " Carpenter nnd Repair Work ply and tho community in which sho West Point church at 11 o'clock, TIN WOllK resided, a valuable and beloved being conducted by Rev. John BenPump and Furniture Repairing ! woman, thoreforo bo it Interment followed at the nett. Resolved, by tho Hartford Bar, church cemetery. .j. Soldering aud Saw Filing, Rug- - . . gy Tops Covered anil Lined. . that we extend to our brother and y You'll find him in tho Dr. John his family our deepest and heartfelt STOCK PEAS. Mitchell office on. Main Street. sympathy In this hour of lose and Nice Whippoorwill Seed Peas grief and commend him to tho OmBeaver Dam, Ky. for sale in Hartford by nipotent Judge of all things. BLACK & BIRKHEAD. That a copy of these resolutions i. er Mrs. Martha H. Ringo, aged eighty-tyears, died at midnight last Wednesday of paralysis of the heart at tho homo of her son, Hon. Ben D. Rlngo, at the corner of Third and Clay streets, Owensboro. Mrs. Rlngo was apparently In her usual good health on Wednesday, and her death was very sudden, as nothing was known of her affliction until after 11 o'clock. Mrs. Rlngo was tho widow of Luther Rlngo, who has been dead for a number of years. She was horn In Trimble county and had spent the greater part of her life in tho county of her birth and In Carroll county, Ky. She is survived by only one child, Ben D. Rlngo, Commonwealth's Attorney for this district, and at tho time of hor death attending court at Hartford. She was highly respected, and p most estlmablo woman, who had a great many friends. Sho formerly lived with her son In Hartford and was greatly beloved by all who knew her. A short funeral service was held ovor the remains of Mrs. Rlngo at tho residence at C o'clock Thursday afternoon, conducted by Revr Lowls PowoJl, pastor of Settlo Memorial The remains were then church. shipped to Carrollton, Ky., on the 4 o'clock "Texas" train Friday morning, where tho interment took' place. hree Iiml Ilipsley Dcnd. stock that cannot be excelled Hipsley died 1,'cry suddenly at his residence nejr Heflln. to do the work. this county, Monday night,' of heart Blount's Steel Plows and He ato supper as usual failure. Monday night and retired apparent- Oliver's Chilled Plows and ly as well as usual. repairs of all kinds. Also His daughter noticed that his breathing was not natural and went Wire and Woven Wire Fencto see the cause, but when she ing can be had at this place. reached his bedside, ho was dead. Your trade is solicited. who was ono of The deceased, Ohio county's most highly respected citizens, was 90 years and three months old and had been a member of tho Methodtst church many years, tils wife preceded him to her final rest many years ago. His remaliiB were Interred In tho family burying grounds near Shlnklo Chapel yesterday afternoon. Mr. Hipsley was nn uncle of Mrs. Eggs from Prize Winners nt KenS. K. Duke, of Hartford. tucky Stnte Fair, 101 1. Haw mated .lames A. Hudson Dead. up throe pens from ulildi I w 111 sell Jnmes A. Hudson, of near Sander-fur'- s Crossing, died In tho hospital Eggs nt SSI. .", iJ.OO nnd S5.0I) per at Owensboro Sunday night. He was .setting or 15. Will book orders now operated on at that institution for shipment later. Send for mating about five weeks ago. IlM it's free. Will nlso sell 11 few His remains wero buried nt the InyiiiK Pullets at n $2.00 ejicli. near SeSmith burying grounds, guitiuntced. lect, by tho side of his first wife, yesterday. Tho burial ceremonies R. D. Brooks. " " Graham. Ky. were conducted by the Masons. was 47 years old Tho deceased nnd leaves a wife, ono daughter and a host of friends. BOOKKEEPING Mr. Irad -- LIKENS & ACTON Hartford, Kentucky. Single Comb Buff Orpington Satis-factio- lrltfj" Hiutlne Phnnnnmnhi go 1 Albert Oiler a vl "spy .HHMffl jUH Lj HHMIJtlj,,,, v, IV, 1.,.tt4. 'MWt '!"' PAGE SIX. THE HARTFORD HERALD are headed in a wpstorly direction: but if consigned to somo point eastward, they belong to the Bame man, who has decided that after all there " WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 181. The Hartjord Herald Illinois Central Railroad PLANNED TO WED Cold. dmt weather Is bad for thoss subject to nhoumntlnm. It chills the blood an Time Ta- -, is no place Hko Kentucky. brlBct on an attack. Uo ble at Uenvcr Dam, Ky. DIED Kcntucklan. South Bound. North Bound. a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. N6. O SOMK NKW STOIUKS. No 12212:28 p.m. No. 101 2:48' p.m. O Revealed By Testimony p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. No. 1022:48 In Burris Case. J. K. Williams. Agt OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Ollle James, the gigantic and geIt Is a Powerful 1'OKMS YOITM. K.NJOY. nial Congressman and Senator-eleWall as a Sgssdy Cure from Kentucky, was In conversation WOMAN IS DEVOTED TO HAH O The Herald's Special Selection. Rab It Jn on tho parts affected whenever tho conditions seem to the other day with a WaBhlngtonian MISSOURI . tndlcato a spell of this palnfut ailment; It will warm tho Joints oO O made certain inwhen the latter and ward off tho trouble. If tho disorder has already commenced. LKT'S KOKCiKT IT. quiries with reference to a mutual Who is Defendant Accused of tho treatment la tho same, tho rubblne helps thoHnlirfenfr'to penefriend whom ho had not seen for a trate to tho seat ot pain. Tho relief Is prompt and very satisfyWIVES number of years. Murdering Members of ing: tho ochlnit Joints aro relieved, tho muscles relaxed so that tho 3ay! Let's forget It! Let's put it sufferer feels again the strength and suppleness of youth. aside. "And how does Colonel Prescott For flesh wounds of all hinds, It is a wonderful remedy. Try it Her Family. Life Is so short and the world is so years?" ho wlro spend his declining for cuts, burns, bruises, sores, galls, chofod spots, barbed comwide. , cuts, sprains, swelling:, frost bites. It cur-- quickly and In Dealing With Accused was asked. pletely. IX COFFER Days are so short and there's so I'QISOX "Beautifully, sir; beautifully!" MUCH much to do, Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 Halves." James. "He has a fine answered Henderson, Ky., Feb. 7. Blancho What If It was false, thero's so much ST. LOWS, MO. farm, sir. And a string of trotters, HWPWETM JAMES F. BALLAM that's true! sir. And a barrel of whiskey 1G Royster, exhibiting not tho slightest THE HUSBAND IS RESPONSIBLE yeas old and a wife of the same bltterncssagaln8t the defendant and Say! Lot's forget It. Brush It away To cure Smarting Eyeball Sore T,jtn or Weak Sight. u StcDbraa Ere Salve. calmly telling of her great.fondness Now and forover so what do you age, sir!" say? for him and of their intention of beISoldAno RieoHMtNoioBvl For Crimes of a Spouse-Th- e One of the Toronto golf clubs ing married as soon as the .first wlfo All tho bitter words said, shall be Heaver nam,'' Ky, Hnrtfonl Drug Co., Ilnrtford, Ky., s praise gives a dinner each year to the cad- of the defendant died, was the prinWife is Supposed days. One of'these for the At the feast cipal witness Introduced dy boys It employs. last fall one' of the boys, a tough Commonwealth in the prosecution Say! Let's forget! Let's wipe off to "Obey." youngster, disdained to use any of of tho case against Phillip Burris, the slate. I the forks he fourd at his place, but charged with murder. DECISIONS ON T;HH SUIUKCT 'onded his food into himself with his by the de- Find something higher to cherish It has been learned . than hate, knife. When the Ice crenm course tectives who have been at, work on Tli e re's so much good in the world Acting by Judge Latshaw in the was reached and ho still used his the case that Burris' wlfo died of No. 8 CrlMbJjfa Court last Wednesday, that we've had. knife, a boy who sat opposite to him consumption, In a little cabin near whenliijpentenced Harold Ii. Clark and who could stand It no longer, a Tennessee town and that at the Let's strike a balance and cross off the bad. to prison) for the theft of a diamond shouted: "dee, look at Skinny, time of her death she wns 1n a most Say! Lot's forget it! Whatever ring, supposed to have been stolen usln' his Iron all the way round!" When you buy a Stickney Engine from condition and had been destitute it be; by his wife, holding Clark responsite I will Insure your engine for ten years neglected and uncared for. Let's not be slaves when wo ought against wear, hard service, accidents, fire and ble becauso he was present, was an Oeorge S. Marshall was elected as When Blanche Royster was on the the acts of Providence. Come in and let me to be free, application of a queer law on the reform Mayor of Columbus and stand she was questioned closely show vou the enaine nnrl ernlnin m Insur We shall be walking In sunshiny many other i a Htatutes of Missouri and ance plan The policy is backed by hard cash. did lot of reforming before he was concerning her relations with the ways States. Under it p married woman defeated for Ono of his man to whom she stated that she D. G. Young One of these days. enjoys some remarkable privileges reforms was the establishment of a was engaged and who is charged without danger of punishment if garbage-disposplant. This threw with having admlrlstercd poison to Say! Let's not mind it. Let's smile EXCLUSIVE 'AGENT she takes the precaution To perform out of employment n lot of darkies all the members bf tho family of It away! JwrnUsdeeds--whea D. G. YOUNG Beaver Dam, Ky. Jwr. JarA and.J . Thomas Royster, wttlrthe exception "Bring not a withered rose from yes master is near oy, scavenger business with ramshackle of the daughter, Blanche, and with terday; A wife may steal, set the house old wagons and ramshacklcr old causing the death of tho brother of Flowers are so fresh by tho wayside on fire, commIT forgery, arson or horses. the girl, and also the death of Ret-t- a and wood. bigamy, and It is all right with the One of these darkles, on his way Davis, a colored servant In the Sorrows and blessings, but half unlaw if it appear that she acted to the polls to vote against the May- house. derstood, m'Jhi In her husband's presence and there or, was asked why he opposed MarShe stated that Burris had been Say! Let's not mind It, however, It was a chance that she did it under shall. working on the farm and admitted seems; constraint by him. The law may be am I gwlne f vote agin' that she had discounted notes bear- Hope Is so sweet and holds so many very severe with the husband, but dat man? W'y, dat Burns white, clear and g rascal ing her father's signature and had dreams; steady to the last drop. For the missus goes scot free. tlio sake of everyone In the done took doa garbage right outen "Iven the proceeds of .the notes to AH of the sore fields with blossoms family. Insist on having Thus: Mr. Jones, an amiable and my mouf'i'jjflBk Burris. shall blaze peace-lovin- g person, is weeding the Oil Henry Royster on tho stand statOne of theso days. onions In the back lot. Mrs. Jones Up In Malnef' a quartet from a ed that his daughter had given BurSmokeless Sootless Odorwith Mrs. Brown village is conversing less Costs no more than in churchf choir was asked to ris money to the amount of $500 Say! Let's not take it so sorely to terior tame- - wagon Klnas. across the garden fence. Mrs. Jones go to Jtho country to sing nt the fuheart, Saves eyes; saves money. Your dealer has It in barrels dlroct from our worKs and that he frequently had entered becomes angry and strikes Mrs. neral services over n rich farmer. his objections to her doing so. He Hates may be friendships Just drift C. OIL CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY.OIL Brown on the nose with n loose After tho burial tho members of the ed apart; Eeflaery at Warren, Fa. Hlgluarade Motor OssoUne, Auto stated that he had made objections picket. Very hasty of Mrs. Jones, quartet climbed Into the carriage to the attentions that Burris paid to Failure bo genius not quite underpehaps, but that's all. Mr. Jones, that had brought them and preparstood; his daughter. Other witnesses teswho never has stopped work, ex- ed to start brfck to town. A distant tified that they had heard Burris Wo could all help folks io much if cept occasionally to wipe away a relative of the deceased hurried up we would! VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV1VVVVIVVVVVV- threaten the lives of all the Royster furtive tear superinduced by the ar- to them. Say! Let's get closer to somebody's family. dent onions, is guilty of assault and side, gentlemen "You mustn't be Dr. Vernon Bobbins, Stato bacterhattory, if nothing worse, and that she said. iologist and chemist for tho city of Seo what his dreams are and know particularly bloodthirsty form, In how he tried; "Why not?" asked the barytone. Louisville, stated that ho had made as. be merely had a bowing acquaint, "Because you're nil expected for an analysis of two packages of cof- Learn if your scoldings won't glvo way to pralso anco with Mrs. Brown, and never' dinner over at bereft's." fee that were claimed to have been rhad spoken half a dozen words to Ono of these days. t sent to the Royster family through her in his life. Before the fire on Christmas eve, the mails by Burris and that he had Say! Let's not wither! Let's branch d In the One Hundred and two old maids were planning for the found arsenic In one package and out and rise i Missouri Reports, a Supreme holiday. strychnine In the other. Dr. Rob-bi- Out of the byways and nearer the Court decision says concerning a "Sister Mallle," said tho younger, said be had also made a post skies; case in which a woman carried a re- "would a long stocking hold all mortem examlatlon of the ..stomach Let's spread some shade that's revolver to her husband in jail: Tickets, reservations, train time, dates of sale and you'd want for a Christmas gift?" of Henry Royster, and that he had freshing and deep, "Marriage does not take away "No, Elvira," said tho older; "but found traces of strychnine poisoning Whero some tired traveler may He specific fares from your station, may be had of your 'frorfl a wife hor general capacity to p. pair of socks would. Saturday but that it had not been In sufficient , ' down and sleep. local Ticket Agent. G.'H. BOWER, G. P. A., conun.lt crime, but It casfs Upon her Evening Post. quantities to cauBe death. Ho Sny! Let's not tnrry! Let's do It t& duty of obedience to and aftec Memphis, Tenn. stomach examination of the right now! For Sale, Cheap. The law InHon for her husband. of strychnine In the coffee to havo So much to do, if wo just find out A full course of Bookkeeping or dulges the presumption that if Bhe killed thirty people. how. commits an offense in her husband's a full course of Shorthand and e, h. P. Church, a druggist, of We may not be hero to help folks or mtvvwMWWwwmwvwwwwwwmvwvtmwvMww Typewriting, Including all the auxconpresence It was the result of his Tenn., testified that ho pralso straint and coercion, and In the ftb iliary branches, such as Banking, linil sold Burris (somo strychnine in One of these days. senco of proof to the contrary, ex- Spelling, Punctuation, Mathematics, November of last year. &c, as explained in the catnlogue. cuses her." HOW TO KK A MINT) HEADER During the day Burris showed but Judge Grant, of the Missouri The regular catalogue price for this little concern In the happenings According to THE ONLY ZANCIGS. Suprome Court, In commenting on scholarship Is $50. We will sell at around him and at no time did he This remarkable book will enable to name the wife's Immunity from punish- a bargain and the one getting it will lose his When enter- you, though blindfolded, receive the same benefits as if purment, said: ing tho court room this morning he any article presented; give tho full "From n close examination and chased direct from Draughon's Prac- smiled at tho moro than 2,000 peo- name and address on a card, etc., comparison of the cases and the text tical Bulsness College. For further ple who formed an almost solid lino etc. Great for Church, Lodge ard writers, the general rule admitted particular call on or address, or to earn from the jail to tho court house and other Entertainment, Tho Hartford Herald. by all seems to be that if a wife tf money on tho stage. Price $1. Adwho filled tho court room to roramits any felony with the excepdress, L. G. FIXEN, 1313 Carmen Xnt Tnklni? Anv Chances. treason and pertion of murder, 7t4 Ave.. Chicago. III. "Mrs. Boggs," said the S. P. C. A. haps some other heinous felonies, liaising Salaries. "complaint has been made igent, Genesis. In tho absence of evidence to the years For the past twenty-tw- o you cage containing Pharaoh had Just dreamed of tho contrary, 11 Is nssumed that she did that parrotset tho your our lawn yester- Jno. F. Draughon has been showing soven full and tho seven blasted out on It under constraint by htm (her day morning and permitted the bird tho poorly paid that, they-- can In- cars of corn. husband) and is therefore excusod." tnk-In- g o remain In the snow for two crease their earning power by "You aro going to Invent a now "An net (by tho wife) not begun specialized training. hours." kind of breakfast food," interruptin the husband's presence Is within Ipoboir FW mall For prlfes 0" "Mr. Agent," replied Mrs. Boggs, the rule If completed in It. Thus, "my husband shaved himself with Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewrlt-l- f ed Joseph. when a wife eomeyed to her huse, etc. address JNO.F. DRAUGHOne his new Double Cross safety razor band In prison, by IiIb direction, an ON. President, Nashville, Tenn. For yesterday morning, and I did not Implement for escape, she was -NOW OUUEOPIE catalogue giving rates of tuition at ANDwant to ruin that parrot."' deemed to havo acted under his coI college, address Draughon's Practl- ercion, therefore entitled to acqut-tal.- " COURIER-JOURNA- L When her child Is In danger a caTt. Business College, flashville, May Prolong Their Lives woman will risk her life to protect Tenn., or Paducah, Ky., or Evans-vlll- e, At nn advanced ago wasto la moro "You eco," says Judge Latshaw, it. Nqi great act of heroism or risk Ind., or Washington, D. C. rapid than repair. Tho organs act "a woman Is supposed to oboy her of life Is necessary to protect a 3- more slowly and less effectually than husband, but she may get him into child from croup. Give Chamber- COAL IS STILL KING In youth. Tho circulation Is poor, the TO TUNE OF 9037,000,000 a lot of trouble by being too ready." lain's Cough Remedy and all dannot included in above special Sunday Courier-Journblood thin and watery, the appetito Arkansas, which has n similar ger is avoided. For sale by all dealpoor and digestion weak. rates. Sunday, extra, $2.00 per year, $1 six months, 50c r Tho statement that "coal Is king" law to that of Missouri, recently ers, We want to say to every aged permonthp. Send your subscription and make check payIs an old one, and at the same tlmo son In this vicinity that Vlnol, our de- three modified it, and New York has gone as It was twenty, lictus cod liver and Iron tonic (with- able to the Hartford Herald. It Is as true y farther and repealed tho wife immunity statute. or moro years ago. In the United out oil) will prolong life. It creates Kansas City Star. This offer is good on all back subscriptions and renewI States coal to tho valuo .pf $637,- - an appotjto, aids digestion and makes als for the Hartford Herald. Subscribe or renew NOW,$ For Infanta and Children, 000,000 at tho placo of production good blood. In this natural manner Trains mid Ho Forth. this offer is positively good only during January and FebruV Passenger the record for tho year recently Vlnol retards waBto and replaces trains havo pretty Till Kind YOU HaVB AlWayS BOUgM strength, giving new. aiy, 1912. Rememl-e- r thiB is Presidential year and by this weakness with lights and unsanitary drinking cups. worn system. Bears tho i As a comparison, A freight train has none of these take for ln life to the In this vicinity only real combination you will get all the news County, State and Vf.j If ccZcUAt stance the value of the precious mot- ized people , and nothing Is supposed to take Signature of how Vlnol Invigorates old people Nation. ' 'Water except the engine Cattle, als, and It is found that; gold was we would not be able to supply the 0. 'coal, household goods and hoboes FOR SALE General store. On produced only to the value of demand. You hear a great deal 'jnako'up tho principal burden of account of 111 health, I wish to sell Try a bottle of Vlnol with the unr Tho household goods nt once, stock of general merchan- about tho silver production, and derstanding that your money will be 'the'TroIffht. returned if It does not help you. BBtajTuIeiibelong to somo man who dise, storehouse, dwelling, lot etc. what docs It amount to annually? Tho only relation of Z. Wilbur Mitchell, Beaver Dam, Ky. ho can do better in Splendid location. Big bargain. Ad - f$28,000,000. decided has In The Herald and it Costs Yon Only One Dollar a Year. Texas or Oklahoma; that Is, if they dress, S. O. Crafton, Deer Lick, Ky, ("King Coal" which nearly ap- - Hartford Drag Co., Hartford, Ky. Hog-wallo- w 132-74- :05 ooooooooooooooooo ct WHENJIFE ooooooooooooooo annually In recent years. Copper Is credited with a valuo of $05,000,000 nt tho. placo of production. Ono other product of tho earth which may bo mentioned Is petroloum, and that Is valued at $107,000,000, according to tho. last Coal Trade Journal. statement proachea him in power1 Is pig Iron, and Its valuo Is put at somo $400,-000,0- 00 Ballard's Snow Liniment Prvntiv, s a LI IU "Better per Bottle A Paid Up Policy al I -- aU.uiLJ,aw r1'" iiLjii.i i"mm iriuiuniii" Or ""y low-flun- Solite Lamp - q CHAS. STOLL Wo-Car-b" ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD j . Mardi Cras New Orleans -- Sixty-secon- ns eTDXTxaD?3r 15 to 20 stat-morte- m -- ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD Good-lettsvlll- self-contr- Great Subscription Offer ' Special over-Howln- g. bargain Rate! . GOOD ONLY DURING JANUARY AND FEBRUARY, 1912. The Hartford Herald Year & Daily Daily Daily " " " " one year $4.0O 6 months $2.75 " $2.0O al to-da- CASTOR A r j - $110,-000,00- Plenty of Good Reading t"Mut ,., y.!il,y..,.rtWielM. 'iz-lizzjt- ii; ' Hsstir' in'siH-ii-l AviMMUHMM a. Admim TVEDNEHDAY FEB. 14, 1012. Of THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE SEVEN. THE LIQUOR PROBLEM Liquor Drinking Noted as Most Demoralizing v Curse Af, dieting Mankind. Pleasant Editors The Herald: Allow me to present a few observations on the liquor problom. It Is gratifying to "know that the Legislature has pass-- d Ridge, Ky., Feb. 8SL91Z- - IB QUESTION 1 4 tho County Unit bill. Most people who favor this bill are sober, They Include thinking people. farmers, ministers and the sober of All professions, whllo those who oppose It are tho saldon keepers, tho whiskey manufacturers and the Tockless of allprofesslons. There are some splendid people who are so thoughtless as to bolleve that a lino placed On drunkenness would forever settle the liquor problem. They seorn to forget that all men, howover "smart," are subject to temptations. Many adults are as thoughtless as children and ruecd the protection of the law to prevent their ruin. Who would have a saloon next door to the church or school? Wo can't afford to have our young men subjected to the Influences of those who drink or even look upon whiskey with r friendly eye. Drinking Is useless, extravagant and dangerous to tie drinker and his family and friends. We can't Justify the use of whlrkey from any view point. It Is Injurious to health, and It Is contrary to the teachings of Holy Writ. It has wrought the ruin of many a man financially, morally, socially and physically. It Is a twin brother to poverty and rags. In the face of the fact that 80 per cent of crime Is traceable to lrlnk, there aro those who would offer you tlio temptation to violate the law and then punish you for yielding. Who Is the most competent to settle the drink evil, the ones who drink and favor drinking or tho3e who oppose drinking and "practice what thoy preach?" All drunkards s, and so were onco long as whiskey Is sold, tbero will be drunkards, no matter what the lino shall be. In all cities drunkenness Ib finable, but they get drunk just tho earae, o" at least fines do not provent drunkenness. The greatest enemy this country frlond to moderate drinkhas ing, for he upholds a system or custom as rotten as slavery. Dehlnd It lurks tho tempter himself. Orphans cry out ugninst It. Why does any one want to drink? To gratify an appetite born of perdition. to A saloon at every crossroads gratify the appetite of the moderate drinker but a small fine will settle tho question forover and put an end dram-drinkerIs-t- A' fine Is Imposed for carrying concealed weapons because It leads to crime. Drinking leads to drunkenness and crime. Youra for sobriety, M. T. WESTEItFIELD. to drunkenness. Hah! The Rood Thins. There wan a Man who had a friend who know a Man who was acquainted with a Man who knew a Lady who know a Man who was on the Inside. r Then the Mnn told the Lady who told tho Man who told the Man who told the Man who told the Man who told tho Man who told tho Friend who told the Man that Houndpup was a good Thing In the First Race at Columbaroz. The mail bet $10 and loupdpup Ran Last. Moral: The Only Good Thing about a Good Thing Is the Good Thing who Gives It Away. JKIt CAPITA Cl'ltHKVCV IX TUB l S. IS fjtai.flt Washington, Feb. 5.. An equal division of all tho monoy in the L'nlted Sta'es would result In each man, woman and child possessing $34. CI. TJiat amount Is tho per capita circulation, according to the calculation of the Treasury Department, which estimates that the population of the country has grown from 91.972.2GG, as determined by the census of 1910, to 94,958,000 on February 1, 1912. Tho rtock of monoy In the United States h fst climbing up into tho billions. On February 1 thoro waB Advicfcto the Aged. Age brings Infirmities, cuch as ilur-gu- h bowels, weak kidneys ssd fcUi ler and TORPID LIVER. TutfsPills have a specific effect on these organs, stimulating the bowels, causing them to perform their natural functions aa la youth and IMPARTING to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER, They are adapted to old aad young;. . v" peoplo themselves, who, through $3,624,672,121 In the United States. represented O HIMl'LK AND PURE DEM- - O and by the Initiative, the Referenthis, $338,302,481 Ol dum and tbo Recall, express their OCUACY. tho assets of the Government and O ny W. H. Cundlff. O own sovereign will, and thus have Was in circulation. O $3,286,269,640 qiffiffiumiMw nfliaacwimi,,wiii Thirty-thre- e years ago" tho entire OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO direct legislation and ment. counamount in circulation in this AH talk about the "passion of tho Federal and political power may try was $816,266,721. not override States Rights. But, In pocjple," In the matter of the Recall For Infants and Children. Fine Magazine Offer. the matter of public utilities and of the Judiciary or In anything For a limited time wo will offer necessities like transportation and olse Is foolish and futile, and Is Norman E. Mack's National Month- communication lines, tho Federal Irrelevant In the discussion of a ly, a Democratic Magazine for Men Government certainly haB plenary "Simple and Pure Democracy." Either tho people aro sovereign, and Women, and the Hartford Her- powers, socially and politically, to or else there Is a power over and ald, a newspaper of the same kind, regulate commerce by governmental both one year for only $1.10. control of all the means of trans- abovo them. Aedable PreparalionbrAs-slmilatin- g mag- portation and communication. Whencvor and wherever there 1b Tho National Is a high-clailicFoodandUcgula-tin- g good over with azine bubbling iheSloiuuchs andBowcls of Hence, constitutionally and polit- either a sovereign or representative, things. ically, 1. o by powers delegated to then and there they aro governed; Its contributors are the foremost the United States Government by and, hence, aro deprived of tho desideratum which Is men and women of tho land. It Is the States, railroads and telegraphs same size of the Saturday Evening ought to be regulated and controlled a necessity of "Simple and Pure Promotes Digeslion.Cheeriur-nessandltest.Con'aiPost and Is beautifully Illustrated' by the General Government In tho Domocracy!" nellher throughout. Politics, good fiction, Interest of all the States In tho Opium.Morpliine norrlhieral. brilliant reviews, interesting de- Amorlcan Union. NOT HAH.C OTIC. O O SPECIAL NOTICE partments, humor, with George Ado AssWB U If If not, why not? in regnnl to and John Kendrick Dangs as regu' The political and social right, O OIHTUARIES, RESOLUTIONS O flKtpt afOUDrSAKUZLPtrCHm O lar monthly contributors ' to this de- through and by the powers confer- O . Rmv&ln Seal' O OF RESPECT, &c. partment. A magazine that will red o it by the States, Is ono which O OJL.IU&J- I Interest every member of tho fam- tho General Government may well OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I yCiue.Wd ;iimmi ily. Every reader of tho Hartford suae In behalf of all the people, In HiCcrtmnikStia Tho Hartford Herald has adopted Herald knows what it Is and what oruer to pronmit private ana corpoHinpSrnl- a new rulo In regard to Obituaries, It stands for. Don't fall to take ad) I&drryrnrunir. rate monopolies from existing to the of Respect, Cards of vantage of this great combination I033 and detriment of the common Resolutions Apcrfecl Remedy forConslipa-Tlo- n 'fit, Thanks, &c, whether written at the tf offer. people. AV l , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea tho behest of lodges, churches or inPublic utilities Include all transWorms .Convulsions .Fcvensh-ncs- s telegraph, dividuals, and that K wo shall telephone, portation, Sleep. nnd Loss O O TO A FAITHFUL FRIEND. traction and turnpike lines, and all charge at tho rate of two cents per Facsimile Signature of OOOOOOOOOCOOOOO water, gas, and electric light com- lino for all such articles, except obituary poetry, which will bo ono cent panies. When I wake ho comes to greet per word, straight. This Is tuo smallAll theso public service corporame with a wagging tall he'll meet tions bolong In a class by them-iclvest rato wo charge for nnvthlnir and mo when I'm coming homo at twih of our regular rate. , since they are performing Is only light from tho business of tho day. public functions that, wero they not Tho amount, in cash or stamps, Though I'm weary, cross and dow- perVormlng them, tho Federal Gov- must accompany each article, or dy, he Is ready with his 'Howdy!" Six ernment Itsslf would have to per- It will not be printed. exact copy or wrapper. and his eyes are full of welcome and form, as a social and political unit words average a lino In ordl- Is his" tall Just thumps away. If I'm standing for all the people. nary reading and every separate THCOkNTAUK COMPANY. NCWVOHB MT ugly, grouchy, snappy, it disturbs character or initial letter counts ns Theso United State. constitute the hlsonannor happy, yet he sort of a word. Tho headings and the slg- - j posto cheer mo as a comrade Social Unit, and, as such, they tries nature both count one lino each, ought to do; while If I'm bright sess full social, political and econom- oven .If they aro only a word or two. ic powers conferred by tho people and smiling at his canine ways beobituary poetry, straight All guiling, he tho gladdest, gayest dog- to them, ns being E Plurlbus Unum, through, ono cent per word. empowered by the sovereign people gie that a man would wish to view. Contributors please remember. If I called to him to follow, he to protect their interests and their from being encroached upwould trail o'er hill and hollow; he liberties Hut tin- - Wive Don't Know It. Mayor Hunt, of Cincinnati, hopes would never pause or leave mo on by corporate or prlvato Interests, foreign or while he had the strength to crawl; or militated against by that the tlmo will come when Cin' stick through fight and domestic enemies. ho would cinnati working girls can find huspowers bands In the dance halls. Many All of those political frolic merry days or melancholic asking only to bo with me In my which make Demos, or tho people, Cincinnati wives now (INCOlll'OKATKD) Yes, though the paramount authority, sovereign can. fortune or my fall. Loulf vlllo Com degradation made mo In all things, aro of necessity deshame and Siili. shunned by all creation, through rived from the people alone, and can upon, or An $S0 Sclfolarjhip In tho Vandor-bl- lt valley of the shadow and the In no wise be Infringed the Training School for Boys, Elk-topaths whore terrors dwell, lth a militated against by cither corpora3HCa:c1: Ky. Will sell reasonable. For does not alter, with a trust tion or individual seeking to exlove that that cannot falter, he would follow ploit or to rob the people by exces- further particulars call on or ad- j dress, me unflagging, though my roadway sive charges for public services. The Hartford Herald. tho urgent need of tf Therefore, led through hell! Dog'o' mine, you're shy on breed- governmental regulation and. con- Siihscrilw for The Ilnitfonl lUmUi.ltietH, WllCIl 'il VCai'll . ing, but unless I'm poor al reading trol of all railroads, telegraphs, etc., there lies love and faith unending so that the economic Interests of the In those brown and gentle eyes, and people, en masse, may be protected although you'ro far f'om pretty, from the rapacity of corporations, nnd the encroachments of monopothat's no causo to call for pity vou'vo a world o' canine wisdom lies subversive of the rights and libfor a fellow of your size. So I love erties of tho people. There are no metes and bound3 you 'cause you're loyal and your It Is tho concrete heart Is truly royal, with i warmth for democracy. and tender vigor that would well 'will of tho people. It Is their nat befit a king, and becauso your dumb ural and Inalienable rights expresssocially, poSEND YOUR BOY TO devotion Is as measureless as ocean ed In and indusas fervid as the passions that litically, economically and trially. the poets love to sing. MATHENEY BATTS Therefore, because of this social Let the scientists aver that you're an ordinary cur, that in your canine and political fact, all corporate composition there Is not a pint of powers aro derived from tho State. said corporation, poul. Let 'em prove It, word and And whenever letter, but I know a whole lot bet- whether It be ono of transportation ter, and I guess your name is enter- or communication, or one of whated on the "fit for heaven" scroll. ever name, transcends those powers, Truth to tell, when I have ended all It constitutes Itself a prlvato mothe space It was intended I should nopoly detrimental to the economic spend upon this planet, when, In Interests of the people. Talk about "vested rights o! corshort, I've "got my cue," I shall plucky, that I porations!" There aro no rights parthink, good dog and sure am mighty luckv If they'll let amount to tho rights of a frpo, sovmo up In heaven where they've ereign people. All other rights aro only delegated rights, and whenever made a place for you! any corporation claims other rights of college-traine- d Almost Lost His Life. than those ceded to It by tho State S. A. Stld, of Mason, Mich., will as being of the nature of a public Twenty-fou- r never forgot his terrible exposure function, Iti claims that which does to a merciless storm. "It gave mo not belong to It as a social instituin repa dreadful cold," he writes, "that tion exercised by prl-atand corpomy chest, bo rate Individuals doing a social buscaused severo pains In this it was hard for mo to brqathe. A iness as servants of society, and not neighbor gave mo several closes of as Irresponsible private Individuals. New Discovery which Dr. King's The foregoing statements and brought gr,eat relief. The doctor elucidations of prlvato and corposaid I was on tho verge of pneumorate rights, and of social functions nia, but to continue with tho Dis- dorived by corporations from the I did so and two hot, o.i people as a whole, aro In strict accovery. completely cured me." Use only cord with simple and pure democrathis quick, Bafe, reliable medicine cy a democracy of the people, by for coughs, colds, or any throat or the people, for tho people. lung troublq. Pried G0c and $1.00. In a simple and pure democracy Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by thoro Is no power higher than the m James H. Williams. people's power. All sovereign and veto power resides In a eovorelgn people, who are social, political and 'economic equals. FOR FLETCHER'S Equality of rights, privileges and opportunities attest tho , fact of In-.1 dustrial freedom, emphasized In the A Strategist. , "Talk about Napoleon! That fol- existence of political and economic low Wombat Is sotncthingof a strat- oquallty. Any othor kind of democracy does not guarantee liberty, for egist himself." and equality to all. "As to how?" Without tho Initiative, the Ref "Got his salary raised six months Address all communications to ago, and his wife hasn't, found It erendum and tho Recall no people J can exercise tho rights of out yet." Desk "C." for, Indeed, Is tho sacred right of each and When DALLARD'S SNOW LINIMENT Is rubbed in for rheumatic every human being. aches and pains, It reaches tbo spot In order to be free, tho peoplo quickly and tbo relief is very gratimust bo supremo In all things. fying. Prlco 23c, GOc and $1.00 representative govern- -' per bottle. Sold by Hartford Drug mont, thero'oro. Is an utter and a j Co., Hartford, Ky Donovan & Co., complete falluro; because none can j ra truly rcprosent tho people but tho Beaver Dam, Ky. ' n -) ooooooooooooooo CASTORIA Always Bought The Kind You Have ss Bears the Signature of ns ooooooooooooooooo K.ir 9 In ooooooooooooooc i AsI I td Use of For Over xew'york Thirty Years es one-fift- CASTORIA TZEI&rTTjrCZECr light and Power Company E. G. hard-worki- i n, Will icire your house at cost. Electric Li (fltts are clean, healthy and safe. No home or business house should be without Wtti't BARRASS, MGR., ord, IKZy mmmiiiimimmiiimmii ft rw Vantebilt Training School FOR BOYS Elkton, Kentucky. e select school for boys. Faculty men. Our patronage has come from several Southern States. different towns Western Kentucky resented year. A limited C Electric Lights, Steam Heat, Hot and Cold Baths. Extremely Healthful location. recently spent on improvements. $4,000.00 No saloons in the town or county. Children c,ry ii CASTO Rl A i Moral surroundings excellent. Unexcelled as a school for young boys. Write Nineteenth Year Begins September 6, 1911. catalogue. fra-tornl- ty MATHENEY & BATTS. , ,T- - - TWBEWJ1 ""l'" t ii n nn hhwm.i,. Iy.i I lyiiyfii - pi . jh ,.s,fcvas. T"ll'"Yfll-T," 71 ! iTfflff - lMit ufirMir) iJffflfcV" r nS WE0NE8DAX, EIGHT. THE HARTFORD HERALD FEB. - 141918. t I I there is only one difference of any democratic nation Is richer In geconseque'neo between us, and that Is nius than any other nation because that they still adhere to a protective it releases genius. The fine proot, may be all right, but of tho principles of Democracy la M. 21. A E. RAILROAD TIME TA tariff. That that you can't predict from which 1 have never had a feeling of piety 1HJ3 AT HARTFORD, KY.. for it. My heart has never been class the leadors are to come. Tlysse protecgiants more often come from cotThe following L. & N. Tirdo Card touched by tho principle of to tages than palaces. Tho genius that U ofToctlve from Monday, Aug! 21st: tion. And so there are candidates, "rises out of that, Is genius that will bo substituted for the present ReNorth Bound not bo denied." publicans In power. No,' J duo at Hartford 7:19 a. m. "Why has the country hesitated No. 1U duo at Hartford 3:40 p. m. Master Commissioner's Sale. to substitute the Democratic party South Bound Ohio Circuit Court, Kentucky. for the Republican party? America No. US duo at Haatford 8;4G a. m. Is a business country, dominated by Jessie Phlpps, Plaintiff, No. 113 due at Hartford 1.48 p. m. practical men of affairs. vs. They do 11. K. MISCHKK, Afit. not tolerate Interference with the Laura Greenwood, &c, Defendants. By virtuo of a Judgment and orcourse of their business. normal You know what the lawyer's argu- der or sale of the Ohio Circuit ment Is for following precedent. It Court, rendered at The Juno term, GREAT Is a great deal bettor for him to 1911, In the above cause for the know what Is going to be done In purposo of tho division of tho procourt than to be In doubt. ceeds amongst tho parties In InterTho same Is true of tho business est and paying tho costs" herein, I AT man. Ho wants definite points by will offer for sale by public auction at the court house door In Hartford, which ho may draw his orbit. "Therefore, I say that America Is on Monday, the 4th day '"of March, By Governor Wilson, of Intolerant of experiment and uncer- 1912, about one o'clock p. m., upon tain change. Tho Indictment against n credit of six and twelve months, New Jersey. tho Democratic party is that It is a the following described 'property, party of experiment nnd change. Is arAbout one hundred acres of land, TALK TO GENERAL ASSEMBLY not that true? Is not that tho gument that has been used against being the same conveyed to E. V. us? The truth of It Is neither hero Phlpps by Jas. C. Warden In No' vember, 1850, and deed for which Is Iu Which He Clearly Outlines nor there. page S such recorded In Deed Book "L", w. f has undergone "Business office, lySome Fine Policies of changes that merely standing and 545, Ohio Countv Clerk's county, Kentucky, and letting things alono will not serve ing In Ohio beginning at two beeches, sweet Government. tho interests of business itself. Tho gum and black gum In W. C. WarCopyright Hut, SchaffhfT lc Mux field of business Is not free, as It line, corner of O. R. Ashley's MESSAGE OF RURXISG TRUTH used to be, but Is bound by certain den's 1 17G acres; thence E. 100 poles to a central controlling Influences In the beech, dogwood and stone; thenco Frankfort, Ky., Feb. 9. What financial woild.glvlng privileges and on Not many N. 3C2 poles to Daviess' corner !io boliuvcd the Democratic party artificial advantages. Rough Creek; thence down Rough to tha,t business men are speaking out about should do to win in the next nationmennders to the mouth was told the members of this. Many a man knows If he com. Creek in Its al election V 11 1 or Big Run; thence to an ash, two tho Kentucky General Assembly plains there are men who can jeop- maples, corner to Jos. Barnott's surI here this afternoon by "Woodrow ardize his success more than now. vey, to which this is a part; thence Wilson. Oocrnor of New Jersey, "Tho questions of business of this up the Rli Run with its meanders . Gnd candidate for tho Democratic country have become new questions. first The procpsscs of our law 3 are not to two white 'baits, poplar and hicknomination for President. The Ferry ory near where Condit's to cMonttal, ho said, lb to win the con- truo to tho new processes of busl-nc- c. crosses the Big Run: thenco S. 20 lotting them fidence of U" people liv T'io Judges are a bit at sea. K. 117 poles to tho "Beginning, conDemocratic lenders Itnow Hint th to-d- ay "l'rl liege governs unrestrained. all conditions, Those combinations in business arc taining two hundred acres more or are conversant with truo said to con-tnl- n less, but erroneously and then recommend remedies that, disclosing themselves ns coincident one hundred and twenty-livof it; while not radical, will bring about with combinations In politics. Excepting thererrom tho surtace the desired effect. Tho speech was "The problem, to my mind, there- or a certain tract of 100 acres sold delivered In the House of Represenfore, is how to commend tho Demohv E. V. Phipps to Mary Tichenor tatives, and at Its conclusion Gov. cratic party to the confidence of the shown by Deed Book 34, page was Riven an ovation. Ev- nation. How can wo show the peo-nl- o as Wilson well-dress- ed else; 351, and which 100 acres of sur-fac- o In ery Eoat. both on the floor and of the United States that they only Is bounded and described tho gallery of the chamber, was oc- can trust us? By showing that we as follows: cupied, and standing room was at a j know the facts when we see them. Beginning at a stone, corner in premium. Wo are getting knowledge by the the Hartford and Polt Pleasant Ho began his address to the Geninvestigations of tho Stanley Com- - road; thenco N. 3 E. 2 GO rWs to ' SCHAFFNER & JHARX eral Assembly at 3:30 o'clock. mittee, and by the meat packers in- n beech on Rough River; thence "I feel as if political business was vestigation. We now know how the down that stream to a stone and being transacted in this country at price of meat is fixed. The blprod-uct- a small hickorj; thence 'S. W. all us present," ho began, "and therefore of the carcass aie tho great 131 rods to a stone In the Hartford am going to speak to you this af- profits of the meat concerns. The and Point Pleasant road? thence Democrat. I know price of meat is made to cover the with the road S. 58 E. 15 rods and ternoon as finish there arc Republicans present, but ,wIole operating expense. 18 links; thence S. G814 E. al8 rods; I have conio to believe there Is no E. 20 rods to tho "With regard to the Steel Corpo- thenco S. 72 in service Republican who is hopeless. ration, we now khow something of beginning, containing '"0 acres "1 am not aware of any partisan its operations, but not all. Wc will more or less. All tho coal and prejudice on my part, but I am a know In time. mineral under which wis reserved 1 1 boliovor In party allegiance. 1 be- "All thnt I'm Interested In is how by E V. Phlpps and Is now owned Jiovo in a close union a men to ac- - pnn I bi3t Kft the crovbar under br I1I3 estate, and this boundary Is comiillih an object. Tho only thing there locked gaten to open them." :i part of tho land conveyed by John 1 And of which we need feel jealous is not To illustrate is point, Gov. C. Waiden to E. V. Phlpps ii llio paity organization, but the parhero told a story or a joung excepting also the family gravevard She was with right of ingress and egress. ty machine. Tho part) organbatlon mid her sweothoart Is formed for public purposes, while jllgt , ,ler teens, he said., nnd hor Lorvlng bv recent survey by John ... .. .. . ut the party machine is toimeil :oi niOlllur atwilys UlUUU 1. u ..!.. m I. B. W llson, the following boundary II iuuh norsonal nuriiosos. No man can act urcseiit when the daughter's sweet-hea- it to bo gold, lz: II IlllaBBkOLXr' III with party efficiency If lie does not called. Bcglrning at a hickory In Mary n party act as an integral part of Tho oung man arrived at the Ticheiioi'fl line, 50 feec from low ' organlvtIn. house on evening before the mother water on Rough River; thence down "Tile United States Is dissatisfied bad completed her toilet, and he said river as It meanders.blndlng on i with the rule of tho Republican par- and the young woman were in tno low water S. 39 ,i W. b poles, S. 1 do parlor alone when she began to G1V& W. 11 poles, S. 8 7 controlled. ty as at present W. 12 of is not need to proc this. 1 nm not bleed at the nose. He, wishing to poles, N. 73 V W. 9 poles, N. 52 you, but I am telling do something arguing with for her relief, and W. S poles to a maple, Frank you. having heard that cold steel at the Ross' corner: thence with his line come In. When he was assured that HOPEWELL. "There Is p widespread dissatis- back of the neck was p good remo-d- S. 53 W. G poles to the center or KINSMAN OF "BECAUSE Nichols waB going to get Into the Feb, 12. Mr. Billy Johnson faction. Not a dissatisfaction with stepped over to the door for the Big Run creek; thence up same as It house, after some parley, the moth- some hogs to Paradise the third of T? the professed principles of the Re- key. In his excitement he Inadveit-entl- y meanders In tho middle thereor to CAUGHT IN HART COUNTY er of Hatfield opened the door and this month and they are thero yet. polipublican party, but with the turned the look in extracting a stone, 'corner with Jno. nnd Arbln No boats on account of ice. No allowed tho marshal to enter. cies or ,the Republican party. The the key, and then hurried over to Tichenor and Rowo'on the Mr. Nichols took charge of his boat has made a trip for about dissatisfied the oung woman and held It to the Hartford and Point Pleasant road; Fonsy country Is profoundly fyy prlsonef and in the morning preHatfield Arrestee flye Tveoks. with the leadors of the Republican bark or 'hor neck. Just then the thenco with Howe's line S. 17 W. Commissioner sented him before Mrs. J. t. Shull, who has been many of them, mother arrived at the door, and party. They believe, Marshal, Charged With 9' poles to p stone; thence with John KIcoi. pf Loltclitield, whore very alc, Is some hotter, honeBtly. that this country cannot fln,nng u locked, rapped for ad- - Rowo's and J.B. Wade's lines S. 3 Hatfield' promptly admitted his, guilt Mr. John Miles spent n fow days Selling Liqior. entor upon courso of action with- mittniice. Adding to the embarrass- W. 112 poles to a stone and black In Hartford last week on business and stated that he had been violatout the npproval of men who con- ment o' the situation, the young gum, G.ll. Ashby's comer In Wade's ing tho law for longer than hq for the county. trol the largest llnanclal Interests of man dropped the key down the lino; thence with Ashby's line S. Messenger of couUL?member, and did not know The Owcnsboro Miss Minnie Shull, who has been the country. It Is a theory of trus- voung woman's back, 8GJ4 B. 100 poles to n stone, Orvllle Sunday says: 11 U(M.UUIU U!Bt;UllklllUt3 111(3 DAIC Ul very sick, Is much better. teeship. "What Is to be done?" Gov. Wil- Bishop's corner In Ashby's line; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Engler, who 'Deputy United States Marshal liquor. after he. got-oof his trou"When they speak o the people son asked, and his heaicrs began to thence with Bishop's line N. 3 E. Charles T. Nichols has just returnble. Tho Commissioner directed the have been visiting Mrs. Engler's or the United States they do not In- laugh. When tho merriment had 83 poles to a stone, said Mary a long and tedious trip, prisoner to be placod in tho custody parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wilson, They arc4n the subsided Bomowhat lm added: "My Tlchenor's corner on said road; ed from, clude .themselves. made under grave" hardships, consid- of the Jailer at Oweiisboro, wherp he of Ronfrow, returned home Sunday. attitude of guardians. Their idea solution Is to get the key nt any thence with said road and hor lines ering the state of the weather and will await the action of the grand Mr. Alox Russell has had a seis that ocry election must b percost." N. 72 Vi W. 20 poles N. G8PW. 38 tho conditions or roads traveled, In Jury nextMay. ' vere carbunclo on his neck, hut lsj-sonally guided. Whenever there is Becoming berlous, Gov. Wilson pole3 N. 5S E. 15 pojes and 18 links bettor now. the apprehension of a man charged A Warning Against Wet Feet. a campaign, It is made to turn upon said: to a stone, her corner on said road; with selling liquor, in violation of Mr. Lindsay McDaniel, formerly tho question of prosperity doled out "We must be willing to deal with thenco with another of her UneS, N, the United StateB laws. Wot and chilled feet Usually aN of this neighborhood, but now n resby' tlio material-controlle- d interests. one thing at a tlmo. We must un-- j 3 fect tho mucous membrane of tho ident of ast St. Louis, is visiting E. 134 poles to the beginning, A warrant came to tho hands tit "They do not trust the general dertako to stop that way of fixing containing 101 acres more or less, noBe.throat aiid lungs, and la grippe, his cousin, Dr. Harry King, at Nasb, Mr. Nichols gome days ago for'the Vronchltjs Judgment of America, and the peo-pl- o prices which establishes and mainor pneumonia may re- -. .Texas, fie Is anticipating returning Tho purchaser will bo required to or Fonsy Hatfield, ljvlng at realize this. They aro demandsecur- arrest a monopoly. Watch carefully, particularly tains execute bond with approved Mlllerstown, about twenty miles suit. children, and for the racking, by way of Dade City, Fla., to spend ing that In Federal nffalrs they have tho 'Tin not afraid of tjio sl?c or a ity Immediately after sale. a few dayg with Mr. Dave Rhoads, In H,art County.. from Leltchfleld, Bigness, associated a govurnment of their own. corporation. This 14th day of February1, 1912. Tho zero weather delayed the o'fllcer, stubborn coughs give Foley's Honey formerly rof' Rockport. Compound. It. "soothes the '.'This isn't nn Indictment against privileges, is extremely dangerous. and F. V. FElitX, ' from making the trip, but on fasti inflamed membranes, It is an Indict- Without privileges, biguebs is not their characters. juxd .heals the, Master Commissioner. to morning ho went f Chest pains and a dry, hacking Thursday ment of their Ignoiance of the Unit- dangerous at all. Mrs- - A. A. Swagel( Jones, Fogle, Hcavrin lc "Wood- Leltchfleld by train, and from, mere, co.uglvrfjulckly. cough, should be treated with BALsays: "I ahyays give ' ed States. I am not surprised at It. Kroh.jWls,. "I believe the business of Amer- ward, Attorneys. LARD'S HQREHOUND ta- In tho night time, proceeded to the ThcBe gentlemen have been bo ab- ica Is conducted by honest, patriot SolyWjlonoy and Tar Compound to ken Internally, and a SYRUP residence of Hatfield, .In n convey- my HERRIGK8 sorbed In vast undertakings that ic men, and that the dearest wish of ' Sedentary habits, lack of outdoor cniiren, u cures meir cougiis RED ."PBgPEJR PORUS PLASTER ' Leltchfleld, they have never had tlmo to lift these mon Is to have. these errors of exercise, insufficient mastication of ance obtained nt and'tiohfii and they like to tako It." abplled to the chest. Buv the jiolv'J ." m Hatfield la a direct kinsman of For sape, by all dealers. business removed that have brought food, constipation, n torpid liver, their eyes to the horizon. 'lar's'lze Hbrehound Syrup; you got , the people of that nataie ii the "We havo como to a time when business into disrepute. worry .and anxiety, aro the most Forf?ale Town property, vacant a Porus Plaster freo with each bo"Tho thing for the Democratic common causes of stomach troubles. eastern part at the State the .chief the country Is looking nround for a ' ' y dwplllng. ttle Bold by Hartford Drug Co., of whom was "Devil" Anso Hatfield. lots, cqttages and 's substitute for the Republican party. party to do 1h to show that it Is Correct your habits and take Hertford; Ky Donovan & Co., Bea. A. C. YEISER & CQ "Now there aro candidates and more familiar with the business of Stomach and Liver Tab- This, however, did not deter Mr. ver p'am, Ky. m Hartford', Ky. candidates In tho Republican party, this country than the Republican lets and you will soon be voll' again. Nichols from performing his duty. ,' I&P promptly located tho house, alsatTho Democratic party Is , referred to by some ns 'insurgonts,' party. m He For sale by all dealers. " Congress Wlfl 'be occupied princi- - For Sale, Farms All sizes, from though ho had never been In that who say the present policies of the urated with certain ancient princiQto'300 acres." We can please you neighborhood before, and It was. In pally llils. week with tho.- - tariff, wrong, nnd ples which underlie the wholo strucMcCrenry has slgndd the party aro Gov. Republican .senatorial elet-'tlo- If you want to buy land. ' bill appropriating ?75,000 'itor' the an almost Inaccessible place. Upon who want tobring that party to a ture of political society. army and . agricultural aTM A. C. YEISER & CO,, "Every nation Is renewefl out of construction of an Executlvc'"man-slo- n demanding admittance the young realization of its duty. These gen" ' "' . "f. X '"' man rofused to allow tho officer to controversion.' . HaTtford.Ky. --: In Frankfort. tlemen have swung around until tho ranks of the unknown men. A Jfo Hartjord Herald mwBm -) lirllik ' I If "H 5PEEEH ik FRMKFOfl I .'II s to-w- it: ims ml Lincoln's Birthday, February 2 y: OU realize a truly great man does not finally belong P -- any party, or section; not even to any country, belongs to the whole world; to humanity. he truly great mart be. But Lincoln's political career was partisan; sectional; it had the man himself was neither; and sections of the country, and'' the world, acknowledge and honor his greatness. There's nothing sectional, or local, or partisan about good clothes, either; men look about the same here as anywhere and they want to look the same. HART, e. 3i 1 have done a great service to the quality, the style, the some here of by making their land of clothes; that men like you want. We've done having them for you to buy and wear. Overcoats $ 6.50 and up. Suits $ 8 and up. 1 Wll-.-01- wo-ivH- E. P. Barnes & Bro., BEAVER DAM, KY. lqpHHK-inirrru3MfIiv- vl This the home Hart, Schaffner H Marx clothes. y, too. ut I Tr T 1 -- iipr ' two-stor- Chatn-borlaln- '- - ns V)l IvM -- Mtw4wfcwttG6iw4vMi Hfflff ,', aa