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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, April 24, 1912.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, April 24, 1912. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912042401 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, April 24, 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. THE HARTFORD HERALDJ Subscription fix Per Year in AdvancexecI f t ctecl 38th THAR HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY APRIL 24 1912 NO 17 FIX MAY 29 AS- cONVENTlON DDAYl Yj For Kentucky Democrats To Select Delegates 10 THE BALTIMORE MEETI jj G County MassConventions To Be Held on Saturday nay 25th 4 VVLlt TKXT OF UKSOLUTIOX CLouisville gets tho Democratic N to select delegates to the national convention at Balti more Tho Stato convention will hold on Wednesday May 29 The delegates to the State Cc vention will be selected as follow In all counties excepting those containing first anti secondclass J tics mass county conventions ho held on May 25 i In counties containing flrat cl ass cltlpH pcojjlnct inns convention will bo held on May 2to select delegates to n county masb convell 1tfon on May 27 which In turn will select tho delegates to the St conventionTho affected by tho p duct meetings are Jolters Louisville Kenton Covlngton I Campbell Newport Fayetto L ington and McCracken Paducah The basis of representation each county to the State convent Is one delegate for each 200 votes and fraction cast for JV J Bry 1n 1008 The new county of D Creary la given one vote c The resolution fixing preen meetings In tho counties having t Jthelarge cities received every vote one that of W P McDonogh t member from the Fifth district who protested that It was unfair Ire emphasized the objections pre viously made by Mayor Head discriminating against Louisville Mr McDonogh of Louisville fered a resolution exactly word lIke the one adopted by tho co mittee for the last State conv tlon calling a Stato convention In Hv June and providing that the dele gates bo selected at mass county conventions In ovary county T j McDonogh resolution was voted down by the same vote the Lawrence resolution carried Text of Resolution The Lawroncec resolution In full follows Do It resolved That a dolegato convention be hold In tho city of Louisville on Wednesday the 20th day of May 1312 for the purpose of selecting delegates to the Na tlonal Convention to ho held I- nj Baltimore Maryland on Juno 2C 1912 and in order that said dele gates may represent as nearly asndpossible tho will of tho people Bo It further rcsolvedThat sain delegates bo selected as follows all counties In whlch there Is a cf I of the first or secondclass the Democrats of said counties shallI meet In their respective voting pre duets on Saturday tho 2f th day May 1912 at 2 oclock p m n- at Il1twill such meeting shall select ono 1 representative Democrat resilIent of such precinct as Its dolegato tooust n county convention and theDotOre1 ocrato so selected at these precinct f a meetings shall moot at the coun tho 27th day of I atI2 oclock p m t tho purpose of selecting tho dolet gates to represent tholr county thasf tho State cpnventlon Tho procln ettor mass meeting shall bo called to order j It by the member of tho Demo crane County Executive Committee for said proclnct and In the ove- t ratrlco such precinct committeeman falls tho mass metll then oltthe Democrats shall select one of their own number who shall pro side as chairman until a temporary organization Is perfected When a vacancy for the ofuco of precinctru yscommltteeman exists In any pro lnct the chairman of the County Committee shall designate In writ Ing a Democrat resident of sue precinct to call said precinct meet Ing to order and to preside until a temporary ofilC9r I Ila selected After tho meeting Is called to ord by the clmlrinan a secretary slia be selected by the assembled Dom 11hall1 11Sucha preY1 ti represent tho precinct was by a majority of tho Democrats assemb led chosen to represent the Democracy of this precinct in the county convention ChairmanjTho county convention shall be called to order by tho chairman of the Legislative District Committee iIn which the county scat is situ ed except that In counties coutnl- Ing cities of tho firstclass tho Ity convention shall b6 called to dor by tho chairman of the City and County Executive Committee and the delegates thereto shall organize ty electing a secretary and shalll thereupon proceed to select ll number of delegates to the Stn onvontlon to which the county Is bo1tt1ed The list of delegates so elected shall bo certified by the Stnupwacasing these credentials shall par tlclpato In tho temporary orgnnlza vfUlien of tho convention In all other counties the Demo orals thereof shall assemble ntIthliZ ounty seat on Saturday May 2T UI12nt2orlock 1p m for tho Diuposc of selecting the dolegajes 0 tho said State Convention to reateentitled Provided that the coun leJ18Ine aJI1city of tho first or BccondclaBO mnS8xconventions Ini each of sand leglsla Drllvo districts to select delegates as IlIsmrlct chairman In such cases to de dIIII wool1C ror thorse and to preside until n sectshalllecalled to order by the chairman Coth0mltteo for said county who shall preside until a temporary erganlza yon Is perfected A secretary shall assemblolled Democrats and after the mass namesed of d conventionm a 1st thereof shall bo certified by the naconvention and thoso possessing such credentials shall be entitled o participate In tho temporary or ieII on The representation of each county n sold Stato convention shall bo one delegate for each 200 votes or ractlonal part thereof over 100 ast In said county for tho Demo cratic ticket at the last Preside n lal election The State convention Ils to bo railed to order at 12 oclock noon and the different congressional dls rlct conventions to bo called to or tor at 10 oclock n m Tho county of McCrcnry Is to bo allowed ono lolcgato In the State convention I tho precinct committeeman of proIIj I e mitt as Chairman wI aunty convention said county robe hold at Pine Knot CoinmenilN The Heralds Courwe Sob reo Ky April Ifi 1912 ofidltorA Herald Kncloecd you fliiii one dollar to extent my subscription to Tho Herald ono of p Mio most reliable weekly papers I saw J have been taking It for than twenty yenta and oxpoot to take It the remainder of my lifo tYIlIntro been rending tho contra voroy between Tho Herald andi yOur Country In both papers an am delighted tho way Tho Herald handled Our Country Oo It for you have sure got 1 It lown and I dont think you will have any troublo in keeping It down That along is worth tho Ito of your paper Wishing you continued success I remain your d friend IL ELY ElectIon of Teachers Tho annual election of teacher for Hartford College will bo hold Monday evening April 29 and all teachers desiring to make applies tions for positions In this school r ho togothoh0 old Secretary of the Board of Education hereto that date C M BARNETT Chmn 3 i 17t1lThe House of Representativesi ent on record aa favoring the par tiost lyatem i a 100 YEARS OLD IN GOOD HEALTHN1 Is William Green Sr of Vincennes Ind CENTENNIAL OF HIS BIRTHH Celebrated in Great Style By aAdmiring Friends and Neighborsor illS A IXJ AXD ISKKLMj IIMI Vincennes hutsii Iii 2fVit- o comics kept open house Wednesday totor Its oldest citizen William Ciroon Sr in celebration of ii 100th birthday anniversary All ling and evening Mr 1reell- wnsnt homo to hundreds of rota lives and frlenda The old home stead occupies n iiimrtcr of a block1 In the sealer of the city on the car h lino and here a public reception vas Jiold that for unltiuonosH andl brilliancy Is seldom equaled On the spacious lawn 1 ban i1I stand was erected and hero the Klrst ileglment hailor the hit nun National fiuard whoso homo IIs In Vincennes furnishedl music of which Mr Green Is pnsBlonately fond app which gave him tutualtI1pleasure Time lawn was Illumlnat cd with ono hundred xpcclallyar ranged electric lights In the bonne an orchestra pin od Dinner and refreshments we served to hundreds At n oclockj Postmaster John W Kmlson andl fifty employes of the post oAlcu via lied tho centenarian in n body andl resented him with one hundred red roses From Al M Ford came one hundred red carnations toe Llof florists were taxed heavily to supj ply all the flowers ordered for t occasion In tho center of the table was an Immense birthday cake surmounted with one hundred candles which wero Illuminated during tho ovenI Ing v Mr Jrcon Is In good health ex copt for a recent Injury to his footl but this did not prevent him fromI invitations to several au tomobllo rides I During the dRY Mr Orecn was visited by John T Simpson Town ship Assessor who assessed him for the year 1912 Mr Simpson be Uovos ho Is tho only Assessor In tho United States who visited a man 100 years old and obtained his tax able list and his personal signature tho day that tho man celebrated his 1 100th anniversary Mr Green was horn In England and emigrated from LiverpoolI In 1 1831 Landing In New York he came by water nnd stagy to IEvansi vllle whore ho accepted a position as stagQjJrlvor In LI1 hill of 1SIIII ho came to Vlnccnnffs which was then larger then either Evannvlllo or Terre Haute lie became owner It of sIngo lines and operated the amo bctweon Evansvllle Louis vlllo Intro Haute and Danville or sixtyfive years he has hold tho contract for delivering the mall Ibe I ween trains tool the postoffice ind ntlll holds tho contract He tiullti tho first opora house In Vln orates and when It was destroyed 1 twentyfive years ago replaced It with the present opera house IIn Mils lino of worst ho cntortnlned1 many of the earlier stago celobrlt ties Ho has served In time City COlin stti1 was Vlnconnes first flro chief The homo ho owntf he bought iIn 1S40 for 1200 Its nmlkot value now Is considered cheap at 30000 Mr Green Is n man of regular lint nod neither chows nor smokes Ho Is the father of thirteen child ron of whom tho following are liv- Ing Frank Oreon of Indianapolis Mrs Ella Agnew Mrs Perry Tin dolph and William Ocean Jr Vln cannon 1 Wllllnm WnlkliiH 11seWilliam Watkins a well known to farmer of the Phllpot neighbor ddled of Infirmities Incident to ago at 2 oclock Thursday nf tonpon attar an illness lasting for Bovbral months Atr Watkins was seventyeight years of ago and Is TtI Phllpamdonst 1a3of Phllpot I TTORNADO KILLS IN WILD SWEEPP About 150 are Injured By Winds FuryH- THOUSJ1NOSDOLLS8S01IGEE To Property and Many Houses Demolished in the Storms Path SEUIKS OK WILD TOltVADOKS- n Thirtytwo persons are known to bo dead half n score aura no so vcroly Injured they may die surd- s a hundred anil fifty others were hurt iIn two tornadoes one of which swept overI Southern Illinois m tho other acroim Northern Illinois Iota odium just hereto minsct Sunday night Twelve wero kilted at Hush 1111 flvoat VIIlloavlllo numes not ob tatiifhlc throe nl Neddie IIII 111111It ai ItoTs6 111 Hid It Is expected that more will I1 round whoa the debris Is cloarrl away IFive persons wore killed at VI1I llsvllle coal oaten hearer wrote de mollMied A Fpiclal frnlut arrived at Mur1 carryIirvat Hush III by the tornado They 1Velo taken to n Murphysboio hos pltal Tile St Louts IronI Mountain Southern railroad station at Hush was destroyed as wore two rows houses extending acronti the town hoIruil of Tornado Qllrngo April 21A KOtlcs of tornadoes swept across parts of IIllI IInols Just before nlghtfuall The storm swept through the northern part of Murphysboro ML1 seriously Injuring Mrs eorge IKing and two daughters and Mr nnd Mrs William Wllderlmck No deaths were reported there Ten houses were demolished at Mnr physboro mid the Illinois Central station at Flnncy was carried 300 feet Two sections reported tornadoes at the same time Most damage apparently was Juno by that which appeared from Coal City 111 and swept eastward tho other beingI ac tlve In and near Murphysboro Wauponsce n village near CoalI City tuna reported demolished de stroylng telephonic communication making It Impossible to learn the seriousness of damage done Ithere Houses sheds mid farm build Ings near CoalI City were demolish ed windmills blown down amil noun head of cattle were reportedI killed The tower above Mine No t at Carbon Hill wan toppled ovaI At Allen near Coal City tele phone and telegraph wires were laid to the ground for a mile at stretch In several places Near Dwittht n Bchoolhouao and farm buildings rusty destroyed The Chicago Indiana R SouthI ern Railway station at Roddick waw blown across the tracks IKvory I farm building on the property of UI man named 1atchctt theta wits ilIeII stroycd anil tho fatally escaped Inr jury by clinging to trees In nil U doorlIrllII Many other buildings ware de rayed at Ueddlck and near by aim several persons wero Injured none severely I All of the south and cast lport of Grant Park III near Kankakce was destroyed Six persons waste so severely Injured as to require melltIcnl attention A layman church was demolished and other build1 IIIIlfII Park Xiiio Killed In Indiana Kcntland Ind April 1Nhllspersona wore killed live others so verely Injured they urn expect die half a hundred others were IIbruhRdl ands of dollars worth of proper destroyed In mid around Morocco Newton county when a tornadr swept out of the west this evening Others wore hurt loss povoro od houses woro blown down fir nd near Morocco and fully forty habitations lu Newton county wore a dostroycdi As npar as can tie judged half the tornado started In Iroqu county III and swept easlwnr- Stock Was killed when farm build1 ings went down Three Demi In Knnsn Kansas city Mo April 21 Three persons aro known to have lost their lives In the four torn i MSouthernA Hroyles was killed in ll wreck of his home near Waldron Harper county and 1rockop Kottal RwereRush county A total of thirteen persons arei renown to have peon Injured In IKansas and properly damage will aggregate 200000 At Column an oil town In Okla hums sue girl wear killed and twen tylive persons Injured A race between n Missouri Inclfif train and the storm was won by the train near Xaahvllo KliiKsman county the twlter crossing tl track onlyI UUCP telegraph poles boi hind the train 1atwnrers crowd tdtyi the roar platform to see the torI nude it close range lw lend in Olhthmuu ferry Ok April 311 Two rildI ten wero lord by the tornado which swoon over this place Inte yesterday They aw John lerdpn shed 112 nnd Mary Cerdea awed 2 More thou 100 wooden houses wore blown over and fourteen i penions Nltglitty fnjwrwl Thi Pet ry Country Club buildIng sins rlcV ed up and carried a iuurt r 1fI- I mile to the opposite 11111V of I tv club lake IFrank Pearson i lillY wns plavltiK la a burn when thr wind picked It up nod carried It 20H1 1 hrlkIJIIawlXcliber the barn nor the clubhouse wan damaged greatly rUCiUT MANI CIIUMKD WITH liriCMXC STOI1I I Chicago IIL April IIS Churl F Ilium aged 10 also known the public as liana Howard a for mer Adams Kxpresa messenger wat arrested today as a fugitive from I justice According to the police he I1swill wanted at Morganlleld Ky on the charge of nr olIIThe burning of Cohna cleparlII ment store at Morgantleld two yen ago Is charged to Blum accorlIl1II to time police A search fa also bug l toads for Charles Cohn one of I the owners of the story who Is au posed to be In Los Angola Cal fornln the police say Another storm at Owenaboro Ky belonging to Calm ts also nlllgellll to have been destroyed by an In cendillryII Cline Colin was chief owner t the Ohio Valley Dry Coods Compa ny store of Owensboro which w IaII destroyed by fire and for which Ihe I and Ilium are under Indictment the charge of arson The companies carrying IIIIHlIt urea on till stock allege that thr a storo was set on lire and that 111I vious to the the Colin timid shippedl most of the stock away tJll rlflllIII ttill companies refuse to pay tilt llosses I TO IIKAVKVI IIKIiL Oil XIR 111nI 1 2mIIleiivon hell or New York In tlV days IIs whirl a Captain on Ni Y York liner told n tourist WIIH hit slandliiK oHlclal order nccordlir to Captain John 1 Lwls an oinrluI of the Arundel Sand and 5 ravel Company who has toured the worldOne night when returning from Europe saidl Captain Lewis I 11cnnln out on deck It was yn fojsgy that nothing could be soon The Captain of the ship wens wnlkllJII the deck and I approached i him nndI said v How test aro we going Tho master replied Twenty tithes an hour Is not that a violation of thoi nv I asked The Captain admiti I tell It was Thor asked why do you runi fast through a tog Tho Captain replied j1l II nrlIHeaven holl or Now York In Ile- ays 1 of Drowned In n Spring H- Maysvlllo Ky April 2mJolt Marshall sixyearold son of Join Ducklny of this county was drown In today In a largo spring on hip fathers farm Tho childs boib was found several hours Inter withl cup clupcal In hl Find hs am IEledS FLEEING BEFORE SURGING FLOOD any Made Homeless into LowerMississippi RELIEFR WORK IS CONDUCTED By State and Federal OffI cialsConditions Will 111 uW Worse ttATKK MAV STAV KOI VKKKS With the Hood watery of the MIs alsolppl river mailing through cnvi- r asseH In the levees of the bis- i Htream In Southeast Arkansaj Northwest AluwlMlppI and North eiiHt Louisiana nlowly flndliiK their VaOOUI towns null plantations reports continue to tell of touch sufferliiK In the vast flooded ITUIM Kellef nmoiiK I the I lmiinan l of homeliHS people Is being well eon ducted under the suiiervlflim of State and Federal olnclnls with 1Illllua rtem at VIcksburK MISH whoin nlrendy about 3000I negroiH 11unrhlttrl1h11t11 trte stttrtrrrd11x llof slut Ion have been stnMislictl at It dozen points In Northeastern Louisiana nod at points hi Miills Hlppl throngs of definite folk ar+ being fed nod Kiven clothing rook IllK Ht ii0lln medicine ctr The conditions wilt grow vors e during the oral few days In theftin llowor Valley of MfmdBnlppl which la being Inundated rapidly liy tint waters from the crevatwe at Ileulah told In Northeastern Louisiana pouringtoNear Alsntla La the nlWt waters are spreading over portions of thir teen parishes Several thousand B tiare tulles of rich bottom laiuU have been Inundated before the waters front these two great crev asses finally return to the Missis slap river through the Vazoo and riversrereExcept In the vicinity of time llcii Inh crevasse where ten negroes were reported drowned the floods claimIthas not reached the towns In the district which yet are III telegraphic communication with the outside worldThe lovernora of Mississippi and Louisiana coal Mayors of cities ofthroughout these States have Is sued appeals during the last few pryvlaIons wntcranlwill cover n vast Wren of the pres Inundated territory fur perhaps month longer and It will ho to rnlsu many thousands of dollars yet to succor the home lots and destitute The rains have not been general over a considerable portion of Louisiana Mississippi and Arkan during till last week but Sat urday one of the heaviest hull storms ever experienced In Southern Louisiana added to the alarm of theI people whose property la en 11I11IIIIIIt rains continue the hunt result cannot be otUlmnted llIN SlII IOU 1lIdslihil IMISH ItKPItKSKNTVnnVI Iaducnh Ky April WIII time suit of August ID Cooke of Law ronceburK lad against Halo Ward fur 1 12000 dnnmye n ver tar S000 wan returned thin afternoon Tho plaintiff claimed to have purchased n large tract of timber land In the lieelfoot Luke section with Ithe understanding that a large quantity o the timber was ash lie aliened that allot the purchase waa made he found thorn was no anil timber on tho land This wan the second Itrial of the milt tho first resulting In n hung ry1hu eatpense account shows that the cost the 1 oOOO votes which Col received In the Now York Presidential primary averaged 1 each an the total expenditures worn excess of r D000 vbio c prlwary duos not take pIne ir + M A n vet tpitwcntolx ntuiouncod cnnd tofT court pTlPo In MadUon IJ rrrnGH SDAI APRIL 84 1913 TWO 1 tlF HARTFORD HERALDWEDN1 H IF THE PEOPLE COULD ONLY SEEE t I Advantage Taken of ThemI By the Interests I 1 1IT WOULD OPEN THEIR EYESS f SituationtOfod i 1 1OUf Great Affairs Of Government f if r LIGHTS OX HAPPKNIXGS I ISIDLandes who dominates Scandl-l r rnavlau literature says Put problems to debate and Milton j panagyrlc on freedomI Iconchides a With Of all liberties give me theII liberty to know to utter and to I I sue freely according to co- I nI science I What sententious and wise retie c tlons This Is why a Kentuckian Il never shoots a man who can talk potitlesho wants to keep him to I I argue with The chief obstacle to thorough investigation of our political and Industrial problems by tho masses t is not only their indifference butIp facilities fortheir lack of i Information What of the bull lenra grafters demagogues cranks j i I sensation mongers all bent up iitnnmakes It well nigh impossible t set the true facts unless you a toII upon the ground Nothing woul Itlunse the bears more than for the k Committee to wreckI Stool Probe stock Nothing wouldthe trust 1iplease the defeated litigant or cari wrodidatoU na recalls How then could th initiative and referendum help mat1t torZlT Would not the Held for selL llsh operations be broadened and opportunities Increased Our present system Is the safer liemuse It relieves the private citit izen of much public work and re sponslblllty which Is given the repi resentative and since the evils w complain of spring from our ow neglect of public duty whatever adds to theso duties can but 1ini crease the evil Indeed have we not already reached the limit7 Think of the cost of all the divisions of government variousII I ly schools churches charities losses yearpublic nearly enterprisesa half a billion firoII canal costing more than a quarter of n billion dollars floods the idle I 3andgrafter and trusts litigation and 11Its thousand other drains upon the ov wrtased energies all of which mu be subtracted from the earnings o the producer No wonder he negI lects his public duty no wonder li t staggers under the tremendous load I like an Atlas The wonder Is lha 4 4hisi nerves of steel muscles of Iro I and heart of oak do not fall him al together Here is where our troub ics begin l Suppose the people had the time tn get at the true Inwardness of theI protective feature of our tariff a covert system of criminal taxationI wWfTi under a mask of pure benevolence robs them of one billion set en hundred millions of dollars annually and turns this fabulous sum over to a favored few rendering them more powerful than any des Vnot on earth and who while their long felonious fingers are pillaging your pockets with smug hypocrisy sing psulniH and extol Proteiulon How long 1 ask would It last For fifty years with consummate skill the protectionist has confused the public mind and played upon party prejudices with over Increasing success Lincoln said you can fool1 nil the pooiile some of the tin Hud some of the people all of the tlmtvbut you cant fool all tho pea pin nil the time How about It 7 1tknly n few days ago a letter was written by a U S Senator who IIs supposed to bo guarding the litter wrtB of tho people to the Secretary if the Ohio Mfg Co the Senator who Is managing Roosevelts cam T algn of puro politics which iif read In the catacombs of Egypttt iiiUKht to open tho eyes of mum f adios embalmed nine thousand yours before Christ Yet this Infai f mows threat and demand Is only i another form of You and I Bro Harriman arc practical men d ant L If you want this boundless graft tlEto bt t dough You fellows get about sev 1 1cnbillions or about 350 from o t yetcan y ij millions to carry States like Now York and Indiana So they can i and so they do while the bowllder ed victims stare at each other won Bering how and by whom it was doneProtection paves the way ttom o r nopoly Like a vampire it lucks AI 4 u the fruit of labor and concentrates It In tho hands of the privileged tow naturally rendering the con dit Ions of tho masses almost Intol erable Already the struggle for existence Is tragic While there Iis more money more wealth than before it is so ingenuously filched from those who earned it and so systematically concentrated that there Is moro poverty more suffer ing than ever before Tho opulence generalSl When Egypt withdrew her fabulous wealth from the people and hoard it in her temples soon the owls began singing their watt h songa ini her magnificent towers She per- Ished Greece and Rome ventured the same economic blunder and shared the same fatesoon the spl der wove his web in their glittering palaces Bodes it to us no evil that In Roosevelts seven years orgies of trust formations that thirtyone billions of capital and ten thousand I distinct Independent and compet Ing Industrial plants were drawn by a system of Interlocking dlrec torrtes within the control of six moi to say nothing of their bale ful influence upon every Important Industry In this land Absolute despots who dictate the financiali policies of the country make andI unmake men measures and panics laugh at our laws and scorn our courts If they want to take over this Tennessee Coal Iron Co withi all its vast holdings of natural rc sources they produce a panic that slnot only wrecks Tennessee stocks but forces Roosevelt to grant an op adaministration from n like wreck In whereIrserprlso without first going down upon their knees for the consent ofI jHvre mentVftera Is there an IystHal or financial Institution they rirlnot wreck at a word What 0en despots or demons ever had half such power Protection has made this possl hIe Indeed It Is the chief factor It arms these plants with the torn We bludgeon of nearly one and threequarters of a billion dollars every year with which to brain all opposition and stands guard on 0auS coasts to prevent any possible- n roller till now like a Hydra of Hesperedes they literally consume lho substance of the people But mark you I do not mean by this Ito cunningly suggest riots violence or destructive legislation No no This would bo criminal folly and could end only In disaster to all The cure is in an Intelligent ballot a weapon that comes down as still Os snowflakes upon the sod but ex ecutes a freemans will as lIght nlng does the will of God and from force no doors nor locks can shield even the almighty trust- t Heighho One by one we see four Idols and altars tumble In the dust and ourselves thrown further 0back upon nervestraining selfde nendence What a rest to mind- t and body to fully relax and wholly 1trust and believe in thingsa saints compensation even If his gods are false Like the little frollcing trusting punpv we love to stilly forth Into thin great big old world piously eHeylnsc that every llvlnct creature Is our natural friend nut alas what shocks and cruel disillusions wait us How soon this beautiful faith Is shattered One of the last I THE EFFECTIVE LAXATIVE Tastes Like and is Eaten Like Candy In our experience In the handling of drugs and medicines we believe se have never had experience with tny Remedy that gave such great- E utlftfactlon to our customers as do oxall Orderlies This Remedy Is lot like any other laxative or cath irtlc It contains all the good feat ires of other laxatives but none of their faults Our own faith In Rexall Order lea Is BO strong that wo offer them o you with our own positive per tonal guarantee that If they do not Jioroughly satisfy you you onl iced tell ua and we will hand back o you every penny you paid us fa horn Therefore In trying them LIpon our recommcndatlonyou take 10 risk whatever Roxall Orderlies taste like and ire eaten like candy They do not- o ripe cause nausea excessive loose ness or any other annoyance They ict so easily that they may bo tar ken at any time day or night They- u are particularly good for children aged or delicate persons They areI iut up In convenient tablets inI three sizes of packages Pricesi lOc 25c and 50c Remember Rexall Remedies can b4 obtained in this community Only U our storeThe Re ia11 Store James H Williams 214 Main St Hartford Ky 0 to fall was Consistency the Jewel Vandals had disfigured 11 before to be sure but It was when this great Government desecrated its attar IIt toll and now Judged by the contradictory laws and rulers Iit was never a jewel at all but a mfr cloak for fools and scoundrels Take for Instance Tafts touching solicitude about the high cost of living Dy what system of morals can it be harmonized with his hear ty indorsement of the Payne Ald rich tariff law when it takes wrings from the scant earnings of the average family 87 every year and turns it over to a favored few whoso only claim Is their liberal contribution to a corruption fund of a party pledged to perpetuate this legalized robbery If Protection Joins in building up I monopoly by denying the consumer his natural right to buy wherever ho can buy cheapest abroad by what code of ethics moral or eco nomic can the Government prose cute an oil steel tobacco beef o sugar trust for merely extending the principle to our homo market What Is the difference Or are we to believe that horn we have an ex cellent sauce for a goose thats hI1 on ganders Again by what pretense of con sistency can Mr Taft explain his Attorney Generals frightful prose cution of this Oil Trustalmost as terrine as Teddys battle with the Harvester Trust with the howl Inv facts that none of them are Ian iitlslIns In jail that their combin ed property la worth today only n few months after he so triumph rrtly pulverized the mass Into it v Ilial contemptible atoms tIs woith two hundred anti twentyfive irllltons of dollars moro than when c brought tho dam plutycrats to book and that their stocks which specIJClllrlr I Kclng at tOOO If theres noth ing dead In Denmark whew what en earth h that we smell What a Cadrnean victory A few more such retlrosBcs of the wrongs of the peo ple would fix our clock beautifully ark us right Into Paradise But had this been a Farmers Tobacco Pool or Rockefellers stable boy charged with counterfeiting a few nickels I venture to believe there would have been qulfe a different story to tell We should then have heard nothing of Impersonal guilt restraint of trade and all that insufferable rot that makes Justice scream Just a plain Wickersham story of prison bars and laws tri umphant But of all the cheap sop east to cupidity rotten bait thrown to suckers gold bricks handed the Rubes the imaginary feasts to flatter vanity and appease hunger to which the victims of rapine were ever Invited perhaps the raw deal that Protection protects labor fff tho starkest and baldest Nearly two billions of dollars given the trusts annually that they may erf they want to but they never do pay higher wages What on earth has the wealth of the employer to do with the wages he pays With millions would he not go abroad and Import enough pauper labor to arnmer yours down to starvation- If It promotes business and pro ects labor what about the panic of 1907 the worst the country ever suffered and from which It has icvor recovered What about the conditions of labor now under a till higher protection What about Lawrence Mass Nothing In New England hiss approached the dread ul condition of those thousands of- mPld men women and children workers since the historic draft lots of the Civil War Does It slg ilfv nothing that those woolen mils wero operated under Sched the K the highest protection over niposed on any civilized people ayne Aldrich Lodge Smoot and II that coterie of Standpatters Taft himself slid It was the best Mil that over 1passed pictured the ow law as a special gift of Heaven vent to the toilers of Lawrence lint did they get Not comfort ind Independence but Increased Gilt of living decreased wages cold toil hunger that made them desperate then bayonets bloodshed and i reign of terror Instead oran gels blessing them with horns of stalkedyheir streets and haunted thick homesrOh no Consistency is not a Jew 311 That was all an unfortunate hough happy delusion It is s mere bugaboo a betenoire of lit Me minds Tariff For Revenue Only Rockport Ky April IB a One of the best points In favor at Foley Kidney Pills Is the com ort and roller they give tq elderly people Mrs R D McGee 301 East Gth street Owensboro Ky iii U 1n her 76th year and says I heard of Foley Kidney Pills and Lbegan taking them and they com menced oact at once and today Tiny kidney tad bladder trouble IK jill gone For sale at slldrui- torea m i iiiiiiiii1i A TRAGIC LITTLE TALE OF WRECK r Of the Giant Steamshipi Titanic Last Week A DEVOTED FAMILY REFUSEDD To Be Separated in the Face Qf the Awful Disaster And Shipwreck AMIDST A MASS OF ICEBERG I I New York April 18The first circumstantial story of what actu ally happened on the Titanic was Whitre Star Line this morning Though White Star officials deny that they have had any further news than they have given out it is believe d they have received other messages An incident which toads to sonlirm this was tho accidental mention by a clerk in the lines office of a strange feature of the wreck HisI story which he begged bo not ut trlbutc d to him was that of a fam ily named Allison aboard the Ti tanic only one member of which a child had been saved Because Mr Allison would not take to the lifeboats but stayed be cloaksids wife and daughter also refus ed to leave the ship and went down with the Titanic Paving first put their little boy safely In one of the j boats In charge of his nurse How do you know this the clerk was asked He realized for the first time that he was talking to two reporters He tried to laugh off the story but finding that 1m iiorslblc admitted he had got tho Information Inside pointing upstairs t to the executive offices It la a fact that the family of JII t1 Allison was aboard and that neither Mrs Allison nor Miss Alll tionbeen reported caved When asked If ho knew of any other wreck In Ident the clerk smiled and replied that one slip was enough for him The first cabin list of the Titanic Tglsters the Allison family as fol lowsH J Allison wife son daugh ter maid and nurse They are I from Montreal The wireless operator of steamer Mesaba of Atlantic Transport Line which arrived this morning report ed that on Sunday night at 750 oclock New York time he warned the Titanic that there was an im menso ice floe In the giant liners IJathThe Mesaba sailed from London on April 4snd was aboutI ninety miles ahead of the Titanic nearing this port when she sent tho warning It Is as follows In latitude 42 to 4136 north ongltude 49 to r 030 west saw much heavy packed Ice and great umber of icebergs Weather clearThe answer that came from tho Hner plunging to her doom was Thanks It was signed M G Y the TI anfcs signature Stanley H Adams the wireless operator of the Mesaba Is a Lon loner He said this morning that before ho sent the message of varnlng to the Titanic he heard the big liner working from Cape Race He broke In to send a message when aware of her presence in the neighborhoodCapt of tho Mosaba said Just after his vessel docked this morning that he had gone 120 nlles out of his course to get irouiid the mass of Ice floes It was the biggest I have ever ecu In many voyages he said It must have been from seventy to natty miles long There were from leventy to 100 bergs In It We vcro In ita irraediato proximity on Sunday morning at 6 a m TIio first news tho Mesaba hall of he Titanic disaster waa on Monday t 9 a m when the Parisian and llymplc were overheard discussing lie disaster Officers on board the Mesaba say hat on Sunday night and Monday Horning before dawn the weather vas not foggy The sky was over cast It was impossible to see the Uars though there was no fog on he sea The absence of starlight hey added made it difficult to seeI ho icebergs Shortly after 1 ocfock this morn ng the wireless man on the Cruiser Chester reported that the Carps CASTOR IlAFor Infant and Children The Kind You Hays Always Boughti theESignatureo ct thlas operator had left bls key for the night utterly exhausted by his work through a stretch of moro than fiftysix hours F L Maim I the Marconi wireless man on board the Carpathia who detected the Ti tanks S 0 signal piled tho air with blue flame until he found the sinking vessels location and then gave the world the lightning flash glimpses of the appalling scene KATYDID WIGGLE AND- CATERPILLAR SQUIRM A dispatch to the dally press from Washington says The Turkey Trot and the Grizzly Dear were much in evidence at the dance following the White House reception to the Judiciary and de spite the disapproval with which I these now dances may meet in oth er cities in Washington they are danced In the most exclusive cir cles apparently without offense At the regular Monday evening meet ings of the Dancing Club they still nourish and the instructor finds new pupils awaiting him each weekOn the same day the dally news papers published the following die patch from Now York The Tur key Trot and the Grizzly Bear the dances which were recently taken up by New Yorks Four Hundred were today barred from public dance halls of the city by order of the proprietors THE SELECTION OF TAFT MEANS A SURE DEFEAT And a Dark Horse is Talked About LaFollette Men Arc Figuring Republican Dally Special Washington April ISWhlle this Taft forces profess entire con thence in their ability to pick the renominatlon plum for President Taft there developed today a strong belief that only the selec ion of some other candidate will promise success to the Republican national ticket this fall The grooming of dark horses has ilready begun Two most prominently mentioned are Senator Cum mins of lowrt and Justice Hughes of the United States Supreme Court This Is no expectation that tile Chi cago convention can be stampeded to either of these men but those who believe that the party would be helplessly split if either Taft or Roosevelt were nominated hope that a compromise can be reached- It Is believed that a dark horse who will be favorable to both wings of the party can be reached only in the event that President Taft vol untarily retires in the interest of harmony and pressure will be brought upon the rPestdent before the national convention to take this actionWith the Republicans split Into three divisions one favoring Pres ident Taft another favoring Sen itor LaFollette and the third cling- Ing to the Roosevelt band wagon the prospect of any one of these men winning even after a long hard fight Is becoming more and more remote according to tho na tional leaders Those who favor a compromise ire seeking a candidate who blends he progressive principles with those of conservatism in P degree which will appease voters of all factions There are a number of leaders however who fear that this is next to impossible W S Bailey McCreary Ky Is willing to verify his statement us Ivan herewith Ho says My wife had a severe attack of la rlppe that terminated In bronchi Ms She coughed as though she had consumption could not sleep and her medicine rave no relief She was advised to try Foleys Hon 3y and Tar Compound and she con Inued using It until sho had taken hreo bottles which effected n per tnanent cure Forsaloat all drug Stores m Champ Does Handsome Thing Speaker Champ Clark has with lrawn his name from the ballot to be used in New Jersey in the pri nary election on May 28th to hooso delegates to the Democratic rational Convention The action vas taken as a courtesy to Gov Woodrow Wilson of that State Nho like Speaker Clark is a can lldate for the Democratic nomlna Ion for resident An Item of Homo Interest Charles Gormley 307 Maxwell Itreot Lexington Ky has lately teen cured of kidney and bladder rouble Ho says I heard of roley Kidney Pills and the good taktagimy lack the tired feeling passed away vnd I am glad to recommend them For sale at all drug stores m 0 J ifIIffftf1O U n IMMENSE SUM SPENT FOR DRINK Annually by People of United States THREE BILLIONS EACH YEAR 60 For the Stuff That Only Damns Souls and Ruins Lives X A FEW STARTLING FIGURES The amount of money we spend eVery year in the United States directly and Indirectly for liquor would give a twoweeks vacation to every man woman and child in the land with their board and expenses paid We spend 1500 000000 a year for alcoholic drinks and wo spend as much moro for Judges police jails poorhouses and Insane asylums to take care of the people who get Into trouble through hard drink That makes 3000000 or 30 apiece for everybody tFqr a family of father T mother and four children it amounts to ISO a year a nice sum for an outing in the country- It Is estimated that 1500000 men and women in tho United States ate every day either mental ly or physically disabled for work as a result of drink If It could b0 shown that the drinking man had better brains or better muscles or better earning power or lived longer than the man who did not drink there might be sonic argument In favor of drfnkreven In spite of all that has just been said But thousands of ex periments have shown that the brain worker and the laboring man arc both at a disadvantage If they 1 drinkExperiments in the French army showed that under all circum stances the French soldier Is 40 per cent more efficient when subjected to a regimen of total abstinence Generals Roberts and Kitchener in Africa proved the same fact about the British army Laboring men who used to feel the necessity of y having their dram regularly in or der to do their work and do it well now know they were formerly de ceived and that they are better workmen without drink So well Is this understood by practical busi ness men that many large railroads and other employers of labor have prohibited the use of alcoholic li quors by employees at all times Some marine Insurance companies make a reduction of 5 per cent In insurance rates to ships on whichillno liquors are drunk during the voyageNew York American Children Cry FOR FLETCHERS CASTORIAI Fine Subscription Offer The Louisville Evening Post dally from now until November 10 1912 and the Hartford Herald one year for only 2 Subscribe fowlI tf p Her Chance tmyWifeNo John its this last years hat Im wearing TRUTH TRIUMPHS Hartford Citizen Testifies for the Public Benefit A truthful statement of a Hart ford citizen given In his own wordy should convince the most skeptical about the merits of Doans Kidney Pills If you suffer from backache nervousness sleepless ness urinary disorders or any form of kidney ills use a tested kidney medicineA citizen tells of Doans Kidney Pills 1 Could you demand more convinc ing proof of merit Daniel King Hartford Ky says I used one box of Doans Kidney Pills some time ago and they did me so much good that I am pleased to recommend them to others knowing of their value For sbme time I suffered Intensely from pans in my sides and in the mall of my back Doans Kidney Pills had been used by friends with such excellent results that I thought I would try them I got them at the Ohio County Drug Co Their I use as directed permanently cured me For sale by all dealers Price BO cents FosterMilburn Co Buffalo New Yorksoleagelitilfor the JJnlted States v Remember the name =Doans and take no othercv i w uWEmESDtY APRIL si 1012 THE HARTFORD HERALDrflllF NO UNSINKABLE J SNIP IS KNOWN Idea Is Called Fiction iof Ticket Sellers i TITANIC WAS JUST WITHIN lAW In Lifesaving Apparatus Boats for Only Nine po Hundred WORKING ON A SLIDING DECIt London April 18Naval arc1h Itects are busying themselves even now with the problem of designing a deck which can be slipped from a sinking liner said John Harvard Bites vice president of the Ins tu tion of Naval Architects In an 1In- terview today He continued The problem Is chiefly that of the expense of the apparatus which would be used only once In fifty years An unsinkable ship Is a IIc lion of the transAtlantic ticket sell lers All things considered even IIIn- case of a collision with an Iceberg n vessel of the size of the Titanic ought to be safer than a smalls liner A headon collision woul leave more compartments undam aged while a sideswipe could be Letter resisted It is possible to carry sufficient boats to save every soul on board a liner I cannot ac count for the failure of the wireless apparatus on the Titanic almost two pours prior to her foundering as a supplementary dynamo was carried fifteen feet above the wate lineFigures from the highest official source supplied today by one of the most prominent British naveI designers show that 960 persons was the greatest number that coul possibly be saved with the apparatus carried on the Titanic That vessels facilities were just within the Board of Trade regulations which specified that a ship must be equip ped with wooden or metal boats sufficient to carry 550 passenger from a 10000ton vessel Collap alble boats rafts and other appa ratus not carried on davits must be supplied to accommodate three fourths as many making the total BALD HEADS NOT WANTED Baldness is too Generally Considered a Sign of Ad vanced Age R A baldheaded person does Dot have an equal chance with one blessed with a healthy head of hair because baldness is too generally accepted as an indication of age Many large corporallons Inv es tablished an age limit and refuse to take men over 35 years of age as new employes Probably 65 per cent of bald headed people may regain a good head of healthy hair if they will follow our advice and accept our of fer We have a remedy that we 1positivelY guarantee to grow hair on any head unless the roots of the hair are entirely dead their folli cles closed anil the scalp has be come glazed and shiny We want people to try this remedy at our risk with the distinct understand ing that unless it does exactly what we claim It will and gives satisfac tion in every respect we shall make no charge for the remedy used d r- Ing the trial We know exactly what we are talking about and with this offer back of our statements no one should scoff doubt our word or hesitate to put our remedy to an actual test We want every ono In Hartford who Is suffering from any scalp or hair trouble dandruff falling hair or baldness to try our Rexall 93 Hair Tonic We want them to use i It regularlysay until three bottlesI have been usedand if ItSdoes not eradicate dandruff cleanse and re fresh the scalp tighten the hair In Its roots and grow new hair we will return every cent paid us for 1 the remedy for the mere asking i There IB no formality expected and wo exact no obligation from the user whatever yo are established right here in P Hartford and make this offer with a full understanding that our bust ness success entirely depends upon the sort of treatment we Record out customers and we would not dare make the abpve offer unleea we were positively certain that we could substantiate It in every particular Remember you can btaln Rexall Remedies in this community rexauStorI w I W elf v it would be possible to saVe under the Board of Trade rules 962 The plans show that the Ttanlc carried lifeboats to accommodate 960 persons Each of the eighteen lifeboats was capable of taking fif tythree passengers There is not evidence on the plans to show that the Titanic carried any collapsible boats or rafts her lifeboats putting her barely within the Board oC Trade regulations Comparlsc with the Oceanic and Campanl Which are much smaller show that they carry twenty boats each while the Lusltanla has only sixteen The Board of Trade rules laid down iIn 1905 took as their basis 10001 ton ships and apply only to ships with watertight qompartments 1 It does not appear that In the big ships of later date any attempt Itto Increase the lifesaving apparatu beyond that required by the regulations was made WHY CANT WE RAISE EDIBLES WE CONSUME A Pertinent Question That Aptly Applies to the Farm ing Classes An upper Kentucky paper says that thousands of dollars are going out of Its county every season for cabbage potatoes and apples The pertinent and proper question Is asked Why not raise what we consume I Cabbage potatoes and apples are articles of sonsumptlon which maybe grown to n reasonable degree of perfection In Kentucky Decidedly It would be much better to grow them at home than to buy them from our Northern neighbors at till Increased price that Is necessitate by the cost of handling packing and shipping In that way we should have more money In circulation in the State and if perchance we grow a surplus of these products they might profitably be exchanged for other peoples money There are other vegetables and fruits which Kentuckians buy fror abroad in preference to growin them at home The outlay for thes Is enormous and there would be no better way of saving money than by producing them In our fields and truck patches with the aid of our favoring soil and climate which al ways do a fair share of work In co operation with the efforts of the farmer and fruitgrower Soil am climate cannot do all the work I- so we should have potatoes for the digging and apples for the pluck- Ing One reason we do not have more of these commodities Is be cause we are not keeping up our end of the enterprise and are not giving the soil and climate a chancy to show what they can do when Intelligently assisted- In an agricultural county am there are many such counties ir Kentuckythere does not seem to be much excuse for sending away from home for cabbage potatoes or apples Yet there probably an tow if any counties In Kentucky which raise n sufficiency of these articles for home consumption Kentuckians should devote more attention to horticulture and truck growing or should invite Immigration with an especial view to de velopment In these lInesCour ierJournal Strange Things In the Wash The women are In such a hurry these days to get to their clubs that hey are rather careless In wrapping up their family washing which goes to the laundry Such articles as combs brushes shocbuttoners pocket knives dishes and many olh er articles are quite ordinary finds In family washings Recently an Erie lauhdryman rolled a poodle log out Of a family washing Last week he found an alarm clock Kansas City Journal Gettysburg The whole number of men engaged on both sides In the battle of Gettysburg was 160000 i federal 10000 confederate 70000 The losses were 53433 about equally divided between the Blue and the Gray During the three days fight- Ing the aggregate amount of lead and Iron shot at eachother by the wo armies was 56tf tons In the Ight of this fact the wonder Is that tbe losses were not very much renter sip W J Bellamy Clarksburg Ky recoT1crThad bronchial trouble ever since he was a baby and It gradually grew worse until we feared consumption I got a bottle of Foleys Honey and Tar Compound and soon there was such a marked Improvement that I- got n second bottlo and this will I rink make a permanent euro The fint bottlo cured his stubborn cough and I think this wonderful mlediclne eavaq my boys lIfo F t- safe at all drug istorea la FULL FUME TRIBUTE IS PAID To the Trusts Under Present Tariff Laws GOVERNMENT GETS A DOLLAR While Big Interests Get Five Out of the Reve nue Collections EXCISE HILL LIKELY TO PASS Special Correspondence Washington April ISThe 1Im- pression is steadily gaining ground that the Democratic exclseincoL tax which proposes to place upon wealth a part of the burden of sui taming the Government will pass the Senate and the White House Senator Penrose who pretends to be the leader of the Standpattei In the Senate has made the state ment that none of the Democrat bills would be allowed to pass the Senate but It Is becoming more and more apparent that Senator Pen rose and those of his kind who have assumed in the past to rule the Ser ate no longer have the power tallow certain measures to pass or prevent others from passing The truth is a great many of the Senators on both sides of the chamber either because they are at last frightened by the wave of protest against the high tariff injustice or because they believe In the Inherent right and justice of the Income tax measure have come In look fa vorably on the bill At least ther has been a cessation of the talk about the unconstitutionality of the measure and since this argument always has been the Stand pat answer to nil logical proposals the sign Is considered a good one Nobody pretends to know of course what the ultimate fate of the present bill will be but from the popular approval that has been ac corded the measure It is admitted by all that such legislation mus come eventually The present tariff law raise about 330000000 annually In Government revenues For over dollar of revenue thus turned Into the United States Treasury Itj U estimated by Democratic leaders In Congress who have studied the matter from every possible angle that the tariff barons put five dollars into their own pockets in the form of loot In other words thi tariff gives these beneficiaries the right to collect five dollars in tribute for every dollar the Government collects in revenue This condition is alone responsible for the horde of mushroom mil llonalres In this country On every article of daily use the people of this country pay this fiveto one tribute In the past tho tariff barons have urged a tariff for two prlncl pal reasons First they pretended that they desired to protect American workmen That this argument which the protectionists ir Congress listened to with a willing ear for the past slxteeh years Is a arcs pure and simple has been proven beyond a doubt by the Democrats at this session of Congress chiefly through the various invest atlons Into trust methods Secondly the trust heads pointed out hat In no other way could revenue be collected for the Governments support They thus gave their plea for a tariff the form of an ex useHaving disposed of the first rea son for keeping up the tariff the emocrats through the exciseIn ome tax bill have offered a solution of the other alleged difficulty The bill repealing the tax on sugar which will reduce the price to the consumer 2 cents a pound if the measure is enacted into law and he bill to place a tax on all Incomes of moro than 5000 a year are two of the most Important measures passed by the House of Representatives In the last quarter of a century These sister bills conceived and rained by Democratic committees were so good In fact that eighty Republicans were forced to vote for hem Forced to vote for them Is the corroct expression because the Republicans refused steadfast 13 when In power to pass such leg- Islation or even to consider It but when the Democrats forced them to vote one way or the other they were afraid to Tote against either bill lest their constituents retire them to private life HIS WASPERFECT AFTER 41 YEARS BURIAL Burled tor 41 years the body of Pedro MaztlnJ was exposed to the view of relatives who declared that t had not changed a particle over feature having remained tie cam j as the day the body was placed IIn tho casket Tl0 grave was disturbed as tho result of a request made by Mrs Margaret Mazlni who before hor death three days ago said she wanted the remains of her husband Placed in a small boxsupposing they had reduced to rshes and her own body laid to rest In his coffin With his ashes at her sid When tho grave was opened ii In the presence of the five surviving children an unexpected and surprising condition was found The body of Mazzlnl which had been buried in an airtight steel casket was in a perfect state of preservation The children saw the features of their father as perfect as when the body was laid away In 1871 Even the garments showed no wasting Santa Barbara Cor Los Angeles Times REPLY FROM MEXICO TO UNCLE SAMS NOTE Declines to be Responsible for Acts of the Rebel Chief Orozco Mexico City April 17Mexicf replied to the note of Acting Secre tary Huntington Wilson tonight declining to assume responslDiiuj for Orozcos acts denying the right of the Washington Government to deliver the admonition container therein taking exception to the communication directed to Orozc through Consul Letcher and de ploring the making public of this communication In the same note to which the Government was required tomakeanswer Tho reply was given to the press by Minister of Foreign Relation Calero It denies the right of Washington Government to theI Ish Mexico for the reason that It not based on any justifiable Inci dent It denies responsibility bj the constituted government for acts committed In territory remover from law while accepting full responsibility for every loss or damage sustained to foreigners legal chargeable to the Government- A caution has been Issued to the leaders of the Federal forces to In sure proper treatment of foreigner who may be taken as prisoners of war at the same time It is asserted that no basis exists for supposing that any other course would be pur suedOrozco Is held to be answerable for his offenses only to the Mexican courts and therefore should not have been made the recipient of a diplomatic communication r If you cat something which dis agrees with you dont let It work Its own way through Its a slow process and makes you feel bad Get rid of It quickly by taking ia dose of HERBINE It drives out Impurities In the stomach and bowels and you feel better Immediately Price 50c Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan c Co Beaver Dam Ky m Tlie Sacraments The Christian sacraments are two according to tho Protestants baptism and the Lords Supper According to the Catholics there are oven baptism the Lords Supper confirmation penance holy orders aatrlmony and extreme unction as laid down by the Council of Trent In li47 There Is not room here to explain transubstantiation It would fake a whole page to do that and there might be a few mysteries between the lines I I IWhen you feel Lazr Half Sick l I SortsIHERB1NE Ii the Remedy Yon Need It Is an invigorating tome for a torpid liver Tho first doso brings improvement a few days use puts tho liver in fine vigor ous condition Ilcrblno also ex tends Its restorative influence to tho stomach and bowels It helps digestion and food assimi lation purIfies tho bowels and brings back the habit of regular dally bowel movements When the stomach liver and bowels are active bilious Im purities no longer obstruct functional processes the result of which is renewed mental activity and cheerful spiritsPrice SOc per Bottle JametFBalUrdPron StLouItMa Use Stephens Eye Salve for Sore Eyes ItCurcah- TOIOANO1tccafiNLNOLol3Y lonovandl Co Heaver Dam iCy Tartfonl Drug Co Hartford Ky FOLEY KIDNEY PHIS IK BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDKH L f L Bad Spells M I suffered during girlhood from womanly weakness writes Mrs Mollie Navy of Walnut N C At last I was almost bedridden and had to give up We had three doctors All the time I was getting worse I had bad spells that lasted from 7 to 28 days In one week after I gave Cardui a trial I could eat sleep and joke as well as anybody In 8 weeks I was well I had been an invalid for 5 weary years I Cardui relieved me when everything else failed I CARDU TAKE I If you are weak and ailing think what it would mean to you to recover as quickly as Mrs Navy did For more than 50 years this purely vegetable tonic remedy for women has been used by thousands of weak and ailing sufferers They found it of real value in relieving their aches and r pains Wiry suffer longer A remedy that has relieved and helped so many is ready at the nearest drug store for use ctt onceby you Try it today Write to ladies Advisory Dept Chattanooga Medicine Co ClutUaoorj Tenn for rfrtnl Instrttrtinnt and PlZC book Home TrMlmint tnr Women sent tree l5i rtorIT lh I B YOU WANT a Better I IBookkeeping Bookkeepers all over the United States say that Draughons New System of Bookkeeping saves them from 25 to 50 per cent in work and worry Shorthand Practically all U S official court reporters write the System ol Shorthand Draughon Colleges teach Why Because they know it is the best DRAUGHONS PRACTICAL BUSINESS Nashville or Memphis or Knoxville Tenn or Paducah yor PrnlHnuIlor BARNES SMITH Attorneys At Law HARTFORD KENTUCKY r tr II llnnifH suit1 U K Smi l- iuuacuucxIhatthryhuverorutrda itangier hIprortIr cen rHl irHHU4 ttf I vt tx opt criminal mill1 dtvnrcacue1lrj Sinltl living County Altnrnry l irrVBtit M fnui Hdloch tH m Mr Ilirir will Indlvlduiilly urrppt urh prucllm tlttlrw In Iliuilord Keimlilltun Iou I 1111 111 Ha 4 furil Ky J M PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice hU ptolcuiuu In Ohio andO olntngcountle Special nttentlon xtven In a boilnexentruiteil to hll lire FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY will practice his profession In Ohio ami a ilnlBgcountlea and In the Court of Apprali Criminal practice and Collection a iprclaltv Office In the Herald bnlWInn OTTO C MARTIN 8 P MCKENXKV M9 RTIN McKE NN EYY HARTFORD KY GENERAL INSURANCE LIFE ACCIDENT SICK AND FIRE Will Also Bond You Otto C nartin Attorney at Law HAKTKOUD KV Office upI stairs over Wilson A Crowe opposite court house Will practice his profession In all the courts of this mill niljotniiiK coun tics and Court of Appeals Co litIIIC I cial and criminal practice a spec Inlty PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Cleuuri snit bourtlfin tho hItlromotcf a ItmuUnt growth GrayIralrPrevents hair falllne Six and HIOO mt irnrH tit HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESIDENCE OR PLACE OF ULS INESS AND PUT YOURSEII IN DIRECT CONTACT WIT TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR THE COMPANYS BPKCIA1 CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRESS JWOBANON Local Manager Hartford K W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Beaver Dam K71 IWomansI I JOB1 IThatHome Study fioiisaniis of banketai lens bookkeepers and stenographers are holding good positions as the result of taking Draughoas Home Suuy CATALOGUE For prices on lessons nyMAlL write Jvo P DRAtGKOif President Nashville Tenn Formcat alogue on course ATCOLLLVE write COLLEGEI Io= I I I s W H J F HIRESPIE t IIPKoPRICTOnsI BLACKSM1THIKL vaepalr r Ic Horseshoeing g j jASpecialtyII HARTFORD KY I ESTABLISHED 1858 i7 IdiamondfJewelryware you cnn get the bet quatllv lit ttthe lowest prices i Sctit OLDEST MAIL TAE HOUSE IN SOUTH Par a1most liaif s century we base rrvrdcx I I loda7jII 1- HV Notice If you want clothes of any kind clnnertl call on time Hartford Pressingi Club Vc Ican clean zany kind of clothes you lithe rind guarantee that they will be satisfactory if not nothing will be charged We are ready to clean your clothes for spring We also have a new line of lIntro sam ples and ye guarantee a per fect fit Call on u when in need of work in our line Hartford Pressing Club YM C A Bldg FRED NALL Mgr i n IW I IT J r 1 AVEDNESDAV APIUL SI 1W2 4 PAGE FOURTHEHARTFORD HERALD t The Hartford Herald HEBER MATTHfeWS FRANK L FELIX COITOHB j PRANK L FELIX Pub lad Propr r tEntered at the Hartford postoffice RfLamall matter of the second class Gov Woodrow Wilson lost his t tsuitcare in Illinois while on a t speaking tour also the delegate F iI vote of the State He recovered the suit case n It Is said that some of the Taft becoming discouraged 1followerslately have taken to religious I ii thought and pursuit for comfort i and consolation FF- ii i We have been waiting for some I t I suffragette to get up and insert ajj i plank in their platform t demandingI j that all ladles take oft In church We would second that motion heartily It Is sincerely that Ken tuckysdelegates to the Baltimore Convention will not go uninstructed I Democrats certainly JIjI have a choice for President and they want that choice named I Farmers are wont to complain of their hard lot and unfortunate weather conditions but all living in this section should be glad that I they have not been compelled to j endure the wreck and ruin of the flooded districts of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers There was mis fortune sure enough T An amateur garduer has fur nished us with the following infor oration which may come in bandy f this time of year He sayrJnputt ting in potatoes It Is best to plant onions alongside as the latter will bring tears to the eyes of the pota toes and there will be no need of Irrigation He also suggest egg plant and milkweed as good gar den combination Result custard II pie It seems that two great causes stand out for the fearful shipwreck and appalling loss of life anent the I Titanic horror One was the reck less speed about 25 miles an hour I at which this giant of the ocean t tearing through a sea of ice sUflficlentI near passengers I The steamer was several hours In sinking and all could have gotten off If there had been lifeboats sum clent The speed we understand was by order of the owners for a record Such causes are unpar donable in these modern times The Morsflntown Republican ed Itorlally asks iiWho is Bridge 6Rear Why son dont you remember He is the fellow who also IIhim for Governor on the Republic ticket last year on a platform1 1anendorsing Mr Taft for Presidenti He Is also the man who held his I hands in benediction over the beadI of Senator Bradley and said Here stands a man whose political soul is without a stain or words to that effect True he has gone wayI back and sat down but many of your party still regard him as a no table character A CONSUMMATE DODGERI We scanned the editorial page of the last Issue of Our Country out last Thursday over thorough ly for a possible answerto The Heralds editorial of April 3d wherein was repeated the Question we hadI asked twice before Is or Is not Our Country a liquor organ bark ed by the liquor Interests Each of its nine editorial articles was headed with an appropriate caption and all dealt with agricultural matters Our Countrys alleged mission except one which was headed Mr Bryans Attitude I and purported to be an extract 1 from the Commoner correcting a report that Mr Bryan would Intro I duce a Prohibition resolution In the Democratic National Conven tion Upon this extract Our Country commented to the length of a column taking its usual stand In I drinkII i which Is as follows Our brother of The Hart ford Herald who has been f chewed up some by us on the Bible side of tho Question Is Invited to take up this ques lion with us as soon as he can Rot about without groaning J w t tThese few lines which consti p tnted Our Countrys sole reply to The Heralds somewhat lengthy f challenge were so obscure and hId- den In the body of another article which did not deal In any way with the question at hand that wo near ly missed them And so this la Our Countrys an I 1 r sorer Is Itr This puerile silly 1 jrueanlaglees paragraph we suppose IB Intended as n reply to our Tital iu r ueetipnthe only question at I- sneIS OR IS MPT OUR COUN F- C I 4 TRY ISSUED AS A FARM JOURNAL BACKED BY THE LI QUOR INTERESTS We expected Our Country to dodge as It has been doing but wo at least ex pected a more sensible reply We are sorry if our persistent question ing has disturbed the woozy som rolence of Our Countrys siesta but this alleged groaning does sot seem to have awakened our contemporary to a sober apprecla Eton of the fact that In practical Journalism a silly Insinuation does not constitute a sane reply to a straightforward question If we have been chewed up some by Our Country or any of Its emls arles either figuratively or In fact we have not discovered It as our epidermis Is all hero and our facil- Ities of utterance are still intact The editor of Our Country must thiIsuch bacchanalian hallucinations was sure he saw it just that way I We have heard of these cases be fore but does not Our Country I know that medicine and science j I have combined for a remedy ThisII great temperance paper should jnot indulge In such Intemperate and misleading thought It shouldII curb Its appetite forfor Imagination and get rid of this troub- leIVe hope Our Country will ul j willIvetII The Heralds without blinking likeII MASKED MEN BOB- PULLMAN I PASSENGERSSIII I Covered By Revolvers Porter J jj Is Forced to Point Occupied Berths OutII Chicago April 1Xlne per sons were robbed of money or valuables or both by three masked holdup men who went through the sleeper Nottingham of the Rock Islands westbound Golden State Limited a few minutes after mid night this morning at Sheffield 111 forty miles east of Moline After the robbers had finished their slgI escape Under cover of three revolvers the porter was forced to point out to the outlaws the berths that were occupied AS soon as the robbers entered the Pullman they forced the porter to lock the doors Only the occupants of one Pullman were disturbed Those who were robbed are W L Le Blanc New York 45 and railroad ticket Mary Herron Chi cago 96 O L Benton Oberlin Kan gold watch and diamond val ued at 1150 and = 250 cash D A M Fuller and wife Fort Wayne Ind 95 and two watches valued at 60 J B Gomand Phoenix Ariz 85- Presence on the train of the three robbers has not been account ed for It is thought perhaps the men boarded the limited at the crossing of the Chicago Burlington ft Quincy railroad near which a Burlington train was held up come time ago After the desperadoes had taken their loot they commanded the porter to pull the air tube as a sig nal for the engineer to stop the train When the porter demurred the men punctured the tube with bullets The firing of the revolvers was the only noise connected with the holdup- It was stated at the general of Ices of the Rock Island here today that a good description of the out laws was obtained and It was said further there were hopes of running them down Siiliscrlho for Tho HprnltJ SI n year i NervousThin rl I jt I Are you easIly tiredlack yourII usual vigor and strength Then your digestion must be II i poor your blood must be thin your nerves must be weak You need a strong tonic You need Ayers Sarsaparilla the only Sarsa parma entirely free from alco hol We believe your doctor will endorse these statements Ask and find outI IconaequeqcoI will disabuse you of that notion Iin short order Correct Uat opec I he will AyerPIII1At I f t c It1 MINERSSBURIED BY A TERRIFIC EXPLOSION And Five Men Were Entombed in Coal Shaft at Mad isonville f Madlsonville Ky April 21On white man and four negro miners were entombed in the mines of the Coil Coal Company just at the northeast part of this city tonight following an explosion whIch shook the city and was beard for many miles It is supposed to have been an explosion of gas or of powder The men In the mine are Joe Hollowell white aged 27 married I loneI child night pit boss who was In charge of the mine at the time the explosion Charles New mar Iof miner Will Hughes single Light single Herbert Petree single IAt exactly 7 oclock tonight a i crew composed of the five entomb i ed men was dropped to the bottomI j the shaft In the cage Within j Iof minutes the workmen on the oufslde were stunned by a terrific explosion and the air was full of flying debris A mass of flamesI shot out of the mine shaft and the air shaft and for several minutes sound of rock and debris strik Ithe the ground could be heard of persons hearing the explosion went to the scene at once and Assistant Mine Inspector Long of Earllngton came In an automo with helmets and other instru IIbile for entering the mine It was found that the machinery on the top was out of working order and Tone cage Was blown to pieces The other cage was left Intact No hope is entertained for the rescue of the entombed miners Even If they were not killed instantly by the explosion they prob ably will have been suffocated be fore the mine will be entered early Monday morning Several mine men expressed the belief that the explosion was due to dynamite and as there were a number of kegs In the mines they think these were set off accidentally It Is known I that no shots had been placed and none were to be fired Others be llevo that the probable cause was gasII The company Is a new one and the shaft was sunk only a few months ago at the depth of 2001I feet It was owned by the Coil Coal Company of whlchW D t Coil Is president Tho mine usually works fifteen men at night The I town was in darkness for sometime I as the current was shut ort to prevent persons at the scene from being electrocuted by numerous lHye wires Mangled Body Found Madlsonville Ky April 22 Thousands of persons are swarming about the scene of last nights mine explosion The wrecking crew have worked desperately since 8 oclock last night burrowing Into the mass of debris It developed this morning that one of the four negroes was on the cage at the time of the explosion The mine is 200 feet deep and the cage was blown out at the top The negros mangled body with head severed was taken from the mass of timbers at noon today None of the other bodies has been recovered The wife of Joe Hol lowell is frantic with grief and grave fears for her life are felt A Healing Salvo For Burns Chap pal Hands and Sore Nipples As a healing salve for burns sores sore nipples and chapped hands Chamberlains Salve Is most excellent It allays the pain of a burn almost Instantly and unless the Injury Is very severe heals the parts without leaving a scar Price 25 cents For sale by all dealers m firXotlceIAll persons having claims against tho estate of Willie P Pirtle will present the same to me at Hartford Ky properly proven on or before May 1 1912 or they will be forevI er barred This April 1 1912 IIRA N PIRTLE Admr 1413 Of Willie P Pirtle deceased Lams shoulder nearly always duo to rheumatism of tho muscles and quickly yields to the free application of Chamberlains Lini ment For sale by all dealers m AgalCitizen J J May seventyfive years of rIIge and ono of the most prominent farmers in the Utica neighborhood died of a complication of diseases at 11 oclock Friday night at his home where he had spent his en tiro life Mr May had been in fit health for a number of months but his condition had been regardedaa J being serious only for the pasjt few weeks is survived by six child IlIrllar daughters and three l sons They are Mrs C W Curry Mrs Mottle Samoa and Miss Mary May and Mr Jack May all of Utica and Messrs Homer and Ivan May of Loredo Ark Mrs May died about fourteen rears ago +Notice The undersigned will receive sealed bids for the old Gregory or Morton building on Center street IIn Hartford Ky The purchaser to tear down building and all chin neys special care to be taken IIn handling brick Said building Ito be removed from lot by June 1 1912 There Is reserved from sale all stone and brick Bids to close May 1st 1912 at nodn Therlght to reject any and alt bids Is reserved j SJGLENN- E P JIOORE Committee IIOlKWELL IApril 21Klttie M Taylor was born December 13 1843 and departed this life April 20 1912 at her old home where she was born and raised After funeral services conducted by Rev Eply her pastor she was laid to rest In the church cemetery to await the resurrection morn She professed religion and Joined the Methodist church at Hopewell In 1866 About 1881 she moved her membership to Taylor town where she lived a shining light until death Mr Joe Brown has a sick child at his home Messrs Elbert and Porter Hun ley took over 100 chickens to Beaver Dam last Friday Mr Albin Shull lost a fine colt last Sunday Mr Elbert Hunley lost a good twoyearold filly recently Miss Maude Mlles Is visiting he- sister Miss Beulab Miles who IIs going to school at Hartfordu Several of the neighbors attend ed the funeral of Miss Kittle Taylor at Taylortown last Sunday We had a little rain and hat here last Sunday but it did not hurt anythingAnal April 19Mlsses Iva Patton and Eula Midkiff are visiting Mrs C W Moseley at Owensboro Miss Zoda Raymon who is at tending school at Pleasant Ridge visited her parents here from Friday until Sunday Mr and Mrs C L Patton and daughter Elda C spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs J H Miller near Dundee Tiny May the little daughter of Mr and Mrs Will Froman Is on the sick list The oldest son of Mr Riley Greer Is dangerousy 111 and not expected to live Miss Ethel Phillips Westerfield visited Miss Gertrey Raymon here Saturday night and Supday Mr CL Patton has taken off his first hatch of chickens from his In cubator He had an excellent hatch and chicks are doing fine v Mr Oscar Sapp and family re cently of Owensboro have moved back to his farm near here Miss Bertha Sapp ofII Westerfleld was here Tuesday afternoon call ing BENNETTS I April 22The new road from the Morgantown road to Bennetts schoolhouse Is almost completed- Mr and Mrs Elbert Spares were the guests of Mrs Sparks parents Mr and Mrs N T May near Maxwell Saturday night and Sun dayMrs J A Ruby was called to the bedside of her mother Mrs Ogles by of Centertown who is danger ously 11- 1Messrs E W Austin and Dock Faught went to Bowling Green Sat urday on business Misses Vera Hawkins and Phyllis Moseley and Mr Clyde Chinn of Beaver Dam attended church at Bethel Sunday and dined with Mr J A Ruby here Mrs Tom Andersons sister of Central City was her guest here last week The farmers telephone line hero Is completed W SOX April 22Mrs James Brown Is still quite ill Mr Allen Taylor and mother Mrs Louisa Taylor are on the sick list Mr and Mrs HE Hill and lit tle son and daughter George and Ruby visited Mr and Mrs George Kane and family at Beaver Dam last Friday night- IIARHETTS FEUnV April 22YrIank Truman died at his residence near Huffs Creek church Sunday night of stomach trouble He Is survived by seven children three of whom are married Mr Elvis Johnson is very III of typhoid fever For SaleTown property vacant lots cottages and twwtory dwelling A C YBIBER dc CO Hartford Kjr For class job printing The Send t I SHIRJVAISTSListenV10UI viIIen1mt i VIII t waist brand lvLwI Outdoor life gives health and happiness Why kill yourself over a sewing machine when you can come to our and In a few oments buy the garments allcorn plete It would you weeks to make yourself We have all kinds of llngere from the plain durable styles to the sheer dainty outfits for the trousseaux We have also shirtwaists fit and havefstylectealedbyexperlenceddeu sIgners1ti When you buy our readymade goods you buy leisure service and style for little more than the wouldcost r youCARSON 5 COINCORPORATED Hartford Kentucky LAST ACT OF CAPTAIN OF DOOMED TITANIC Was Effort to Save Life of Little Girt Intrusted to ills Care New York April 20Taklng refuge on the bridge of the illfated Tltanictwo little children remained by the side of Captain Smith until that portion of the big shlphad been swept by water Survivors of the crew who went down with the Titanic but were saved by clinging to an overturned lifeboat today told of their gallant commanders effort to save the life of one of the children He died a sailors death and the little girl who hal instrusted her life to his care died with him Ho held the little girl under one arm said James McGann a fir- emanas he jumped Into the sea and endeavored to reaoh the near est lifeboat with the child I took the other child into my arms as I was swept from the bridge dock When I plunged Into the cold wa ter I was compelled to release my hold on the child and I am satisfied that the same thing happened to Captain Smith- I had gone to the bridge to as sist In lowering a collapsible boat The water was then coming over the bridge and we were unable to launch the boat properly- It was overturned and was used as a life raft some 30 or more of us mostly firemen clinging to it Captain Smith looked as though he was trying to keep back the tears as he thought of the doomed ship Ho turned to the men lowering tho boat and shouted Well boys Its every man for himself He then took ono of the children stand jumPiereach the overturned boat but did not succeed That waa the last i saw of Captain Smith IfcGann said that Captain Smith from the bridge 1ctedtlo lower Ing of the life boats He said that the story that Cap taln Smith had committed suicide as the Titanic was going down Is without foundation Benjamin Ilawefl Dead Benjamin W Hawes a highly In fluential and prosperoM farmer tot 1 r Md a II store that take that material THE the Mcceo neighborhood died ot cancer of the stomach at 630 oclock Friday morplng at his real dence at Maceo Mr Hawes had been in failing health for some time and for the past four months his condition had been regarded as critical Rcountythe time of his death was sixtysiX years of age His widow and one son survive George Bright Hares off Macco Mr Hawes Is also sur vived by two sisters Mrs Jesse B Adams of Hawesville and Miss Millie Hawes of Macep Every family that has children La liable to have croup Invariably at night If BALLARDS HORE HOUND SYRUP is kept in tho house it saves going after the med Iclne at an inconvenient time and checks the attack promptly Price X I 25c 50c and 100 per bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ky m The State Board of Health has Issued a bulletin on the bookworm disease said to exist in twentyfive counties In Kentucky A gtv9atopleasant to take Chamberlains Cough Remedy Is made from loaf sugar and the roots used In Its preparation give it n flavor similar to maple syrup making It pleasant to take It has no superior for y f coughFor Acme Binders Mowers andI Rakes For Salet pneasy terms Sae ileiis Acton rfQueenBwWCjl if I iQl1lStoves and Repairof alll kinds 1 Cof s7rrJ iI cir4j er6N tiartforcitKen ucky r l WEDNESDAY ATOIL 24 I t SoleTN HARTFORD HERALD IYGE FIVE II Piano Contest Closes May 15 IT HAS BEEN AN INTERESTING AND ENTHUSIASTIC CONTESTj EVERY DAYINTENSE EXCITEMENT AMONG CONTESTANTS l ClJ r Is Still Anybodys Raceh II THIS MAGNIFICENT INSTRUMENT r ofMfone of our customers after itsaThis is the vital question This is the question that will be decided when the certifi cites are finally counted left I I HOW THEY NOW STAND I VICTORA liAltlVAKll JSGBU TINA MIDRIFF 75400 ETHEL FUNK 69225 IRENE WARD 57675 I MATTIE HICKS 53385 VIVIAN TAYLOTi77 frT Y32245 BETTIE WELLS 28760 ONLY MORE WEEK excitement biggest contest lfOSELI CORA THOIiASS01r2U IRENE RENDER EDLIOTTrvvvrTvr BERNIE MILLER This Will be Grandest Week of All nt every Our day Store There that will be specialsales need will be marked with pricks that will tempt you to buy You should not opportunity of visiting our store at once every day Tell your friends about wonderful cash bargains we have Get certificates your own certificates and remember that certificat9 you get increases your chances of owning this elegant piano when final count is made IF YOU NAVE BEEN WORKING FOR A FRIEND GO BACK ON HIM OR HER NOW F PL I R co 11 P JS NYI The Fair Dealers t HARTFORD KENTUCKYr r OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 O LOOAL NEWS AND 0 O PERSONAL POINTS 0 ooopoovooQooooo0Splendid O ery BARNARD CO SupplyII I station at Barnard Co HoosierCorn Drill best made tor sale by Likens Acton Quick sales and small profits 1 isI my motto Call and bo convin- cedJ15t4 S L Buy Millinery from Mrs Ger trudq Dean You w111 not repent later Buy Llnweave the new White Fabric Barnard Co selling agents r For cabbage tomato and sweat potato slips see Albert Rial Hartford Ky 1S14 Barnard Co have lOc Linen like no other If It is not better leave It Mrs Marvin Mosoley or Oweqs boro is the guest of Miss Helen Ralph city Now Mattings in variety at Bar nard Cos Bought right and priced right Daybreak Fertilizer the crop producer for sale by Likens Ac ton Hartford 4 Mrs Laura Tate has accepted a position as stenographer with At torney Otto C Martin-A k Messrs Joe C Bennett city an- dLJ1J Holloway Roslne were among 1 bforidaqIADLER t for jappendlcftiB or any stomach trouble on sale of- I COUNTY DRUG CO- I IrOHIO Mrs Josle Duke who while vis Sting at Dundee last week fell and broke her arm is getting along nicely Col Hugh Murray of Equality ill came to Hartford a few days ago to watch the oil well shooting operation Messrs C F Boswell Narrows and J B McDaniel Horse Dranc were among The Heralds calls yesterday I It you would enjoy a dish of pure rich Ice Cream made from whole Cream try OHIO COUNTY mUG CO Mr J H Dodson and Iltt daughter Kittle o near Sunny dale paid The Herald a pleasant call Friday Mesdames Lido Miller and Hiram Miller of Beaver Dam and Mrs J S Glenn city honored The Hern with a call Friday There will bo an oldfashioned spelling match at Grove schoolhouse next Saturday nigh Everybody Invited Mr and Mrs J W Parks and1 daughters Icy and Mattle of Beda i gave The Herald a pleasant call1 while In Hartford When you contemplate buying hardware farming implements of any kind remember I can save you money S L KING 15t4 Ky Before you buy Paint this spring get our Uelow wholesale prlcea onli paint Wo are not going to han dIe paint offer this season OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO Mrs T F Blrkbead of Owens boro came to Hartford Saturday where she Joined her husband JudgeTF Blrkhead until Sun W j IOYAL tr rBAKING PQWDERI- i l Ab3ofu4ey lurer r maderI f t tf LIME PHOSPHATE nf Fdd HQ aLQMI N4 t cl lc t ONE Is now of the Make it the and best weekI of the Every body is anxious to know the standing of the candidates Everybody wants to know who is ahead who has the best chance II DIXIE Y 820 GERTRUDE SCHLEbiDiIR20015L- NVIr MAY 17870 5G75 MARY + n 3775 B 230 the Goods you miss the least the their Save every the DONT I I I KING Remedy Central t Thursday Hartford 25285 day afternoon when she and Judge Blrkhead went to Beaver Dam t visit Mr and nits D T Lee Barnes until Monday morning when Judge Blrkhead returned tp Hartford and Mrs Blrkhead returned homo Mon day afternoon When In need of anything usually I kept in an uptodate hardwarei yohu purchaerae 15t4 S L KING Mrs R A Rowan and daughter Rosamond of Hoflln and Mrs J C Dennett and daughter Gladys city were pleasant callers at The HeraldI office Saturday tobit G B Likens who was in n tendance at Circuit Court the first of last week returned from Frank tort yesterday to look after hjs 1le- gal business hero seldwhat useful articles can be had I the lOc department of S L Ilog e Hardware Store Hartford Step IIn and seo for yourself 15t Messrs T N Daniel Olaton Route J M W Barnard and John R Phipps city and J K Tlnslev Hartford Route 3 were callers at The Herald office Saturday Mrs Joannah Amerine of Richmond Ky 1B In Hartford visiting her daughter Mrs Wallace Riley who has been sick for some time but is now Improving nicely Prof Russell Cooper of the Fordsville High School has accept ed a position as assistant principal in the Lebanon Kyj High School and will teach at that place next year Mr M A Fought manager of the Hartford Music COhas brought his wife and two children Charles and Marline here to live with him They have rooms at the Commer cial Hotel Harrowtultlvator lNewl SL King Hartfordy and be sup piled at n bargain 15t4 I Dr A B Rlloy of Hartfordha I recently been stricken with a mil taro at smallpox and Dr PendleM Isaleaul with what was thoU r I tb be theraamoarouble f although I t has + not7et developed Dr Pendleff tonfsDotofths opinion that ho hRS cmallpoxand thinks he will bo up and ready fat business by Friday I a 1 Attorney C E Smith who had the- o disease has now recovered wodld aeem that the County Board of Health should take more precautions against a further spread of this disease I ExJudge J P Miller has return ed from I sonImonths since Roy stood the trip well and Is slightly improved The man with the nitroglycerine to shoot the oil well near town is scheduled to arrive here today and the shot will probably be tired to morrow Eighty quarts of the stuff shottMessrs L C Morton and E J Ashby Centertown J H Miller Dundee Route 2 Rev HD Burch Friedaland F M Hoover Buford- j Mrs 0 W White McHenry were lasteMessrs eonA7 M Mlu ton Jr Hartford Route 2 J Burch Taylor Beaver Dam Route 1 Joseph Schroader Hartford Pouto 1 pave The Herald pleasant calls while In town Friday Messrs Chester Rowe Center town Joe T Shultz Narrows Henry Taylor Denver Dam V L Ful kerson Equality H P Addington McNary C B B Felix Olaton and Miss Eva Taylor city were among Tho Heralds callers Wednesday Mr W Chapman of Herrln Ill who has been visiting relatives and friends In the southern part of the county for the past two weeks will return home today Mr Chap man called while in town yesterday and renewed his allegiance to The Herald saying he Just could not do without It oooooooooooooooooO MARIUAGE LICENSE 0 000000000000000 Oscar Hewitt Jones to Mabel DobrulcrcFordav111e B B Atchison Roslne to Chloe DamstoqLyda3tarytThe Hotise Naval Committee votII M i ed against battleships and cruisers IIIAmerlCI III Ittraooonoo voovnoI I liVlT COlKT XOTKS 0 I Q000000000000OGJ nICoverdict of jury S ill for plrlntlff Ira Cox vi L k N R R Co dismissed settled order not 1ft- entpod Mary B Burden vs H D lidrer continued S V Wlilieloy vs t C p P Co verdict o jurv E00 for oanllff John Hold vs Same verdict of luy 50 for plaintiff W H Haynes vs eame vordlrt of Jury 30 tor palntlff B F erguFon vs P Frank Thomss hung Jury continuedI NInIcr not yet entered orI Ohio County Board of vs L M Hatcher verdict of jury 570 tot lane taken for schocliouie- Ivlh Rove AfII nee vs John Acdlngion co Irstructloi af the Court ilvlrs il as to Artdl cn and Judgment against the INew Knjrlanfl Life Insurance C r for a ont of 2- 9rn M Orchr m VF ilL H t E R R Co mandate of Court of Ap peals tiled confirming the flndlns of the Ohio Circuit Court- S P McDowell vs MI IL fi E R P Cos1me order- Cotrmonwealths Attorney Ben D ninffo of Owensboro arrived In Hnrtfoul Monday and Is in attend TCO st Court looking otter soma lepal business The following five cases the M H ti E U RCo aalnstI pei fo oversow have been com promised namely A F nralam J E Willett Hi pnm Babbitt Tosle Babbitt and C v Boswell Thn orders dlamlsfliiK hO1Mr4mU1I1ttartedl11pon The suit of Emerson Ropers VH Vr C Blankenslilp ct a1 on trial IlKAVHIl I U1 April 22E P Barnes d Bro bought the entire crop of poultry of the county both pooled and un pooled ant commenced receiving last Wednesday Notwithstanding the downpour of rain there wore more wogons In town than worn becore1The12i cents in cash or 13 cents in merchandise They were receiving four days and loaded six ears and paid out over thirteen thousand dollars for poultry and abort three fvousord dollars for eggs IrJ-N Norris of Louisville bought the = n eittre lot from Barre9 Bro and Lcti poultry and c 39 wero chipped dirge to Now Voh City MrDnv Taylor has sold hjlu boss Mful leilence on Main street near the Baptist eliurih to Dr Willis oC romwell K Pot sri Summer of CnnLcr town wMlo en costs to Dotter Dam with a four hone wagon load f poultry rnd cfts upset fcla ffffri IIn a deep mvdbofa near Ta v or Ivce and smotherod about 300 hlrcrs sad lost tSiPrt 17i dozen lrfn 0 oads was the cause of tlc accident n IMnnn OHI of biz Planes and Organs repaired on rht noie The latest sheet mu or sale lit4 Hnrtford Music Co riTpany II A ti ntloii The members of Company H aro directed to report at tho armory or Jrlll Saturday pril 27 at 8 p in The dao fo encampment has been set for Jrly 26th to August Stir at Arnlston Ala oleo who antic late ncting In tho company and woo hnve not bail1 previoi military tr alnr must io eo rot later tlan April 26 ero tov wit ot receive pay for the coming orcampment C H SHOWN Lieut Commanding tto Company Mrs iil7iiiclli Curds Dcuil Mrs Elizabeth Ccrtia vlfo of Mr J E Curtis Rockpot Ky tiled last Saturday mornlnit at 5 oclock of a complication of troubles Af ter funeral Eervlces conducted by Rev John Casobler at ibs Baptist Church Centertown at oclock pI m Saturday her remains wero Interred in the Ccntertovn cerae tery Mrs CnrJl who hart been a member of the Baptist Csurch for Iseveral Fats leaves iiTrv tlg1nI a husband one diuglitor JIlss Fern and son Hayden boildea a hOlt of frlendn and relative to mourn hoc demise t Failed to Agree The Jury n the suit of H F For g uion ajnlnst P F Thomas for tho nlleged alienation of tho affections of Fergusons wife wherein tho plaintiff was claiming S 10000 darn apes felled to agree and were dls IntaetcndanLa Our baby cries for Chamber loins Couth Remedy vrltcs tics T B Kendrick Ranaca Ga It is he heat roar remrdv on the mark t fPr coughs colds and croup For gale by all dealers m Itr amu DeW SPRING BRIDES to be are urged to advise with us for their outfits Our stock of fine White Goods Lingerie Lawns fine Nainsooks dainty Ribbons and Laces manylittlef f in fine shape to supply your needs Our Milliner will fix you with a Hat that will satisfy and please Every department lass many good things for your inspection BARNARD CO HARTFORD KENTUCKY I j jjp jjj jjf 4 APRIL 24 1012 HARTFORDHERALDWEDNESDAYPAGE 8LX THE fit p I The Hartjord Herald i Illinois Central Itallrand Time Table nt Dearer Dam Ky Isr North Bound South Bound i r No 132405 nm No 121 1135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm r No 102248 pm No 131855 pm i J E Williams Agt i Y SEES MUCH IN HERALD GOOD AND INTERESTING a d I- yy And Names Some Of ItThS- ociological Problems L Of the Times Hartford Ky R F N No6 April 18EdltorBHcraldln your Issue of April 3 the articles which interested me most were these The Vital Question Is It Alll Worth While Tills Strenuous lame Unknown Heroes an the two editorial paragraphs be ginning respectively thus Its simply th espolls of office and We think a number of Republicans will join us In the prediction c The Vital Question Is oppor I tune Is it All Worth While is 1 1ii thoughtful Unknown Heroes Is beautiful and your editorial para graphs are excellent I would say to the author oC- t Unknown Heroes while the hum i iblc heroes of everyday life are 11 y ybrave noble and good yet In the otherIiJustice and Right who despite i persecution and proscription and all adverse conditions has the moral courage to labor with voice and pen In the cause of truth and equityI find something good and Interesting In the Hartford Herald ii suggestibiographic sociologic and ed i 1torlc11 I Iucational matters are always good for those who are thought ful and progrcssful And why not semloccaslonal ly grace your pages with some of the principles program and phi losophy of Socialism the most cussed and discussed subject in I the universe People are inquiring about it There is a demand for informa tion relative thereto In the April 3d Issue of the Her aid I read an article under head lines beginning with The Bulwark of Human Liberty and as I an ticipated it took a flng at tb- emobthe people Now let me say we have never had majority rule In this country The Constitution docs not grant i majority rule consequently we have always been under minority rule The people are either sovereign In ALL things or else NOT sovereign at all Whenever and wherever theI PEOPLE are not sovereign In ALL things then and there they do not exercise their paramount authority and It logically follows that theyI are suffering from the tyranny of the fewthe minority Democracy Is selfgovernment Selfgovernment Is majority rule I All tyrants whether monarchic autocratic or Judicial fear what they call the mob the rabbleII Ih e the common peopleIIn all ages and climes the oppressors of the common peopleI and all those persons having speeI ial prlvlllRcs by which the CewI profited to the loss sorrow and detriment of the many have stood for TIlE LAWS and against majority rule for the very simple reason that they feared that they would be shorn of their special privileges or that their class Interests would be endangered and put In jeopardy by the rule of the people The master and ruling class in all lands have dreaded and hated democracy and majority rule They CONVALESCENTS Those Recovering from Any Sei vere Illness After a long wasting illness con valescents require nourishing food that will not overtax the digestive functionsand in the way of a strengthrestoring and vitalitymaking t equalsVlnoltonic without oil Vlnol creates an appetite reestab lishes good digestion and helps tho dally food to make rich blood form flesh strong muscles and Impart now t thotl strength and flesh bullding tonic res torative to call at our store and get a t bottle of Vinol with the understand ing that if it does pot help them we will rotund their money without ques tion James It Williams Hartford Ky 1 Z Wilbur Mitchell Beaver Dam Ky are great sticklers for THE LAW for THE LAW protects THEM lii i their encroachments on human rights and liberties Democratic government rest solely on the rule of the people Whenever there are constitution and laws which either cripple 01r prohibit popular rule and govern ment in the least then indeed we have tyranny of THE MINORITY Liberty is never an aggressor AUTHORITY vested In few has always trampled on the rights olt the many In these United States today we see the autocratic power of plu tocracy wielded in behalf of the oef the Republican party like Aldrich and not by the Ignorant voters fIn the G O P W H C 0 000000000000000o Inoooooooooooooo Selfpopping corn Is an Interest whiclh Is offered this spring It Is the re ordinarydpopcorn and red peppors generat ing enough heat within the ear to pop the kernels in the fall People living In a sixthstory apartment will find It Impracticable to grow pumpkin vines In their window boxes While the foliage and large blossoms are very effec tive from the street the result of a fullgrown pumpkin dropping on a passerby is disconcerting The Plymouth Rock eggplant Is perhaps more showy but the Duff Cochin variety Is larger and richer In color We can only repeat our former Injunction that the egg plant Is ready to pluck as soon as it cackles Attempts to evolve a horseless horse radish by grafting the stem of the plant to an automobile tire have only produced p hollow radish with a strong gasoline taste Chicago Post T XKV LAW AFFECTING PUBLIC DRINKING CUP The recently enacted State law prohibiting the common drinking cup In Kentucky will go Into effect about May 10 The law forbids the use of com mon drinking cups on railroad trains and in railroad stations ho tels boarding houses restaurants steamboats stores or other pub licly frequented places No per son or corporation in charge of such places shall permit the use of the drinking cup in common and warning placards must be posted in conspicuous positions A violation of tho provisions of the act Is pun ishable by a fine of not less than 1 and not more than 10 and each days violation of any of the provis ions of the act Is to be considered a separate offense The public drinking cup Is now recognized as a menacing medium for the transmission of disease Legislation has been directed against It In various cities and in a number of the States of the Union Kentucky In adopting this com mendable law has taken a forward step in the campaign for the pre vention of disease On general principles the common drinking cup had nothing to recommend or jus tify it Now that it Is known to be an agency for the dissemination of many deadly dangerous or loath some maladies there Is no longer any shadow of excuse for Its continuance In public places The ef fective enforcement of the Ken tucky act will be a substantial gain for decency andsanitation He Delayed the Game An Eastern college graduate ap plied for work In a Michigan lum ber camp He was told to occupy himself with one end of a cross cut saw the other end being In charge of an old and experienced lumbermanAt of the second day the young mans strength began to wane Suddenly the old man stopped the saw a moment Sonny ho said not unkindly I dont mind yer rfdlng on this saw but if Its list the same to you I wish youd keep yer feet oft the ground Ragged wounds are painful and cause much annoyance If not kept clear they fester and become run ning sores DALLARDS SNOW LINIMENT Is an antiseptic heal ing remedy for such cases Apply It at night before going to bed and over with a cotton cloth bandage It heals in a few days Price 25c HOc and 100 per bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ken tucky m re Because Why Mrs Holmes Fancy Mrs Bangs threw a saucepan at rheY husband because he eat orifriewthat I lould never do athiuglilte that Mr HqlmesHCjlrV Bp Becatse ICVP m foxiVnrityeli PstT Mrs Holmes Yea Besides I havent a new hat I oooooooooooooooo 0 O POEMS YOULL fcSNJOY C- Io O O The Heralds Special Selections 0 0e0 PLAY FOR PLAT The eldest was John fio elected To play the trombone In the band Ho said it had been much neglected I And this would enhance tho de round i- So John learned the trombone andI started A worthy position toseek The last that was heard of his case twas averred He was earning eight dollars a week The second was Joe he predicted The bassoon would come Into Iti I own So Joe his poor family family af flicted With horrible sounds like a groan Then off for the Wjst he departed To show to the world his technique Ho wrote from Seattle They treat us like cattle Im getting six dollars a week The third son was Frank he de batedThe and the cons quite awhile But chose the oboe much elated And learned too fo play In fine style Then eager for fame and for fortune Forth fared he with high man tling cheek This word came from Bangor Pray pardon my anger Im making five dollars a week The last son Was Tom though the latest To make his appearance on earth Of all he was most uptodatest And showed too he knew his own worth No trombones or bassoons or obes He thundered Away with them all And Tom now makes yearly ten thousand or nearly For he Is the one who PLAYS BALL William Wallace Whltelock a Resolutions on the Drntli of Mr Dudley Ford At a recent meeting of the Ohio County Union American Society of Equity the following resolutions I were unanimously adopted 1 Resolved That the Ohio County members of the American Society of Equity have learned with profound sorrow of the death of their brother and coworker Mr Dudley Ford which occurred since our last regular meeting 2 Resolved That In the death of Mr Ford this Union has lost one of Its most valuable and untiring workers and one who had tilled the position of county treasurer for many years In a most acceptable manner and who had also done valuable work as a member of the finance committee and as grader for the Hartford Warehouse In every position In connection with this organization we found him to be true honest capable and gen erous In his dealings with his brethren and with his fellowman and his advice and counsel will be greatly missed by our organization 3 Resolved That we tender to his bereaved family our sincere sympathies In their great loss and that a copy of these resolutions be furnished them and published In tho county papers GEORGE HICKEY H T PORTER C M BARNETTCommittee By order of the Ohio County Un ion American Society of Equity 0 The correct treatment for cuts burns scalds wounds sores lum bago rheumatism or neuralgia Is DALLARDS SNOW LINIMENT It Is healing penetrating and antisep tic which Is everything that Is needed to effect a complete cure Price 25c COc and 100 per bot tle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ky m rTWELVE YEARS ADDED TO THE AVERAGE LIFE The astounding and gratifying fact Is claimed that In the last half century an average of12 years has been added to the period of human life Since the first actual records were taken in New York Cltylh the middle sixties the rate of mortality has been reduced from 85 deaths In each 1000 Inhabitants to about 15 or 16 This reduction has resulted from the control of infectious die eases The eavlrig thus made re feso Jyo the period of life under 50 arsT1iere la no saying knowledge regarding the organic diseases of advancing years which afflict especially these who have been active in affairs and who are axed with largo responsibilities Dr William H Welch In an ad fl jlrI T I dress at the fortythird anniversary of the Presbyterian Hospital IIn New York recently in referring to the close alliance between the College of Physicians and Surgeons and tho Presbyterian Hospital said he be lieved that such relationship would be a source of great scientific edu cation not only In the nursing and treatment of those afflicted but al so In preventing the diseases which I andIaverage of human existence Christian Herald THE RULESPOKER 0 AS APILIED TO rtTHE TRADE They are telling a story this sea son of a battle of brains between the clever advertiser and the clever localeshoo store and we are printing it just to beat some trade paper to It The local shoe store aforemen tioned has been conducting a bargain sale in mens shoes In each pair of shoes in the show window there are three new 1 bills and the sign reads Three of a kind take one pair The 3 shoes have been going rapidly Recently however a big young man entered the store and asked Do you sell these shoes according to poker rules as adver tised 1IYes sir answered the clerk who had played a bit himself Good I wear a No9 Wrap me up two pair of them He received the shoes and hand ed over 3- Excuse me said the clerkll These shoes cometo 6 You took two pair Thats all right said the young man but three of a kind beat two pairs I know that responded the clerk promptly but three of a kind dont beat four nines The customer paid Cleveland Plain Dealer Business Education Pays Young people who want to make good salaries should first got a good business education Positions are plentiful for the qualified The Business University of Dowling Green Ky sends free literature to those Interested in this line THE GRAPHIC STORY OFsA VANS WASTED LIFE The other day a man was over heard soliloquizing He was say Ing something like this Not long ago I visited a cemetery and saw a tall and costly monument glittering in the sunlight I knew the man who sleeps beneath I wonder If In the world beyond the stars he found happiness He certainly did not this side of the meridian He gave his strength In the chase for a gold His schemes by day and his dreams by night were of how he could Increase his harvest He never saw the sorrowful face of the widow In want nor heard the plain tive cry of hunger The birds sang gaily In the treetops Innocent flowers wafted their perfumes to him and the sunlight danced across his path but he heard nothing The only music that he heard was the jingle of the gold as It dropped In to his coffers In the flush of his conquest and power he was stricken down and now sleeps on the hill with the poorest He left behind no legacy of kindly deeds no cher ished words of hope no aching heart for a friend who has gone His gold has built for him a monu ment of cold and pulseless granite that defies tho moans of the wind as his heart defied the sobs of hu manlty In the democracy of the grave there Is no caste and I say that this man wasted his life as much as the rumsoaked pauper who sleeps In the potters field a stones throwawayJ Great Weekly nt a Low Price The Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer a twelvepage paper recently trans formed Into the size and appearance of a dally will be furnished In con nection with the Hartford Herald at only 135 for the two papers This price stands good on renewals for The Herald The Weekly En quirer Is an Ideal newspaper containing a big variety of reading and Is especially suited to the farming classes It Is Democratic and progressive This Is certainly a low price for a lot of good reading tt est Catalogue Free Write the Dowling Green Busi ness University Bowling Green Ky for its new complete and illustrated catalogue Gets Rich la Prison D A Hatfleld convicted forger Ii awaiting transportation from the I King County Jail to the penitentia ry in Walla Walla to serve from two to ten years for attempted jail breaking cleaned up 11000 irony one man during the last year and while he was an Inmate orbe County Prison according to FnCunningham Cashier of a bank In Hanford Cal Cunningham told Prosecuting Attorney John F Mur J w 1 f Illinois Conirall Alt Train Service Has Been Resum ed by way of Cairo to and from North Ca H BOWER General Passenger Agent I phy today ho had been swindled out of that amount by forged deeds during the past 12 months while Hatfield was supposed tobo in a cell and under strictest survell ance Cunningham eft Seattle for his home this morning but will re turn to Seattle In two weeks Seattle Cor Los Angeles Times AND IT WAS JUST LIKE A LETTER FROM HOME For once in her life Miss Bernice Grady has all the news from home She Is a clerk In the Department of Commerce and Labor at Washing ton In a Jotter to her father John H Grady 32 Leavitt street she said ho was a stingy writer Pa Grady bought a writing tab let of 160 pages running 20 lines to a page He began a letter to his daughter He wrote all ho knew about home all he could get from the neighbors the gossip downtown the latest thing In church life the club calendar the weather farming news suburban notes what the children were doing In school a dash of local politics the windup of the CarloMax dog feud the weekly shoe shipments and the spring fashions for men He wrote 20000 words In the letter Sixteen cents worth of pos tage stamps took the letter to Miss Grady The girl sent back a blank envelope followed by this note Revenge is sweet How do you like It If I ever get time Ill an wer that essay of yours Brockton Mass Dispatch A Newspapers Rights Decency A newspaper has aright to join In a moral crusade without the risk of a libel suit The Newcastle id Courier published an article denouncing Saturday night fivecent dance halls as Im moral A dance hall owner brought an action for libel Judge Jackson of Newcastle decided that newspaper cannot be convicted of libel when It Is engaged In a crusade for the betterment of the mor als ot a community Sound sense and good yawlLeslies All For Nothing I always was unlucky he said with n weary sigh Whats the matter now old man his friend asked Ive spent over 500 on having J my boy taught to play the fiddlejj and now his hairs all coraln out What Did the Groom Wear The bride was prettily attired with dress of pink satin messallne while the groom looked every WinchlIl the man Sandwich N H Re porterjj 0 With Leaden Heels Gink Your son is pursuing his studies at college Isnt he DlnkI guess so Hes always behind Senator Shelby M Cullom of Ill inois a native of Kentucky who was defeated In tho advisory pri mary in Illinois last week sends a message to the young men pf Ken tucky advising them to keep aloof from politics Coy Harmon of Ohio In an ad dress at Omaha replied to the crit- Ics of his public record and denied the charge that he faa reaction ary In a saloon fight In Louisville ono negro threw an angry cat on another negro and the felines claws got In their work on the victims throat making a bad wound J Kentucky has but four ex Goy irnora Hying Buckner and Beck ham Bradley and Wlllson Two are Democrats and two Republic I ins 1 For Sale FarmAll sites from to 300 acree We can please you f you want to buy Ian- AOYEISER Se CO- Hartford tt7JWe are all a little honest a little poutewoall need isra little more of i- tp1EThNEYThicL 1 f I R a 4 T IONEIor BOURBON POULTRY CURE down the throat of afeaplnj chicken deitroyi theprormi and saves the ehlckffllfe rtnklntwatercurea PREVENTS DISEASEF- orthe treatment ol White Diarrhoea In chldu I and Blackhead and other diseases In turkeys BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS NO EQUAL One5ocbottlemakesi2neltonsofinedJclneSold J Beaver Dam Ky + + + + + + J + + + + + + GO TO + Oiler Rummafe + FOR + + Carpenter and Repair Work + 4 TIN WORK and FLUE CAPS 4 + Pump and Furniture Repairing + +j Solilering and Saw Filing Bug +gy Tops findCovered and Lined f Youll i the Dr John + + Mitchell office on Main Street + + Beaver Dam Ky + of + THERE IS NO CASE OF tONSTIPATIONpRBEUlfATlSM BLOOD OR SHIN DISEASE arising from a disordered stomach bowels liver or kidneys whi- chttSEVEN BARKSwill not materially benefit or permanently cure 5 this has been proven for the past 42 years Ask your parents or neighbors fr about SEVEN BARKS as thousands have testified to its merits Dont delay tJTiget aCO cent bottle at your druggist and start recoveryLYMAN Single Comb Buff Orpingtonii Eggs from Prlre Winners at Ken tucky State Fair 1011 Have mated up three pens from which I will sell Eggs at 150 300 and 500 per I setting of 15 Will book orders now for shipment Inter Send for mating I IIstIts tree Will also sell n laying faction Pullets guaranteed at 200 each tewII i RD Brooks Box H Grata KUII Thrice a Week Edition New York World iJ i Practically a Dally at theories of a Weekly No other Newspaper in the World Gives so Much at so Low a Price fThe great Presidential campaign will soon begin and you Will want the news accurately and promptly The World long since established a record for Impartiality and anybody can afford its ThrlceaWeek edition which comes every qther day in tha week except Sunday It will be of particular value I now The ThrlceaWeek World also abounds in other strong feat uresserial stories humor mar kets cartoons In fact everything that is to be found in a firstclasp f dally regular1 per Tear and this pays for 156 p4 i pen Wo offer ttila unequalled IIA8TFORDHERALD year for only 105 i The regular ubicriptlon1 price of the two papaya IB 200 ff OIthID 1E r bimMBUMATISUKIPNBVaAMDVtABM 1 r Is y 1 WEDNESDAY APRIL 24 fills THE HARTFORD HERALDIaUESEVEN t r LAND WHERE NO ENTERSt Inhabited By Ten Thous and Men THE REPUBLIC OF IT ATHOS Is a Strange Community Of Ancient Origin Peopled 1 By the MonksiJFx FINE PLACE FOR HIIJLK STUDY There Is a womanless republic on a peninsula south of Macedonia In Greece where 10000 men llvestudy ing and praying constantly and where policemen guard the coast to keep out women pilgrims and other persons who would make undesira ble guests Prof Casper Rene Gregory theologian of the University of Leipzig student of Biblical manuscripts who located In Kansas City recently at the Fine Arts Institute told of this most unique ojjall countries rThe place Is Mt Athos classic peninsula of Akto the oastermost of y three little peninsulas below Macedonia Prof Gregory explained i It Is called Mt of the Twenty 1 Monasteries and was used In an cient times as a signaling station to Asia Minor It Is a real republic There are 10000 monks there who govern themselves without Interfer ence from Turkey or any other country There are however no Government buildings no Presidentt or other officeholders The only police force Is compos ed of men who patrol the coast to keep out women and men who have no permit to enter this most exclusive of countries Only those who have a letter of permission from the Greek Patriarch In Constantinople are allowed to enter the holy place The holder of the letter must pre sent it In Karges the village capi tal of the peninsula Some reports have It Prof Greg ory said that this republic was formed In the ninth century It Is said that the foot of a woman has untouched the soil of the place for centuries All the monks represent the Greek Catholic Church They work the soil some but live chiefly upon contributions from pilgrims Probably the greatest collection of Biblical manuscripts Is in the mon arteries of this republic It is the most interesting place in the world for the student of the Bible the doctor said I have been there three times already and I will never tire of going There llrJl in the monasteries thousands of OJj ek manuscripts and hundreds of them are connected with the New Testament Hundreds of stu dents have studied many of these manuscripts very carefully but there are other manuscripts that have not yet been read carefully It may be that great discoveries valu uable to the Bible scientists will emanate yet from this great store house o manuscripts 1 WHAT ITZV5LED HIM WAS A VERY SIMPLE MATTERI JJhe proprietor of a tanyard was anxious to fix a suitable sign to his premises Finally a happy thonght struck him He bored n hole III the highest type of IIis womanhood Scotts Emulsionis curative food The nourishing and curative elements in Scotts Emulsion are so perfectly combined that all babies children and adults are equally bene fited and built up Bf erne to get SCOTTS less the Standard and always the belt ALL DRUG QIST3 1117 IMLmKIDNErPIUs MRMCUUI U KIIIMICYSAMDftAMKII Irk lJ1 through tho door post and stuck a calfs tail into It with the tufted end outside After a while he saw a solemn faced man standing near the hole loowlng at the sign The tanner watched him a minute and then stepped out and addressed him Good morning sir he said Good morning said the other without taking his eyes off the sign Do you want to buy leather asked the tanner NoPerhaps youve got some hides to sellNo NoAre you a farmer No1 What are you then Im a philosopher Ive been standing hero for nearly an hour trying to find out how that calf got through that hole TilE ORDINARY MAN GETS A LITTLE INFORMATION The Ordinary Man walked in to a florists shop and pointing to a beautiful flowering plant asked its priceThat duodeclmum floriatum asked the florist aancarly as the Ordinary Man understood him Its worth a dollar He dropped In at the physicians once and requested that gentleman to tell what was the matter with himOh youve just got a slight manifestation of nasopharyngeal comblommerus the doctor said or words to that apparent effect The Ordinary Man stopped to took at an automobile and the agent said You see the differential is set fit a tangent to the assimilator and that brings the oblold parelllng chute in dlamctlc connection with the swiveling trunnion as nearly as the Ordinary Man caught the re markThe Ordinary Man consulted his lawyerWe will appeal to have the de cision reversed declared the attorney on the grounds of lex ju dlcatum non contendre posse come tatusat least that Is what the Ordinary Man gathered- So he became so bewildered over the way things were told to Ordln aryPeople that he was careless when he crossed the street and was rundown by an automobile being de monstrated by the agent and was picked up and carried into the doc tors office and called the lawyer to make his will and later the florist got an order And to pursue him still further they carved on his monument Requlescat in pace eCatarrh Cannot be Cured With IOCAL APPLICATIONS as the cannot reach the seat of the disease Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease and in order to cure It you must take Internal remedies Hans Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces Halls Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription It is composed of the best tonics known combined with the best blood purifiers acting directly on the mucous surfaces The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh Send for testimonials free P J Cheney Co Props Toledo O Sold by Druggists price 75c Take Halls Family Pills for constipation The New Fish Law The new fishlaw passed by the last Legislature Inflicts a very heavy penalty for the use of set nets In any Kentucky water It also makes It a felony punish able by a term In the penitentiary for anyone to use dynamite In any stream or pond In Kentucky Dynamiters will probably here after look well to the banks and bends of the streams and set watches around the pond before dynamiting e It Looks Like n Crlino To separate a boy from a box of Bucklens Arnica Salvo His pim pies bolls scratches knocks sprains and bruises demand it and its quick relief for burns scalds or cuts is his right Keep It handy for boys also girls Heals everything deniable and docs it quickly Une qualed for piles Only 25 cents at James H Williams m Presidential Succession Should the President die tho or derof succession is Vice Presi dent Secretary of State Secretary of Treasury Secretary of War At torney General Postmaster Gener al Secretary of Navy Secretary of Interior Secretary of Agriculture Secretary of Labor anti Commerce I Children Cry FOR FLETCHERS C ASY9RIAtI oooooooooooooooO IHLLSVILLE ITEMS IO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOs Blllsvllle is not a big town nu merically jior geographically but iit is the most important place in the world to one hundred and eighty three people not counting Parson Broadstream nor the book agent who has been hanging around hero all winter Blllsvllle had another name once back before the war My uncle Bill was the original settler hero and he had n still house and in this way the place became known as Bills Still But when the Internal revenue tax went on spirits uncle Bill wanted neither to pay the tax or stop his still so he had the name changed to Blllsville Health is very good except Par son Broadstream has nightmares School Is progressing nicely un der Prof Snow who Is teaching some of the higher branches In cluding baseball Our physician Dr Fox Is a most wretched man He has been try- Ing to fish for the pmt week but has been repeatedly disturbed by sick callers Parson Broadstream preached a powerful sermon Sunday upon the evils of the recall The Parson has a fiveyears contract with his con gregationMy Bills son who inherited his fathers still and temper took a shot at a revenue office TuesdayThe Blllsvllle postofllco was In spected Friday and among some old papers the Inspector found my uncles will benueathlnR the still to me I always lid believe that someday the stream of good luck would run my way- Jealously Is a colorless odor less fruitless flower that seems to bloom In too many mens hearts I was telling Postmaster Van Horn this morning that I always did like Dr Fox but better than over now since yesterday when ho told me that we were such good friends that he was going to do my family prac tice Including surgery for nothing hereafter Ahem said Van Horn the doctor has heard of the find ing of your uncle Bills will Now Doc docs like n drink but I consider this n mean thrust I really feel sorry for uncle Bills son for In addition to losing the still he has measles and twins at his house It Is a law at nillsvllle that no citizen may tell s lie and livethatI- s live in Blllsvllle This principle was put to severe test last week A temperance apostle dropped into town and of course called first up on Parson Broadstream Nothing doing hero in your line said the Parson Not a drop of whiskey has been drunk In this town for the past nine years The temperance man went on his way and when the Parson was called upon to vindicate the law of veracity obtaining in Blllsvllle swore that not a drop of real whiskey had been made at the still since old man Bill tiled nine years ago Dr Fox told me this morning that he had reconsidered his prop osition to do my family practice free as he was afraid such partiali ty might hurt his practice A few minutes later I noticed In the Sprucetop Journal that my uncle Bills will had been declared barred by limitation In the county court ALMARING WINKLES The Danger After Grip Lies often in a rundown system Weakness nervousness lack of ap petite energy and ambition with disordered liver and kidneys often follow an attack of this wretched disease The greatest need then is Electric Bitters the glorious tonic blood purifier and regulator of stomach liver and kidneys Thous ands have proved that they won derfully strengthen the nerves build up the system nnd restore to health and good spirits after an at tack of grip If suffering try them Only fiO cents Sold and perfect satisfaction guaranteed by James II Williams m Children Cry FOR FLETC- HERSCASTORIAI NEW visit LAW WILL UK ENFORCED IN BARREN Glasgow Ky April 18 The citizens of this section aro delighted over the new fish law which passed the last Legislature including r heavy penalty for the use of set nets In Kentucky waters aiid also making It a felony punishable by a term in the penitentiary for any one to use dynamite in any stream or pond in Kentucky The people of Southern have suffered much KerltuckYII violators of the law who rated extensively in Cumberland I Darren and Green rlvtirs often times killing hundreds of smalls lab and after selecting the ones leave the dead ones largerII banks of tine rivers Not stppplng at this they sometimes visit private ponds in the absence of the owners and in some instances have practically destroyed all the fish In the pondsThe report of the dynamite save been heard and numerous arrest have been made but nine cases out of ten go unpunished for the lack of proof of the guilty ones En couraged by the now law the citl zens are determined to put a stop to their work and private parties residing along the river have been asked to keep a watch on the streams MRS EDDYS FORMER HOME TO HE SOLD FOR TAXES Concord N H April 1SDec- ause of unpaid taxes Pleasant olrslBakeri advertised to be sold on May 23d next Mrs lEddy lived many years at Pleasant View and It was there that many of her books were writ tenThe proposed sale of the proper ty comes about because of the re fusal of Henry M Baker one of the executors of Mrs Eddys estate to pay the taxes The levy amounts to 417 anil this sum Is considers by Mr Baker to be excessive Pleasant View Is an estate of many acres on Pleasant street some distance out from the center of the city DATES DEMOCRATSI WILL CIIOOSM THEIR DELEGATES Colorado convention April 29 Florida primary April 30 Massachusetts primary April 30 Delaware convention April 30 Georgia primary May 1 Connecticut conventlonMay 1 California primary May 14 Utah convention May 14 Michigan cmrt entionMay 1 ii- Maryland Iconvention May 10 Iowa convention May 1 r S Carolina convention May 21 Ohio primary May 22 Virginia convention May 23 New Jersey primary May 2S Texas convention May 28 Georgia convention May 29 Rhode Island primaryMay 31 South Dakota primary Tune 4 Ohio convention June 4 W Virginia convention Tune C Minnesota conventionJune f- In cases of rheumatism relief from pain makes sleep and rest pOSe sible This may be obtained by ape plying Chamberlains Liniment For sale by nil dealers m Almostn Miracle One of the most startling changes ever seen In any man according to W B Holsclaw Clarendon Tex was effected years ago In his brother He had such a dreadful cough ho writes that all our family thought he was going Into consumption but he began to USP Dr Kings New Discovery and was completely cured by ten bottles Now he Is sound well and weighs 218 pounds For many years our family has used this wonderful remedy for coughs and colds with excellent results Its quick safe reliable find guaranteed Price 50c and 100 Trial bottle free at James H Williams m last Do Without It- nichlnnd Springs Tex April S Editors Herald Hartford Ky A little late again but do not stop The Herald as we can not do with out the paper We have tine pros pects of a big crop this year Fine rains n good season in the soil and n railroad running right through the big middle of our town Yours respectfullyJ Constipation brings man aliments In Its train and Is the primary cause of much sickness Keep your bowels regular madam and you will escape many of tho ail ments to which women arc subject Constipation Is a very simple thing but like unary simple things It may lead to Eorlous consequences Na ture often needs a little assistance and when Chamberlains Tablets ire given at the first Indication much distress and suffering may be voided Sold by all dealers In a For Sale SIxtjLie acres of well improved land In Rough river bottoms 2imiles west of Hartford For further particulars address X care of Tho Herald 2tf MsPillsAfterjI will derive great benefit by taking one of these pills If you have been DRINKING TOO MUCH they will promptly relieve the nausea SICK HEADACHE andnervousncslwhlch follows restore the appetite and remove gloomy feel isge Elegantly sugarcoated take No Substitute f I Tho Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been n In use for over 30 years has borne tlio signature of IIsonnlAll Counterfeits Imltntlons and U Justasgood arc but Experiments that trifle with nnd endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil Pare gone Drops and Soothing Syrups It is Pleasant It contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic substance Its ago is its guarantee It destroys Worms nnd allays Feverishness It cures DIarrhwa and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles cures Constipation nnd Flatulency It assimilates the Food regulates tho Stomach and Dowels giving healthy and natural sleep The Childrens Panacea Tho Mothers Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of L4n es The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years Tae CtNTAUn COMPANY TP MURRAY TRCCT New VOHK CITY 11 Y 4 I To Our Farmer Friends and Patrons Now is the time to begin to anticipate your Fence wants We have just received two tar loads of the cele brated American Steel Wire Fence We bought it right so ve can give yon a very low price on any specifications you may need Call and see us about your fence Yours truly DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO INCORIOItATKO DUNDEE KENTUCKY FARMERS MARKET PLACE TO BUY AND SELL Hay Corn Oats Stock Peas bullet Clover Seed Timothy Red Top and all kinds of Field Seeds Also Internation al Sugar Dairy and Horse Feed Sucrene Dairy and Alfal fa Horse Feed and Poultry Supplies RAPIER GRAIN SEED CO Phone No 5hJx OWENSBORO KY EENTUCKY Lh1 and Pawer Company 4 IMOjtrOIlTKI E Q ++ ARR ASS MGR E3aCbfordtKy Wlll itfie your houfi at cost Jttectric Ltfjlits arc clean licalthy and safe No home or Imsiut vv louse should be trithout tJiem tvhcn witIt ill rtach U m I WHY NOT MAKE 200tA MONTH Thats I 5000a Week almost GTO00a Day Soiling Victor Safes end fireproof boxes to merchant doctor lawyer li ntuts sad weltIIIdoftmetdntl of whom realize the need of a auto hilt ilo not knot Jiuwraf Itlsloown one Salesmen declare our proposition one of the best cleancut luoneyiaukliif opprrfunl tips over reculvel Without previous xlieuro YOU can duplicate tho eucce 3 ofoljirri Our handsomely iiluDtrntril aoiape catalog will onauie you to present the subject to CUB tonmra hl ns lulcrettug a 11IlIIlt ue thou h j you were piloting them tliroucu our factory Men aipclutrd as raicsmeii receive advice sad liucrurtlnnu for selling tulec nivlni 11II I SalaAnnuaUrI The 25tli anniversary of our company was celebrated by erecting the roost modern fate factory in the world Wide wake men who rewired our special edling inducement rendered itnccessary todoubla our output We are spenalnR many thousands of dollars en larRlnc our sale organization but to learn nil Particulars it will cot you only the price oft postal card Ask for Catalogue 1161 THE VICTOR SAFE LOCK CO CINCINNATI OHIO The HeraldOnlyl 100 a Year I c aien v tiiYtr r i r 1 er A as r KrW A nIL 2tj 1812 rtOR EIGHT THE HARTFORD HERALD1VEDNEDAl = xl r1xI The Hartjord Herald I f 9 ik U n 4 E ItAIMtOAD TIME TABLE AT HARTFORD KV 1 II 1 The following L N Time Card ll J I I Iraeffective from Monday Aug 21st BoundII i l No llt duo at Hartford 719 a m P t r No 114 duo at Hartford 340 p m f BoundIir I i t Hartford 845 a m No 113 due at Hartford 146 p m i Ih E MISCHKEAgtItI N f rj LF TALE OF TRAGIC t t INTEREST TOLD By Survivors of the III Fated Titanic l M01MENiSOF DIREST PERil That Triad the Souls ar d Threatened the Sanity of Pzrtic pants GUKATKST HOItHOU OF AG1I5- f I The Cunard liner Carpathla a ship of gloom and succor came into New York Thursday with first news direct from the great White Star liner Titanic which sank off ilf ftheGrand tanks of Newfoundland early on Monday morning of last I I week rtegreat liner wont down with lior hand playing taking with bur to death all hut 740 of her human cargo of 2340 souls To this awful list six poisons wore added One died In the life hint when It put oil from the liners side and five subsequently suc cumbed on the rescue ship Carpa jt jtthla The total death list as the Carpathla isf brought to port by In the lifeboats hud I1i01in the darkness at a safe dis I from the stricken ship and I her go down As to the scene on board when the liner struck ac counts disagree widely Some main tain that a comparative calm pre valied others say that wild disorder broke out and that there was aII manlachal struggle for the life boats That the liner struck an tIceberg as reported by wireless was confirmed by all I I Ripped from stem to engine room by the great mass of Ice she I struck amidships the TUanlcs side I I I was laid open as If by a gigantic canopener She quickly listed to i I I starboard and a shower of Ice fell onto the forecastle deck Shortly I before she sank she broke In two 1 t abaft the engine room and as she disappeared beneath the water the expulsion of air caused two explo slons which were plainly heard by I the survivors adrift A moment more and the Titanic had gone to I her doom with the fated hundreds grouped on the afterdeck To the survivors they wore visible to the last and their cries and moans wore IlltlableII IK 55 Taylor of Philadelphia one of the survivors jumped into the sea just three minutes before tho boat sank He told a graphic story as he came from the Carpa ibis j I was eating when the boat struck the Iceberg he said There was an awful shock that made the boat tremble from stem to stern I did not realize for some time what had happened Xo one seemed to know the extent of the accident Wo wore told that an Iceberg had been struck by the ship I felt the boat rise and It seemed to me that she was riding over tho Ice I ran out on deck and then I could see ice It was a veritable sea of Ice and tho boat was rocking over It I should say that parts of the Ice berg were eighty feet high but It had been broken Into sections probably by our ship I jumped Into tho ocean and was picked up by one of the boats I never expected to see land again waited on board the boat until the lights went out It seemed to me that the discipline on board was wonderfulCol Grade U S A the last man saved went down with t the vessel but was picked up Col Gracie told a remarkable story of personal hardship and denied emphatically the reports that there hall been any panic on board Ho praised In the highest terms the behavior of both the passengers t and crew and paid a high tribute to the heroism of the women pas sengers Mrs Isador Straus he said t went to her death because she Y would not desert her husband Al though he pleaded with her to take ber place In the boat she steadfast u y e rofnacd and when the ship seed t at the head the two were csrt ultcdr by the wave that swept her Col Gracie told of how he wai riven to the topmost deck when he ship settled and was the sale survivor after the wave that swop t her Jijat before her final plungeI Sad passed- I jumped with the wave sale bo Just as I often have Jumped with the breakers at the seashoreI Dy great good fortune I managedd to grasp the brass railing on thee deck above and I hung on bjy might and main When the shi plunged down I was forced to 1 let go and I was swirled around and around for what seemed to me at interminable time Eventually I came to the surface to find the sea a mass of tangled wreckage Luckily I was unhurt and cast- Ing about managed to seize a wooden grating floating near by When I had recovered my breath discovered a larger canvass and cork life raft which had floated up A man whose name I did not learn was struggling toward iIt from some wreckage to which ho had clung I crfst off and helper him to get onto the raft and wo then began the work of rescuing hose who had Jumped Into the sea uid were floundering In the water When dawn broke there were thirty of us on the raft standing knee deep In the icy water andI afraid to move lest the craft be ov erturned Several unfortunates benumbed and halfdead besought as to save them and one or two made an effort to reach us but we iad to warn them away Had we iarte any effort to save them will e might have perished Col Gracie denied with empha ils that any men wore tired upon iDl declared that only once was a pvolver discharged This was for the purpose of In Imidotlng Eomo steerage passen frs he said who had tumbled into a boat before It was prepared or launching This shot was fired In the air and when the foreigners WEre told that the next would be llrectcd at them they promptly re urned to the deck There was no confusion and no panic Contrary to the general expecta ImpactIhisIherth0 the submerged portion of the berg and was aroused by the jar- lie looked at his watch he said Ind found It was just midnight The iMp sank with him at 222 a m for his watch stopped at that hour GraIs H Hayes president of the Grand Trunk railroad One of the last things Mr Hayes said was this TIle White Star the Cunard ind the HamburgAmerican lines are devoting their attention and In genuity In vicing with each other to attain the supremacy in luxur ious ships and in making speed rec lords The time will soon come when apI IaIThe conduct of Col John Ja cob Astor was deserving of the highest praise Col Oracle declar 111 The millionaire New York T he said devoted all his ener los to saving his young bride nee Miss Force of New York who was n delicate health Col Astor helped us in our ef andjvested permission of the second officer to go with her for her own orotectlon No sir replied the officer Not a man shall go on a boat until ho women are all off Col Astor en Inquired tho number of the host which was being lowered way and turned to the work of tearing the other boats and In re curing the frightened and ner OUR women By this time the ship began to- kt frightfully to port This be ime EO dangerous that the second leer ordered everyone to rush to larboard This we did and wo 1711 the crew trying to get a boat off In that quarter Col Gracie said that despite the warnings of Icebergs no slowing I flown of speed was ordered by the ommander of the Titanic There were other warnlngstoohe said the 14th he said the ships In1 I uas iHG miles and we were hat the next twentyfour would see I won a better record posted No Mmlnutlon of speed was Indicated 1 the run and the engines kept up ielr steady running When Sun ay evening camo we all noticed ho Increased cold which gave aln warning that the ship was In one proximity to icebergs or Ice eldsWhen tho vessel struck ho nntlnued the passengers were soI 11he11 notII Te slightest indlcatlonf panic tome of tho fragments pti Ice hatd lIen on the deck and these were sicked up and passed around bj oinoof the facetious ones who or eyed them as mementoes of the oc casion On the port side a aver the side failed to glanceI evidence of damage and the vessel1 zeomedto be on an even keel Ai few minutes later the officers order ed men and women to don life pre servers One of the last women seen by Col Gracie he said was Riles Ev pans of Now York who vlrtuall refused tobe rescued because ac cording to the army officer she had been told by a fortune teller In1 London that she would meet her death on the water The two hundred and more steer age passengers did not leave the ship until 1 oclock They wore In a sad condition The wane- i were without wraps and the few men there wore but very Utle clothing A poor Syrian woman who said she was Mrs Habush bound for Youngstown 0 carriedI In her arms a 6yearold baby girl The child woro only a light calico dress was barefooted and bare legged This woman had lost he husband and three brothers I tort four of my men folks sh I erledIIII the Carpathla were Washington edge City Assessor of San Fran Isco and his wife and son Wash npton Jr who had been rescued rom the Titanic It was exactly twenty minutes T 12 and nearly everybody was slosp said Mr Dodge I was In ny both and my wife and son had tt pot In theirs When the Im mct came we were thrown to the P1r TIP night was fine and there c l bre1 no for to obscure tie lIce icrs which the boat seemed to trlke headon toward tho starboard vnvtsr The lower decks were Im mediately covered with water and Voting Ice For a little while the hips officers seemed to have the nation well In hand but when ie cold water and ice bean to itriko the passengers the exclte lent began I heard several shots nut did not know where they came romWhen I saw tho ship was sink ns I ran back to the cabin where I had left my wife and child and ou can Imagine my alarm when I ound they had gone I searched ill over the saloon deck for them nd just as I reached deck they were getting ready to lower a boat They called for women to fill the three seats left but there Were no women on that deck and a man shoved me Into the boat and I gave my wife and son up for lost I did not know they had been rescued until we met later on the deck of the Carpathla Many of the women he said were scantily clad and all were suffering from the cold Four died on fhc Carpathla as a result of the ex posureOf all the heroes who went to heir death when the Titanic dived o Its ocean grave none In the opinion of Miss Hilda Stater a pas ginger In the last boat to put off leserved greater credit than the members of the vessels orchestra According to Miss Stater the orchestra played until the last Vhen the vessel took Its final Ilunge the strains of n lively air ilntled grewsomely with live cries if those who realized that they wore face to face with death It was terrible said liliES Sta er who had come from her home n England to visit a brother an rchltect In New York From the moment the vessel struck or as oon ns the members of the orches ra could be collected there was a steady round of lively airs It did much to keep up the spirits of ev ry one and probably nerved as much as the efforts of tho officers to prevent panic When the ship struck the Iceberg ilss Stater went on deck She was ordered to go back to bed which silo did on being assured there was no danger A half hour later she heard confusion on deck and heard some one cry Order everyone to don a life belt Running on deck after dressing again Mlss Stater was ordered to the boat deck aloft When I got there she said I found an Indescribable scene A number of the steerage rhea passengers had attempted to seize one the boats and there was a brisk 10f fire and many men fell un der It The prompt and drastic acr tlqn of the officers restored order There were many touching scones as the boats put ottIsaw Col John Jacob Astor hand his young wife Into a boat tenderly and then ask an officer whether he might also go When permission was refused he stepped lack and coolly took out his clgjfrrette case Goodbye dearie he calledas he lighted a cigarette and leanp1 over t e rail Ill join von 1gte An other man I Frenchman Jl think approached one of the boats about oo be lowered He had with him wo beautifull little boys An officer waved him back sternly Bless you1 he said I dont want to go but for Gods sake take the boys Their mother 1s waiting for them In New York The boys were taken aboard Mrs Edgar J Meyer of New York said It was a clear and starlit night When the ship struck we were In our cabin My husband went out on the deck to sea what was the trouble He came down and said we had hiuan Icebergbut that It did not amount to much I said I was nervous We went on deck for a walk More people said the accident was of no Importance It would only delay our arrival I was afraid and made my husband promise It there was trouble he would not make meI leave him We walked around the unand cried All women Into the lifeboats My husband dad I dis cussed it with each other and the officer said You must obey or dens We went down Into the cab In and we decided on account o- tlour baby to part Ho helped me put on warm things I got Into a sailorraboard We called to the ship that boatoThey sent a sailor down An English girl and I rowed for four hours and a half Then we were picked up at 6 oclock In the morn Ing We were well away from the steamer when It went down but we heard the screams of the people left on the boat There were about sevonty of us widows on the Car nathla and all were wonderfully braveThe officers of tine Titanic acted wonderfully A steward belonging o a ncishborhinpI cabin was asked WhY dontyou pet R life preserv er Ho replied I dont think thoro vIII be enough to go around mum Mrs K T Andrew of Hudson X Y n firstclass passenger on the Tltnnlc said When our boat pot away from the Titanic there wes an explosion I rid the Titanic seemed to break in I wooThen she sank bow first Just before this I saw Mr Astor Mr Thaycr and Mr Case standing onIleek They were smiling and we went off they waved theirI bands Puts End to Had Habit Things never look bright to one with the blues Ten to one the trouble is a sluggish liver filling the system with bilious poison that Dr Kings New Life Pills would expel Try them Let the joy of better feelings end the blues Best for stomach liver and kidney 35c James H Williams Hartford Ky m EQUALITY April 22Mr and Mrs John P Rowe are visiting their son Perry at Island Station Mr Logan Barnard of near Hartford was In our midst last weekMr and Mrs James C Bennett who visited relatives In Hartford returned home Saturday Mr Garfield Barnard section foreman sent In application for the position as section foreman at Hart ford or Moorman and will move with his family first of next month Mr Lee Overhults has moved In to his new residence at Kronos Mr Clifton Brown visited in Island Station last week Mr Harry Everly and family of Nelson Station are visiting their parents Mr and Mrs Wm Bullock Mr Reggie McKenna of Center town was here Wednesday and Fri day buying poultry Mr Guy Barnard who has been siting relatives In Island Station returned home Sunday Mrs Myrtle Withrow went to Hartford last Tuesday to have some dental work dono For Constipation Mr L H Farnham a prominent druggist of Snlrlt Lake lown sav Chamberlains Stomach bind Liver I I Tablets are certainly the best thing on the market for constipationI I Give these tablets s certain to find them agreeable and pleasant In effect Price 25 cents Samples free For sale by all dealers m a AXTHUACITE MINERS REACH AN AGREEMENT New York April 22The subcommittee representing the anthra cite miners and the operators con ferred here today for what Is ex pected to be the final session as a settlement of the demands of the miners has it Is understood al ready been virtually reached The basis of settlement Is said to ho a 5 per cent increase In wages end an indirect recognition of the rnlon There will be no acceptance of the check off system The whole committee of opera I tore and miners will meet later to j I act on the report of the subcorn jI mlttee w- M 1 I SIX CAR L A I D iI The totallweight of a little over one hun i dred thousand pounds of Ohio countys poultry was received by us Wednesday Thursday and Friday of last week distributing among our farmers about thirteen thousand dollars We Made the Prices Our farmers wives furnished the poultry We use all sorts of business alertness to secure the best price for the produce ydu have to sell We I Hammer the Price Down as low as is consistent with legitimate merchan dise on everything you want to buy We offer you nothing but a square fair deall in both buying andselling We will guard your interests in every trans action We have the merchandise We I want some of your business E P Barnes Bro BEAVER DAM KENTUCKY Reduced Prices O- NMERCHANDISI3J WHILE THE GOODSLASTB- est Java Coffee per lb M 20q 2 bbls Best Gran Sugar 10 Ibs while it lasts 100 Latest Styles in Chicagp Millinery PrIces right Vitality Flour per bbl650Tw-oother grades at same price Big Deal Soap 7 bars fqrj5oCleanEasy Soap 6 bars for 25p All other brands 6 bars for25onum- berA of nice Suits of Furniture from 2000 to 2800 Oak finish Bargains Plenty of Odd Pauts and Coats at Reduced prices Right Come and see Be sure to come and see our Farm ing Implements Plows Drills Cultiii vators Field Fence Wire and Fence of all kinds Best Lard by the 50lb can per Ib12o Bacon by the side per Ibl3oCome and buy while this quantity I lasts Highest prices paid for poul try Star Brand Shoes Oxfords E MqMILLAN Centertown rIlems I Do Not Eail to see me and my PI4NOSBefore you buy You will Save money HARTFORD MUSIC COMPLY M A AUGHT MgrFACTORY REPRESENTATIVE FOR High Grade Pianos PLAYER PIANOS ANDtOR3AB IHa LprKehfucM 1 y f At faY i r 1 i W