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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, May 8, 1912.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, May 8, 1912. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912050801 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, May 8, 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 HERALDl Subscription 1 Jfer teal in Advance I c the Btraldorr a toiq World the tens ofr III Nations Larip Ij M All Kinds Job Printiny Neully Executed 38th YEARS HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY MAY 81912 NO 19 EARNEST APPEAL TO DEMOCRATSA a Of Ohio County to be On Their Guard FOR INSTRUCTED DELEGATIO To Speak Out and Preserve Integrity of the Party Organization PEW FACTS PLAINLY STATE Fellow Democrato especially of Ohio County Listen Im not going to make you a stump spo th for Ive got something to s- It j is believed by many of the truest and most prominent Democrats in Kentucky among whom are James Stanley and Watterson tbat there Is an unscrupulous determined and dangerous coterie of Ille 1 hunters who sniffing the savory odors aftsie fleshpots ofBgypt t are now seeking to vestpock Kentucky Democracy and go up 1 to Baltimore and trade for whatevt they can get This enterprising llv x stock deal is very simple and practical They hope to pool the Interests of all the weaker candidates or In other words organize the field against the strongestthey dont care who their victims hai pen to beand In this way control the State convention andsend an unlnstructed delegation to the National Convention where tbey hope to find a ready marketIt may be already contracted Conventions are called for tbe sole purpose of ascertaining by fair full and free deliberation just who the party in their best judgment think is the best and most avallable man to nominate for Pres- Ident They are not called to be manipulated by a few eelfseekln Toliftcal wirepullers and charlatans as if clay In the hands of a It is an appeal to the judg1 1potterand choice of the great body of disinterested Workers In the heat and dust of the trenches who ex pect ask nothing but the triumph ot principles and whoever attempt J to interfere with this object should suffer the wrath of his party and be kicked into kingdom comer You are called Upon to say who i you believe is the best man It 1Is- II of the greatest importance to know what your opinion Is Go then to your county convention select som I good strong clean true men with backbone like a circus pole and send them to the State convention tully Instructed for your man tha they may select other delegates to Baltimore likewise under strict and explicit Instructions to vot A for the choice of the State To do less would be to jeopardize vital Interests and play Into the hands of these mountebanks who want to S sell you for a price If this band of freebooters can once get control of the State con vention by this dangerous cornbi nation the choice of uninstructed delegates and all the other selfish I i accomplishi1 r tors to a helpless betrayed and dis- traCted party- Whomsoever the party Is for let It say so In tones that make the peddler of votes quake What you r want Is the triumph of party prln cIples not softsnnps for n few dirty political gamblers who trade upon unfortunate party differences prejudices c sacrificing harmony and strength to personal alms a menace rind disgrace to the party they Isbonor When you catch a man making a tool and catspaw of your party spot him swat him hustle on the toboggan that mates never a atop this side the dlmlnUlorfil bowwows SJmply Instruct tour delegates to DaltlDore for the man you want This is not only wise just expe e dlent girl Democratic but It will thwart the 1 scheme and utterly squelch and scrapheap a small crdvf of the most selfish deslgn IngVaml dangerous men that ever Infested the party yont lot a sense of security de- cote you They are out for spoils ana are prepared for the most dear pirate measures and methods They e astute wily and resourceful i jfbey practically control the ma chine Which Is no small power tin M the hands of these bloodsuckersa they have all the money they can use They have no candidate they dont want any What they want Is by combining the strength of iall the other candidates against the strongest no difference to them who he may be to defeat him and with him the will of the peopl and being In control send an unln structed delegation to Balttmor where it may be traded like so many cattle Less than a half dozen 110 lltlcal vampires hope thus to over ride and defeat the judgment and will of the party and prostitute them to their own selfish purpose You see the critical situation and that too when everything hall looked so promising and Inviting Now It Is up to you to scourge these political mountebanks and gamblers from your temple and put a mark upon them that will neither wash rub or peel off I believe you will not suffer this shame llUt upon your party Even now In n mind I see Democracy like a lion after sleep rousing and stretching and shaking his Invincible locks Listen clansmenl Dlna ehear the slogan SENTINEL Rockport Ky May 3 1912 Democratic Convention luruanU4o a xall mao J y the Democratic Executive Commltte- the Democrats of Ohio county are notified that a mass convention willi be held at the court house In Hartford Ky on Saturday May 2 1912 at 2 oclock p m for the purpose of selecting delegates to the State Convention to be held IIn Louisville Ky May 29th at which delegates will be selected to the National Convention at Baltimore Maryland on the 2Tth of June 1912 All Democratic voters and oung Democrat who will be entitled to vote in the November election 1912 are urged to be present and participate in said county convention G B LIKENS Chmn Dem Executive Commltte of Ohio County HEBEJR MATTHEWS Secy COL ASTOR LAID TO REST IX VERY QUIET flANNEl New York May 4The body iot Col Jcmn Jacob Astor who was drowned in the Titanic disaster was laid to rest today with simpl ceremonies In the Trinity Cemete ry It was brought here on a special train from HhlnecllftOnThe Hudson where funeral service were held at noon in the little stone Episcopal Church of the Messiah of which Col Astor was for sixteen years a warden These services also of the simp lest kind were conducted by the Rev Ernest C Saunders pastor of the church and the Rev Willlan T Manning rector of Trinity Church here and were attended bY relatives and friends of Col Astor residents ot Rhlnecllff togethe with employes of Col Astoria Rhlnecllff and at Newport abou me hundred in all Mrs Ava Willing Astor the Colonels former wife did not attend the ceremonies but sent a wreath INDIANA WOAIKX PAVOK- flAMKS FOR IMIKSIDKX Evansvllle Ind May 4The Review a weekly local magazine edited by State Senator William B Carleton Is conducting a Presidcn lal primary and only women art ppermitted to vote The Review will announce the vote tomorrow and IIt will show Senatorelect Ollli lames of Kentucky in the lead for the Presidency President Taft Is second in the race Speaker Champ lark third AVllllam Jennings Bry an fourth United States Senator ohm W Kern fifth and Theodore Roosevelt sixth Mr James leads by a big margin a Steep Walker lilted Zanesvlllo Ohio play 4Whlle walking In his sleep Charles Se rest aged 44 of San Toy Perry ounty plunged from a thirdstory window of the Palace Hotel at3 30 this morning and was Instantly kill ey by striking his head on tho brick treat Secrest was on his way to Del Roy near Canton to visit relatives Edward Secrest n brother lives In Columbus Shoots Husband and Self Hagerstown Md May 4ln a Ot of jealous rage 1 Irs Luther Jen klns 23 years oldshot and mortal I r wounded herhusBajI Vioretp IsUfcldeyours later i tS JJ NOTED FEUDIST WAS FIRED UPON Ed Callahan the Victim of Ambushed Assassins STEEL BULLETS FROM COVE On Mountain Side Near By Will Probably Prove To Be FatalIHAS UK AX KVKXTKUL UI Jackson Ky May 4Ed Callahan one of the most noted leaders of the feudal wars of Breath county was shot from ambush his morning about 9 oclock throug tho window of his store at Crock ottsvillc a little village In this county about twentyfive miles from Jackson One steel bullet entered his leg just above the knee and an other pierced his breast The latter ball has been located and will he removed Several pliysJclai were at once called In to attend the wounded man and at 11 oclock he was removed to the hospital which Is being maintained In connection with tho Buckhorn High Schoo about six miles from the scene of the shooting where he was late this evening reported as resting well with some hope for his recovery Callahan operates at Crockett vjlle one of tho biggest stores IIn Brcnthltt county and has been an enterprising and prominent bust ness man lIe was a dcfendar with the late Judge James Itargl for the murders of James B Mar cum and James Cockrell anti Mat cums widow was given a verdict of 8000 in a civil suit against hIm for her husbands death The fact that the bullets found In Callahans body were of dlfferen sizes leads to the belief that he was shot by more than one person The Identity of the wouldbe assassin Is a mystery Callahan was shot from a moun tain side that overhangs his home and store It Is said that jte hid Ing place of those who shot Calla han was discovered by his friends who made a search but no tract could be found of the men them selves Since the death of Judge Jin Hargis and the removal of B Ful French to the Bluegrass section of Kentucky Ed Callahan was the most widelyknown man in Eastern Kentucky and while remainIng quietly In the precincts of his own home at Crockcttsvlllo since he was fired upon from ambush two years ago he was regarded as the leader of the old Hargis faction In the HargisCockrill feud Five times did Callahan face ju rles In Lexington Beattyvllle and Sandy Hook on charges of murder growing out of the assassinations of James B Marcum Jim Cockrll and Dr B D Cox he having been- a codefendant with Judge Hargis In all of the letters trials At the time he first became prominently identified with the feudal fights In Qreathltt county Callahan was High Sheriff While Hargfs Wins the bounty Judge and It was over a ontest of their election In November 1902 that resulted In the feud jetwcen the Hargis and Cockrlll actions and tine assassination of lames D Marcum May 4 1903 as he was standing on the steps of the 3renthltt county court house at fackson talking to Capt BJ Ewen Good Insure Pot Recovery Lexington Ky May GA brief elegram received from Jackson to night states that Ed Callahan who vho shot from ambush yesterdays resting well and It Is now bollev loved he will recover Ho is at he hospital at Buckhorn where he was taken yesterday and under the are of skillful surgeons Thp hos iltal Is supplied with every appliance desired for the best and most cientlflc treatment and there Is a trained nurse In attendance The telegram from Jackson says therE were no further develop nents which Is taken to mean that the bloodhounds taken to the cone by Capt Mulllkln of triis cltv bavc accomplished nothing as ret The Democratic State Convention ot Connecticut instructed its dele atea for Coy Baldwin of that tate for President HANDSH IT OUT 1 HOT OFF REEL Does Ollie James Dealin With Percy Haly REPLIES IN VIGOROUS STYL To Charges of Haly Whit He Calls H Contempt ible Falsehood WIII FUJIIT MA Washington May 3 ICIIIXESoI I Ing blow at Percy Haly ment behind him In Kentucky Den ocratlo politics was struck by Hell resentatlve Ollld James today IIn reply to Mr Italys statement that he biileves the Senatorelect hall some part In tho bulletin Issue last week by the Harmon menu quarters and now fiercely In con troverny The stern and angry langunge with which Mr James In vested Ills Interview today show better than anything he has said IIn the campaign thus far that the First district Congressman was nov er readier for a fight In his life He apparently welcomes all comers and th merciless manner In which he handled Mr Haly today shows It Mr James points out that Mr Halys rage rises not at the official of tine Harmon headquarters win issued the contested statement put ting him anti Mr Mayo In the Har mon camp but at Mr Tames who ventured to believe the truth of the statement Why doesnt Mr Mai denounce those officials wino like C A Cottrill tell a circumstantial story about the alleged visit IIs what Mr James wants to know Is he afraid that they will give the public some Information rein tlve to his transactions with them asked Mr James curiously The Issue Is not whether he was In WashingtonMr in his statement say flatly that he believed and still believes that the Harmon headquar ters had authority for Its bulletin because the Haly denial Is not con elusive The Senatorelect hark back to a letter said to have beet written by Mr Haly before the Mc Creary campaign about playing prohibition In the country and whis key In the cities the authorship of which the General indignantly denied The James statement follows- II have read the statement issu ed by Mr Italy In which he denies vigorously that he was at the Harmon headquarters but It will be observed that when he talks about the Harmon headquarters which Issued the statement he puts or the soft pedal Ills wrath onlyI rises when he refers to the fact that 1I believe the statement Why Is It hat Italy doesnt denounce the officials of the Harmon headquarters is liars anti falsifiers Is he afraid that they will give to the public some Information rcl itt e to his transaction with them Does he fear the publication of tonne letter or letters that ho may have written Does he fear that hey will tell of some telephone communications Is he alarmed that they might disclose some con ersatlons had with them when ho ias been In Washington relative to the Harmon candidacy and declaring that he was for Harmon for resldqntHaly seeks to dodge the real Issue and that isis he undertaking to set an uninstructed delegation rom Kentucky to act In the role of a small Murphy and deliver It- to Harmon or some reactionary for whom tho pcoplo of Kentucky If Icy had the opportunity would not ec are and has ho communicated these things to the Harmon man gem and did they Issue this statement relying upon the truth of his statements to them 1 The Issue Is flot whcttor ho was In Washington lIe denies that vigorously But ho remains singularly and ominously silent upon tho other questions Vhy did he not make his denial weeping and conclusive by saying he had never talked to the Harmon innasers had never written Harmon headquarters had never com iunlcated with them by phone ad nfiVftrtgBM he was for Hnrw that he l3sot for Harmon and that y It Is not his purpose to try to deliver Kentucky to Harmon and not seek to hide behind the mere denial of the statement that he was In WashingtonOne 1 two things Is certain Harmon headquarters have dell erately lied about Italy or they had Information from Haly which the published It Is Inconceivable tome that the Harmon headquarters would be guilty of having men In control of It who advocating the candidacy of a gentleman for the highest office within the gift of tbe people would deliberately lie about Mr Haly and Mr Mayo Halys statement that lie be- lIeves I had part In the frameup Is such n contemptible falsehood as not to deserve notice I believe the Harmon headquarters had au thorlty for their statement and I believe It yet and Is not such a contradiction of the former Haly I In political activities In Kentucky as to make mo disbelieve Its truth for I remember that our Ropubllca friends jpublished n letter that this same Emily hind written and used It upon us In the campaign much tto our hurt and detriment wherein he said that he anil his crowd nlnyc prohibition in the country and whl key In the cities Emily last year tried to deny Ito the pwnimTnty lit Kentucky lhlJ I right to select their tnltod States Senators lie Is now trying to den I to the Democracy of Kentucky the right to say for whom they Stan for President Ho wanted to loaye tee Senatorial election In the LeI Islat lye Assembly where he thought the Interests whose agar he Is would bi more powerful than tine people mid so for the same reason he Is undertaking to leave Kentuckys vote In tine hands of a few men rather than to allow the whole Democracy of the State to speak lie was opposed to the rule of the people last year be cause his bosses were and he is opposed to It this year because his bosses are for he Is on their Iay roll As to the question of an organ Ization in Kentucky I want no organization I want no machine I never did have one I never expect to have one but I intend to see tit that nobody else has a machine In Kentucky If I can prevent It The Democratic party of Kentucky Is made up of the people and IIt ought to be their organization and I am going to fight for the right of the humblest and plainest Democrat in our State to have the sam treatment as one who Is so fortu nate as to own millions Why should I want n machine Seven years of official life are before me already given by a confiding and great Democracy Committees will have to be reorganized four year from now before any benefit car possibly accrue to me from such or ganlzatlon The battle I am fighting Is the battle of the Democratic party I want to free It from the clutches of a few men It Is the same fight I made last year and back of me stood n practically unanimous maul and file and I believe I will havi the same rank and file back of mi In this tight But at least if I fall It will be lighting and fighting for Line rule of the plain Democrats of Acntucky t iXKTKFX TKASlOOXS- TAKFX FROM STOMACI Ilnngor Maine May 4A surgl eal operation has been found rice wary to recover a lot of teaspoons which disappeared one nt a time from a ward of the Eastern Mains nsane Hospital here When the mystery was solved by tho discovery that one ot tho pa louts was swallowing the ml1lnli iftlcles Urs W C Mason aim 13 n Sanger recovered from the mani stomach 10 teaspoons Seventeen of them belonged to the hofpltnl pad two had presum ably peen swallowed before the nan was committed aIKTS HEATH IMCXAITY- FOR CKIMIXAL SHUIr Louisville Ky May 2JohnG- onnors was convicted today for rlmlnally assaulting Rocnleon Gra orsky aged nine years In the mind of St Peters Catholic m urch I 1jolnlng the parochial school whre the child attended on February 19 The penalty was death In he electric chair TMs was the crond trial the first trial resulting I III a hungjul I Tvn JrMsh TIRntp rmur ttI has readied a total oZ Jl 500000 HUNGRY BEASTS ROAR IN GAGES For the Blood of Jewish Refugees HUDDLED IN THE SULTANS ZOO Terrible Scenes in Fez After Bloody Revolt When Many Were Slain I1tI 1IC rrui OF DRSOLATIOX Fez Morocco May 1I IThe Jew ish quarters of Fex present a la mentable spectacle as a result of the recent pillaging and touting by tho revolting populace and muti nous Moorish soldiers Of the 12000 residents no fewer than 7000 havo been rendered homeless by lire and thew hare ta learn refuge naked and hungry In the gardens of the Sultans ipalace Hundreds of emaciated human beings liretmlddhrrttfgctlief then In empty cages of the Sultans me nagerleand these are surrounded b rages oontalulng wild beasts which maddened by the sight of human neh lilt the gardens with their roar When they attacked Mullah the Jewish quarter the Infuriated mob chiefly bent on pillage tore thp clothing from men x women and children alike and these shrieking with terror raced for refuge Into the palace gardens The mob then sacked and burned at Its leisure destroying everything that came In Its way The synagogues were wrecked and the sacred books and parchments torn and burned Objects too heavy to be carried off like beds and furni ture were first hacked to pieces and then plied In the streets and set on fire The streets are a picture of deso lation Here and there are to be seen the naked corpses of persons who were struck down while try Ing to escape from the frenzied MoorsAt the French British and other consulates bread is being supplied to the starving refugees and the Consuls are endeavoring to find some kind of shelter for the home lessNot all the bodies of the French officers who were killed In the recent fighting have been found but those recovered show that the soldiers suffered terrible tortures and their corpses were mutilated In a liorrlfylng manner One of tine assassins of Colonel Gory confessed that tho MoorishI woven were tine ringleaders In his I murder They tied his arms and feet and then slowly stabbed him to death with polgnards Many arrests of Moorish soldiers and citizens of Fez have been effected I Tine prisoners will be tried by court martial and subjected to mil itary law a Vuliliy 1iiMiiiT Snlriilis Despondent hind In 111 health ole Wntton CO n wealthy Boone county farmer who lived two mills vest of Burlington 1Ky committed iulclile Thursday morning by shooting himself In the head Tine deceased was well known through Booni county having been a resident there nil his life and had tccumulatod considerable wealth He lg survived by a wife and several children I TIll K K A at lmilsvlJli Tho Kentucky Educational Asso I iatlon Is a tremendous power anil ufluonce for good In the uducatlon i al1 life of tine State It should bo he greatest deliberative body of the StatebecausH It Inaugurating tioaoures ninth lighting for reforms lor the greatest conceivable Import 1ce to the welfare of the State It I hould have the active support andxncourngemont o every teacher in his county and every one who cani possibly do so tOouM attend the big meting In Louisville on June 25 wI It Is Croat Stuff Those who find nourishment In i he unspoken JvctrtV ant thin ifsv t onH rRrivjifg te eiOyji from Mr ocsoveUs VRwrltyrjC biochure n What I THwV + 1ltthl Tariff New York Herald I s v J n PAm Tno 1 THE HARTFORD HERALDn NFSDAY MAY 8 1912JJ I Is II t SAYSS EVERYONE i GOES 10 HELL ry Declares That Hell rrAndMeans the Grave I SAYS NOWHERE IN MentionedI I Is There Anything i I IThatConnects Hell With Fire MODERN VIEW OK SUBJECT I Alfred I Ritchie a Bible Stu dent of wide reputation In the Unit ed States and Canada declares that- everone goes to Hell Mr Ritchie pIIblealong a new line In an interview recently he gave out some InterestII lag Information regarding various prominent Bible subjects that re- quIre more than ordinary consider i ation to obtain their full meaning I have a new cure for infldell I I ty declared Mr Ritchie To prescribe the remedy we must find i the cause which I believe Is theIi inability of the people to under stand how a Rod of all Love and Wisdom and Justice and having all I Power could permit present condi Lions and conduct human affairs as Jfl UI1UIIIIC by the dominant creeds I Christendom Unbelievers cho- keJut e 1of the Idea of the groat Creator an eternity of any IllndII I torture for His own creatures especially if He was gifted with the j foreknowledge that most of the j human family go there and that He had all Wisdom to plan otherIc wise and nil Power to do as He Illleased Truly the general rellg lous teaching on this line is a foe i to reason and the mother of doubtI The Bible taken as a whole I presents no such Idea of our blessIj I j cd Heavenly Father but praises j If glorifies and exalts His holy charI j ncter And so when understood It will be as natural for average man beings to emulate love hUI praise God as it has been In all man history for them to worship as leaders and heroes those who have shown greatness of character either in power or wisdom or benevo lence When rightly shown the character of our God will compel the admiration and loyalty of theII masses infinitely more than character of a Caesar or a Napo I leon or an Edison or a Bryan or a Roosevelt What is the reason that the character of God is so little J reverenced that the Holy Name ofIII the SaviourHimself and of made the commonest cuss words I We answer that it is because His character is blasphemed by the I erroneous Hell teaching of calved Christianity deII Well did Pastor Russell of the Brooklyn N Y Tabernacle sayrI If the Bible does teach that eterI nal torture Is the fate of all except the saints It should be preachedII yes thundered weekly dally hour ly If It does not so teach the factt should be made known and thett foul stain dishonoring Gods Holyff Name removed Everybody goes to Hell Why Ttccause Hell is the grave or death condition to which good and bad alike go to remain until the blessed time of resurrection Judgment and restoration to perfection of all the obedient The Hebrew word sheolII Is positively the only hell word In the Old Testament Its lIebrewIdefinition is the unseen the Plato of the dead It occurs sixtyfive times and nowhere is the word lire associated with ItIIj I Solomon saidThere Is no work nor device nor knowledge In sheolI and he adds whither thou goest l Why Because all In Hell arc dead lleferrlng to the resurrection the Revelator says Death and Hell marginal reference roads or the grave delivered up the dead not the living which wore In them Sheol IB translated twentynine limes as hell three times as pit and thirtythree times as grave In the revised version t shed Is translated as hell only about twenty times out of the six tylive times and Its Greek equivalent hades occurring eleven times In the Now Testament Is not translated ns hell at all but Is left untranslated because the Bible revisers knew It did not mean eter sal tormentIsix books use the word hell InI the English translation St Paul i wrote fourteen books of the New I jI Testament but never mentioned hell fire John never mentioned It in his Gospel nor In his three Epistles nor did Peter In his two raNehemlahlEsther I I Joel Obadlah Micah Nahum Zeph anjah Haggal ZecharIahor Mala II t chi Strange tbat all these holy Apostles and Prophets did not harp upon the danger jot falling Into that lake otflreh whIch is supposed to be the doom of billions of human ityl No wonder that men turn away In disgust full of fear and doubt I No wonder that church pews are empty and no one seems to care No wonder that hundreds of thousands are Infidels or are fast becom ing such The sure cure the only cure Is to get a knowledge of OOdsl true character for to know Him Is to love Him With presentday Bibles Bible Helps Concordances Bible Dictionaries and Studies In the Scriptures no one need be In the dark How About This Patronlzze home Institutions cries the country editor from week to week That Is right says the merchant give It to those who go to some other town to buy goods Then with hIs heart filled with kindness to the loyal editor he sends his job work elsewhere or utilizes a piece of wrapping paper j to write an order on for goods or send a statement to tv customer Funny isnt ItLogan i News CountyII I MINE PLACEOrFOR EN MYII I I I SINKS MERCHANT SHIP And 140 Turks Arc Drowned at Entrance of GulfI of Smyrna- Constantinople May 20ne hundred and forty Turks were drowned lttho entrance of theI mornlngjwhenlis j Steamship ing to Company struck a mine and sankII I I It Is alleged that the disaster wasI due to the Texas deviating from thoI course Indicated by the pilot boatII preceding her through the mIneII IlehlAt the time of the antiGreek I boycott the fleet to which the Texas which consists ofbelonged and eight vessels bearing the names of I Itt American States was authorized to fly the United States flag by theCI United States Consul General be cause the company was largely controlled by American Interestsjj The Texas was flying the Turkish j and United States flags and was engaged In carrying malls fromII Constantinople to the Levant was at first stated that theI IIt thett was an American vessel error arising from the fact that she Is part of the fleet of a local con cern trading under the name of the ArchipelagoAmerican Steamship Company The Gulf of Smyrna is one of the finest harbors In the Mediterranean prlnclplalI I mined some time ago by the Turk ish authorities In order to protect the port against an attack by the I Italian fleet The Texas was a vessel of 261 one net register built at Newcas tie England In 1888 She was atjj first called the Olympia then re christened the Marguerite and fi ally received the name of the Texas I The Demons of the Swamp Are mosquitoes As they sting theyI put deadly malaria germs In theI blood Then follow the Icy chills and the fires of fever The appe Ute flies and the strength falls also malaria often paves the way for deadly typhoid But Electric I litters kill and cast out the mala ria germs from the blood give you n fine appetite and renew your succerlng1wroteI malaria from my system and Ive had good health over since Best for all stomach liver and kidney j Ills 50c at James II Williams ml A JURY LAW IX I CUIMIXAIj CASESBALI I The newspapers are commenting i favorable upon a provision which constltuIIondict can bo returned In all civil cases by an agreement of three fourths of the jury It Is clalmClIII hat under this provision bo but few hung juries This proI vision Is no new thing It Is a part Iof theConstltutton of Kentucky andII has worked admirably There I are not onetenth as many hung juries In civil cases in Kentucky as there were unJer the old ConstitujI ton which required a unanimous verdict We need the provision In criminal cases If threefourths ot jury could return a verdict In all criminal cases few guilty menI ould es ape and crime would rap fly decrease Ellzabethtown Vews r LLjjj I RELIEF RUSHED TO SUffERERS From Flood in the South ern Sections NEW RECORD OF MISSISSIPPI Government Now Has 100 000 Refugees On Its Ration Rolls THE SITUATION AT HICKMAN Torras La May 2Relief is being rushed to hundreds of marooned families In the inundated teirltory north of this place re ports from which state that condI- tions are extremely pitiable and FoodIdepots have convenient for purposes of dlstrl button Conditions In the Black river sec tion are said to almost beggar de In Instances parents scription many and their children have soughtI refuge on hastily constructed rafts which they share with live stock A S Simmons who arrived from c a trip over Concordia Catahoula 111111I Tensas parishes said that all of these parishes wore undor water with the exception of a few towns protected by levees The Inhabitants are homeless and destitute said he and they have no means of support The situation In the Black river sectionI the worst 1 ever saw Five UIOUSI white persons along thoI river are In a desperate fix I The Government supplies received I there are Inadequate many famlI lies expecting the flood built rafts and when the water came they moved their household goodsI aboard Horses cows pigs chick ens dogs and cats are sharing these rafts with the farmers and their families The rafts are anchtt ored to trees ard thats the way they are living now When I pass ed through the swamps I saw many of these rafts The bellowing of the cattle could bo heard a great distance The people not only neellII food for themselves but provender I for their live stockjj The water continued to rise In this district yesterday the gauge at the Torras bridge showing anj advance of fourtenths within twen tyfour hours The gauges at the mouth of the Red the Mississippi and Atchafalaya showed an equaljj rise Old river has submerged theII old gauge and another hasbeen erected Previous Marks Broken New Orleans May 2All previous Mississippi river high water records from Baton Rouge south were smashed today and the flood tide Is Increasing at the rate of three to five inches a day Extreme anxiety as to the stability of the levees south of the Red river land- Ing Is entertained by the Federal and State engineers and unless sunshine continues during the pres ent week they freely admit they have little upon which to baseI hopes of winning the hard fight At New Orleans this morning thoI river gauge registered 206 feet the highest water ever officially recorded here The gauge at Baton Rouge showed 419 feet or more than a foot above the previous high record and rising nt the rate half a foot a day A rise of two tenths was recorded at Natchez and onetenth of a foot rise at Vicksburg Above Vicksburg the waters receded slightly at all points ex cept Cairo where there was a rise of a foot and a half for the past twentyfour hours Junior United States Engineer Schoonberger at Natchez reported to the engineers headquarters hero today that hundreds of head of cattle from the overflowed lands In Concordla parish are swarming on the levees endangering the levees further and impeding the operations of the forces at work on the embankments Mr Schoenberger reported that he hall already removed r 00 head of cattle from the levees near Natchez and will re- quIre additional boats to move oth leIs IDay and night mounted patrol of the levees In New Orleans Has been established The engineers say Is no danger of a break near IItherocity but to prevent overflow the levees In the commercial dls trlct are being raised and the re vbtements are being strengthened tall pointsSituation at Illrkmnn HIckman Ky May2The MIs- sIssIpPI river continues to rise rap Idly here and will no dniiht reach i stage that all of the lowlands will gain be flooded Some of the per sons from flooded homes who were r refugees here and had returned to their homes are now coming back The Indications are now that a great many of the flood refugees will be compelled to return to Hick man to be cared for The break In the West Hickman levee Is being rapidly filled sand bags helng used and if It were not for this work the entire western part of the town and the large manufacturing plants would again be flooded r The Ingenious Farmer After hatching chickens from his incubator Allen McNeal a farmer living near Graham Nodaway coun ty conceived the idea of hatching young grasshoppers to feed his chickens He got a few shovelstut of dirt in a place where he believed grasshoppers had deposited eggs placed them In the Incubator and awaited developments The scheme worked to perfection The warmth caused the eggs to hatch and in ia few days McNeal had a big swarm j of grasshoppersMlaml Mo I News Before Edison TeacherWho was the first elec t tr IclanPupilNoah He made the arc t light on Mount Ararat t + a A FRIGHTFUL METHOD OF SUICIDE ADOPTED Henderson County Girl Being j Despondent Sets Fire to Herselfei Henderson Ky May 2Satourating herself with coal oil uudIi then setting lire to her clothing WDSs the manner in which Miss Helen Smith n pretty browneyed gIrla committed suicide lato this after noon at her home at Onton Ky a few miles east of Sebree For several years the girl hadn been despondent over an affair thec nature of which was unknown to her family but which was believed to be over an old sweetheart Shec was driven Insane and was sent toc the asylum at Hopklnsvillc about two years ago She left there only a short time ago and was brought back homesShe had made several attempts to end her life and early this mornh ing her family found her at a pondg near the house preparing to jump to in She was rescued and watched vary closely Shortly after noon she disappear cd again and the family hearing screams in the orchard near by ran out and found her running about with her clothing in flames Be fore they could be extinguished the flesh on her body was falling off Medical aid was rendered but without avail and she died at 530f oclock IllS RICH VOICE 1i1WTJNOOSE FROM HIS NECK 6 Sharon Pa April 27A reIIIt markable baritone voice has saved Velka Ankrovltch from the hang mans noose for the Board of Pardons has recommended to Gov Toner that he commute the death sentence of the murderer to life Imprisonment When the condemned man was told the news he cried for Joy and exclaimed Thank GodlIThen he broke forth into a hymn with such expression that tears I were brought to the eyes of Sheriff t Martin Grain The prisoners wonderful voIceII caused many to work in his behalf Including scores of prominent woven Often unknown to the pris oner musicloving visitors were al lowed to stand In the jail corridor and listen while Ankrovltch sangI ono melody after another SOME SPRING ASIll SII FOR THE WOMEN AND MEN i A neat gardening costume is shown In the select shops ThoI frook Is simply made of sprigged dimity or mull with short sleeves finishing in double rows of oldI lace The neck Is cut Vshaped and edged with the same lace With this goes a dainty Paris hat with brilliant ornaments and aigrettes and a wreath of silk flowers The costume is finished off with an Iv oryhandled parasol It Is intended to ho worn while sitting on the porch directing your husband whore to set out the red sage A nobby golfing suit for men is ra black cutaway coat over a white vest with gray striped trousers The shirt has French cuffs and the tie should be some solid color tied lria small knot This suit Is worth vhilo sitting on A bench criticising fhe plays of the folks who work at ihe game liens clothes this spring are cut ind made to make the wearer looks slim as possible Extra heavy pen find that by wearing two suits Jhoy will appear twice as slim as Otherwise Chicago Post I THE COUNTESS WAS KIONAPEI And Robbed While on Way to University THIS HAPPENED IN CHICAGOI Ito I Was Grabbed Up from thet Street and Carried Away in An Auto RETURNED AND THROWN OUT I Chicago Ill May 2 CountessI Gertrude Gorecka 19 years old descendant of a noble Polish family and a student in the University of Chicago was kidnaped by three men in an automobile drugged and robbed of jewelry and money while the car was speeding through Jackson Park and then thrown out of the car on the Midway according tOll report that was made to the police of the Hyde Park Station toIIi dayThe young woman is said to be I in a serious condition as a result of the hysteria caused by the experience Count Gorecka visited his daughter today and In lucid mo ments she told him something of her exper6nces They gagged me and blindfold d me she said When we were in the park they took off the gag and made me drink something Out ml a bottle I believe It was some t of n drug One of the men something sharp Into my I mm and I think it was an Injection of another drug I tried to scream when the gag was taken off my mouth but two of the men choked outTheBtephano Gorecka Is a wealthy rear state dealer on the West Side was the Midway on her way to when three men jumped from an auto and seized her The car ran into the park at high speed It was not until the long of road on the lake shore was reached that the men robbed er While one of them herd the age in place and another held her prevent struggling the third removed her rings and earrings which were studded with diamonds and a gold chain that was around c her neck The trip through the park was completed in less than 15 minutes and the car was driven back to the Midway where It was stowed up and the girl thrown out on a grass plot After lying In the parkway r a short time she was revived by the cold rain and went to Blaine all where she fell unconscious For Sale Farms All sizes from to 300 acres We can please you you want to buy land A C YEISER CO- Hartford Ky St UK FINALLY DIED FROM EFFECTS OF DOGS RITE IRIce Gregory of Hebbardsvllle Henderson county formerly of Ow ensboro who was bitten about 60I days ago by a rabid dog and taken toI the Pasteur Institute at Chicago for treatment died as a result of the Infection from the bite When the dog bit him he paid no attention to the wound and nevi gave It a serious thought When the first symptoms of rabies appear InclIIsatI ed After a consultation by Dr Cyrus Graham Dr W T Travis and Dr E L Busby It was decided to take Mr Graham to the Pasteur Institute at Chicago He loft Im mediately for Chicago accompan led by Dr W T Travis Mrs Gregory and Hugh Jennings After hours of terrible suffering he diedI while at the institute Death was caused by hydrophobia- Mr Gregory had a host of friends and was universally popular For the past number of years he had been a prominent farmer of the lebbardsvllle neighborhood J W Jordan a well known dent st of Hopkinsvllle Ky recently iad an operation for his kidney rouble but he says The first eal relief I got was after taking o1ey Kidney Pills They eased the errlblo pain in my back and ac ompllshed moro good than any hlng I had tried I gladly recom mend them Sold by all deals m WILL TEACH FAR1fR TO BUILD CONCRETE SILOS Frankfort April 29Commls sioner of Agriculture J W New nan has completed arrangements with the Department of Agriculture it Washington to send a in nit9 c A Kentucky tp teach the farmers how 1 j to build concrete silos The expert from Washington wl1III help construct the first few and teach some ono or more men In this State how the work should be done and then the men here can Carry on the work Commissioner Newman says he will furnish the frame work Inside which the concrete silos will be built and a I man to show the farmers how to do I the work and expects many farmers take advantage of this opport nII ity to got a firstclass uptodate silo at a small cost He estimates that any farm of 100 acres can save at least 250 j I every year by having a silo and when one of these concrete silos is built It will last practically forever f- It has been clearly demonstrated that these concrete silos keep the stock feed sweet and nice Joy many I I monthsMr Newman estimates that In two years ho will help build enough silos in this State to save the farm ers nearly 2000000 a year TheII time for building the silos Is In warm weather and the expert from Washington will come to Kentucky In the next few weeks and begin his work of instruction OLLIE JAMES STANDS PAT ON UTTERANCE I Says the Harmon Headquarters Circulated An Untruth If i Anyone Did Washington JJay I 3Represen I I rtatlvo Ollle James today made a statement about the contested bul letln issued by the Harmon head quarters here last Friday quoting Percy Haly and John C Cp Mayo as having pledged themselves to Gov Harmon after a personal call J at the Washington headquarters of I the Governor in the Ebbitt House I of this city on April 26 If there Is any falsehood being circulated jt is being circulated by the Harmon headquarters said Mr James My part In the busl ness Is simple On Sunday April 28 I saw a copy of the Louisville Herald of Saturday April 27 withm II- a Washington dispatch Including this bulletin now in controversy I I was amazed I could not believe my eyesight I asked for a copy of the bulletin tram the Harmon headjj quarters and two of these wore 1 sent out to me Questioned I C A Cotterill publicity managerff r of the Harmon campaign stood by every statement made by the bulls R tin Insisting that Haly and Mayo IItheycribed to them and authorized theII I publication Mr Cotterill has been the confidante of Presidents in his long service with the Associated Press In Washington and his InII slstence overcame my doubts I After taking alt these precau tions to ascertain that the Harmoniii managers had Issued the bulletint iI which was mimeographed and of which a great number had struck off and that they beenII it when questioned I accepted a fact and commented on It accord ingly FINALLY RECOGNIZED AS PLAIN CHAMP CLARK James Beauchamp pronounced Beecham Clark was known in his early life as James BV Clark Soon after leaving law school he found J that a J B Clark was getting mall at nearly every postoffice In the country Sometimes they got his letters and sent them back to the writersI lopping off the James mud traveling as plain Beauchamp Clark but my friends Insisted upon pronouncing it Bochamp or ab brevlated It to Bo Clarx said the Speaker telling me how he made the change I thought I would save them trouble by ab brevlatlng It myself and began to write It Champ Clark It has been a good asset It is enough to- ro usually printed In full Look at any list of those present In the pa mars others are mentioned by surnames only but my name Is prlrit ed Champ Clark From this It may be inferred that the Speaker isii dive to tho value of advertising Worlds Work 7 rIf j Great Weekly at n Low Price The Cincinnati Weekly EnqulrerII a twelvepage paper recently transformed into the size and appearance of a daily will be furnished in conU 1 nection with the Hartford Herald at only 1135 for the two papers This price stands good on renewals for The Herald The Weekly En quirer Is an ideal newspaper con tainlng a big variety of reading andris especially suited to the farming classes It Is Democratic stiff pro gresslVo This Is certainly alow price fqr a lot of good reading tt S 4 e 1lI ILr rp4ti Th i I I THREElii WEDNESDAY MAY 8 1012 THE HARTFORD HERALDPAGEI h I TEDDYS DEAL FOR COLOMBIA f One of the Most Question able in History I FAIR SPECIMEN OF HIS WORK t Characteristic of a Reckless Adventurer Thirst t It ItIngf for ur Fame POLICIES devastating war be f had raged for four r long years the South once moreI represented to France and England that having fully demonstrated her ability to protect life and property by her regularly organized Government she was entitled un der the customs and laws of na tions to their acknowledgment of her Independence This they were In the act of doing which If done would have unquestionably result ed in the dissolution of the Union I but the North pleaded that they were not Justified so long as the South vas unable to break the L f openft I In the meantime the Confederacy and the Union was savediiii iicollapsedby the merest accident Stick a pin at four years please After the warship Oregon with decks cleared for battle made her startling voyage of 14000 miles around Cape Horn nothing honor I able could have kept the United I States from digging a ditch across I the narrow strip of land connecting the two continents and dividing the two oceans In the Western Hemis 1 1IlhereWith eager ear always to the ground St Teddy the TruthfulI I discovered the sibilant swash of i I Ithispopular demand and with char acteristic vehemence and haste atII once got tremendously busy But I when his terms of agreement on Irlghtofwayterms reeking with graft and treacherywere submit ted to the Colombian Congress it refused to ratify them This was J theJtious scheme but you just simply I cant keep Saints like hIs nlbbs the resourceful and blatant and his i friend Cromwell down A maxim in Is Seek whom the IIcriminology l Somebodyas unscrupulous as en terprising then undertook a most dastardly and Infamous Job and II t soon we began to hear what proved to be inspired rumors of a revolu tion In Colombia and sixty days before there was any sight of an out I i breakwhen our warship reported all quiet no sign of revolutionI sixty days before there was the pretense of an organiza IIslightestprotect life and property or have broken a blockade of Joboats this reckless character recognized the unborn republic of Panama treated with mock I plenipotentiaries and commenced the marvel of modern engineering If such a Mad Mullah had worn the crown of England and France when Fort Sumpter fell what ofII the world Cant we see the tre mendous danger with such a heed less bull In our priceless china shop With commendable pride public sentiment is committed to the spirit of International Arbitra tion It is a good stride In world advancement and promises to spare untold treasures and bloodshed Now helpless hapless Colombia from whom a giant with a giants sheer brutal strength has roped a large boundary of her sacred do main unable to redress her cruel wrongs by force of arms Impover- ishedI by the horrors of a rebellion 1 instigated by a trusted neighbor in the name of a Square Deal asks t us to submit to international arbi tration Was ever a country reduc ed to such embarrassing and Igno minious circumstances And to j whom do we owe this oqtrage upon a sister republican outrage that I makes honor wince and hang Its head In shame but a reckless ad venturer who knows neither fear 1 1norscruples If we yield to her prayer as every Instinct of honor demands we shall be convicted of a perfidy as hard to believe as to bear It we refuse wo brand our honor with a Scarlet Letter and prove to the world that all our canting and mouthing about na tional honor and international ar bitration is the very ersence pf sneaking unmitigated insufferable hypocrisyAnd spme there are who would risk Sour years morrwhlch may mean tortyot this fretful in tolerant domineeringcoz tuma dour power Inadl yestott ren- fa i t x- L lemagogue Scruples cheek go- 1lrt you say Wh In Irf04hl famous Dear Harrlmau coioelna- hebackdoor lobe brought 200 000 with which Harriman said before the Hughes Committees 50 000 votes in Now York were corrupted O W Perkins the organizer of the Harvester Trust closely associated with the Morgan Interests which absolutely dominate Wall Street now an officer of the Steel Trust as a director of the N y Life Insurance Co added 50 000 more to this vast corruption fund Yet In the face of this shameless record this civic mountebank has the effrontery to boast- a class of characterforming young men in Applied Decent Politics and the hardihood to actually pose as a paragon of political virtue With flaming rhetoric he Is now denouncing Ballinger Lorimer Stephenson Co as Tafts tools of political debauchery Stephensons seat In the U S Senate cost him less than 2 a vote Within the last few weeks this cannonlzed beautified Saint of political purity has spent 60000 In the New York pri mary Taft spent 6000 and 100000 In Plttsburg Pa Every vote he got In New York cost him 4 This same man Perkins and with him In the Steel Trust which controls ten of the eighteen billions of dollars Invested In the railroads- of the country Frank Munsey gave 30000 to this dirty fund and another subscriber was A S Ward the largest carpet manufac turer in America whose self Inter est In Schedule K Is paramount What could point out with great er certainty the cause of hostility of these Trusts to Taft and their anxiety for Roosevelts nomination Why shouldnt they spend millions for a man who prostituted his high office to their greed Re cent disclosures make this plain- A cardinal crime against a re public Is to corrupt its franchise Now if he descends into the cess pools of New York and muck rakes votes at 4 a vote and spends 100000 in Plttsburg for the triumph of his spotless princi ples how much will he spendand what is more vital to public morals and the taxpayers where does he get enoughto corrupt sufficient votes to ram the nomination down him in spite of his vigorous pro test Nay more if disgraced Stephenson should be scourged from the Senate a marked malefac tor in the name of his flaunted Decent Politics to what depths of Infamy should Justice consign this Titan of hypocrisy XXX Rockport Ky May 1 PRESIDENT TAFTS OPINION OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT Mr Roosevelt ought not to ho selected the candidate of any per ty 9 a He may now be pav log thn way if successful In this campaign to remain the Chief Ex ecutivv of the nation To as many term t as Mr natural life would pur mit- a o If Mr Roosevelt Is necessary to the Government now why not la ter o a One who so lightly regards con stitutional principles and the Independence of the Judiciary one who is so naturally Impatient of legal restraintscould not safely be In trusted with successive Presiden tial terms a a t By misstatements throughout the country Mr Roosevelt had led many people to believe charges made against me and my administration II S t a Mr Roosevelt has failed to live up to his policy of a square deal and violated a solemn promise to the American people not to be a candidate for n third term That promise and his treatment of It only throw an Informing light on the value that ought to be attached to any promise he may make a a Mr RooseveltsColumbus speech sent a thrill of alarm through all the members of the community Taft at Boston Mrs R Brant 11116 Paden St Parkersburg W Va had an attack of la grippe which left her bad kid ney trouble and she suffered much severe pain and backache Then she heard of Foley Kidney Pills and says After taking them a short time the pain left my back and I am again able to do my own housework Foley Kidney Pills helped mo wonderfully Sold by all dealers m =CASTORIAI for Infanta and Children till Klld Ysu Nays Always Bought theroof The Heraldta year t CURIOUS CARGO j IS TRANSPORTS I To the Flowery KingdOmII Regularly BONES OF 8000 CELESTIAL Shipped Back to China for Burial Alongside of Their Ancestors AN OLD CUSTOM CARRIED OUT Recently a British steamship loft the port of Seattle Washington U S A with a remarkable total o f 8000 passengers not one of which cost the owners a dollar In food from the port of sailing to the OrientThe 8000 travelers on the out wardbound freighter were all stowed comfortably tween decks beneath the spacious hatches and not a complaint or murmur came from one of them They were all Chinese and some of them had been burled so long that there was really only a set of bleached bones In the caskets placed within the plain pine boxes In which they were embarkedEvery few years the Chinese gather up their dead for shipment to and final reinterment In the soil of the Flowery Kingdom For a month or more previously to the sailing of this vessel local under takers and those in other centers all over the Pacific Coast were busy digging up the coffins and sealing l them In other caskets for shipment From all Western points trains brought large numbers of coffined Chinese to make up this cargo of remarkable freight Little ceremony was shown In th transfer of the plain white pine boxes from the pier to the freighter A handful of Celestials agents of the society which looks after the dead Chinese in the U S A stood around and stolidly watched the operation of hoisting the boxes from the pierhead In bunches of four and lowering them Into the yawning holds of the steamer The sailors of the ship also Chinese did not appear to pay much attention to the work of loading their departed countrymen into the vessel for their last voyage All that might Indicate anything unto ward taking place was the quantity of rice strewn around the decks which looked as If it had been showered there after a bridal party Instead of a death watch The smell of roast pig and chicken com ing from the focstle also proved the Chinese sailors loyal to their belief that a dead Celestial must never be sent on his last trip with out a firstclass meal a la carte comprising the above These silent tourists were neith er cabin nor steerage passengers and once aboard the big freighter never caused the slightest trouble or anxiety to the officers unless any of them got a conjuring up the perambulatIIng her destinationIentals takes place from various ports In the United States every few years the Chinese exiled there i nnd desirous of their bones resting finally on the homeland paying aI small weekly sum to a society organized for the purpose Whe there are enough dead Chinese t make a shipment worth while lo cal undertakers dig up the coffins In the various Chinese burial grounds and send them sealed t the port of sailing Tongs and society affiliations I 1ohot Interfere with this curious i custom and once aboard the vessel lie side by side laundrymen and rich merchants who may have been deadly enemies during life but both of whom contributed their mite to the society superintending- the final Interment Such coffin u IsI duly labeled with the name and history of the Chinaman lying within and at the port of disembarkment each body Is sent to the locality where the man was born and there Interred for the last timeTitB- its PROGRESSIVE MEASURE BECOMING MORE POPULA- The initiative and referendum wmbe a big issue In the coming ampalgnboth in State and Nation but principally in the severalStates where it Is more urgent and where Itenn be of more immediate bene fit The initiative and referendumI presents good sound Democratic doctrine It stands for people- rule a It means a return to tb people of that power which has x yrpY- been taken from them and perverted by faithless Legislatures throughout the country It Is necessary to maintain popular rule against the strong pressure being brought upon lawmaking bodies by fig Business It la not a fad Its most consistent enemies have quit calling It that It Is not fostered by political muckrakers and dem agogues It Is the preachment of the great leaders InI this country Irrespective of party It Is the burning issue of the day It has been said that the people will get tired of the Initiative and referendum In due time Facts de feat this assertion Lincoln Dai ly Courier Helps a Judge In Hml Fix Justice Ell Cherry of Gillis Mills Tenn was plainly worried A bad sore on his leg had barred several doctors and long resisted all reme dies I thought It was a cancer lie wrote At last I used Buck lens Arnica Salve and was completely cured Cures burns bollsII ulcers cuts bruises and piles 25 cents at James H Williams m j IMPORTANT REASONS WilY A MIN SIIOUM SWEAR Rev Albert Marion Hyde pastor of the Porter Congregational I Church of Brockton Mass whose I decalogues for men and have been spread broadcast womenII again with reasons why I spectable thinking man should swear just as often and as hard hecanHere they are asll 1 Because It Is such an elegant way of expressing ones thoughts ji 2 Becauselt is such n conclui t slve proof of taste and good breed lagt3 Because it Is a sure way of making ones self agreeable to ones friends 4 Because It Is positive evidence of the acquaintanceship with J good literature 5 Because it furnishes such a foreyoung boys 6 Because It Is such a good way of Increasing ones selfrespect 7 Because It Is just what a mans mother enjoys having her son doing 8 Because It would look so nice In print 9 Because It is such a help to manhood and virtue In many ways 10 Because it Is such an infal I bible way of Improving ones I chances In the hereafter HOWS TillS We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure F J Cheney Co Toledo OhIo We the undersigned have known F J Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm Walding Kinnan Marvin Wholesale Druggists Toledo U Halls Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter ashy acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system Testimonials sent free Price 75c per bottle Sold by all druggists Take Halls Family Pills for constipation The Modern choel Fifth grade this year Tommy Yes sir- Youre In decimals or fractions how no doubt iNo sir Im In crochet work and clay modeling now 1A child cant get strong and ro bust while Intestinal worms eat childnparasitesomust be destroyed and expelled WHITES CREAM VERMIFUGE Is guaranteed to remove the wormst inohealthy vigorous condition Price 25c per bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ky m Caught in Saute Forest A Venetian being asked by a German where his countrymen got their lion with wings replied We caught him In the same forest whence you found your two headed eagle Refficiency depends upon your condition Scotts Emulsion buildst strengthens and sustains niltIScott 14 Down nioonifield Nl lt1 CryaO ASTORIA oo tc Couldnt Walk I used to be troubled with a weakness peculiar to women writes Mrs Anna Jones of Kenny III For nearly a year I could not walk without holding my sides I tried several different doctors but I grew worse Finally our druggist advised Cardui for my complaint I was so thin my weight was 115 Now I weigh 163 and I am never sick I ride horseback as good as ever I am in fine health at 52 years TAKECARDW TheWomansTomc We have thousands of such letters and more are arriving daily Such earnest testimony from those who have tried it surely proves the great value of this vegeta ble tonic medicine for women Cardui relieves womens sufferings and builds weak womangivcmillion organsItI If Tennfors- Jk io p YOU WANT a Better That question will be asked you almost daily by business men seeking your services If you qualify take the Drnu hon Training and show ambition to rise iMore BANKERS indorse DKAUGHONS Colleges than Indorse all other business colleges COMBINED 48 Colleges in 18 States International reputation lUnkfnr Typewriting Prnnunnhlp Encllsh Spoiling Arithmetic Letter Writing llnilnes LawHtKK auxiliary linnehm Good POSH IONS GUARANTEED under reasonable conditions Bookkeeping Bookkeepers all over Home Study Thousands of bankccah he United States say that Draughons fen bookkeepers and stenographers are New System of Bookkeeping saves them holding good positions as the result of from 25 to 50 percent in work amI worry taking Draughons Home Study Shorthand Practically all U S ofii CATALOGUE For prices on lessons cial court reporters write the System of BY MAIL write JNO F DRAVGHON Shorthand Draughon Colleges teach President Nashville Tenn Forfirecat Why Because they know It Is the best alogue on course A TCOLLEGE write DRAUGHONS PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Nashville or Memphis or Knoxville Tenn or Paducah Ky or Evansville lad Prollonul Curd Attorneys BARNES At LawII HARTFORD KENTUCKY Meows tY II harass Hiul C K Smith lltrlprhllreiit crllillliill anil illvorci riinn Mr Smith being County Attorney In prirvuteil from practicing such caes Air lI rurs will individually xrerpt Midi prHrtlm Oilier In Hartford Itvpubllvuu building UIt t foril Ky J M PORTER I Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice his profession In Ohio mad W olnlog counties Special attention siren 10 I badness entrusted to his care FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HARTFORD KY Will practice hi profession in Ohio aad a jlnlug counties and In the Court of Appe ib Jrlmlnalpractice and Collections a nxcliltT OOce In the Herald bnlldlnr OTTO C MARTIN S P MCKESXKY IMARTIN McKENNEY HARTFORD KY GENERAL INSURANCEi i LIFE ACCIDENT AND FIRE SICKII Will Also Bond YouslII I Otto C1larti- nAttorney at Levy lIAUTFOIH Injj arcs tii 11111practiceI I iI courts of this and adjoining coun and Court of Appeals Commer I cial and criminal practice u spec i IlnUIIII PARKERSII k IClftDI I Promotes a laiujlnl growth Orotnailremits hair fMllnir SOc and tlonut Pnmvlte HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESI DENCE OR PLACE OF BUSINESS AND PUT YOURSELF IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR THE COMPANYS SPECIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRESS JWOHANON Local Manager gartford K W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Beaver Dam Ky aa r JOB1 IGilisspie Bros I LLESPIEIIW H J F PROPRIETORS j BLACKSMITfflNG Ij 4Repairi i HorseshoeingA HARTFORD KYI cboooccococoocccocoooccxxo ESTABLISHED 1858 getIpricesM OLDEST MAil ORDER HOUSI N TILE SOUT Iclulhelv Notice If you want clothes of any kind cleaned call on the Hartford Pressing Club We clue clean any kind of clothes you have and guarantee that they will be satisfactoryif- not nothing will be charged We are ready to clean your clothes for spring We also have a new line of late samples and we guarantee a per feet fit Call on us when in need of work in our line Hartford Pressing Club Y M C A Bldg FRED NALL Mgr cr At C t I PAGE FOUR THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDIV MAy s 1012q The Hartjord Herald HEBER MATtHEWS FRANK y FELIX EDITORS PRANK L FELIX Pub and Propr Entered at the Hartford postofflc s mall matter of the second class Money makes thej mare go 1 It also takes cash to buy gasoline It has been demonstrated in politics that the square deal first takes care of Itself The Massachusetts primary 1Is over but the stench of the affal remains with us still It Is announced that Congres may soon authorize the coining of half and threecent pieces Still w e dont see how wo can use tha combination and buy a twoforflvi cigar fI- t Is said that Mr Urey Wood son of the Owensboro Messenger will have opposition for Secretary of the National Democratic Com mittee the postlon which he now holds Mr Woodson has made a very worthy and efficient secretary of the Committee and he deserves an endorsement It Is a very Im portant place full of Intricate details with which Mr Woodson has become thoroughly familiar TIle National Committee would do well to retain him i S No matter how much In favor a candidate may get with the voters or the people there Is always some body ready to say Oh hell never do he hasnt the ability to fill the place This Is likely to occur with any riiarirnutrtlro people ought to be the best judges as to whom they want The majority are generallY right after all Is said and done Anyhow it is poor policy to contro vert their combined judgment Each voter has a right to his opin ion either separately or unani mously expressed The bitter quarrel between Mr Watterson and Mr neckham has made nothing for Democracy In the State nor has it added particularly to the prestige of either In a per sonal way except as the close friends of each may see it It seems to be mainly a matter of personal opinion of each other In which the people In general have little real Interest It Is a matter of regret that two such excellent gentlemen and Democrats should be eternally flying at each others throats It seems nbout time that a truce was declared There la hardly an Issue of The Horald but what we are compelloc to leave out from one to three col umns of good reading matter al ready In type This seems una voidable Oil account of there being so much good stuff to print nowa days The old story of just anything to help 1111 up the paper lost Its meaning years ago Nowadays everything must be condensed and the columns culled It Is on this account that we constantly urge our contributors to get their favors to us early The quickest to us the better served The Todd County Times very pertinently remarks We believe In supporting the administration of Gov McCreary as an administra tion and not as n political ma chine That is the case in a nut shell The voters of Kentucky elected Senator McCreary as their Chief Magistrate because they believed In his ability as a Governor and not as a mentor of their political views or to head a coterlp of machine politicians Somehow we believe Gov McCreary Is being misrepresented when he is put In the attitude of denying the voters an individual right of expression Democrats of Kentucky who are In favor of an Instructed delega tion are not supposed to be lining up specifically with the Courier Journal In Its tight against Mr Beckham That Is a personal mat ter between the CJ and Mr B and let them settle It Mr Becki ham Is for Woodrow Wilson as he has a right to be The Courier Journal has not been outspoken In Its choice for President but It Is for an Instructed delegation which Is all right and proper Those who believe In instructions are the people of the State against a small coterie of selfseeking politicians A few of the Democratic newspa pore of the State whose editors oppose an instructed delegation to Baltimore are harping upon the fact that Cloy McCreary is of like mind having so expressed himself But that Is no specific reason why Kentucky should go uninstructed It Is no disloyalty to our worthy 1 Governor to differ from him on this point and we are quite sure that he a Is willing to let the great mass of Democrats who elected him do as they please In this strictly party natter We take it that all Kent tucky Democrats have a choice tithe race for Presldent and they should be allowed to express their sentiments and have It so recorded r The ourth District Leader says The Hartford Herald Is experiencing some difficulty in Its efforts to ascertain whether Our Country a magazine published at Louisville Ky Is I or Is not backed by the whis key Interests We would sug gest that Mr Matthews put It to the alcohol test and If It Is then we say Sick em Heber We have already hinted to Our Country that It might find a cure for its inability to stand straight enough to answer a simple ques tion without blinking or dodging and are awaiting the result Our Country seems to have too much alcohol already In Its editorial ays tern to permit of any further test along this line- DEMOCRATIC CHOICE Besides the expression of their chdlfce for President two other du ties or matters will come up before them at the convention of Ohio county Democrats at Hartford on the 2Cth of this month These questions consist of a choice or en dorsement for Chairman of the Democratic State Central Commit tee and a delegate to represent the Fourth District at the National Democratic Convention at Balti more on the 25th of June Among the available men for State Chairman are Messrs Rufus H Vansant of Ashland who so successfully managed the Demo cratic State campaign last year and Mr John M Stevenson a promi nent attorney of the Winchester bar hhi the mfitfef of atuironr- the Fourth District there are two other men to oppose Mr R E Lee Simmerman of Hartford whom The Herald mentioned for thl po sition several weeks ago They are Messrs Morris Beard of Hardlns burg and J L Druln of Bards town As loyalty to our own county man who Is a good and worthy Democrat the endorsement of the convention here will in all likeli hood go to Mr Simmerman who would certainly represent the old Fourth District with honor and dis tinction These are matters deserving the thought and attention of Ohio county Democrats before the convention meets here on Saturday the 25th Inst ItKI HILL May GIr Guy McDanlel who recently broke his collar bone is getting along as well as could be expectedMrs Amanda Kaalngor ontor tained a few of her friends and rel atives last Wednesday night All reported a nice time Miss Jessie McDanlel of this place recently spent a few days with friends and relatives at Ola tonMisses Lizzie Burton of Muriel and Inn Harris attended the party at Mrs Kasingers Wednesday nightMessrs Oscar Smith Horton and Herman CooperHartford Route 2 gave Misses Madle and Martha Potts a pleasant call last Wednes day night- Miss Madlo Potts was In Sulphur Springs the latter part of last week Misses Ida Minton of this place and Floy Minton Centertown visited l Mr and Mrs Roland Cooper last Saturday night Messrs Wayne Payton and FredI Mitchell Olaton attended the fox supper at Vine Hill Saturday night Mrs Lonnlo Minton and little laughter Maudle Hartford visited her daughter Mrs Roland Cooper here recently Misses Martha Potts Ina Harris Herman Cooper Wames Burton allI of this place made a pleasant trip to the oil well near Hartford Sunday afternoon Tonic Alterative I IVhat is a tonic A I medicine that increases tie strength or the tone of the I whole system What is an L I alterative A medicine that alters or changes un healthy action to healthy action Name the best tonic and alterative Ayers Sar I saparilla the only Sarsapa- rillaenttrelyfree from alcohol Ask your doctorabout it UlctisJckbeadacheslndlgeadon arc some of the results of pan Inactive endofJelAyerJ i small one pill at bedtime Xd by Ih1 0 AYXB CO Lown uii n fG L BUllSEYE SHUTTERED BY TAFT IN BROADSIDE At Roosevelt Accusing the Lat ter of Being Candidate of the Interests Baltimore Md May 4Anewc- hapter to the history of they Har vester Trust was added here to night when President Taft forcibly declared that Colonel Roosoveh did prevent the prosecution ofr that trust The President also cut loose a few things more when he strongly Intimated that much of the support the Colonel Is receiving comes from some of the trusts and the Inter ests which Taft is denouncing in his campaign speeches The President In closing his 18 hour campaign through Maryland spoke to an audience here that till ed the Lyric Theater to the doors He charged that Roosevelt prevented the Harvester Trust prose cution after George W Perkins one of Its directors and now a Roosevelt supporter had asked that the trust be not taken Into the Courts Intimated that Charles J Bonaparte AttorneyGeneral under Mr Roosevelt was mistaken when ho said that he Mr Taft was present at a Cabinet meeting which decided against prosecution and said that tho diary of Herbert Knox Smith then and now head of the Bureau of Corporations proved that at the time referred to he was on a trip around the world Mr Tafts explanation of the Harvester Trust was only one of the many points on which ho at tacked Colonel Roosevelt He saia that his predecessors attitude to ward the trusts showed clearly that he wished to perfect a benevolent despotism that would discrimi nate between the good and the bad trusts pointed out how Mr Roose velt had changed from his attitude of regarding his entrance into the Presidential race as a calamity to that of being an active campaigner for the nomination and insisted that Mr Roosevelt was striving to make this campaign one In which the man who had little should be arrayed against him who had more In concise form ho listed the achievements of his administration and the charges which Mr Roosevelt has made against It declaring that In his Tafts term in the White House there had been more progressive legislation enacted than In any previous Presidents term since the Civil War p SriTRAGKTTKS MARCH IX A MONSTKR IAUADK New York May 4Ten thou sand women men and children participated In a suffrage parade along Fifth avenue this afternoon the artrangements being carried out to the letter without a hitch Three hundred thousand apparently two thirds women crowded the side 1 walks so the mQunted police could not control them though there waS no disorder Most of the women wore 39cent yellow straw hats and efforts were made to preserve uni formity The women kept step well to the music of twenty bands and the parade was followed by a mass meeting In Carnegiehall BOY CAUGHT BIG FISH IULLUI IX AND DROWNED Philadelphia Penn May 4 Dragged Into thin Delaware river by a large fish that had caught on the hook of the fishing line which he had wrapped about his waist while seated on the pier at Washington avenue John Holmes 14 years old today was drowned In view of a number of his playmates who were unable to assist him The boy screamed as he tugged desperately on the edge of the pier to prevent himself from being pull d overboard and workmen ran to- sslst him but before they reached he boy ho had disappeared be icath the water The crew of a police boalwho tad been attracted to the scene succeeded In recovering the body ifter a search of several hours The Ine was still about the boys waist tad the hook while still attached o the line was bent In a manner which Indicated that a large fish had been tugging furiously to free tself ITAXIC OWNERS WILL BE SUED FOR MILLIONS New York May 6Several1 mil Ion dollars of damage suits It is predicted will follow the Senatorial Investigation Committees report on the cause of the Titanic disaster Former Secretary of the Nary H A Herbert andDF Mlcau of Wash Ington George 8 Graham Cassll ly Cook and Maurice Leon fyrpml nent lawyers of New York already are Instituting legal proceedings against tho White Star Line for re covery of damages for Idas of live and baggage and personal effects o the illfated Tltanlca passengers These suits are brought In the Federal Courts horet It Is thought however that the great majority of the suits will be brought in the En gush Admiralty Courts Immediately on completion of the British Investigation of the Titanic catastro phe now on in London MARYLAND GOES FOR CLARK AND UOOSEVEL Baltimore Md jSIay GRoose velt and Clark carried the primary today on the face of unofficial re turnsRoosevelt ups sixtysix delegates and Taft sixtythree Clark has sixtynine Wilson thirtythree Harmon four Under wood twentythree Necessary to coptrol convention sixtyfiveIn city Clark defeated Wil son three to one while Wilson is two to one ahead of Harmon The Clark lead in this city Is a victory for the organization while Roosevelt downed the regular Re publican organization Under the rules whichever can didate has a majority In the State convention will secure the entire State delegation of sixteen XO PAID WORKERS FOR CLARK IX RAY STATE Boston May 4Congressman James M Curley issued this state ment at the Champ Clark head quarters In Boston The result In Massachusetts all things considered was remarkable Perhaps for the first time in the history of State politics a campaign wan conducted without a single paid worker at the polls without circularizing and with a majority of the socalled strong men politi cally on the fence rather than in the lineThe splendid reception which the candidacy of Speaker Clark has received at the hands of voters when conditions surrounding his candidacy are considered Is the strongest Indication teat as the nominee of the Democratic party in November he will be triumphantly elected and should he be success ful In carryingout his pledge for a lower cost of living there Is every reason to believe that Democratic tenure of national control shall be equal that enjoyed by the Republicans In the past THE MIXERS STRIKE IS ON AND 18000 MEN ARK OUT Terre Haute IndMay 6Whllet- ho strike of 18000 Indiana miners wont on today the policy committee Is shaping plans for managing the trouble Whether the men who wore allowed to do the productive work In the mine following the settlement of the wage agreement would be called out was one of the questions before the policy commit tee Tine suspension began April and became a strike when nego tiations over the settlement of the district differences were broken off after the miners refused to accede to the operators demands that they return to work pending the settle ment GOVERNMENT FILES SUIT FOR 110000I New York May 4Sult against the Federal Sugar Refining Compa ny for 116000 was filed by the Government In the Federal District Court here today The amount represents alleged back duties on Importations of sugar entered at the custom house between 1902 1909 a difference duo to recently discovered errors In the original liquidated weights Through an error In the drafting of a paper It appeared that the suit was for full value Instead of back duties S I Notice All local unions A S of E In Centertown Magisterial District are called to meet at Centertown on Saturday May 11 at 1 oclock pm to reorganize a district union By order of Centertown Local No 597 W E BROWN Pros A ROSS Secy Thanks to Friends I wishto extend my heartfelt thanks to my many friends who so faithfully helped me to be the win ner In Falra piano contest IRENE WARD CHAMPION TOIJACCO GROWERS OF GREEN RIVER DISTRICT It is believed that the record for a large crop of tobacco in the sec tion of the country for the past year was made by Je Reynolds Roy Taylor and E W Taylor who grew over 20000 pounds of pryor on less then ten acres of the Thorn ton Goodetarmln McLean county near Glenvllle For class job printing The Herald LIhTh L seuR ceoxvshoUP WASH GOODSL4 Ii1aar i r Look nice In summer time make your clothes of cool dainty wash goods What Is more delightfulI than to put on a pretty I wash dress fresh and spotless from the laundryKnow that when you come to us for your Summer lawns and linens perlcals and ginghams you will get reliable goods andcolors that will wash well and wear well p 00 Come In and see them and test them Our prices on these goods are moderate For a very small outlay you gain a very big amount of comfort and pleas- ureCARSON Be CO INCORPORATED J Hartford Kentucky p II I DRESS GOODSv a Our stock of Piece Goods of every description for Waists and Dresses never was more completes Wool Merges in a great range of colors andgrades Fancy Mixtures for Skirts and Full Suits t Crashes and Linens of every descripk lion White Goods and Printed Wash Goods iin all the new fabrics and designs You Dont Need To Worry t about what to buy and how to make it up if you come here We know hove its done andwe II give you all the necessary information We will not only give you the best goods4for your money but lwill give you a service that will relieve you of quite a lot of worry Make this store your store and dont hesitate to command Us and use us to your own personaladvantage Erl rDPsiBro C- REARbVtt DAM ffKENThCKY l I IvaJJ O If I l 1- J S L WEDNESDAY MIRY 8 1012 THF HARTFORD HERAT1 DPtGEFIn a iI MAY BUSINESS J i i i Wii Thats what were after We areaware of the fact that it is a very iimportant month to all house keepers spring cleaning you know flecwith 0 have made special preparations to supply DRUGGETS oo- I S 4 NEW MATTINGfRUGS 44 64 and 84aFLOOR Oil CLOTH j 1 1WINDOWLACE CURTAINS SHADES i m o t 1 Curtain PolesI ExtensionBrackets r G Curtain SwissesWiin fact everything that would be useful to you o And ornament your home Come direct to us and a we will help you out of your troubles Do this op 4please and remember that It Pays to Trade t tiwith as House that Saves You Money F r id oj t FAIR CO The Fair Dealers 4o Y f on ness Oil all Lt HOMEII III Customers At the Home Quality Groceries mwmm II LADIES NEED NOT STATE AGE Either Sex or Old Positions Permanent Apply atOnce 1 Try These Theyll Please I Heinz Worchester Sauce A Apple Butter Red Raspberry Preserves Olives I Strawberry Preserves Peanut Butter Tomato Catsup Mandelay Sauce Pure Apple Cider Mustard Dressing Vinegar t ILERS GROCERY AND MEAT MARKET III KENTUCKYI ilJ 1 Acme Binders I jandj1l For Sale easy terms4 b See Likens Acton t lh General Dealers in Groceries Queensware Hardware Har f Stoves Ranges I Stoves Farming Implements and Repairs of Minds N itI LIKENS ACTQN KentuctcyLt w 1 THE of Quality Groceries WANTED A Few More of EXPERIENCE Young Mince Meat 000000000000000O LOCAL NEWS AND 0ofO PERSONAL POINTS 0ofOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Mr Sfth Moseley left yesterday for a business trip to Auburn N Y Nice Beefsteak 15c Ib and Roast 12r1cc atRILEYS MEAT MARKET Prof Isaac Mason of Fordsvllle gave us a call white In Hartford Monday For cabbage tomato and sweet potato slips see Albert Rial Hart ford Ky 1614 Mr W M Fair of the firm of Fair kCo left Monday for a short trip tO I ufgvllles Mies Felfftf Curt s as accepted a position as jjilaRp de onstrator with the Hartford Music Co fD EfibKA1pi new Germa- n13eedyor Iippe1Idcltl or nr stomach trouble ph8ale at OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO- n I 1 L= Miss Alice Taylor went to Louis ville Sunday to enter business col lege Miss Ethel Drown Madlsonvllle visited Mrs E T Williams lost Wednesday and Thursday Mrs T R Barnard returned Wednesday from a short visit at Owensboro and Livermore Attorney W H Barnes and son Glenn were in Owensboro a day or two last week on business Judge J S Glenn and family spent the day Sunday with Mr J H Glenn and family near town iMiss Katherine Thompson of Fordsvllle arrived Wednesday to be tho guest of Miss Orrel FIelden Miss Mary Spaulding spent from Thursday until Saturday In Owens boro tho guest of Miss Francis Lit tie If you would enjoy a dish of pure rich Ice Cream made from whole Cream try OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO Mr Sam P Render after a visit to relatives here left yesterday for Ills home at Lawton Oklahoma Mr M M Dackus and wife of Louisville were the guests of Col onel and Mrs H P Taylor city a few days lately The series of meetings which was set to begin at the Christian Church next Sunday night have been post stoa later date Mrs Otto C Martin went to Leltchfleld Sunday where she will make her mother Mrs Lula Co page an extended visit rThere will be preaching at Mt Hermon Church next Sunday morn ins by thel pastor Rev T V Join er Everybody Invited I Mrs W C Schlemmer and child- renI have returned from a visit with Mrs Schlemmers mother Mrs Fehr of Cannelton Ind Drs Pendleton and Riley who had been quarantined at their homes here on account of small pox have fully recovered Whlppoorwlll Stock Peas antI Tennessee German Millet best qualities on marketfor sale by W E Ellis the produce man 10t returnedfle taught In the Central Park Grails- School for the past school year Dr Deans new automobile arrived alt right and has been put fin the passenger transfer business be tween Hartford and Beaver Dam At a recent meeting of the Hart ford College Athletic Association i was decided to close the ItII hum over Hers grocery until fall Mr Silo Taylor and family have moved from Attorney Ernest Wood wards residence to Mrs Mattie Barretts residence on Clay street Mrs Karl Anderson will leave to day for Louisville with her little son Ernest W who will be operat ed on for an affection of his head Before you buy Paint this spring get our belowwholesaleprices o paint We are not going to han die paint after this season OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO Messrs J Ney Foster and S F Riley went to Owensboro the first of the week to attend Federal Court They will return home to day Mr J B Renfrow and daughter Mrs W A Hatcher and the lat ters son Robert all of Centertown gave The Herald a pleasant call Saturday Rev Orlando Cundiff Craig of Bell City Mo and Miss Sadie Hen dricks Madisonvllle Ky visited Mr E T Williams and wife last Friday and Saturday Mr Harold Holbrook has sold his automobile to Messrs Cooper Co the Hartford llvermcn who have put It on the transfer line between here and Deaver Dam Rev Virgil Elgin former pastor the Hartford Methodist Church Jeffersontown Ky has been here the past few days visiting rel atives and old friends Corno Chicken and Hen Feedthe most economical feed for your poultry More eggs Less cost Sold by W E ELLIS Produce Merchant 19t4 Hartford Ky Messrs J W Robertson T J Smith and Frank Black of Hart ford left Sunday for Owensboro where they had been summoned to serve on the Federal Jury In the United States Court A Jolly crowd of about to relatives and friends gaye Mr S A J Kingtof Beaver Dam a surprise I birthday party llast Sunday It was his 68th anniversary anddhe event was much enjoyed by all present Cap James M DeWeeae has re turned from several weeks vacation In Mexico and a number of Western I t States He is greatly improved in Paducahassignment Mrs Isaac Foster son Yewell and sister Miss Arblo Brown of Cen tertown were In Hartford Satur day Mr and Mrs Foster will leave soon for Owensboro where they will go Into the hotel and boarding house business At the school trustee clcctclon in Hartford Saturday Dr E B Pen dleton and Mr J D Duke were elected by large majorities Dr andairC M Barnett whose term had also expired Mrs Fleetwood Ward and little son Loyd Eldy returned Wednes day afternoon from Klngswood Ky where they attended the dos ing exercises of Kingswood Col lege They were accompanied home by Miss Lydia Ward who is a teacher at that place Mr Z Wayne Griffin and family will move in a tow days from h re to Mlddlcsboro Ky where they will make their future home that place being nearer Louisville from which city Mr Griffin travels for a wholesale house Harfford people regret exceedingly to give this ex cellent family up Corno Horse and Mule Feed Is guaranteed to be absolutely pure Free from rotten grain dirt screen materialICheaper than oats or corn and fedPplentifully Sold by W E ELLIS Produce Merchant 19t4 Hartfprd Ky Drilling operations are still going on at the oil well near Hart ford and will continue until satis factory results are reached The hole Is now nearly 1000 feet deep Experienced oil men who have been here say bore Is no sort of doubt but than there is plenty of oil In this region if tho operators will only go down after It And they are going Mr J W Marks who has been engaged as civil engineer In rail 4road construction work In Tonnes tod day or tomorrow to spenl i lew hwdHaytl ore of the West India Islands where he lias hen engaged to work In his pro fesslonal line by a big construction company Mr Marks Js nnoilier Hartford boy who hag gone out and made goodiA rather curious type of disease which in a few cases has developedI into a mild kind of smallpox has been prevalent in Hartford lately Tn doctors have not all agreed1i that all those cases wore smallpox TIlt afflicted QUOS are generally sick but a few days and some who have had the disease were not confinedi to ihelr beds at all On account of the prevalence of this trouble tit was deemed advisable by the Hoard of Health to stop church ser- I vices tho school and other public gatherings for about two weeks Got Part of It Lifted Judge R R Wedding Deputy County Court Clerk Owen Hunter and Mr R R Riley assistant cash ier of tine First National Bank Hartford who had been appointed as a committee representing Ohio county went to Frankfort Wednesday and appeared before the State Board of Equalization Thursday to testify as to the 15 per cent raise on the taxable property In Ohio county After hearing the evidence the Board granted a de crease of 10 per cent thus only leaving a 5 per cent raise They report a pleasant trip and courteous treatment from the BoardJudge Wedding showed us a sou venir presented to him by the cus todian of the old State House in the shape of a letter written by S C Perrin of Covington Ky to Governor C S Morehead bearing date July 23 1858 This along with many similar documentsis be ing taken from tho archives of the building preparatory to remodeling same Enilcavorcra to Meet The Christian Endeavorers of Kentucky will meet in Owensboro Slay 9th12th In their Annual Con vention The usual list of good speakers will be there One of them will bo Secretary Shaw from the United Society You can not af ford to miss this For Sale Cheap The stock of the Hartford Drug Co has been moved to the office of Dp E W Ford the old Jail build Ingand Is for Immediate sale In whole or In part The stock consists of J Standard Drugs Patents fiXjturesParties owing the will ment please call and aboveftrmII of t 00000000000000000O MAIUUAGK LICENSE C- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Herbert Beaver DamHopper Adie Oda Woodruff Beaver Dam toII Frank Wells Fordsville to E Wells Fordsvllle Harvey Tucker Livermore to Nellie HIggs Livermore Cleveland Sanderfur Prentls to Nellie Frizzell Prentls For SaleIHouse and lot In Hartford cen trally located at a bargain Also good work horse 19tf SETH MO3ELEY TOSTHAXGK ACCIDKXT nun FROM A Xglmg A very strange and possibly very serious accident resulted to the ecven months old Infant of Mr and Mrs Forrest Higgs of the Utica neighborhood Thursday afternoon when a large needle which was an Inch and threequarters long be came buried a half an Inch under I the skin in the childs back near the spinal column An aunt of the little baby was playing with the child and the sup position Is that she must have had Graduating 1 Presents I I II have a number of very pretty and useful things that would make nice graduating presents- I think a watch is one of the most useful as it is both pretty and a necessityDrop in and look throughanyway J B TAPPAN Jtircler unit Ojiti- iiiHartford Ky u = the large needle stuck In the front of her waist The cries of the baby attracted her attention and upon examining the Infant she found where the needle had penetrated the babys back The baby was sent to Owens boro and taken Immediately to Dr IL E Grlflln who located tho needle and with the aid of forceps drew the needle from the back of the child In case the needle did not penetrate the spnal column It Is certain that the accident will not result seriously but In tho event the spinal column was pene trated by the sharp Instrument tho accident would be extremely se rious and the chances would bo against the recovery of the child irnndmotlui at Thirty Georgetown Ky May 4Proba- bly the youngest mother and grandmother In Kentucky live at Georgetown Thursday afternoon Mrs Kate Fields who Is Just 13 years old gave birth to a girl The grandmother of the babe Is 30 years old Poultry Wanted IIWill pay In cash the following prkes delivered In Hartford Frl jay May in 192- Hens IOc lb Ducks lOc lb Cockerels old and young 5c lb Turkeys 8c lb Geese 4c lb Eggs 14c doz bt slivered at my plac of IToi business WII receive io pou ry after 3 p m of said lay WIE1 ELLIS Ill J iINH1r i3 nNT lliudoul Ky u u i YV1lMf1LPYkA6 rY f111 ar 1=1ZIOiOIIB IJ Ys MATTINGSiitt- iscwr3an if MLU 5Df3 7ast 3 02 III 717 They are sanitary ccol andpleasing Most kinds 25c the yard We have sold out of Window Scrims but willreceive more in a day or two They are splen did to brighten up and make your house look inviting Ten cents the yard Window Shadeshandmade any size length or width This service ought to be appreciated more Buy your White Goods of us Our Linens cannot be ex celled We are exclusive agents fort Linweavei the New White Goods Looks like linen washes better wears better Price 1 1212c1 to 30c per yard SAY It willpay you many times over to 7 titeJ BagravjTgzria MrttrrA vdaaiKiitKgfc W5H Aii 4 W 4 t fPAGE SLX THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY MAY 8 101 The Hartjord Herald Illinois Central Railroad Tlnio Ta blc at Beaver Dam Ky North Bound South Bound No 132405 am No 1211135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm No 102248 pm No 131 855 pm J E Williams Agt FORTUNES THAT 3 CASE SWIFTLY In Financial Record of Re cent Years I EVEN SINCE THE SPANISH WAR a Number of Men Have I IQuiteBecome Prominent I i Millionaires I TUg KT1UCUQLHK SCHKMKSJ 1 l lThegreat railroad and Industrial development of this country which I has gone on since the Spanish War has produced a remarkable crop of men whose futures have mounted 1 into the millions at a rate unknown in any previous period of our coun tryOne who lied recently was John W Gates Mr Gates fortune has Just been appraised at 11000000 Like Mr Gates Mr E H Harri- man I possessed a fortune made practically within this period It fortune than Mrwas a much larger Gatess and the estimates of it at I Mr Harrimans death ran as high as 150000000 The Harriman estate paid taxes on a fortune of 71000000 These new American fortunes to i which attention has been called by the death of these two men might be divided into two spearate and distinct groups namely those ere ated by the industrial combinations a which began in the McKinley era and those due to the resurrection and expansion of dead railroads which the prosperity of the period made possible Mr Gates was as conspicuous an example of one as Mr Harriman was of the other Next to Mr Harriman the most conspicuous of the new millionaires who have been made essentially by railroad manipulation Is Edwin Hawley Ten years ago he was regarded i the finan as a newcomer on cial stage and was being described as Wall streets new constructive genius In railroad operations It was to James J Hill that Hawley a few years ago sold the Colorado and Southern a railroad sys tern with more than 2000 miles of that deal until it was consummated track Wall street Knew little of Today Mr Hawley controls more miles of railroads than the Vander bllts His fortune Is estimated by some at more than 20000000 It has been made within the last 12 years One of Wall streets most interesting figures in these years of rap Id fortunebuilding has been form er Judge William H Moore Of all these newlymade millionaires hisaII record Is unique Within the same period the period that began with the consolidation of the great industrial plants Judge Moore hast made and lost one fortune and hasJ made another on the ruins of the firstHe was a good corporation law yer and he turned this to account when the consolidation fever set in He organized the Match Trust and followed that with the American BIscuit Company and got himself e quickly known as a consolidator They made a fortune for him and then a few years later in 1896 the Cracker Trust which he had put together went into the hands of a receiver and Judge Moore failed for 9000000 He started right In to make another fortune First Ir he reorganized tho American Bls t cult Company which helped to get him out of the hole Then he began organizing all 1 sorts of trusts among them the American Tin Plate Company the 11 American Sheet Steel Company and the American Steel Hoop Company He was taking advantage of the Ir same revival in the steel business that was being utilized by John W Gates and others of the group to ii make fortunes In 1900 when he moved to this city from Chicago I with his brother he was credited with 10000000 He has much 1t more than that now Daniel G Reid Is a man who has II made a large fortune in the same recordbreaking time and In much i the same way With him should be classed the late William B Leeds for they hewed their way together two little Indiana boys Rtiid II used to call them As the youngest possibly of this L 4 remarkable group of swiftlymade men of millions Charles M Schwab has come in for perhaps more at tention than many of tho older fig urea In it Strictly speaking ho belongs to the Carnegie group of millionaires men whom the iron master took into partnership and helped to push along toward for tune though belonging to a young er generation than himself Wili liam E Corey and several othe men might bo named In this group Their fortunes have been made 1 ini the same quick manner The ca reer of Schwab has been almost me teoricThese are perhaps the most con spicuous figures in the group of new men of great fortunes in the country It is a group that i younger than the men with for tunes made from oil and the railroad I development of a quarter of a century ago Twentyfive years ago few of these men had even the small beginnings of a large fortune Almost without exception their for tunes running up into the millions have been made since McKlrfloy was inaugurated and the Mainet was sunk In Havana harbor New York Sun T GRID UNION OF FORCES BRINGS GREAT RESULTS Typified in the Work of Teachers A Great Meeting I Just Ahead If you should dip up Lake Erie in a tin cup pint at a time and pour It on the big turbine wheels In the wheelpits at Niagara Falls I you could hardly get them dump But let a great odY of water tumble 1 through the tunnels and the wheels are driven to generate energy sufficient for running all the machinery within two hundred miles of the falls The water has might only when it falls in lage volumes This principle holds as good In political and social science as In physics The sum of the forces of number of units Is greater the closer the aggregation of units The Irresistible rushes of Napoleon and Oku the successful work of parties and sects the powerful Influence of organized public j opinion In any great matter all these though widely differing are based upon the principle illustrated above To make intellectual or moral forces most effective they must be made to act in the same direction at the same time Each teacher in Kentucky is a unit of force Every one of the ten thousand teachers of Kentucky Is doing a faithful earnest and inmost I cases efficient work But how I vastly more efficient work could be done by these units of teaching force acting togetherbY aggregat ing The Kentucky Educational Association is sounding a clarion call to all teachers In Kentucky and asking for their presence at the Louisville meeting on June 2527 for the purpose of more effective organization a uniting of forces for the benefit of the school and the teacher as well A Chccrlshed Memory Time may rob us of our teeth hair says Mack Cretcher butt cant take away the memory ofIj I how good the ground used to feel to our bare feet along about this Ime of the yearKnnsas City J IN HARTFORD The Evidence Is Supplied by Local Testimony I If the reader wants stronger proof than the following statement I and experience of a resident ofII Hartford what can it be Henry Nall Hartford Ky says I have used Doans Kidney Pills i j j for about a year and have found them to be an excellent remedy for I i kidney complaint I had pains in my back and In my sides Seeing Doans Kidney Pills advertised I procured a box at the Ohio County Drug Co They did me a world ofIi good and I can therefore recom mend them to anyone suffering from kidney trouble The above statement must carry conviction to the mind of every reader Dont simply ask for a kldI ney remabpask distinctly for Doana Kidney Pillsthe same thatl Mr Nan hadthe remedy backed b1home testimony DOe at allI stores FosterMilburn Co Props Buffalo N Y When Your Back Isl Lame Remember tho Name For sale by all dealers Price 50 ents FosterMllburn Co Buffalo Sew York solo agents for the United States- Remember thenameDoana and take no other THEODORE AND THEBIG1USTS Stand By Each Other As Is Evidenced- r BY DEALS OF RECENT YEARSS Plain Violation of the LawI Hushed Up Harvester I Investigationa I 0 I VOTES FOUR DOLLARS APIECE I By Clyde H Tavenner I Washington May 4That the Steel Trust is willing to spend mo 1 ney to elect men to public office who are willing to serve It after they get Into office Is again being 0 demonstrated When Theodore Roosevelt was President of the United States he permitted the Steel Trust to absorb Its principal rival tho Tennessee Coal and Iron Company This per mission td violate the law was a worth millions of dollars to the Steel Trust because it practically assured the trust a monopoly leaving it free by the simple process of tightening the screws on the public to extort most any price it desired for its products The absorption of the Tennessee company by the Steel Trust was In direct violation of both the spirit and the letter of the law No one denies this Not even the attorneysI for the Steel Trust contend now or ever did Contend that the deal was legal This Is not the only favor Theo dore Roosevelt did for the Steel Trust or the Harvester Trust at the request of Geo W Perkins then partner of J Pierpont Morgan Roosevelts Commissioner of Corporations Investigated the Harvester cle Trust found it illegal but at the suggestion of Mr Perkins the report was not made public The most exhaustive search of the records of Congress during the years that Roosevelt was President fails to show the passage of a single measure that even in the most a remote manner affected the monop oly or the huge dividends of the Steel Trust Hundrefls of such measures were introduced in both the House and Senate while Mrfl Roosevelt was President Each andW everyone was chloroformed In committee and Mr Roosevelt never praised his voice in protestslMr Roosevelt is now a candidate for office Every politician in the land Is aware that he is spending more money to obtain delegates than any candidate for the Presidency has spent In the last quarter of a century Where is this money O coming from Let us see 0Eton0urer of the Roosevelt League has 0just filed with the Secretary of State of New York a list of contributors to the Roosevelt campaign fund This sworn affidavit a reveals that in the city of New York alone Geo W Perkins organizer j of the Harvester Trust and director of the Steel Trust spent 15000 Frank A Munsey the largest Individual holder of the Steel Trusts common stock in the country contributed 15000 moreu Thirty thousandl dollars of Steeli Trust money spent in a city of oneI State alone and there are 48 StatesI is In time Union This sworn state ment shows that In New York CityIT 5912575 was spent to get aboutl iIt 15000 Roosevelt votes or practic ally 4 a votenSenator Stephenson spent only half as much per vote In Wisconsin a and It wail declared that he thus debauched American standards and should not be permitted to occupy a seat in the Senate The point of this article howev T Is that the Steel Trust stands by its friends p s p IMrs Rose A Freeman Clifford Va says they have long used Fo eys Remedies and want to say n ood word for them She writes Foley Kidney Pills cured my hus land of a long standing kidney trouble after he had aken medicines without relief We would not be without Foley Cos medicines In our house forI many times their costSold by all1 dealers I l cfoii rn cry FOR FLETC- HElSCATORIA IT IS UNLAWFUL TO- MUTILATE YOUIl COINS i It la a crime to mutilate or de face gold or sliver coins and if you were to ask a jeweler step to punch a hole ira 5 gold piece so thatI you could carry it onxyour watch chain you probably would be told ff L = to go about your business Yett strangely enough if you wore t- mutilatea gpld piece until 1t hadl lost all resemblance to a coin you probably would not be punish ed What the Government alms at is to prevent the Impairment of the value of Its gold and silver Tokens I by plugging drilling sweating and other processes It Is unlawful l to cut even a monogram on either gold or silver colnNew York Mall How to Catch Rats Take a barrel or washtub and fill with corn or other grain and put In a stable or other place In fested with Tats and leave it uncovered for a week or two until rats get in the habit of coming to get the grain Then remove the grain and fill vessel nearly full of water sprinkle chaff or wheat bran on top of the water and the rats will jump on the chaff or bran and sink through and drown e 0000000 OOOOOOOO WHAT IS A MAX O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO A Chemical ViewAn average man of 150 pounds contains the constituents found In 1200 eggs There is enough gas In him to fill gasometer of 3649 cubic feet He contains enough iron to make four tenpenny nails His fat would make 75 candles and a good sized cake of soap His phosphate content would make 8064 boxes of matches There Is enough hydrogen In him in combination to fill a balloon and carry him above the clouds The remaining constituents- of a man would yield if utilized six teaspoonsful of salt a bowl of sugar and ten gallons of water A Physiological and Anatomical VlewA man has 500 muscles 1 000000000 cells 200 different bones 4 gallons of blood several I hundred feet of arteries and veinst over 25 feet of Intestines and millions of pores HTs heart weighs from 8 to 12 ounces its capacity is from 4 to 6 ounces In each ventri and its size Is 5 by 3 by 2 Inches It Is a hollow muscular organ and pumps 22 V6 pounds of blood every minute In 24 hours It pumps 16 tons It beats about 72 times a minute In one year an average mans heart pumps 11680 000 pounds of blood The heart Ist willing slave but it sometimes strikesand It always wins Practical Druggist For cholera morbus cholera in diarrhoea from colds and colic McGEES BABY ELIXIR is a remedy of extraordinary It relieves colic paras In checks diarrhoea and set ties the disordered stomach Price 25c and 50c per bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Kentucky m OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO SPECIAL NOTICE 0 in regard to 0 OBITUARIES RESOLUTIONS 0 OF RESPECT 0 0 000000000000000Tho new rule In regard to Obituaries Resolutions of Respect Cards of Thanks c whether written at the the behest of lodges churches or In dividuals and that is we shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles except obit poetry which will bo one cent per word strolghtThls Is too smallest rate we charge for anything and only onefifth of our regular rate The amount In cash or stamps accompany each article or- t will not be printed Six words average a line In ordi reading and every separate character or initial letter counts as word Tbo heading and the signature both count ono line each even If they are only a word or two All obituary poetry straight through one cent per word Contributors please remember Higher Chemistry In other words the eggs gave off the odor which all high school boys know as H2SO4 To be explicit the eggs were rotten despite the euphemism of the sUtuleDos ton Herald rsurr neck Is not only painful but annoying To get rid of It quickly rub the affected part with BAL SNOW LINIMENT ItI penetrates the flesh and relaxes the 1muscles so that the pain ceases Immediately Price 25c 60c and 100 pet bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan CO Beaver Dam Ky m Children Cry FOR FLETC- HERSCASTOiRIAI mEYWDNEYPHISrbnilllKUUATISMKIONBVSAMDBLABBEII lnUe iorThe eraldSIl a tear 4 rc 1 il- t lNelecled wounds produce old sores and awaythe v Ballards Snow LinimentIs aHeading Rsmsdy for All AH m ntof the Flesh of Man and Beast The speed wIth which this splendid liniment heals tip a bad wound or Bore has surprised and pleased those who were accus remedies little time lost front work In relieving rheumatic pains neural CIa sciatica it has done and la doing a wonderful work Many chronlo victims of these dUeasei have found to their great eatls faction that Itxurcs an attack la a fraction of the time required 1 toy the ordinary treatment It IB equally effective In the flesh ailments of animals Owmera of blooded stock value It highly for two reasons It heals spree and wounds qulcklX and leaves no disfiguring scars andtacacyPrice 25c 50c and 100 per Bottle JAMfl 1F BMJLMO PIMPMETOR ST LOUIIIIO Stephen Ere Salve U a Mfe and Pftdr remedy for Sore Fie OLOANO COMMCNOD Y OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O IOtiMS YOULL ENJOY CJ o n O The Heralds Special Selections O1 00 OCI The following Is one of the poems of Wm Lamont the notedI Grayson county Ky poet contributed to the Lcitchtleld Gazettet by Mr N C Tilford with this ex planation A short time after his La moms reformation upon entering the postoffice at Caneyvlllo Ky while Mrs Ell Harned the post mistress was quoting a few lines from Whittier In Maude Muller Of all sad words of tongue of pen the saddcct arc these it might have been the words fell upon his ears which seemed to appeal his sensitive feeling In such away as to cause the expression How true How true Whereupon Mrs Harned handed him a tablet and pencil and requested him to write her a few stanzas on the Might have been It was a cold dreary day snow lakes falling and bleak winds blowing Instead of loafing around the saloons and mixing with the rabble as he was wont to do on former occasions heI a seat on a box near the stove and In a very short time presented her with the following lines TilE MIGHT HAVE BEEN A wonderful realm Is The might have been That far In the distance lies With its hopes and fears its joys and tears Its shadows that fly with the pass ing years Like a cloud across the skies There are fairy isles in The might have been With fountains of living youth And beautiful flowers In their own bright bowers And Sabbath calm of the holy hours That come when the heart Is truth There are oasis fair In The might have been Mid the glare of the desert sand And mirages bright that dazzle the sight And storms that beat on the breast of might Are abroad In that wonderful land There are loves that were lost in The might have been But never a one that was won There are tears long shed oer the loved and dead But none for the living whore loved Instead In our land of the shadow and sun We have sailed the shores of The might have been And the coast was fair to view And you and I with a deep drawn sigh A shudder of pain and a tear dlmmned eye Regret that it was not true But a King reigns oer The might have been Whose will Is perfect law And Ho wills In His might that our earthly sight Be veiled with a cloud of darkestl night Like the morrow we never saw So well wander no more In The might have been With Its false Illusive light But journey along with our tears and our sQngI And pray for the faith that can make us strong For whatever God sends is right I WARNING TO FARMERS I AS TO THEIR SEED CORN Frankfort Ky April 29Seed 1 corn In Kentucky this spring tIs running1 so poorly that a warning has been issued by the Department of Agrlcudturo to the farmers of the State urging them to pay more t attention to the kind of corn plant it ed It Is stated by Commisslone of Agriculture Newman that he ha had great difficulty securing enoug good seed corn to supply the 1000 members of the corngrowing dub which have been and are beithgor ganlzed in the State among thi school boys Unless the farmer look carefully Into the quality ol the corn that they plant this sprint tho crop in Kentucky will be short Mr Newman says John B Staton Joyce Ky had an exccplonally severe attack ol whooping cough He says If had not been for Foleys Honey nnq Tar Compound I would have beoij compelled to quit work Instead 1 never missed a day and Foley Honey and Tar Compound gaveTme instant relief and Is tge only cough medicine we ever use Contain no opiates Sold by all dealers iri Incapacitated In the Supreme Court not Ion since an official when the Judge called out for the crier to open thei Court said May It please your Honor the crier cant cry today because his wife is deadCasea- nd CommentBRONCHITIS I To Whom It May Concern J BluevaleTOnt May 4 1910 = I w sick for two years with chronic bro chits and a consequent rundown con dltlon I received no benefit from doc tors or from a trip which I took foi my health and I had to give up work Vlnol was recommended and from th second bottle I commenced to 1m prove I gained Inweight and strength my bronchial trouble disappeared an I am at work again xItcurative elements of the cods livers aided by the blood making and strengthcreating properties of tonic Iron contained in Vlnol which makes It so successful In curing bronchitis Vinol is a constitutional remedy for chronic coughs colds bronchitis and pulmonary troubles not a palliative like cough syrups Try Vinol If you dont think It helps you we will return your money James II Williams Hartford Ky Z Wilbur Mitchell Beaver Dam Ky ecEOF oPJ BOURBON POULTRY- CURE down the throat of a lapN chicken destroys the wormi and saves the chicks lIfo A few drops In the drlnklnt water cures and PREVENTS DISEASE For the treatment of White Diarrhoea In chick and Blackhead and other diseases In turkeys BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS NO EQUAL Owe flOc bottle make 1 2 gallon of medicine SOLD 111 Z Wilbur Mitchell Beaver Dam John A Miller McHenry Ky + + + + + + + + + + 1 + + + GO TO + RummageFOR oe Carpenter and Repair Wojh 1 +TIN WORK and FLUE CAPS + tjt Pump and Furniture Repairing 41 of Soldering and Ejaw Filing Bug +jToplr overedandLined+ +You find us inthe Dr John + Mitchell office on Main Street tt Beaver Dam Ky + of + + + + + + + + + fjmlPm iV I WEDNESDAY MAY 8 10J2 THE HARTFORD HERALDPAGE SEVEN t THE STANDING L i 1 OF THE POTATOI is Steadily Rising Over r the Country PLAYS AN IMPORTANT PARTTI In the Affairs of Commerce Dont Raise Enough for Ourselves SHOnXAGE IS NOW EXISTING The humble potato Is now com ing from long neglect Into public prominence It Is emerging from I useful obscurity Into the limelight of publicity Fifteen years ago tho humble po tato was the steppingstone upon which Hazen S PIngree then Mayor of Detroit and later Governor of Michigan stepped Into the hall of tameIt may once more perform a sim ilar service for some ambitious Young man In Congress- It to predicted by commission merchants and food authorities connected with the Department of Agriculture that the shortage In the potato crop will terminate In a potato famine before the first of JuneAccording to the Government re port the shortage will exceed 50 000000 bushels This shortage IIs all the more likely to be felt be cause of the high price of meat at present When the price of on commodity advances the customer looks for a substitute then the prIce Of meat jumped skyward the poorer families were compelled teat less meat and the demand for potatoes Increased Now the demand is greater than It has over been In the history of the country and the supply is shorter York Is Importing potatoes fro Scotland Only last week a ship load was received by New Yor commission merchants The South is being supplied from Cuba The demand Is growing and foreign markets are being drawn upon Itieems ridiculous to think of potato famine in a country so roc with agricultural possibilities but as a staple article of diet the potato cannot be equaled It antedatesI the discovery of America It has been In demand since Spanish j plorers transplanted it from Sout America to Europe Ever since that remote day Us cultivation ha spread rapidly Most of us jump at hasty conclu- sIon and look upon the humble po tato as a positive plebeian among vegetables 04 This has been largely due to the cheapness of potatoes With the shortage in this coun ry due to the summer drought nd the difficulty in finding an ade iuate supply in Europe the predic tion of a potato famine seems logic ally based The New York importers are now Before Congress with a demand that the tariff of 25 cents a bushel be removed and unless some sort of retlef is extended by Congress the cost will be even greater Statistics show convincingly tha we dUnot produce potatoes enough for our own consumption They tow that during the past 10 years- e have imported an annual aver ge of 2000000 bushels of pota des each year There is no excuse for this We should grow our own supply Memphis CommercialAppeal GUAlHIC IEXIMCTUUK OF JESUS THE CHIlfST The following epistle Is said to have been taken by Napoleon from the records of Rome when he de prived that city of so many valua Ible BjjUiuscrlpts It was written at i the time and on the spot where Jesus commenced his ministry by jPubllus Lentulus Governor of Judea to the Senate of Rome Cao anr Emperor It was the custom jn those days for the Governor to write home any event that trans pired while he held Ills office It follows f Conscript Fathers In those our JesuslaysII Is living ushrlst who yet among nd of tho Gentiles is accepted as a trophet of great truth but his own Isclples call him the Son of God He hth raised the dead and cured 11 ifffhner of diseases He I lsa lan of stature somewhat tall and omelY with n ruddy countenance I uch as the beholder may both and fear His hair IItUbe dolor of aI Albert when fully ripe plain to his ar whence downward U is more 6t Orient color curling and waving an his shoulders in the rrfddlo of 1lt held is a seam of long hair at teii the manner of the NazarjteaJl His forehead la plain and delicate j the face without spot or wrinkle beautiful with a comely red Jiis nose and mouth are exactly form ed his beard Is the color of his hair and thick not of any length but forked In reproving ho is terrible ad monishing courteous in speaking very modest and wlsein proportion of body well shaped None hay seen him laugh many have seen him Weep A man for his surpass chlldreiT1 I Time IKlnpsed girls father I want to talk to you about that young man of yours When did he say goodby to you last evening At 10 oclock replied the dear girl What Why It Was 1 oclock at leastOhl That was when he finished saying it IT DEVELOPED HE WAS JUST HOUND TO HE BOSS Theres a certain politician gal lavantln around the country just now said a dyedInthewool Taft man at the Customs House who reminds me of an old negro who used to york for my father Hes bound to be boss Old Ike was given a Job one day by father cutting up some wood In the backyard Dad gave Ike a quarter to do It Later In the day he wont out and found the old ne- gro sItting on a box and directing the work of another black who wasI Industriously cutting and sawing Why lire remarked dad didnt I pay you to do this work Yas suh boss yo sho dill Well why arent you doing It I glv din nigger So cents to doe I It Thirtyfive cents Why soI much asked father Well boss Its Ills n way II reckon Its wuf 10 cents ter be bossI once In a while Louisville t Times oooooooooooooooI O UESOLUTIOXS OK llESlECT C- m00000000000000C I ItWhereas An Allwlse Father hast removed from us the mother of our brother Rethel L Duke Resolved 1st That In the death of Mrs S E Duke our brother has lost his dearest earthly friend and tchbear his joys and sorrows and a friend never to be replaced Resolved 2d That Hartford Camp No 202 Woodmen of World extend its deepest sympa hthy to brother Duke and his family in this hour and for his guidance point him to the Great Commanders who docs all things well Resolved 3d That a copy of these resolutions be furnished our brother a copy spread upon the records of this Camp and a copy furnished the local newspapers for publication LESLIE BENNETT OTTO C MARTIN J NEY FOSTERCommittee Whereas the sad Intelligence of the death of Mr William PIrtle brother of James and Ira PIrtle members of Hartford Camp No202 Woodmen of the World has reach ed this Camp be it deathtof William PIrtle our brothers have lost a faithful brother and compan Ion the mother wife and child have lost an upright loving and just son husband and fathertResolved 2d That we smypa thlze with our brothers and the other members of the bereaved family who mourn his departure but we can only remind them that he Is not dead ho Is only asleep resting to await the Resurrection mornResolved 3d That a copV of these resolutions be spread upon the records of Hartford Camp No 202 Woodmen of the World and a copy furnished to the local newspa pers for publication LESLIE BENNETT OTTO C MARTIN J NEY FOSTERCommittee Fsr pcs An lsvftFate A thousand tongues could not ex press the gratitude of Mrs J E Cox of toilet Ill for her wonder I ful deliverance from an awful fate Typhoid lneumonla had loft me with a dreadful cough she writes Sometimes I had such awful coughing spells I thought I would dteI could get no help from doc tors treatment or other medicines till I used Dr Kings New Discovery But I owe my life to this won derful remedy for I scarcely cough 3at all nowQulck and safe its the most reliable of all throat and lung medicines Every bottle guar anteed 50c and 100 Trial bot tie free at J IL Williams m KID1mtPtr01r KAOHB KInANY BlABBIN THE HISTORY OF THEJILIPPICS As Promulgated By De- L mosthenes DESIGNED TO AWAKEN GREEKS To Encroachments of Philip of Macedon Patriotism Was Aroused THE EMBODIMENT OF OHATOUY It was on or near this date twen tysix hundred and sixtythree years ago that Demosthenes delivered the first of the immortal series of orations known as the Philippics so called from the fact that they were designed to awaken the Greeks to the encroachments that were being made upon their liberties by Philip of Macedon Demosthenes at the time of the delivery of his first Philippic was In the flush and glory of his young manhood having Just turned thIr- ty The herald cried Who among the citizens above fifty years old wishes to speak and after them which of the other citizens In his turn The subject of Philip and his policies had been so often discussed that no one seemed disposed to mount the Bema and then It was that Demosthenes arose to make his first public harangue to the Athenian Assembly All accounts unite In describing the effect of the speech as magical Inspired by tho preternatlonal eloquence of the young orator the Athenians cried out as one man Let us BO forth to tight Philip For thirteen years did Domothe nee stand between tho wouldbe Macedonian usurper and the liberties of Greece Beyond the reach of threat and allurement the mighty orator stood at his post appeal Ing to the men of Athens to be worthy of the glorious achievements of their sires It Is at once the subllmest and most pathetic picture In all history the fight of Demosthenes against Philip Demosthenes failed through no fault of his own and Philip won but as long as the world en dures the Philippics will live the wonder of oratoricaleffort and thee inspiration of all who shall be struggling for human freedom And here the question naturally arises How Is It that In a faculty which Is common to the whole spe cles that of communicating out- thought and feeling In language the palm should by the unanimous consent of all nations and ages be given to Demosthenes The speeches exhibit no ostenta tious rhetoric evince no particular learning show no glaring orna ments but rarely touch the heart with a soft and melting appeal an quite devoid of wit and humor and yet In spite of all these things the speeches are unrivaled In a class all by themselves the supreme master pieces of the worlds eloquence The mystery Is explained by the fact that the orator was himself a living part of his orations He was absolutely In earnest thoroughly sincere honest to the very center of his mind and soul and when he as cended the llama and began to speak he was Irresistible No hyp ocrlt demagogue or timeserver however gifted he might have been could have made those wonderful speeches Demosthenes died at the age of sixtytwo from the effect of administered by his own polsonI caring to survive the liberties of his country he took the fatal drug and quietly expired In the month of October 322rnev Thos BOreg ory In Chicago Examiner A Mortal Blow Whats the matter with your wife Shes all broken up lately She got a terrible Jar What has happened 1 Vhshe was assisting at a rummage sale took off her now hat and somebody sold It for thir tyfive cents borSnlc- Slxtjfiro acres of well Improved land in Rough river bottoms 2 3 miles west of Hartford For fur ther particulars address X care of The Herald 2tf VOTE lOU PKE8IDEXT WILL EXCEED 130000001 Washington April 29 That moreli than 15000000 persons In the United States will record their votes for President in the campaign of the present year is evident from the official statistics of the Presi dential vote published in the Sta UnitedMatesj bythe Bureau of Statistics Depart hl ment of Commerce and Labor Prior to 18p3 no Governmental official record of the votes cast for Presi dent existed but an act passed by Congress on February 3 1887 made it the duty of the Executive of each State to report to the Sec retary of State the names of elec tors and the number of votes given or cast for each person voted for and these reports made by the Sec retary of State In 1888 and in each subsequent Presidential election form the basis of the official record of Presidential elections In the United States This record which has been pub lished for several years In the Sta tistical Abstract of the United States suggests that the total number of votes cast In the Presidential election this year will for the first time exceed 15000000 The total number In 1908 was 14887000 In 1900 13965000 in 1892 12044 000 and In 1888 11381000 SOMETHING ABOUT THE ORIGIN OF HAXDSHAKE Did you ever ask yourself why you shake hands with a person whom you know Here Is the rea sonIn the old days when every man who had any pretensions to being a gentleman carried a sword It was the custom for men when they met to show that they had no Intention of treachery to offer each other their weapon hand that Is the hand that would be used to draw the swordnnd to withhold the hand was usually tho signal for a fightSo fixed did this habit become that long after men ceased to wear swords they still offered the weap on hand to n friend and declined to offer It to an enemy To this day when you refuse to shae hands with a person It signifies that you are at war Among savages who newer carried swords the slinking of hands Is unknown and It affords them amusement to see white men do itNow York 5u- uno000co000000orO WHAT IDEALISM MEAXS 0 O By Thomas Hamilton O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOII There are no Idealists extant In the world So many people boast of their ideals and the ideals of others without stopping to thinkIjI for a moment what sort of anism constitutes Idealism When men and women have be come masters of their own will power theta they have hewn the I way for Idealism But how many people on this revolving sphere of ours have become masters of their will Is there one No not one Man Is too credulous His heart Is I too filamentous of unworthy deeds He has too many fickle recipes and ofttimes overtaxes his own heart with them Man can have pleasant words and pleasant thoughts but he can never become an Idealist God never produced ideal men He did not have even thoughts of such productions because past ages nor modern ages would not permit of them Christ was the only Idealist that ever ex isted because he was a Heavenly Being modified by everything that Is good Man has but few modifi ers that are Rood therefore he can not be and will never be an Ideal ist Man when sounded Is an ab- negator of his own soul but he chances to tell you that he Is an Idealist I Ia I Once upon a time I heard a young man make this remark about a certain professor of a very cele jbrated Institution Yonder goes our president and he Is a wonder ful character I should call him an Idealist for he Is charitable and such an optimist Is he i This young man was densely Ig norant and had not the slightest conception of what an Idealist Is Let us throw off such a burden of dense Ignorance and put Into our heads a system that will circulate pure clean and unadulterated thoughts I Hartford Ky Route 05 Flue Subscription Oflcr The Louisville Evening Post dallv from now until November 10 1912 and the Hartford Herald one year for only 2 Subscribe now tf Advice to the AgedA- gebrings Infirmities such as slue JtISh bowels weak kidneys and bladder and TORPID LI- VERTuttsPills have aspecific effect theseorgansi stimulating the bowelf to perform their natural functions a- In youth and- IMPARTING VIGOR LIVERThey FOIEY7KIDNEY PHISrOB- HCUUATI5MXIOMKTaAMD LA0BXtl e CASTORIA For Infants and ChIldren The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the- Signature of In- Use For Over Thirty Year- sCASTORIA the OENtaue CONIINC NfWDaa arl+ u To Our Farmer Friends and Patrons Now is the time to hegira to anticipate your Fence wants We have just received two car loads of the cele brated American Steel Wire Fence We bought it right Iso we can givefoou a very low price on any specifications you may need Call and see us about your fence IIYoms truly DUNDEE MERCANTILE COIISCOUrORATKD IDUNDEE KENTUCKY FARMERS MARKET PLACE TO BUY AND SELL Hay Corn Oats Stock Peas Millet 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 iVo r u OWENSBORO KY XENTcrOK Li htantt Power Company u NJrCJtTEn E GaBARRASMGF Hartford ZELr Will wife your house at cost Electric Licjlits tire clean hcati11 Slid sfeeNohome or btisinffffi IIOUHC should be ititIt out them tthvn within reach WHY NOT MAKE 200 A MONTH Thats 5000a Week almost 1000a Day Soiling Victor Safes and flrcproof boxes to merdllmls doctors lawyers dentists mid welltodo lurineri sit of whom realise the nllof n sate but do not know hotrcnryltlitouwn one 8alesmeo declare our roposltlon one of upporlunlties nco YOU can dupilcate the surcelsofothers Our handsomely Illuutrnted 2OI ago catalog will cimbli you to present the Fubjcct to cus tomes In as IntcreiiliiK a mu21u r ifs though you were piloting them nnrougtt our factory flea tl as salesmen receive advice alill nistrucllons for selling safes Ihhil IIdonthcMthannlVfr ar ot our company was celebrated by erecting tho worldWidefactory In the fwake men who received our special eelllnK Inducement rendered It necessary to double our output We are ipenalnic many thousands of dollars en la rgingour sales organization but to learn nil particulars It will cot you only the price of a postal card Ask for Catalogue 16T THE VICTOR SAFE LOCK CO Our Nw Hone Capacity 20000 Sale Annually CINCINNATI OHIO The WiHMy SiOOt a Year l K L u t y w 1x HERALDWEDNESDAy MAY 8 1912x tOE EIGHT THE HARTFORD Cu J 0 ROYALBIKING POWDERAbsolutely Pure The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of artar NO ALUM NO LIME PHOSPHATE The Hartjord Herat IL H E RAILROAD TIME TA ULE AT IIARTFOKD KY The following L N Time Card Is effective from Monday Aug 21st North Dound No 112 due at Hartford 719 a m No 114 duo at Hartford 340 p m South Bound No 115 due at Hartford 845 a m s 113 due at Hartford 14G p m 1No Agoii I CONFEDERATE jREUMON- tt SPECIAL WAS WRECKED A Number of Persons Killed and Many InjuredOn Way To Macon Ga I Hattlesburg Miss May GFour trainmen and six or moro passen gers were killed and at least forty passengers Injured when the first section of the Texas ConfuiluraU reunion special en routo to Macon On was wrecked at Gunns Mill on the New Orleans Northwest I ern railroad six miles north of Hat tlesburfi at 84ii a m Five bodies were brought to Hat tiesburg on the cars of the big special which remained on the trackFour bodies were removed from the wreck after the relief train with five bodies and the Injured left the scene at Hattiesburg Still other bodies can be seen under the wreckageThe baggage car the day coach and three tourist sleepers left the track and rolled down an em bankment The six remaining coaches of the veterans speciall were hurriedly transformed tnto a morgue and hospital and as soon as an engine reached the scene the dead and Injured were brought hereThe Injured some of whom are believed to be fatally hurt tilled the two hospitals at Hattlesburg while the dead were taken to an undertaking establishment The train was running at about thirty miles an hour and was cross ing an embgankment with a trestle In the center Just as the engine reached the trestle It was seen by a Mr Gunn of Gunns mill to rear up and leave the track The five cars followed the engine some tumbling down the embankment on one side and some on the other forming a tangled mass of splint ers and twisted Iron Two of the cars Hashed against poles of the Cumberland Telephone Company thirty feet from the track demol I ishing the poles and severing communication with Hattlesburg 1IKAVKR DIM May GMfrs W A Austin departed this life April 30th titter a long Illness of stomach trouble Af tor short funeral services at the homo conducted by Rev W B Wright of Hartford her remains were Interred In the Liberty bury- Ing ground attended by a large concourse of sorrowing relatives and friends Mrs Austin was a daughter of Henry and nettle Smith Baltzell a family that was well known In Ohio county In ante folium days She first married Mr John Martin who preceded her several years ago SheMeft ono son by her first husband Mr Forest Martin who Is mnrdej and living tit Central City The widow if AVm Smith living n mile South of heaver Dam dletl heardtroublegether with the Barrass family emI igrated from England to this coun try about twentvfvo years ago and have rived In Tayor Mines and vicinity ever since She leaves eightt children four boys and four girls All are married except her young + eat girl and three boys Mr Frank Casebler has sold his residence on Hroad street to Mr U F Jones Mr Jones has lately moved to our town to take the place of Mr John Waddle In superintending the sour mill Mr Waddlcs health having failed Mr Jones an expert in thea milling businessI and also a good Sunday School1 t i t j I r Intoscholar We welcome him midstMr Gordon Young who has been In the Polk Sanitarium in Louis vlllo for quite a while being treated for stomach trouble has retrun ed home greatly benefited He has bought the property which was owned by Dr Moore situated In the Gray addition of the town Dr Willis of Cromwell willi move to his new homo here noxt week As the Doctor Is a line phy slclan and ho and his family are Christian people we welcome thor to our town HOIKWEM May GMfrs J R Shull and granddaughter Miss Louvel spen last Wednesday and Thursday with relatives In Taylortown Mr and Mrs W D Shull gay the young folks a nice entertainment last Saturday night Miss Mary Hnglcr and Mr Bur nlo Humphrey were married at tin residence of Mr Holder near Paradise the 2Sth ult Rev Hiram Brown pronounced the ceremony The newly married couple ere lit Ing on the farm of tho groom grandfather Incle Billy Smith Misses Beuluh Mlles and Olga Hunloy have returned home from Hartford College Rev George Gordon sold twot mules at Wysox last Wednesday for 24750- Mrs Hiram Taylor and daughter Miss Neva of Taylortown seen last Sunday with Mr and Mrs Wit Shull here Mr Tom Engler has moved to his new house which ho built near his uncle Chester Overtons Mr Strother Engler who has been visiting his nephew Mr L S Engler has returned to his home near Boonevllle Ind Miss Margaret Taylor Is visiting Mr and Mrs E V Bennett at Cen tral City The water has been over a great I deal of the low bottoms but Is falling now Mr John Cummins has recover fd his dwelling house The old root had been on for 33 years- ADStBURO May 3Mr Riley Greers son who has been sick for some time was nigh unto death at noon today Mr John Raymon Is in Whites vllle today on business Mr C L Patton and sister Mary are at Ralph today shopping Mr and Mrs John Raymon visit ed Mrs Raymons parents Mr and Mrs Stewart on Darnells creek WednesdayMr Mrs C L Patton and daughter Elda C visited Mrs Pat tons parents Mr and Mrs J H Miller near Dundee Saturday and SundayMrs Eula Mldklff of this place and Mr Howard of Ralph went to Rockport Ind and wore married last Saturday Their many friends wish them much happiness rCEXTKIWWX May GFarmers are taking ad vantage of the few days pretty weather In rounding up their spring workMr Williams of Butler county has purchased the store of E S Mc Mlllcn and will take possession at once IEsq Jackson wont to McIIcnry Friday on business Messrs E S McMlllen and W SI Whalin went to Beaver Dam Sat urdayMr F M Allen has sold his farm to Alva Calloway Mr Claude Chapman and wife of Broadway Mines are visiting their parents here What Tevans Admire Is hearty vigorous life according to Hugh Tallman of San Antonio We find he writes that Dr Kings New Life Pills surely put new life and energy into a person Wife and I believe they are tho best made Excellent for stomach llv r or kidney troubles 55c at James H Williams m w j Bishop Earl Cranston of Wash i ngton D C In addressing the Methodist Episcopal General Con ference declared the fact ascrltI ical that the churchs membership showed but a 2 per cent Increase For FnleTown property vacant slots cottages and two story dwelling A C YEISERi CO- Hartford Ky y 04 i r ir rr 1virsaK vl 3 GEORGIA GOES SOLID I FOR OSCAR UNOEpOD k Who Will Get Entire 28 Voles Wilson Beats Clink C and ormanif i J V I Atlanta Ga May 3Delayed returns from the Presidential pri mary held in Georgia Wednesday continue to add to the plurality of Oscar Underwood Official results have been received from 10G of the 14fi counties and these with the unofficial returns from the other forty show a plurality forthe Ala bamalan of 13215 votes The offi cial canvass it Is stated will change these figures but slightly The total votes for the four can didates are given as follows Oscar Underwood 71556 Woodrow Wilson 8341 Champ Clark 20860 Judson Harmon 8257 Although Gov Wilson carried more than thirty counties in the State Including all the larger cities he will not get a fraction of the Georgia delegation to tho Balti more convention Under the order State Democratic Executiveof the conventionI iI Committee the State which meets May 29 will be com I posed of delegates Instructed for I the popular choice of the State This means that Mr Underwood Js sure of the twentyeight delegatesl from Georgia IMC CHURCH KRKCTKD IX LESS THAX A wpartanhurgawSrC MaA lY1fl church not a stone or stick whirl WAR standing at aunrlsn ofII morning Is being worshipped In night by a great congregation that fills the building and overflows into i the street j I It had been announced by theI members of Bethel MothollistII Church that they would building in one day the be rnnuuknown as ElBethel There were I tlian 200 workmen well organized gathered at the scene this morning It became apparent that the un dertaking woutd be accomplished It Is estimated that 5000 persons visited the building during the day Motion picture machines played upon the crowds and upon the building at every stage of its orodtlon Tonight the building stands tom pleted painted papered carpeted and furnished throughout lit mow j When your food does not digest well and you feel blue tired and discouraged you should use aUt tle HERBINE at bedtime It opens the bowels purifies the system and restores a fine feeling of health and energy Price 50c Sold by Hart ford Drug Co Hartford Ky Don ovan Co Beaver Dam Ky m + 0 Plays the Game Lil3ftf Woman In other words though T R Insists on having a square deal he ob jects to letting the other fellow cut the cards when hes dealing trait Free Press 0 I o I I I lliIE x III JjJAUTOMOBILEST We have the Agency in Ohio County for the Famous fi Ford Model T Ii Automobiles ft A11lso the Celebrated FLANDERS 20 and E M FI 30 Made by the Studebaker Corporation U We sell the products of the biggest and best motor car manufacturers in the firLII 1 I CATALOGS SENT ors REQUE ST Barnes Clay Machine Wks CENTRAL CITY KENTUCKY Illln =m ii IOQI1LI J RICKETTS May GMr Mack Daniel wife and child of this place spent Sat urday night and Sunday with Mrs Daniels parents Mr and Mrs John Gray at- Miss Tildle Morris of near Coq cord spent from Wednesday till Saturday with Miss Ira Royal here Mrs Era Black who has been at the bedside of her sister at Beaver Dam has returned home Miss Ira Royal spent Sunday with Misses Cork and Orle MaPle of near Victor schoolhouse The singing at Mr Bird Lees Saturday night was largely attended and all reported a good time Messrs C N Daniel and N G Patton who have been ill are im proving The State convention of theLIly Whites faction of the Republican party held in Alexandria La split into two wings each electing dele gates one set being Instructed for Taft and the other for Roosevelt I III Spring Time I I I i I I Calland see our line of DryIGoods Clothing Furniture and Star Brand Shoes All newno old stale goods in our store Also Farming Implements Culti v ators Field Fence Wire and Fencing of all kinds I IE s MCMILLANI I CENTERTOWN KENTUCKY PI ONES cum 7a Farmers 1S3 c i 4tf jJ cc iJ I YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND I If CJ A Practical Cooking and Baking Demon stration ot the NewPerfection Blue Flame Oil Stove At my Store for three daysvMONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY May 13th 14th and 15th I1 Expert Lady Demonstrator in attendance Comea the merits and economy of this stove IGood Things to Eat Served Free MM S L KING Kentucky- I LOOKNOW IS YOUR CHANCE TO get a good Piano at a teal bargain Qygans from 2000 up Can and see our line of sliest musio it OrgansYecoyers no danger of damaging tPialm boxes for sale If you will calft our store we vill give you a song book HJRTPORDVWICCOM FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE FOR I Hipli Grate Pianos layer Pianos and Organ8t i HARTFORD KENTUCKY a I PIReadingjnlWiiiffiiW I