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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): May 8, 1912
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): May 8, 1912 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912050801_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): 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. Him "m-."jii- J ' tm n S'l 35- -: - 1 1 TiiT ii T"5.-- i ii ii Jgjj3jj3 ",,T,fmiii' MJJ THE HARTFORD HERALD. Subscription $1 m Jor Year, in Advance. tho hands of these they have all the money they can use. They hae no candidate; they don't want any. What they want Is, by combining the strength of all tho othor candidates against the strongest, no difference to them who he may be, to defeat him and, with him the will of the people, and, being In control, send an unlni structed delegation to Baltimore, where It may be traded like so many cattle. Less than a half dozen political vampires hope thus to override and defeat the Judgment and will of the party and prostitute them to thoir own selfish purpose. You see tho critical situation and that, too, when everything had and Inviting. looked so promising 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 put upon your party. Even now, In my mind, I see Democracy, like a Hon after sleep, rousing and stretching and "shaking his Invincible, locks." DIna ye hear "Listen, clansmen! SENTINEL. the slogan?" Rockport, Ky., May 3, 1912. blood-suckers.a- "' fti " n(ralj "f ! fforld' ! y"' cf Jl1 Mo" Lnml)t"g ' ar ft&,f All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. 38th TEAR. EARNEST APPEAL HAKTFORD, KY WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1912. NOTED XO. 19 u FEUDIST HANDS IT 10 DEMOCRATS Of Ohio County to be On m STEEL BULLETS On FROM 0 HQ1JFF REEL Their Guard. FOR INSTRUCTED DELEGATION Ed Callahan the Victim of Does Ollie James, Dealing With Percy Haly. Ambushed Assassins. COVER REPLIES IN VIGOROUS STYLE To Speak Out and Preserve Integrity of the Party Organization. FEW FACTS PLAINLY STATED Alountain Side Near By To Charges of Haly, Which He Calls "ContemptiWill Probably Prove To Be Fatal. ble Falsehood." LED AX EVENTFUL LIKE WILL FK.'HT ALL MACHINES.! HAS T Fellow Democrato, especially of I'm not Ohio County: Listen! going to make you a stump speech for I've got something to bij It Is believed by many of the truest and most prominent Democrats among whom are In Kentucky, James, Stanley and Watterson, that deterthere Is an unscrupulous, mined and dangerous coterie of who, "sniffing the savory odera of - the- - flesh-po- is ,, .nro. now peeking to Kentucky Democracy and go up to Baltimore and trade for whatever they can get. This enterprising llvo- stock deal Is very simple and practical. They hope to pool the Interests of all the weaker candidates, or, In othor words, organize the vest-pocket of -- Egypt;" , . where they Convention, National hope to find a ready market it may be already contracted"1. are called for the Conventions solo purpose of ascertaining, by fair, full and free deliberation, just who against the strongest they field don't care who their victims happen to be and. In this way, control the State convention and "send an unlnstructed delegation to the the party, In their best Judg- i ? 'Baltimore likewise under strict and explicit instructions, to vote 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 ell you for a price. If this band of freobooters can INDIANA WOMEN FAVOR JIAMES FOR PRESIDENT once get control of the State convention by this dangerous combiInd., May 4. Tho Evansville, nation, the choice of unlnstructed Review, a weekly local magazine delegates and all the other selfish alms will be easy to accomplish. edited by State Senator William B. They then will be absolute dlcta- -' Carleton, Is conducting a Presidentors to a helpless, btrayed and dis- tial primary and only women are permitted to vote. Tho Review will tracted party. and It Whomsoever the party is for, let announce tho vote Senator-eleOllie show make tho will It say so In tones that peddler of votes quake. What you James, of Kentucky, In the lead for Presldont Taft Is want is the triumph of party prin-- - tho Presidency. ciples, not softsnaps for h few dir- second In tho race, Speaker Champ who trade Clark third, William Jennings Bryty political, gamblers upon unfortunate party differences, an fourth, United States Senator prejudices, &c, sacrificing harmony John W. Kern fifth and Theodoro and strength to personal alms, a Roosevelt, sixth. Mr. James leads menace und dlsgraco to tho party by a big margin. ct ment, think 13 the best and moBt .available man to nominate for President. They are not called to be manipulated by a few and charlaTiolltlcal tans, as If clay In the hands of a potter. It Is an appeal to the Judgment and choice of the great body of disinterested workers in the heat and dust of the trenches, who expect, ask nothing but the triumph of principles, and whoever attempts to Interfere with this object should suffer the wrath of hla party and T)e kicked into kingdom come. You are called Upon to say who you believe is the best man. It is of the greatest Importance to know what your opinion Is. Go, then, to your county convention, select some good, strong, clean, true mon with backbone like a circus polo, and send them to the State convention, fully Instructed for your man, that they may select other delegates to self-seekiwire-pullers Democratic Convention. . call made. Jy the Committee, Democratic Executive the Democrats of Ohio county are notified that a mass convention will be held at the court houso In Hartford, Ky on Saturday, May 2ii, 1912, at 2 o'clock p. m. for tho purpose of selecting delegates to the to bo held In Convention State Louisville, Ky., May 29th, at which delegates will bo selected to the Nationnl Convention at Baltimore, on tho 2."th of Juno, Maryland, 1912. All Democratic voters and young Democrat who will bo entltlod to election, vote In the November 1912, are urged to bo present and participate In said county convenO. B. LIKENS, tion. Ch'm'n! Dem. Executive Committeo of Ohio County. HEBEU MATTHEWS, Sec'y. ..Purs.uant-.taa-- Jackson, Ky., May 1. Ed Callahan, one of the most noted leaders of tho feudal war3 of Breathitt county, was shot from ambush this morning about 9 o'clock through e, tho window of Ills store at a little village In this county about twenty-fiv- e miles from One steel bullet entered Jnckson. his leg Just above the knee and another pierced his breast. The latter ball has been located and will Severn! .physicians. be removed. were at once called in to attend the wounded man, and at 11 o'clock he was removed to the hospital which Is boing 'maintained In connection with the Buckhorn High School, about six miles from the scene of the shooting, where he was late this reported as resting well evening with some hope for his recovery. Callahan operates at Crocketts-vjll- e one of tho biggest stores In Breathitt county and has been an Crock-ottsvill- enterprising and prominent busi- COL. ASTOK LAID TO REST IX VERY QUIET MANNER New York, May 4. The body of John Jacob Astor, who was drowned In the Titanic disaster, y with simple was laid to rest ceremonies In the Trinity Cemetery. It was brought hero on a special train from Hhlnecllff-On-The- -: where funeral services Hudson, were held at noon In the little stone Episcopal Church of tho Messiah, of which Col. Astor was for sixteen years a warden. These services, also of the simpby the lest kind, were conducted Rev. Ernest C. Saunders, pastor of tho church, and tho Rev. William rector of Trinity T. Manning, Church here, and were attended by relatives and friends of Col. Astor, residents of Rhlnecllff, together with employes of Col. Aston at Rhlnecllff and at Newport, about one hundred in all. Mrs. Ava Willing Astor, the Colonel's former wife, did not attend the ceremonies, but sent a wreath. Col. to-da- When you catch a they jlisbonor. man making a tool and cat3paw of your party, spot hlra, swat him, liuetle lijm on the toboggan that Tiever mates a stop this side the s. dlmlnitlorfj SJmply,, Instruct your delegates to Baltimore for the man you want. This Is 'not 6nly wise, Just, expe- Democratic, but It will ,r llentanrl thwart' the (scheme and 'utterly a small squelch and jscrap-hea- p of the most selfilsh, deslgn-lngVafcrdwa dangerous men that ever bow-wowid Sleep Walker Killed. Zanesvillo, Ohio, May 4. While walking in his sleep, Charles aged 44, of San Toy, Porry county, plunged from a third-stor- y window of the Palace Hotel at 330 this morning and was Instantly kill-e- y by striking his head on tho brick Se-cre- street. Secrest was on his way to Del Roy, near Canton, to visit relatives, - brother, lives Edward Secrest, n- In Columbus. tfon't lot a sense of security de ceive you. They are out for spoils' ana are prepared for the most 'measures and- - methods. They are astuto, wily and resourceful. the mahey practically control chine, which Is no small power 'In den-pira- te lnfwted the party. Shoots Husband and Self. Hagerstown, Md., "May 4. In ,a fit of Jealous rago, Mrs. Luther Jenkins, 23 years old, shot and mortal? Iy wounded her hushand here tosuicide, day. She then committed by shooting. Jennings died two hours later. the Haly denial Is not conharks The Senator-elec- t a letter said to have been by Mr. Haly before the 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: "I have read the statement issued by Mr. Haly, in which he denies vigorously that lie was at the Harmon headquarters; but It will be observed that when he talks about the Harmon headquarters, which issued the statement, lie puts on the soft pedal. His wrath only rises when he refers to the fact that I believe the statement. Why Is it thnt Haly doesn't denounce the officials of the Harmon headquarters as liars and falsifiers? "Is he afraid that they will give to the public some Information relative to his transaction with them? Does he fear the publication of some letter or letters that he may have written? Does he fear that they will tell of some telephone Is he alarmed communications? that they might disclose some conversations had with them, when ho relative has been in Washington, to the Harmon candidacy, and declaring that he was for Harmon for Presidqnt? "Haly seeks to dodgo tho real issue, and that Is is he undertaking to set au unlnstructed delegation from Kentucky, to act In the rolo of a small Murphy and deliver It to Harmon, or some reactionary for whom tho people of Kentucky, if tbey had the opportunity, would not dec!are, and has ho communicated these things to the Harmon managers, and did they issue thi3 statement, relying upon tho truth of his statements to them? The issue Is not whether he was in Washington. But he He denies, that vigorously. remains singularly and ominously silent upon tho othor questions. Why did ho not make his denial sweeping and conclusive by saying ho had never talked to the Harmon I, managers, una never nniKii The Democratic State Convention headquarters, 'had never comof Connecticut Instructed Its dele- municated' with them by 'phone, gates for ' Oov, Baldwin, of that "md ppver said he wa3 for Hnr"i State, for President. that he 13 not for Harmon, and that j because clusive. back to written ry ness man. Ho was a defendant with the late Judge James Hargls for the murders of James B. Mar-cu's and James Cockrell, and widow was given a verdict of $8,000 In a civil suit against him for her husband's death. The fact that the bullets found In Callahan's body were of different sizes leads to the belief that he was shot by more than one person. The assassins Identity of the would-b- e Is a mystery. Callahan was shot from a mountain side that overhangs his home e hidand store. It Is said that ing place of those who shot Callahan was discovered by his friends, who made a search, but no trace could be found of the men themselves." Since the death of Judge Jim Hargls and the removal of B. Fult French to the Bluegrass section of was the Kentucky, Ed Callahan man In Eastern most widely-know- n Kentucky, and while remaining quietly In the precincts of his own since he home at Crockettsvllle, was fired upon from ambush two years ago, he was regarded as tho leader of the old Hargls faction In feud. the Hargl3-Cockrl- ll Five times did Callahan face juBenttyvllle and ries In Lexington, Sandy Hook on charges of murder growing out of the assassinations of James B. Marcum, Jim Cockrill and Dr. B. D. Cox, he having been a with Judge Hargls In all of the latter's trials. At the time he first became prominently Identified with the feudal fights In was county Callahan Breathitt High Sheriff while Hargfs was the County Judge, and It was over a contest of their election in November, 1902, that resulted In tho feud between the Hargls and Cockrill and the nssasslnation of factions lames B. Marcum, May 4, 1903, as ho was standing on tho steps of the Breathitt county court house at Jackson talking to Capt. B.J. Ewen. Good Cliimec For Recovery. Lexington, Ky., May 5. A brief telegram received from Jackson tonight states that Ed Callahan, who who shot from nmbush yesterday, Is resting well and It Is now bellov-lleve- d Ho 13 at he will recover. tho hospital at Buckhorn, where he was taken yesterday, and under the caro of skillful surgeons. The hospital Is supplied with every appliance desired for tho best and most scientific treatment and there Is a trained nurso In attendance. The telegram from Jackson says there were, "no further developments." which Is taken to mean that the bloodhounds taken to the of tills hcene hv Capt. Mulllktn, cltv, have accomplished nothing ns' m Mar-cum- May 3. A smashWashington, ing biow at Percy Haly and the element behind him In Kentucky Democratic politics was struck by RepIn resentative Ollie James reply to Mr. Haly's statement that had he be'lees tho Senator-elec- t "somi part" In tho bulletin Issued last week by tho Harmon and now fiercely in controversy. The bteni and angry language with which Mr. Jamos invested his Interview better than any tiling he has paid in the campaign thus far that the First district Congressman was never readier for a fight In his life. He apparently welcomes all comers, and tli. merciless manner in which y shows lie handled Mr. Haly It. Mr. James points out that Mr. Haly'b rage rises, not at the officials of the Harmon headquarters, who Issued the contested statement putting him and Mr. Mayo In the Harmon (amp, but at Mr. James, who ventured to bellevo the truth of the statement. Why doesn't Mr. Maly denounce those officials whu, like C. A. Cottrill, tell a circumstantial story about the alleged visit, is what Mr. JameB wants to know. "Is he afraid that they will give the' public some information relative to' his transactions with them?" "The aBked Mr. James, curiously. issue Is not whether he was in y, htmd-quart'-rs to-da- 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 Washington? "One of two things is certain Harmon headquarters have deliberately lied about Haly, or they had Information from Haly which they published. It Is inconceivable to me that the Harmon headquarters would bo guilty of having men In control of It, who, advocating the candidacy of a gentleman for tho highest office wlthm the gift of the people, would deliberately lie about Mr. Haly and Mr. Mayo. "Haly's statement that lie beIs lieves I had part In the frame-ufalsehood as such a contemptible I believed not to deserve notice. the Harmon headquarters had authority for thoir statement, and I bellevo it yet, and is not such a contradiction of the former Haly In political activities In Kentucky as to make mo disbelieve its truth, for I remember that our Republican friends published n letter that this same Haly had written and used It upon us in the camp'ilgn. much to our hurt and detriment, wherein lie said thnt he anil his crowd played prohibition In the country and whiskey in the chips. "Haly last year tried to dony to of- - Kentucky the thv --IMnoL'int-r right to select their I'nlted States Senators. He Is now trying to deny to the Democracy of Kentucky the light to say for whom they stand for President. He wanted to leave the Senatorial election in the LegAssembly. where he islative p, BESTS fljlj Refugees HUDDLED CAGES For the Blood of Jewish reSULTAN'S ZOO Terrible Scenes !n Fez, After Bloody Revolt When Many Were Slain. TRIE I'KTIIM: OF DESOLATION Fez, Morocco, May 1. The Jewquarters of Fez present a lamentable spectacle as a result of the recent pillaging and looting by the revolting populace and mutinous .Moorish soldiers. Of the 12,000 residents no than 7,000 have been rendered homeless by fire, and these ha," taken refuue, nuked and hunr, in the Kaidens of the Sultan's palace. Hundreds of emaciated human beings "are "InidTlWd"" to'KelreT then-Iempty cages of the Sultan's ish these are surrounded lr' containing v."llil beasts, which maddened by the slsht of human with tin ir llesh, fill the garden roars. When they attacked Mellah, Jew chlpfiv thought the Interests, wltos-- Washington." Mr. James in his statement says flatly that ho believed, and still believes, that tho Harmon headquarters had authority for Its bulletin, he is, would be more powerful than tlie people; and so, for the same reaeou he is undertaking to leave Kentucky's vote In the hands of a few men, rather than to allow the of the State whole Democracy He was opposed to the to speak. rule of the people last year because his bosses were, and lie is opposed to It this year because his bosses are, for he Is on their pay roll. "As to the question of nn organization In Kentucky, I want no orI I want no machine. ganization. never did have one; I never expect to have one, but I Intend to see to It 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 it 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 same treatment as one who is so fortunate as to own millions. Why Seven should I want a machine? years of ofilclal life are before me already, given by a confiding and great Democracy. Committees will have to be reorganized four years from now before any benefit can possibly accrue to me from such organization. "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 rank and file and I believe I will have the same rank and file back of me in this tight. But at least, if I fall, it will be fighting and fighting for the rule of the plain Democrats of asnt lh thf quarter, the Infuriated mob, bent on pillage, tore the clothing from men, women and children alike and these, shrieking with tcrjyir, raced for refuge into the palaco 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 furniture, were first hacked to pieces and then plied In the streets and set on fire. The streets are a picture of desoHere and there are to be lation. seen the naked corpses of persons who were struck down while tryfrom the frenzied ing to escape Moors. At the French, British and other consulates bread is being supplied to the starving refugees, and the to find Consuls are endeavoring some kind of shelter for the homeless. Not all the bodies of tho 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 horrifying manner. One of tlie assassins of Colonel Lory confessed that tho Moorish women were tlie ringleaders In his murder. They tied ills arms and feet and then slowly stabbed him to deatli with polgnards. Many arrests of Moorish soldiers and citizens of Fez have been effected. The prisoners will be tried by courtmartial and subjected to military law. Wealthy l'nrmer Suicide1-- . and in 111 health, Despondent Pole Watton CO. n wealthv Boone county farmer, who lived two inlL-Bangor, Maine, May 4. A surgi- west of Burlington, Ky., commlttel by cal operation has been found Thursday morning suicide to recover a lot of teaspoons shooting himself In tlie head. wns well known which disappeared one at a time Tlie deceased from a ward of the Eastern Maine through Boone county, having been Insane Hospital here. a resident there all his life, and had wealth. When the mystery was solve'd by accumulated considerable the discovery that one ot tho pa- He is survived by a wife and sevtients was swallowlnn the mhglng eral children. aitl"les, Drs. W. C. Mason ana E. B. Sanger recovered from the man's Tile K. E. A. nl Louisville. stomacli 19 teaspoons. The Kontucky Educational AssoSevontPon of them belonged to ciation is a tremendous power and the hoi Itnl, and two had presum- inlluonce for good in the educationbofore the al life of the State. ably been swallowed It should bo man wns committed. the greatest deliberative body of . the State.because It is Inaugurating GETS DEATH PENALTY monaures and lighting for leforms FOR CRIMINAL ASSAULT of the greatest conctivnlile Importance to the wolfnro of tho State. It Ky., May 2. John should have the active support and Louisville, y for encouragement of every teacher In Connors wns convicted Timlnally assaulting RoEalecn tills county, and every one who can aged nine years. In tho possibly do so should attend the big .rd of St. Peter's Catholic mpctlng in Louisville on June 2- rM'joinlng the parochhl schoo1, where the child attended, on FebruIt I.h (iicnt StulT. ary 19. The penalty was death In Those who find nourishment In the electric chnlr. This was the , Tfond trial, the first, trial resulting the unspoken word and tho ti"?i""-should derlvp. fgre"' 'py from Mr. !t a hung Jurv. vnwrlttejv biochure, focsove'.t's xTvo Br'Us'i Ti.ni'lc fMt "What I TMuk the TarLT." has reached a tolal o! $1,300,000. New York Herald. X1XKTEKX Kentucky." TEASPOONS TAKEN FROM STOMACH s nec-csh.i- ry Ora-bovsk- y, r gjSjteam: rf ' PAGE TWO. THE HARTFORD HERALD refugees here and bad returned to their homes, are now coming back. The Indications are now that a great many of the flood refugees will bo compelled to return to Hickman to be cared for. The break in the West Hickman levee is being rapidly filled, sand bags being used, and If It were not for this wdrk the entire western part of the town and the large manufacturing plants would again be flooded. WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1912. Kentucky to teach the farmers how to build concrete silos. Tho expert from Washington will holp construct the first few silos and teach some ono or moro men In this State how tho work should be dono and then the men here can carry on. the work. Commissioner Newman says he will furnish the frame work inside which tho concrete silos will be built, and a man to show the farmers how to do tho work and expects many farmers to take advantage of this opportun ity to got a first-clasilo at a small cost. He estimates that any farm of 100 acres can save at least $250 every year by having a silo, and when ono of these concrcto silos is built it will last practically forever. It has been clearly demonstrated that these concrete silos keep the stock feed sweet and nice or many months. Mr. Nowman estimates that In two years ho will help build enough silos in this State to save the farmers nearly $2,000,000 a year. The time for building tho silos is In warm weather and tho expert from Washington will come to Kentucky in tho next few weeks and begin his work of instruction. ss M y ' i v M 1 1 If ft i. ' Tho Ingenious Fanner. THIS HAPPENED IN CHICAGO After hatching chickens from his 4 Incubator, Allen McNeal, a farmer living near Graham, Nodaway coun- Was Grabbed Up from the ty, conceived the Idea of hatching young grasshoppers to feed his Away Street chickens. Ho got a few shovcls-fu- l the dnrk." Ration Rolls. in An Auto. With Fire. of dirt in a place where he believed How About This? grasshoppers had deposited eggs, "Patronizze home institutions" THE SITUATION AT HICKMAN placed them In the incubator and RETURNED AND THROWN OUT MODERN VIEW OP Sl'IMECT cries the country editor from week awaited developments. The scheme" to week. "That Is right," says the Chicago, III., May 2. Countess Torras, La., May 2. Relief is worked to perfection. Tho warmth Alfred I. Ritchie, a Bible go being rushed to hundreds of ma caused the eggs to hatch, and in a Gertrude Gorecka, 19 years old,' deof wide reputation In the Unit merchant, "give it to those who ed States and Canada, declares that to some other town to buy goods." rooned families in tho inundated few days McNeal had a big swarm scendant of a noble Polish family Miami (Mo.) and a student in the University of everyone goes to Hell. .Mr. Ritchie Then, with his heart filled with teirltory north of this place, re- of grasshoppers. ,.. ,,,. innrnrotntinns nn tho Til-- 1 kindness to the loyal editor, he ports from which state that condi- News. Chicago, was kidnaped by three "' tions are extremely pitiable and "e" men In an automobile, drugged and and ' senus ms Ju worK l)Ie that appear sensational paper Before Edison. robbed of Jewelry and money while critical In different sections. Food Along a new line, In an Interview utilizes a piece of wrapping for BOods or ' Teacher Who was the first elec- tho car was speeding through Jackrecentlv, he gave out some Interest-- 1 t0 wrlt0 nn onler on n customer, ' depots have been located at points son Park, and then thrown out of of dlstrl trician? convenient for purposes Inu Information regarding various send a statement to Logan County button. Pupil Noah. He made the arc tho car on tho Midway, according prominent Bible subjects that re Funny, Isn't It? to a report that was made to tho Conditions In the Hlack river sec- light on Mount Ararat. iu!re more than ordinary consider News. police of tho Hyde Park Station to tion ure said to almost beggar de ution to obtain their full meaning. OLLIE JflMESSTfiNDS day. scription. In many instances par- A FRIGHTFUL METHOD "I have a new cure for Infidell- - UIMP PI flRFll FMl FMFMY The young woman is said to be ents and their children have sought tv." declared Mr. Ritchie. "To IIIII1L I UULU I Ull U1IUIIII In a serious condition as a result of refuge on hastily constructed rafts, prescribe the remedy wo must find PAT OH PTTEBANCE SINKS MERCHANT SHIP which they OF SUICIDE ADOPTED the hysteria share with live stock. caused by the expethe cause, which I believe is the rience. A. S. Simmons, who arrived from a inability of the people to under Count Gorecka visited his and in lucid mo- Says the Harmon Headquarters stand how a God of all Love and And NO Turks Arc Drowned trip over Concordia, Catahoula and Henderson County Girl, Being daughter ments she told him something of parishes, said that all of Tensas "Wisdom' and Justice, and having all Circulated An Untruth If wore under water her experiences. these parishes Power, could permit present condiDespondent, Sets Fire at Entrance of Gulf "They gagged mo and blindfoldwith tho exception of a few towns tions and conduct human affairs as Anyone Did. protected by levees. ed me," she said. "When wo were proclaimed by tho dominant creeds of Smyrna. to Herself. In the park they took off tho cac Christendom, t'nbclievers choke "The inhabitants are homeless of and mado'me drink something out f Washington, May 3. Represen-o- f sit the Idea of the great Creator .May 2. Ono and destitute," said he, "and they Constantinople, Ky May Henderson, y providing an eternity of any kind hundred a bottle. I believe it was sonio ("tatlvo Ollle James made a Turks were have no means of support. The and forty herself with pf torture for His own creatures, drowned at the entrance of the situation In the Rlack river section then setting fire to her coal oil was kind of a drug. One of the men f statement about the contested bul clothing 1 ever saw. Five especially If He was gifted with tho Gulf thous something sharp Into my letin Issued by the Harmon headof Smyrna oarly this morning Is the worst the manner In which Miss Helen stuck and I think" was of the foreknowledge persons along tho arm, that most white It an injection quarters here last Friday, quoting belong- and when the steamer Texas, girl, of Smith, a pretty brown-eye- d liuinan family go there, and that ing to tho Archipelago-America- n Illacl: rlvor are In a desperate fix. another drug. I tried to scream Percy Haly and John C. C, Mayo suicide lato this aftercommitted when the gag was taken off my as having pledged themselves to He had all Wisdom to plan other- Steamship Company, struck a mine The Government supplies received noon at her home at Onton, Ky., a many famiwise, and all Power to do as He mouth, but two of the men choked Gov. Harmon after a personal call there are Inadequate, and sank. few miles east of Sebree. Truly, the general rollg-iou- s pleased. me so out- fat tho Washington headquarters of It Is alleged that the disaster was lies expecting the flood, built rafts, For several years the girl had cry." that I could mako no teaching on this line is a foe the Governor In tho Ebbitt House, due to tho Texas deviating from tho and when the water catno they been despondent ovor an affair, tho goods to leason and the mother of doubt. course Indicated by the pilot boat moved their household The girl, whoso father, Count of this city, on April 2G. "The nible, taken as a whole, preceding her through the mine nboard. Horses, cows, pigs, chick- nature of which was unknown to Stephano Gorecka, is a wealthy rear "If there- - is any falsehood being her family but which was believed estate dealer on presents no such idea of our bless Held. ens, dogs nnd cats are sharing to the West Side, was circulated, Jt ls being circulated by be over an old She crossing ed Heavenly Father, but prnlsesy the Midway on her way to the Harmon headquarters," said these rafts with the farmers and was driven insane sweetheart. k At the tlmo of tho and was sent to classes when glorifies and exalts Ills holy char- boycott anchthree men Jumped Mr. James. "My part In the busifleet to which the Texas their families. Tho rafts aro the the asylum at Hopkinsvlllc about acter. And so, when understood, it belonged, and which Consists of ored to trees ar-ness Is simple. On Sunday, April that's the way ,Uo years ago. She left there only from an auto and seized her. will be as natural for average hu- eight vessels bearing the names of they are living now. When I passThe car ran Into the park at high 28, I saw a copy of the Louisville man beings to emulate, love and American States, was authorized to ed through tho swamps I saw many a short time ago and was brought speed. It was not until the long Herald of Saturday, April 27, with praise God as It has been In all hu- fly tho United States flag by tho of these rafts. The bellowing of back home. stretch of road on the lake shore a Washington dispatch, including She had made several attempts was man history for them to worship as United States Consul General be the cattle could be heard a great reached that tho men robbed this bulletin now in controversy. I leaders and heroes those who have cause the company was largely con- distance. The people not only need to end her life and early this morn- her. While one of them held the was amazed. I could not believe ing her family found her at a pond gags shown greatness of character, eithin place, and another held her my eyesight. I asked for a copy of food for themselves, but provender by American Interests. near the house preparing to Jump to prevent struggling, er In power or wisdom or benevo- trolled Texas was flying tho Turkish for their live stock." the third re- the- bulletin from- the Harmon headTho in. Sho was rescued and watched moved lence. When rightly shown, the and United States flags, and was her rings and earrings, quarters, and' two of these were The water continued to rise In character of our God will compel engaged In carrying malls from this district yesterday, tho gauge vqry closely. which were studded with diamonds, sent out to me. Questioned closely. Shortly after noon she disappearthe admiration and loyalty of the Constantinople to the Levant. at the Torras bridge showing an ed again and the family, hearing and a gold chain that was around C. A. Cotterlll, publicity manager masses infinitely more than the her neck. of the Harmon campaign, stood by within twenty-f- screams in advance of four-tentIt was at first stated that the the orchard near by, ran character of a Caesar, or a Napo- Texas was an American vessel, the our The trip through the park was every statement made by the bullehours. The gauges at the out and found her running about leon, or an Edison, or a Bryan, or a error arising from the fact that sho mouth of tho Red, the Mississippi with her clothing In flames. Be- completed in less than 15 minutes tin, Insisting that , Haly and Mayo Itoosevelt. What Is the reason that is part of and the car was driven back: to-- the were In his office last Friday; that - and Atchafalaya showed an equal of a local ln nlinxnAtn nt flnA la ft I fl cern tradingthe fleet the name ofcon- rise. Old river has submerged the fore they could be extinguished, tho Midway; where ft was slowed up they dictated the statements asthe under flesh on her ody was falling off. and . Teverenced, that the Holy Name of the glrr thrown out on a grass to them, and authorized the old gauge and anothor has been Medical aid was ll UVCRHIDIIIli rendered but with- plot. After lying In tho parkway cribed of the Saviour are fllCUIlieiUKU-AlUt;- ! "Himself and publication. Mr. Cotterfll has been erected. Company. out avail and she died at 5:30 for a short time, she was revived made thp commonest "cuss" words? the confidante of Presidents in his Previous Marks Broken. The Gulf of Smyrna is one of the o'clock. "We answer that It Is because His by the cold rain "and went to Blaine long service with tho Associated mi New Orleans, May 2. All preby the finest harbors in the Mediterranean character is blasphemed Hall, where sho fen unconscious. Press In Washington, and his InItself the prlnciplal vious Mississippi river high water HIS RICH VOICE KEPT and Smyrna erroneous "Hell" teaching of de- seaport my natural sistence overcame NOOSE FROM HIS NECK of Aslastlc Turkey. The en- records from Baton Rouge south For Sale, Farms All sizes, from doubts. ceived Christianity. y trance to the gulf was extensively were smashed the flood and 6 to 300 acres. We can please you "Well did Pastor Russell, of tho "After taking all these precauago by the Turk- tide is increasing at tho rate of Sharon, Pa., April 27. A re- If you want to buy land. Brooklyn, N. Y., Tabernacle say: mined some time tions to ascertain that the Harmon ish authorities In order to protect three to flvo inches a day. Extreme markable baritone voice has saved A. C. YEISER & CO., 'If the Bible does teach that etermanagers had Issued the bulletin, port agalnBt an attack by the anxiety as to the stability of the Velka Ankrovitch from the hangnal torture Is the fate of all except the Hartford, Ky. which was mimeographed, and of Italian fleet. levees south of the Red rlvor land- man's noose, for the Board of Parthe saints. It should be preached, which a great number had been to Gov. HE FINALLY DIED FROM The Texas was a vessel of 261 ing is entertained by the Federal dons has recommended yes, thundered, weekly, dally, hourstruck off, and that they stood by tons net register, built at Newcas- and State engineers, and unless Tcner that he commute the death EFFECTS OF DOG'S BITE It when questioned, ly! If It does not so teach, the fact I accepted It as was at sunshine continues during the pres- sentence of the murderer to life should be made known, and the tle, England, in 1888. She a fact and commonted on it first called the Olympla, then ent week, they freely admit they Imprisonment. When the condemn Rice Gregory, of Hebbardsvllle, foul stain dishonoring God's Holy the Marguerite, and f- have little upon which to base ed man was told the news, he cried Henderson county, formerly of Name removed!'' inally received the name of tho hopes of winning the hard fight. for Joy' and exclaimed "Thank who was bitten about 60 FINALLY "Everybody goes to Hell. Why? RECOGNIZED AS Texas. At New Orleans this morning the God!" days ago by a rabid dog, and taken Tiecau8e Hell Is the grave, or death PLAIN "CHAMP" CLARK Then he broke forth into a hymn to the Pasteur Institute at Chicago river gauge registered 20.C feet, good and bad condition, to which The Demons of the Swamp alike go to remain until the blessed Are mosquitoes. As they sting, they the highest water ever officially re- with such expressioneyesthat tears for treatment, died as a result of James Beauchamp (pronounced of Sheriff the Infection from the bite. time of resurrection, judgment nnd put deadly malaria germs In the corded here. Tho gaugo at Baton were brought to tho Beecham) Clark was known In his Rouge showed 41.9 feet, or more Martin Grain. When the dog bit him he paid restoration to perfection of all the blood. Then follow the icy chills voice no attention to the wound, and nev- early life as James B. Clark. Soon The prisoner's wonderful obedient. The Hebrew word sheol and the fires of fever. Tho appe-tlt- o than a foot above the previous high after leaving law school he found caused many to work In his behalf, is positively the only "hell" word files and the strength falls; record, and rising at the rate- 'Including scores of prominent wo er gave it a serious thought. When that a J. B. Clark was getting mail !he first symptoms of rabies appearIn tho Old Testamont. Its Hebrew nlso malaria often paves the way half a foot a day. A rlso of twoe in the was recorded at Natchez and men. Often, unknown to tho pris- ed, he remembered the little Inci- at nearly every definition Is tho unseen state, or for deadly typhoid. Hut Electric tenths Sometimes they got his visitors wero al- dent, and physTcians were summon- country. - oner, music-lovin- g h of a foot rise at Vlcksthp place of tho dead. It occurs Hitters kill and cast out the malaletters and sent them back to the elxty-fiv- e times, and nowhere Is the ria germs from the blood; glvo you hurg. Above VIcksburg the waters lowed to stand In the Jail corridor ed. After a consultation by Dr. Cy- writers. points ex- and listen, while Ankrovitch sang rus Graham, Dr. W. T. Travis and word "fire" associated with It. a fine appetite and renew your receded slightly at all "I tried lopping off the 'James' Dr. E. L. Busby, It was decided to "Solomon said, 'There Is no work, strength. "After long suffering," cept Cairo, where there was a rise fono melody after another. and traveling as plain 'Beauchamp a foot and a half for the past nor device, nor knowledgo In sheol,' wrote Wm. Frctwoll, of Lucamn, of take Mr. Graham to the Pasteur In- Clark,' .SOME SPRING FASHIONS but my friends Insisted uphours. He loft Im- on and he adds, 'whither thou goest.' N. C "three bottles drove all the twenty-fou- r FOR THE WOMEN AND MEN stitute at Chicago. pronouncing it 'Bochamp,' or abJunior United States Engineer mediately for Chicago, accompan- Why? Ilecause all In Hell are dead. mnlnrln frnm mv HVntnm nrwl T'vn breviated it to 'Bo Clar,' " said Natchez reported -- "Referring to the resurrection, tho had good health' ever since." Rest f ". gardening costume Is IIflll liv Tlr W T Trnvlo ATro -.- .(,- the Speaker, telllnc mo how h A neat the engineers' headquarters hero ory and Hugh Jennings. After lU'Velator says "Death and Hell r i 1,..! n iiv shown In t'.'.o select shorn. Tho v that hundreds of head of frook Is simply mndo of sprigged hours of terrible suffering, ho died made tho change. "I thought I marginal reference reads "or tho Ills. iiOc at H. Williams, m would save them trouble by abcnttlo from the overflowed lands In urave") dolivored up the dead (not dimity or" mull, with short sleeves while at the Institute. Death was breviating It myself and began to Concordia parish nre swarming on A .ll'RV ,AV NEEDED IN ihe living) which were In them." finishing In double rows of old caused by hydrophobia. write it 'Champ Clark.' It has Mr. Gregory had a host of friends "'Sheol Is translated twonty-nln- o ALL CRIMINAL CASES tho levees, endangering the levees lace. The neck Is cut been a good asset. operaimpeding further and the and was universally popular. times as "hell," three times as For bo usually printed In It Is enough to 'and edged with the same laco. With full. Look at tinrty-tnre- e The newspapers are commontlnir tions of tho forces at work on the this goes a dainty Paris hat, with tho past number of years ho had any list "Hit, and times as of 'those present' in the paMr. Schoenberger embankments been a prominent farmer of the pers. "grave." In tho revised version, favorable upon a provision which brilliant ornaments and aigrettes Others aro mentioned by surbheol" is translated as "hell" only has been nut. into tho now Constltn-- ! reported that ho had already ro- - and a wroath of silk flowers. The 'lebbardsvlllo neighborhood. names only, but my name Is printmovc1 r,on heart of catt,e from the Mon of Ohio which says that a ver- -' about twenty times out of the costume Is finished off with an J. W. Jordan, a well known dont-s- t ed 'Champ Clark."' From this, It times, and Its Greek equiv- diet can ho returned In nil civil ,evces nonr Natchez and will parasol. It is intended of Hopklnsvllle, Ky., recently may be inferred that the Speaker is fulro additional boats to move by an agreement of three- alent, "hades." occurring eleven to bo worn while sitting on the iad an operation ' ers" for his kidney altvo to tho value of advertising'. times In the Now Testament, is not of the Jury. It Is claimed porch directing your huBband rouble, 7 Diiy nnd n,Pnt mounted patrol of but ho says: "The first World's Work. translated as "hell" at all, but Is 'hat under this provision thore will to set out the rod sago. eal relief I got was after taking tho IevPes ,n New Orleans Has been ' where left untranslated, because the Bible he but few hung Juries. This pro- A nobby golfing suit for men Is Toley Kidney Great Weekly at n Low Price. Pills. They eased Tho engineers say Tevlscrs knew It did not mean eter- vision Is no now thing. It is a part established. a black cutaway coat ovor a white "errlblo pain in my back and the Tho Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer, Mloro ls no danger of a break near of theConstltutlon of Kentucky and nal torment. vest, with gray striped trousers. paper recently transmoro good than any-hln- g a twelve-pag- e "Only sixteen out of tho sixty-si- x it has worked admirably. There ul cuy oul l0 prevent overnow, The shirt has French cuffs, and the I had tried. I gladly rocom-nen- d formed Into the size and appearance' the levees in tho commercial dls h books use the word "hell," In aro not as many hung tlo should be some solid color, tied them." Sold by all deal- of a daily, will be furnished In conthe English translation. St. Paul Juries in civil cases In Kentucky as trlct are being raised and the a small knot. This suit Is worth ers, m nection with tho Hartford Herald are bolng strengthened Jn wrote fourteen books of tho Now there were urJer the old Constltu- 'vhlle sitting on n bench, criticising at only $1.35 for the two papers. Testament, but never mentioned lon which required a unanimous at all points. the plays of the folks who work at WILL TEACH FARMERS TO ThlB price stands good on renewals Situation ut Hickman. "'hell fire." John never mentioned verdict. Wo need the provision In ho gamo. 1JUILD CONCRETE SILOS for Tho Herald. Tho Weekly Enof Hickman, Ky., May 2. Tho Mis- ' Men's clothes this spring aro cut It in his Gospel, nor In his three criminal cases. If quirer Is an ideal newspaper, con"Epistles; nor did Peter In his two a Jury, could return a verdict In all sissippi river continues to rise rapn& made to make the wearer look Frankfort, April 29. Comrals-ilon- er taining a big variety of reading and Epistles, nor Ruth, Ezra, Nehemlah, criminal cases, few guilty men idly here nnd will, no doiiht. reach is slim as possible. Extra heavy of Agriculture J. W. New-na- n is especially suited to the farming, Esther, Jeremiah, Danjel, Hosea, "ould esdape and crime would rap- - n stage that all of the 'lowlands will find that by wearing' two suits has, completed arrangements' classes. I( Is Democratic and pro decrease. Ellzabethtown Sgaln be flooded. Some of the per- Jhoy will appear twice as slim as with the Department of Agriculture gressive This Is Joel, Obadlah, MIcah, Nahum, Zeph-anla- 'dly certainly a low sons from flooded homes, who were otherwise. Haggal, Zecharlah or Mala- - Vews. Chicago Post. U Washington to send a man to price for a lot of good reading, tf. I and-Carrie' chl. Strange tbat atl thefao lioly j Apostles and Prophets did not harp RELIEF RUSHED SAYS EVERYONE upon the danger of falling Into that "lake of Are" which la supposed to be the doom of billions of human HELL ity! "No wonder that men turn away in disgust, full of fear and doubt! church pews are From Flood in No wonder that SouthHell empty And Declares and no ono seems to care! No wonder that hundreds of thousern Sections. Grave. Means ands are infidels, or are fast becoming such! The sure cure, the only SAYS NOWHERE IN THE BIBLE euro, Is to get a knowledgo of nod's NEW RECORD OF MISSISSIPPI true character, for to know Him is present-da- y to love Him. With IS There Anything Mentioned Bibles, Bible Helps, Concordances, Government Now Has 100,- DIble Dictionaries, and Studies in 000 Refugees On Its That Connects Hell tho Scriptures, no one need bo In THE COUNTESS COjSjO the TDJUFFERERS the W KIDNAPED That And Robbed While on Way to University. ". j r to-da- y, to-da- i anti-Gree- s - 1 1 ,,., ,,,,, to-da- .h.. post-offic- ! one-tent- I , e(,ni. cll"l,(' - ... flr-ntr- - il. i I es -handled ' j one-tent- threo-fourtli- B h, -- tfc. " b'tfa ""'"" .li!::-..- . ,.. W I R7,' fmWj pmm ji&jgi ygw'jjj j fwMT'fl'j-LgV'- ' HuiiiCjgmLj 1'jigi.M gyr tw..-ta!j- " "jssssr WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1012. lemagogue. Scruplas, Wh- THE HARTFORD HERALD .lid you say? In TAGE THREE. TEDDY'S DEAL COLOMBIA cheek, gull, H04.h!s fat- mous "Dear Hanimau" coine-ln-alotUv bi ought $200,-00- 0 with which Harrlraan said, be0 fore the Hughes' Committees, votes In Now York wore cor50,-00- CARGO 15 TRANSPORTED J taken from them and pervertby Legislatures faithless throughout the country. It Is necessary to maintain popular rulo against the slrong pressure being been ed HKa Perkins, the organTrust, izer of the One of the Most Question- associated Harvester Morgan closely To the Flowery Kingdom Interwith the ests which absolutely dominate Regularly. able in History. Wall Street, now an ofllcer of the Steel Trust, as a director of the N. OF 8,000 CELESTIALS 0 BONES FAIR SPECIMENOF HIS WORK V. Life Insurance Co., added more to this vast corruption 'fund.. Yet, In the face of this Characteristic of a Reckless shameless record, this civic, moun- Shipped Back to China for tebank has the effrontery to boast O. W. $50,-00- rupted. Adventurer Thirsting for Fame. ROOSEVELT SOME "POLICIES" ' When the devastating war between the States hnd raged for four long years, the South once more represented to Franco nnd England that, having fully demonstrated her ability to protect life and property by her regularly organized' Government, she was entitled, under the customs and laws of naof tions, to their acknowledgment her Independence. This they were In the act of doing, which, If doner would have unquestionably resulted In the dissolution of ' the Union, but the North pleaded that they were not Justified so long as the South was unable to break the blockade and keep her ports open. So the recognition was delayed and, In the meantime, the Confederacy collapsed, and the Union was saved (Stick a by the merest accident. pin at four years, please.) After the warship Oregon, with decks cleared for battle, made her startling voyage of 14,000 miles around Cape Horn, nothing honor able could have kept the United States from digging a ditch across the narrow strip of land connecting the two continents and dividing the two oceans in the Western Hemisphere. With eager ear always to the ground, St. Teddy, the Truthful, discovered the sibilant swash of this popular demand and with characteristic vehemence and haste, at once got tremendously busy. But when his terms of agreement on right-of-wa- y terms reeking with graft and treachery were submitted to the Colombian Congress, It refused to ratify them. This was the biggest kind of a chunk In the wheels of a very largo and ambitious scheme, but you Just simply can't keep Saints like his nlbbs, the resourceful and blatant, and 'his m friend Cromwell, down. A maxim In Is, "Seek whom the PRESIDENT TAFT'S OPINION criminology OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT crime profits." Somebody.as unscrupulous as en"Mr. Roosevelt ought not to bo terprising, then undertook a most dastardly and Infamous Job, and1 selected the candidate of any parHe may now bp pavsoon we began to hear what proved ty. ing tho way, If successful in this to be Inspired rumors of a revolution In Colombia and sixty days be- campaign, to remain the Chief Exfore there was any Bight of an out- ecutive of the nation fo. as mnny break when our warship reported tcrnw as Mr natural life would permit." "all quiet, no sign of revolution" sixty days before there was the "If Mr. Roosevelt Is necessary to slightest pretense of an organization to protect life and property or the Government now, why not lathat could have broken a blockade ter?" this reckless characof "One who so lightly regards conter recognized the unborn republic mock stitutional 'principles and the indeof Panama, treated with plenipotentiaries and commenced pendence of tho Judiciary one who the marvel of modern engineering. is so naturally impatient of legal If such a Mad Mullan had worn restraints could not safely be Inthe crown of England and France, trusted with successive Presidenwhen Fort Sumpter fell, what tial terms." would now bo the political maps of "By misstatements throughout the world? Can't we seo the tremendous dnnger with such a heed- tho country, Mr. Roosevelt had led china many people to believe charges less bull In our priceless pride made against me and my adminisshop? commendable With public sentiment Is committed to tration." the spirit of International Arbitra"Mr. Roosevelt has failed to live tion. It Is a good stride In and promises to sparo 'up to his policy of a square deal and violated a solemn promise to untold treasures and 'bloodshed. Now helpless, hapless Colombia, tho Amerlcnn people not to be a from whom a giant with a giant's candidate for a third term. sheer, brutal strength, has roped a That promise and his treatment of large boundary of her sacred do- It only throw an Informing light on main, unable to redress her cruel the valuo that ought to bo attached wrongs by force of arms, Impover- to any promlso he may make." ished by the horrors of a rebellion "Mr. Roosevelt'sColumbus speech Instigated by a trusted neighbor, In the name of a "Square Deal," asks sent a thrill of alarm through all us to submit to international arbi- the members of the community." Taft at Boston. tration. Was ever a country reducB to such embarrassing and ed Mrs. R. Brant, 11115 Paden St., And to circumstances? 'whom do we owe this outrage upon Parkersburg, W. Va had an attack kida sister republic an outrage that of la grippe which left her bad makes honor wince and hang Its ney trouble, and she suffered much Then head In shame but a reckless ad- severe pain and backache. venturer who "knowB neither fear sho'i heard of Foley Kidney Pills them a nor scruples?" If we yield to her and say 8: "After taking my back prayer, as every Instinct of honor short time the pain left my own PROGRESSIVE MEASURE wo shall he convicted of a and I am again able to do demands, Kidney Foley Pills BECOMING MORE POPULAR perfidy as hard to bollove as to housework. Sold by we refuse, wo brand our helped mo wonderfully." bear. It m The Initiative and referendum honor with a "Scarlet Letter" and all dealers. will be a big issue in the coming) prove to the world that all our campalgn.both in State and Nation, canting and mouthing about nabut principally in the severalStatcs, honor and international artional where it is more urgent and where bitration is the very ersence of For Infants and Children. it can be of more immediate benesneaking, unmitigated Insufferable ThiKhuJ You Haw Always Bought' fit. hypocrisy. The Initiative and referendum And yet, some there ere who Bears the presents good, sound Democratic would risk four years more which Signature of doctrine. It stands for -- people's f this fretful, inmay mean forty rule. It means a return to the contumatolerant, domineering, power-maSubscribe for The Herald. $1 a year. peoplo of that power which has passion-ren- t cious, He-ce- nt world-advanceme- nt tgno-mlnlou- young a class of character-formin- g Decent Politics," men In "Applied and the hardihood to actually pose as a paragon of political virtue. With flaming rhetoric, he Is now Bnlllnger, denouncing Lorlmer, Stephenson & Co., as Taft's tools of Stephenson's political debauchery. 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 $60,000 in the New York primary (Tnft spent $6,000) and $100,000 In Pittsburg, Pa. Every vote he got In New York cost him $4. Tliis 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 $30,000 to this dirty fund; and another subscriber was A. S. Ward, the largest carpet manufacturer In America, whoso self Interest In Schedule K Is paramount. What could point out with greater certainty tho cause of hostility of these Trusts to Taft, and their nominaanxiety for Roosevelt's tion? Why shouldn't they spend millions for a man who prostituted his high office to their greed? disclosures rnnke this plain. A cardinal crime against a republic Is to corrupt Its franchise. Now, if he descends Into the cesspools of New York and "muckrakes" votes at $4 a vote, and spends $100,000 In Pittsburg for the triumph of his spotless principles, how much will he spend and what Is more vital to public morals and the taxpayers, where does he get enough to corrupt sufficient votes to ram the nomination down him In spite of his vigorous proNay, more, If disgraced test? Stephenson should be scourged from the Senate a marked malefactor, In the name of his flaunted "Decent. Politics," to what depths of Infamy should Justice consign XXX this Titan of hypocrisy? Rockport, Ky., May 1. Burial Alongside of Their Ancestors. brought upon lawmaking bodies by Big Business. It is not a fad; Its most consistent enemies have quit calling It that. It is not fostered by political muckrakers nnd demagogues. It Is the preachment of the great leaders In this country, irrespective of party. It is the burning Issue of the day. It has been said thnt the people will get tired of the initiative and referendum In due time. Facts defeat this assertion. Lincoln Dally Courier. Helps n Judge in Ita l'i. Justice Ell Cherry, of (Jlllls Mills, Couldn't Walk! "I used to be troubled with a weakness peculiar to women," writes Mrs. Anna Jones, of Kenny, 111. "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." CARDUI TAKE T. WomansTomc CARRIED OUT Tenn., was plainly worried. A bad sore on his leg had baffled several Recently a British steamship left doctors and long resisted all remethe port of Seattle, Washington, U. dies. "I thought It was a cancer," "At last I used Iluck-len'- s S. A., with a remarkable total of he wrote. Arnica Salve, and was com8,000 passengers, not one of which cost tho owners a dollar In food pletely cured." Cures burns, bolls, from tho port of sailing to the ulcers, cuts, bruises nnd piles. 2j cents at James H. Williams. m Orient. The 8,000 travelers on the outward-bound all IMPORTANT REASONS were freighter WHY A MAN SHOULD SWEAR 'tween decks stowed comfortably beneath the spacious hatches, and Rev. Albert Marlon Hyde, pastor not a complaint or murmur came Congregational Porter all of tho from one of them. They were Chinese, and some of them had Church, of Brockton, Mass., whose been buried so long that there was "decalogues" for men and women really only a set of bleached bones have been spread broadcast, comes within the again with reasons why every reIn the caskets placed thinking man should plain pine boxes In which they were spectable swear just as often and as hard as embarked. Every few years the Chinese ho can. Here they are: gather up their dead for shipment 1. Because It is such nn elegant to and final reinterment In tho soil Kingdom. For a way of expressing one's thoughts. Flowery of the 2. Because It Is such n conclumonth or more previously to the sailing of this vessel, local under- sive proof of taste and good breedtakers and those In other centers ing. 3. Because It Is n sure way of all over the Pacific Coast were busy senllng making one's self agreeable to digging up the coffins and them In other caskets for shipment. one's friends. 4. Because It Is positive eviFrom all Western points trains brought largo numbers of coffined dence of the acquaintanceship with Chinese to make up this cargo of good literature. '. Because it furnishes such a remarkable freight. good example and training for Little ceremony was shown In the young boys. plain white pine transfer of the 6. Because it is such a good boxes from the pier to the freight- way of increasing one's A handful of Celestials, agents er. 7. Because It Is Just what a of the society which looks after the mans' mother enjoys having her dead Chinese In the U. S. A., stood son doing. around and stolidly watched the 8. Because It would look so nice operation of hoisting the boxes In print. from the .pierhead In bunches of 9. Because it is such a help to and lowering them Into the four manhood and virtue In many ways. yawning holds of the steamer. 10. Because it is such an InfalThe sailors of the ship, also Chi- lible way Improving of one's pay much nese, did not appear to chances In the hereafter. attention to tho work of loading their departed countrymen Into the HOW'S THIS? vessel for their last voyage. All We offer One Hundred Dollars Rethat might Indicate anything unto- ward for any case of Catarrh that can ward taking place was the quantity not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. of rice strewn around the decks, F. J. Cheney & Co., " which looked as If It had been Toledo, Ohio. showered there after a bridal party We, the undersigned, have known The of a death watch. Instead F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and smell of roast pig and chicken com- believe him perfectly honorable In all ing from the fo'c'stle also proved business transactions, and financially the Chinese sailors loyal to their able to carry out any obligations made belief that a dead Celestial must by bis firm. never be sent on his last trip withWnldlng, KInnan & Marvin, meal a la carte, out a first-clas- s Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. comprising the above. Hall's Catarrh Curo Is taken InterThese silent tourists were neithnally, acting directly upon the blood er cabin nor steerage passengers, big freighter, and mucous surfaces of the system. and, once aboard tho per never caused tho slightest trouble Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c bottle. Sold by all druggists. anxiety to the officers, unless or Take Hall's Family Pills for constiany of them got a conjuring up the spooks perambulat- pation. Idea of Chinese i. ing her broad decks as she calmly The Modern School. ploughed her way across the seas to "Fifth grnde this year, Tommy?" her destination. "Yes, sir." This shipment of departed Ori "You're in decimals or fractions entals takes place from various now, no doubt?" ports In the United States every "No, sir. I'm In crochet work few years, tho Chinese exiled there and clay modeling now." nnd desirous of their bones resting A child can't get strong and rofinally on the homeland paying a worms eat Intestinal small weekly sum to a society or- bust while away Its vitality. To give the child purpose. ganized for the When there are enough dead Chinese to a chance to grow, these parasites make a shipment worth while, lo- must be destroyed and expelled. cal undertakers dig up the coffins WHITE'S CREAM VERMIFUGE Is In the various Chinese burial guaranteed to remove the worms: grounds and send them, sealed, to It also puts tho vital organs in healthy, vigorous condition. Price the port of sailing. "Tongs" nnd society affiliations 25c per bottle. Sold by Hartford do not Interfere with this curious Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., Donovan m custom, and once aboard the vessel, & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. lie side by side, laundrymen and CmiKlit in Same Forest. rich merchants, who may have been A Venetian, being asked by a deadly enemies during llfo, but German where his countrymen got both of whom contributed their their lion with wings, replied: mlto to the society superintending "We caught him In the same forthe final Interment. Each coffin Is est whence you found your duly labeled with the name and hiseagle." tory of the Chinaman lying within, and at the port of dlsembarkment each body Is sent to tho locality where the man was born and there Tit Interred for tho last time. Bits. AN OLD CUSTOM self-respetwo-head- 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 vegetable, tonic medicine, for women. Cardui relieves women's sufferings, and builds weak women up to health and strength. If you are a woman, give it a trial. It should help you, for it has helped a million others. It is made from pure, harmless, herb ingredients, which act nromnflv and surolv nn Hip wnmnnin nrrmnc It is a good tonic. Try it Your druggist sells it. ! Ladies' Advisor; Dept.. Chatlanooca Medicine Co.. Chattanoosa. Tenn pasc book. "Home Treatment lor Women." sent tree I M for Special Instructions, and Write to: rsm&sslT9B!BBxmmmimsff3R mini - niMKiiti.i r yy,! s.iawi . ;, YOU WANT a Better JOB? That question will be asked you almost daily by business men seeking yout services, if you qualify take the Draughon Training and show ambition to rise. More BANKERS Indorse DRAUGHON'S Colleges than indorse nil other business colleges COMBINED. 48 Colleges In 18 States. International reputation. Hank inc. Tjiicnrltlnir, Penmanship. Fncllih, Spelling Arithmetic, tatter Writing, Uustnc&f iin r KtE auxiliary uranciir. uoou rusu iuna uuakan i ttu under reasonable conditions. Home Study. Thousands of bankcasfo BooKKeeping. isooKKeepers an over tho United States say that Draughon's iers, bookkeepers, and stenographers ara New System of Bookkeeping saves them holding good positions as the result of from 25 to 50 per cent in work nnd worn. taking Draughon's Home Study. Shorthand. Practically all U. S. offiCATALOGUE. For prices on lessons cial court reporters write the System of HY MAIL, write Jno. F. Drait.hox, biiorthand Uraugnon Colleges teacu. President, Nashville, Tenn. Vox free catWhy? Because they know it is the best, alogue on courne AT COLLEGE, write DRAUGHON'S PRACTICAL BUSINESS COLLEGE Memphis Nashville or or Knoxrillc, Tenn.. or Pod u cab, Ky., or Evansvillc, Ind. ProlKHHlnniil Clinic Barnes & Smith Attorneys At Law - KENTUCKY. HARTFORD, MeHrn. V. II Hitmen hih! C K. Smith n liurlnrr-li- l iinnmiiifti fur thti ueiirral practice uf line, except criminal iiixl illvoro enen, .11 r. smith ImlniT County Attorney, In prevented from Mr l!riic will IrRctlrlnK nucli Hicept lit It practlc. OUtce In lluriTurd ltepuhllcmi bullillui;, Uait-lon- l, Ky. thnttlit-yliitteforiiie- OHIespie Bros., I eae. A SEi I J. M. PORTER, Attorney at Law, EEAVER DAM, KY. Will practice hli profession In Ohio and ad olning counties. Special attention siren to a' Dullness entrusted to his care. FRANK W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, PROPRIETORS. ..BLACKSMITH1NG.. L. FELIX, Attorney at Law, HAETFORD, KY. Will practice hit profession In Ohio and at. lining counties and In the Conn of Apprab Jrlmlnal practice and Collection! specialty, OBlee In the Herald bnlldlnr OTTO C. MARTIN S. And Repair Work A Horseshoeing Specialty KY. I. MCKKNNEY COOGOCCCCOCOOCCCOCOCGCCOOO i HARTFORD, HARTFORD, KY. ..GENERAL INSURANCE.. Life. Accident. Sick And Fire C. Will Also Bond You. Hartin Attorney a.t Lwv Otto 'HARTFORD, KV. Office tip stairs over Wilson .V Crowe, opposite court house. Will In all the p tact Ice his piofessloti courts of this anil adjoining ('(unities nnd Court of Appeals. 'Commercial nnd criminal practice u spec, inlty. nSiwSR'ESTABUSHED wCaresSil it its a ring. r. ap?2?2si HMJgisH diamond, a watch, x32U$qH HftTIB uUP jewelry or stiver. l53S2VfiBf ware, you can ta5rC'S! 'he les' iualit get K33K?s?l at Wwratftl i868.fn3KSi St?t2iEl SffitSSSthe 1.ow"'.Pric"f&.K6SiR w0LDESTMA!L7f isj ror Bimosi nan m icmuij c owtn cluslvelv the Southern trade. Wri'e Address. for our tree illustrated catalogue. UHUtKHUUbt tii p c nn tii. un & Ky. ten - I C. P. Barnes Louisville, Box 2G Go, Every Article Guaranteed. Clean ki HAIR BALSAM PARKER'S p sfa? lrorooti hcn&uf-Jssf- Falls NTr to 1U Xlmir ll falllntr. ItcTinti hair 00 4ftr. to Restore Gray Youthful Color. and sl at Innnrlnt and bciaUfiti th hair. luxuriant growth. Notice , CASTORIA efficiency depends upon your condition. Scott's Emulsion builds, strengthens and sustains robust health. AUDraggUt. Scott k Downe. nioonifield, N. J 1 j- -l If yon want clothes of any HAVE A kind cleaned, call on tho ROUGH RIVER Hartford Pressing Club. We any TELEPHONE can clean and kind of clothes guarantee that you have PLACED IN YOUR RESI- will be satisfactory if they DENCE OR PLACE OP DCSINESS, AND PUT YOURSELF not, nothing will be charged. IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH We are ready to clean your THE Wo also for Long Distance Lines clothes new spring. late samhave a line of TO ALL STATES. ples and we guarantee a perFOR THE COMPANY'S SPECIAL Call on us when in TO THE FARMERS, fect fit. CONTRACT CALL ON OR ADDRESS need of work in our line. J. W. O'BANON. - . b&tf Gt-,lldr- n Cry Local Manager, Hartford, K; . d, CASTORIA ,, FOR FLETCHER'S W. C. SEXTON. Incorporated. Local Manager, Beaver Dam, Ky. Hartford Pressing Club Y. M. C A. Bldg. FRED NALL, Mgr. ioisMfit., .iifcr TAGE FOUR. THE HARTFORD HERALD tucky Democrats have a choice In the raco for President, and they should bo allowed to express their sentiments and have It so recorded. The Fourth District Leader says: The Hartford Herald Is exsomo difficulty In periencing its efforts to ascertain whether, "Our Country," a magazine at Louisville Ky., is , published or Is not backed by the 'whiskey Interests. We would suggest that Mr. Matthews put It to the alcohol test and If It is, then we say "Sick 'era, Heber." Wo have already hinted to "Our Country" that It might find a cure for Its Inability to stand straight enough to answer a simple question without blinking or dodging, and are awaiting the result. "Our Country" seems to have too much alcohol already In Its editorial "system" to permit of any further test along this line. DEMOCRATIC CHOICE. Besides the expression of their cholte for President, two other duties or matters will come up before of Ohio them at the convention county Democrats at Hartford on These the 25th of this month. questions consist of a choice or endorsement for Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, and a delegate to represent the Fourth District at tho National at BaltiConvention Democratic more on the 25th of June. Among the available men for State Chairman are Messrs. Rufus who so of Ashland, II. Vansant, managed the Demo successfully cratic State campaign. Inst year, and Mr. John M. Stevenson, a prominent attorney of the Winohestcr bar. In "the matter Of delegate from the Fourth District, there are two other men to oppose Mr. It. E. Leo of Hartford, whom Slmmerman, The Herald mentioned for this po sition several weeks ago. They are Messrs. Morris Beard, of Hardlns-burand J. L. Druln, of Bards-towAs loyalty to our own county man, who Is a good and worthy Democrat, tho endorsement of the convention hero will In all likelihood go to Mr. Slmmerman, who would certainly represent the old Fourth District with honor and distinction. These are matters deserving the thought and attention of Ohio county Democrats before the convention meets here on Saturday, the 25th Inst. g, n. WEDNESDAY, MAX 8, 1012. re- The Hartjord Herald HEBER MATTHEWS, FRANK I. FELIX, EDITORS. PRANK L. FELIX, Pub. and Prop'r. Entered at the Hartford as mall matter of the second class post-offl- Mnnpv makes the mare go. also takes cash to J)uy gasoline. m It It has been demonstrated In pol ttiPH thnt the "snuaro deal" first takes care of Itself. primary Is Thn Massachusetts over, but the stench of the affair remains with us still. announced that Congress may soon authorize the coining of pieces. Still, halt and three-cewe don't see how wo can use that combination and buy a cigar. It Is nt two-for-fi- It Is said that Mr. Trey Woodson, of the Ovcn8boro Messenger, will have opposition for Secretary of the National Democratic Committee, the position which he now holds. Mr. Woodson has made a very worthy and efficient secretary of the Committee, and he deserves It Is a very Iman endorsement. portant place, full of Intricate details, with which Mr. Woodson hai familiar. The become thoroughly National Committee would do well 1.. to retain hint. , candidate may get with the voters, or the people, there is always somebody ready to say, "Oh, he'll never do; he hasn't the ability to fill the place." This Is likely to occur with people-ougto any"riian7nut-tlH- J be the best Judges as to whom they want. The majority aro generally right, after all is said and done. Anyhow It Is poor policy to controJudgment. vert their combined Each voter has a right to his opinion, either separately or unanimously expressed. ht No matter how much In favor a The bitter quarrel between Mr. Watterson and Mr. Heckham has made nothing for Democracy in the State, nor has it added particularly to the prestige of either In a personal way, except as the close friends of eacli may see it. It seems to be mainly a matter of personal opinion of each other, In which the people in general have llttlo real It Is a matter of regret Interest. two such excellent gentlemen that and Domocrats should be etornally It Hying at each other's throats. May sfems about time that a truce was recently declared. There Is hardly an Issue of The Herald but what we are compellod to leave out from one to three columns of good reading mattor, already In type. This seems unavoidable on account of there being so much good stuff to print nowadays. The old story of "just anything to help till up the pnper" 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 ItKI) HILL. C. Mr. Guy McDanlel, who broke his collar bono, is getting along as woll as could be expected. Kaslnjror enterMrs. Amanda tained a few of her frlonds and relAll atives last Wodnesdny night. reported a nice time. Miss Jessie McDaniel, of this place, recontly spont a fow days with friends and relatives at Ola-ton. pertinently remarks: "We believe In supporting tho administration of flow McCreary as an administration, and not ss a political machine." That Is the case In a nutshell. The voters of Kentucky elected Senator McCreary as their Chief Magistrate becauso they believed In his ability as a Governor and not as a mentor of their political views or to head a coterie of Somehow we machine politicians. believe Gov. McCreary Is being misrepresented when he Is put in tho attitude of denying the voters an individual right of expression. Democrats of Kentucky who are Instructed delegation are not supposed to be lining up specifically with the Courlcr-Journagainst Mr, In ItB light Beckham. That Is a personal matter between the C.-- J. and Mr. 13., and let them settle It. Mr. Ueckham Is for Woodrow Wilson, as he has a right to be. The Courier-Journhas 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 tho peo-pl- o of tho Stato against a small politicians. coterie of In favor of an nl al self-seeki- Misses Lizzie Burton, of Muriel, and Ina Harris attended tho party at Mrs. Kaslnger's Wednesday night. Messrs. Oscar Smith, Horton, and Herman Cooper,-HartforRoute 2, gave Misses Madle and Martha Potts a pleasant call last Wednesday night. Miss Madio Potts was In Sulphur Springs the latter part of last week. Misses Ida Mlnton, of this place, and Floy Mlnton, 'Centertown, visited Mr. and Mrs. Itoland Cooper last Saturday night. Messrs. Wayne Pnyton and Fred Mitchell, Olaton, attended the fox supper at Vine Hill Saturday night. Mrs. Lonnlo Minton and llttlo daughter, Maudlo, Hartford, visited her daughter, Mrs. Itoland Cooper, hero recently. Misses Martha Potts, Inn Harris, Herman Cooper, Wames Burton, all of this place, mnde a pleasant' trip to tho oil well near Hartford Sunday afternoon covery of damages for lrfss of lives and baggage and personal effects of BY TUFT IN BROADSIDE tho illfated Tltanlc's passengers, Thcso suits are brought In the Federal Courts here. It Is thought, At Roosevelt, Accusing the Lat- however, that tho great majority of the suits will be brought In tho Enter of Being Candidate of glish Admiralty Courts Immediately on completion of tho British Inthe "Interests." vestigation of the Titanic catastrophe now on in London. im Baltimore, Md., May 4. X.new chapter to the history of the Har- MARYLAND GOES FOR CLARK AND KOOSEVELT vester Trust was added hero to night when President Taft forcibly Baltimore, Md., lay 6. Roosedeclared that Colonel Roosevelt did prevent the prosecution of that velt and Clark carried tho primary y on tho face of unofficial retrust. Tho President also cut loose a turns. delegates Roosevelt has sixty-si- x few things more whon he strongly Intimated that much of the support and Taft sixty-threhas sixty-ninWilson Clark the Colonel Is receiving comes from Harmon, four; Undersome of the trusts and the "Inter- .thirty-threests," which Taft Is denouncing In wood, twenty-threNecessary to coptrol convention, his campaign speeches. sixty-fivThe President In closing his campaign through Maryland, In this city Clark defeated Wilspoke to an audience hero that lilt- son three to one, while Wilson Is two to one ahead of Harmon. ed tho Lyric Theater to the doors. He charged that Roosevelt preTho Clark lead in this city Is a vented tho Harvester Trust prose- victory for the organization, while cution after George W. Perkins, Roosevelt downed the regular Reone of Its directors, and now a publican organization. Roosevelt supporter, had asked Under the rules, whichever canthat the trust bo not taken Into the didate has a majority in the State Courts; Intimated that Charles J. convention, will secure tho -- entire Bonaparte, Attorney-Generunder Stato delegation of sixteen. Mr. Roosevelt, "was mistaken" when ho said that he (Mr. Taft) NO PAID AVORKERS FOR CLARK IX RAY STATE was present nt a Cabinet meeting against prosecution, which decided May 4. Congressman Boston, and salct-- that the diary of Herbert Knox Smith, then and now head of James M. Curley Issued this statethe Bureau of Corporations, proved ment at the Champ Clark headthat at tho time referred to he was quarters in Boston: "The result In Massachusetts, all on a trip around the world. explanation of the things considered, was remarkable. Mr. Taft's' Harvester Trust was only one of Porhaps for the first time In the the many points on which he at- history of State politics a campaign without a single tacked Colonel Roosevelt7 He" laid was conducted his predecessor's attitude to- paid worker at the polls, without that ward the trusts showed clearly that circularizing and with a majority strong men politihe wished to perfect a benevolent of tho "despotism" that would discrimi- cally on the fence rather than In nate between the good and the bad the line. reception which "The splendid trusts, pointed out how Mr. Roosevelt had changed from his attitude the candidacy of Speaker Clark has of regarding his entrance Into the received at the hands of voters, surrounding his Presidential raco as a calamity to when conditions is the that of being an active campaigner candidacy are considered, that as the for the nomination, and Insisted strongest indication that Mr. Roosevelt was striving to nominee of tho Democratic party In make this campaign one In' which November he will be triumphantly the man who had little should be elected, and should he bo successarrayed ngninst him, who had more. ful In carrying out his pledge for a In concise form ho listed the lower cost of living, there Is every achievements of his administration reason to believe that Democratic and the charges which Mr. Roose- tenure of national control shall be velt has made against It, declaring equal that enjoyed by the Repubthat In his (Taft's) term In tho licans in the past." White House there had been more progressive legislation enacted than THE MIXERS STRIKE IS OX AND 18,000 .MEN ARE OUT in any previous President's term since .the Civil War. Terre Haute, Ind.,May C. While tho strike of IS, 000 Indiana miners SlTntAGKTTKS MARCH tho policy commitIX A MOXSTER PARADE. went on tee Is shaping plans for managing York, May 4. Ten thou- the trouble. Whether the men who New productive sand women, men and children par- wore allowed to do the following tho setticipated in a suffrage parade along work In the mine wage agreement, Fifth nvenue this afternoon, the ar- tlement of the rangements being carried out to would be called out, was one of the the letter without a Hitch. Three questions before the policy commitbegan April hundred thousand, apparently two- - tee. Tho suspension 1, and became a strike whon negothirds women, crowded the sidewalks, so the mQimted police could tiations over the settlement of the not control them, though there was district differences were broken off, po disorder. Most of the women after tho miners refused to accede yellow straw hats, and to tho operators' demands that they wore efforts were made to preserve uni- return to work, pending the settleformity. Tho women kept step well ment. to the music of twenty bands, and GOVERNMENT FILES tho parade was followed by a mass SUIT FOR $110,000 meeting in Carnegie hall. e. e; e; e. ur e. al to-da- y, 39-ce- nt BULL'S-EY- E SHAnERED against tho. White Star Lino for wasii goods. i Xasteiajftfou cenvVasK JU.irZ. ifrirsii A""' . our bsbbk VssflsavL lTTnnsMs'ssi Look nice In summer time; make your clothes of cool, dainty wash goods. What Is more dellghtfulthan to put on a pretty wash dress, fresji and spotless from the -- laundry? Know that when you come to us for your Summer lawns and linens, per'cals and ginghams, you will get reliable goods and colors that will wash well and wear 1 well. 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 andpleasure. CARSON & CO. INCORPORATED. Hartford, Kentucky. II DRESS GOODS Our stock of Piece Goods of every description for Waists and Dresses never was more complete Wool Serges in a"great range of colors and grades. Fancy Mixtures for Skirts and Full Sui.ts. f New York, May 4. Suit against the Fedoral Sugar Rofinlng CompaIX AXI) DROWNED ny for $11G,000 was filed by the Government In the Federal District Philadelphia,, Penn., May 4. Court here The amount Dragged into tho Delaware river by represents, alleged back duties on a largo fish that had caught on the Importations of sugar entered at hook of the fishing line which ho the custom 1902 house between had wrapped about his waist while 1909, a difference duo to recently seated on the pier at Washington discovered errors in the original avenue, John Holmes, 14 years old, liquidated weights. In view of a was drowned Through an error In the drafting number of his playmates, who were of a paper It appeared that the suit unable to assist him. was for full value Instead of back HOY CAUGHT l'ULLICI) 1HG FISH- y. Crashes and Linens of every description. and Printed Wash Goods in all the new fabrics and designs. White Goods y Tonic Alterative What is a "tonic"? A medicine that increases tie strength or the tone of Lie whole system. A few of tho Democratic newspa pcrs of tho State whose editors ophealthy action to healthy pose an instructed delegation to Ba'timoro, are harping upon the' action. Name the best "tonic fact thnt Gov. McCreary is of like and alterative"? Ayer's mind, having so expressed hlmsolf. the only Sarsapa-rillaentire-ly uut that is no specific reason wny free from alcohol. Kentucky should go unlnstructed. Ask your doctor about it. It Is no dlslojalty to our" worthy Governor to differ from him on this Bilious mitts', Indigespoint, and we are quite sure that ho tion, constipation, dizzy spells these some of the results of an Inactive Is willing to let the groat mass of tre liver. endorses Democrats who elected him do as Ayer's Ask your doctor if heThe dose Pills in these esses. they please In this strictly party is small, one pill at bedtime. Kd j tht J.O. ATXB CO., XiOWtU. Vtu. Matter. We take it that all Kenr J Sar-saparil- ia, "alterative"? A medicine that alters or changes un- What is an Tho boy screamed as he tugged desperately on tho edgo of the pier to prevent himself from bolng pull- d overboard, and workmen ran to sslst him, but before they reached he boy ho had disappeared be- icath tho water. Tho crew of a' police boat, who lad been attracted to the scene, mcceeded In recovering the body ifter a search of several hours. Tho Ine was still about the boy's waist, tnd the hook, while still attached o the line, was bent in a manner which Indicated that a lar'go'flsh "iad been tugging furiously to free 'tself. You Don't Need To Worry about what to buy and how to make it up, if you come here. We know hov it's done and we'll give you all the neces-- , sary information. We will not only give you the best goods for your money, but will give you a service that will, relieve you 4 duties. ' Notice. All local unions A. S. of E. In Centertown Magisterial District aro called to meet at Centertown on Saturday, May 11, at 1 o'clock p.m., to reorganize a district union. By order of Centertown Local No. 597. W. E. BROWN, Pres. A. ROSS, Sec'y. Thanks to Friends. to extend my heartfelt thanks to ray many friends who so faithfully helped me to be the win ner In Fairs' piano contest.- I wish - IRENE WARD. "ITANIC OWNERS WILL CHAMPION TOBACCO GROWERS BE SUED FOR MILLIONS OF GREEN RIVER DISTRICT New York, May 5. lot of worry. Make this store your store and don't hesitate to command us and use us to your hi own personal advantage. quite-a of Several mil-Io- n dollars of damage suits, it is iredlcted, will follow the Senatorial Investigation Committee's report on the cause of the Titanic disaster. Former Secretary of tho Navy H. A. Herbert, and D. F. Mlcau, of 'Washington; Cook George S. Graham, Cassil-l- y and Maurice Leon, 'prominent lawyers of New York, already I are instituting legal proceedings For classy job printing: The Herald It is believed that the record for a large crop of tobacco In this section of the country for the past year' was made by J. C. Reynolds, Roy Taylor and E. W, Taylor, who grew over 20,000 pounds of pryor on less than ten acres of the Thornton Goode farm, in McLean county, near Glenvllle. E.P.Barnes&Bro. BEfflS YaViuX in'. Sm, w.F j KENTUCKY.. S.V- - ..' A. . ,m Jr U1AM& .. ?!; l)J wilip V "1" iifjni ifOM T WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, J012. TI-- F RARTFOPD HF.RM D He is greatly Improved In Is now stationed at Ky., where ho has a revenue assignment. States. pve OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC O h, rivE $8$$8$&$$$;&$&$$& m 0 j. Miss Alice Taylor went to Sunday to enter business health and MARRIAGE LICENSE. O MAY BUSINESS OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Herbert Hopper, Beaver Dam, to Adls Oda Woodruff, Beaver Dam. Frank Wells, Fordsvllle, to Lura E. Well3, Fordsvllle. Harvey Tucker, LIvermore, to Nellie Hlggs, LIvermore. Cleveland Sanderfur, Prentls, to Nellie Frlzzell, Prcntls. For Sole. House and lot In Hartford, centrally located, at a bargain. Also good work horse. lOtf SETH M03ELEY. STRANGE ACCIDENT TO BABE FHOM A NEEDLE very strange and possibly very serious accident resulted to the Infant of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Hlggs, of the Utica neighborhood, Thursday afternoon, when a large needle, which was an Inch and long, became burled a half an Inch under the skin in the child's back, near the spinal column. An aunt of the little baby was playing with the child and the sup-- J position is that she must have had A seven-months-o- ld three-quarters That's what we're after. We are.aware of the fact that it is a very important month to all house- keepers spring cleaning, you know hence we have made special preparations to supply you with DRUGGETS NEW MATTING RUGS, (4 - 4, 4 and FLOOR OIJL CLOTH WINDOW SHADES 6-- 8-4- .) j; LACE CURTAINS Curtain Poles, Extension Brackets, Curtain Swisses in fact, everything that would be useful to you ornament your and tndwill help you outhome. Come direct to us this, of your troubles. Do please, and remember that It Pays to Trade with a, House that Saves You Money! IV. O'. -- FAIR & CO, The Fair Dealers. fcics-- THE HOME i of Quality Groceries WANTED! A Few More Customers At the Home of ..Quality Groceries.. EXPERIENCE U.VECL'SSARY! LADIES NEED NOT STATE AGE! Either Sex Young or Old! Positions Permanent! Apply at Once! Try. These Heinz Mince Meat. They'll Please: Worchester Sauce. Red Raspberry Preserves. Strawberry Preserves-TomatCatsup. Pure Apple Cider Vinegar. o Apple Butter. Olives. Peanut Butter. Mandelay Sauce. Mustard Dressing. AND MEAT MARKET KENTUCKY. HARTFORD, -:-- :- ILER'S GROCERY OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O O . Acme Binders, O LOCAL NEWS AND PERSONAL POINTS O Mowers and Rakes... For Sale on easy terms See Likens & Acton j"i General Dealers in Groceries, Queens ware, Hardware, Stoves, Ranges, and Repairs of all kinds. Har-ness, OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Mr. Seth Moseley left yesterday for a business trip to Auburn, N. Y. Nlco Beefsteak 15c lb, and Roast 12 c, at RILEY'S MEAT MARKET. Prof. Isaac Mason, of Fordsvllle, gave us a call while In Hartford Monday. For cabbage, tomato and sweet potato slips, see Albert Rial, Hartford, Ky. I(3t4 Oil Fair Stoves', Farming implements Mr. W. M. Fair, of the firm of & Co., left Monday for a short trip to lieulsville. J? Mies Fern? Curtls'Jas accepted a position as Rlatjo demonstrator with the Hartford Music Co. Vrt 1A.M1 ' LIKENS &; ACTON Hartford, Kentucky. the? new German jADBElftl-KA- j tures. Remedy I for .appendicitis Capt James M. De,Weese has reor any Parties owing the above. Arm Etomacb tf"ouble,on'sale at turned from several weeks vacation will please call and make settleOHIO COUNTY DRUG CO. In Mexico and a number of Western ment. , l'Jt2 v Miss Ethel nrown, Madlsonvllle, Mrs. Isaac Foster, son Yewell and visited Mrs. E. T. Williams last sister, Miss Arblo Brown, of Wednesday and Thursday. were In Hartford SaturMrs. T. It. Barnard returned day. Mr. and Mrs. Foster will Wednesday from a short visit at leave soon for Owensboro, where Owensboro nnd Ltvermoro. they will go Into the hotel and Attorney W. H. Barnes and son, boarding house business. Glenn, were In Owensboro a day or At the school trustee electclon In two last week on business. Hartford Saturday, Dr. E. D. PenJudge J. S. Olenn and family dleton and Mr. J. D. Duke were spent the day Sunday with Mr. J. elected by lnrgo majorities, Dr. Pendleton succeeding himself nnd H. IMenn and family, near town. IT a thnrlttn f I aa nt Mr. Duke taking the place of Mr, Thnmnonti Fordsvllle, arrived Wednesday to I Cl ' Harnett, whose term had also be the guest of Miss Orrel Flelden. expired. Mrs. Fleetwood Ward and little Miss Mary Spaulding spent from Thursday until Saturday In Owens- son, Loyd Eldy, returned Wednesday afternoon Klngswood, from boro, the guest of Miss Francis LitKy., where they attended the clostle. ing exercises of Klngswood ColIf you would enjoy a dish of lege. They were accompanied home pure, rich Ice Cream made from by Miss Lydla Ward, who is a whole Cream, try OHIO COUNTY teacher at that place. DRUG CO. Mr. Z. Wayne GriffiiTand family Mr. Sam P. Render, after a visit will move In a few days from lire 'to relatives here, left yesterday for to MIddlesboro, Ky where they Ills home at Lawton, Oklahoma. will mako their future home, that Mr. M. M. Backus and wife, or place being nearer Louisville, from Louisville, were the guests of Col- which city Mr. Grlffln travels for a Hartford peoplo onel and Mrs. H. P. Taylor, city, a wholesale house. regret exceedingly to give this exfew days lately. cellent family up. The series of meetings which was Corno Horse and Mule Feed is set to begin at the Christian Church next Sunday night havebeen post- guaranteed to be absolutely pure. Freo from rotten grain, dirt, screenponed to a later date. ings or nny worthless material. went to Chenper Mrs. Otto C. Martin than oats or corn, and LeitchAeld Sunday where she will good substitute for hay when fed e, make her mother, Mrs. Lula plentifully. Sold by an extended visit. W. E. ELLIS, There will be preachlnK at Mt. Produce Merchant, Hermon Church next Sunday morn- 19t4 Hartford, Ky. ing by thn pastor. Rev. T. V. JoinDrilling operations nre still goer. Everybody invited. ing on at the oil well near HartMrs. W. C. Schlemmer and chlld- - ford and will continue until satis..,,. IW1 ,, I . 'ICII tUUti ICLUMieU ItUIU U V1H1L l.U factory results nre readied. The Mrs. Schlcmmer's mother, Mrs. hole is now nearly 1,000 feet deep. Fehr, of Cannelton, Ind. Experienced oil men who have been Drs. Pendleton and Riley, who here say Uiere Is no sort of doubt had been quarantined at their but that, there Is plenty of oil in homes here on account of small this region it the operators will only go down after It. And they pox, have fully recovered. are going. Whippoorwlll Peas and Stock Mr. J. W. Marks, who has been Tennessee German Millet best by W. engaged as dvll engineer in railqualities on market for sale E. Ellis, the produce man. 19t4 road construction work In TVnns-soe- . will arrive at home hero toMiss Mary Marks has returned day or to spen I t lew McHenry, home from where she days. After a short visit here he taught in the Central Park Graded will leave for Hayti, ore of tho School for the past school year. West India Islands, where ho has hoMi engaged to work in his Dr. Bean's new automobile line by a big construction all right and has been put in tho passenger transfer business be- company. Mr. Marks Is another tween Hartford and Beaver Dam. Hartford boy who hag gone out and good." At a recent meeting of the Hart- "made A rather curious type of disease ford College Athletic Association it which In a few cases has developed wa3 decided to close the gymnasium over Iler'a grocery until fall. . into a mild kind of smallpox, has be.n prevalent In Hartford lately. Mr. Silo Tajlor and family have Til.- - doctors have not all agreed Attorney Ernest Woodmoved from that all these cases wore smallpox ward's residence to Mrs. Mattle Thi afflicted ones Barrett's residence on Clay street. but a few days aro generally sick and somo who have Mrs. Karl Anderson will leave to- had the disease were not confined day for Louisville with her little to their beds at all. On account of son, Ernest W., who will be operatthe prevalence of this trouble It ed on for nn affection of his head. was deemed by the advisable Before you buy Paint this spring Board of Health to stop church serget our on vices, the school and other public paint. We are not going to han- gatherings for about two weeks. dle paint after this season. Got Part of It "Lifted." OHIO COUNTY DRUG CO. Judge R. B. Wedding, Deputy Messrs. J. Ney Foster nnd S. F. County Court Clerk Ownn Hnntor TUIey. went to Owensboro tho first and Mr. R. R. Riley, assistant cash- of tho week to attend Federal ler of the First National Bank, Court. They will return homo to- Hartford, who had been appointday. ed as a committee, representing went to Frankfort Mr. J. B. Renfrow and daughter, Ohio county, Wednesday and appeared before 's Mrs. W. A. Hatcher, and tho son, Robert, all of Centertown, tho State Board of Equalization gave The Herald a pleasant call Thursday to testify as to the 1ft per cent, raise on the taxablo property Saturday. in Ohio county. After hearing the Rev. Orlando Cundlff Craig, of evidence the Board granted a deBell City, Mo., and Miss Sadlo Hen- crease of 10 per cent., thus only dricks, Madlsonvllle, Ky., visited leaWng a 5 per cent, raise. Mr. E. T. Williams and wife last They report a pleasant trip and Friday and Saturday. courteous treatment from the Mr. Harold Holbrook has sold his Board. Judge Wedding showed us a souautomobile to Messrs. Cooper & Co., tho Hartford llvermen, who have venir presented to him by the cusput It on the transfer line between todian of the old State House, in here and Beaver Dam, the shape of a letter written by S. C. I'errln, of Covington, Ky., to Rev. Virgil Elgin, former pastor Governor C. S. Morehead, bearing of the Hartford Methodist Church, date, July 23, 1S58. This, along Ky., has been with many of Jeffersontown, similar documents, Is behere the past few days, visiting rel- ing taken from the archives of tho atives and old friends. building 'preparatory to remodeling Corno Chicken and Hen Feed.the same. most economical feed for your Endeavorers to Meet. poultry. Moro eggs. Less cost. The Christian of Endeavorers W. E. ELLIS, Sold by Kentucky will meot In Owensboro, Produce Merchant, May in their Annual Con19t4 Hartford, Ky. The usual list of good vention, Messrs. J. W. Robertson, T. J. speakers will be there. One of them Smith and Frank Black, of Hart will bo Secretary Shaw, from' the ford, left Sunday for Owensboro, United Society. You can not afwhere thoy had been summoned to ford to miss this. serve on the Federal Jury in the ' For Sale, Cheap. United States Court. The stock of tho Hartford Drug A Jolly crowd of about 40 rela- Co. has been moved to the office of tives and friends gave Mr. S. A. Dp. E: W. Ford (tho old Jail build-Inand is for immediate sale, In King,' of Beaver Dam, a surprise birthday party last Sunday. It was whole or in part. The stook conhis" 68th anniversary and-dhevent sists of Standard Drugs, Patents, Notions and fixwas much enjoyed by all present. Toilet Articles, n, Cop-pagnr-rlv- ed al es lat-ter9th-12th, g) ' tho large needle stuck in the front of her waist. The cries of the baby attracted her attention and upon examining tho Infant, she found where the needle had penetrated the baby's back. Tho baby was sent to Owensboro and taken Immediately to Dr. II. E. Grl'iln, who located tho needle and with the aid of forcpa drew the needle from the back of In case the needlo the child. did not penetrate the sp'.nal column it is certain that the accident will not result seriously, but In tho event the spinal column was penetrated by the sharp instrument, tho accident would be extremely serious and the chances would bo against the recovery of the child. Grandmother ut Thirty. Georgetown, Ky., May 4. Probably the youngest mother anil grandmother in Kentucky live at Georgetown. Thursday afternoon Mrs. Kate Fields, who is Just IS years old, gave birth to a girl. Tho grandmother of the babe Is 30 years old. PnimFv m v nun n w w Graduating; Presents! ll Wanted! Will pav In cash the following prices, delivered in llartforl, Fri 1aj, Ma 1", 1012: I luive 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 necessity. Drop in and look through, anyway. Hens, 10c lb. Ducks, 10c lb. Cockerels, old and young, 5c lb. Turkeys, 8c lb. Geese, 4c lb. Eggs, 14c doz. To be busi'-est- . .T aft r at n.v ;d ic if Wil' rt'cii 'o poif'iy p. ni 01 sa.d day. de'.iver'-- J. B. TAPPAN. Jtircla' um (fjiticiitii, !w &JL i in-- : i Hartford, Ky. naBwaBnKgggwwiii.ni,MiMMimijm wyyi fm JLii iMioinv!-- : ii..,. ..I . i ..1 1 JLiiLiA KJb v,y:u u i.. . iIIH r fllTWIWI XI il, IIHMI.I III WlWWillllll !! nn"t ii mm i yi i i !!! in ii m nw in m 30Y mattings; They are sanitary, ccol and pleasing. Most kinds 25c the yard. Ve have sold out of Window Scrims, but will receive more in a day or two. They are splendid to brighten up and make your house look inviting. Ten cents the yard. Window Shades handmade, any size, length or width. This service ought to be appreciated more. Buy your White Goods of us. Our Linens cannot be excelled. We are exclusive agents for W . -- L-l the New 1 White Goods. Looks like linen, washes belter, wears better. Price 12 2c to 30c per yard. -- SAY! It will pay you many times over to 1 dr . jmrUij; l vv J. PAGE SLT. THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 101S : remarkable group of swiftly-mad- e to go about your business. Yet men of millions, Charles M. Schwab strangely enough, if you wore to THEODORE has come In for perhaps more atmutilate a gold piece until it had Neglected wounds produce old sores and 'lost all resemblance to n coin, Illinois Central Rnilroud 'I'lnio Ta- tention than many of tho older figtbese In tlma devalnn itinera whtrtfi u I rav """ ures In it. Strictly speaking, ho you probably would not be punishthe vitality. ble at Beaver Dam, Ky. belongs to the Carnegie group of ed. What the Government alms at South Bound. North Bound. millionaires, men whom the ironis to prevent the Impairment of the No. 1324:05 a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. master took into partnership and value of its gold and silver Tokens No 12212:28 p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. helped to push along toward forby "sweating" Stand By Each Other, As and Plugging, drilling, Is No. 1022:48 p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. tune, though belonging to a young other processes. It unlawful J. E. Williams. Agt er generation than himself. Wilto cut oven a monogram on either Is Evidenced Is Healing liam E. Corey and several other a" gold or silver coin. Now York for All Ailmtnts off men might be named In this group. Mail. Flash of Man and Beast. Their fortunes have been made in BY DEALS OF REGENT YEARS T splendid liniment heals How to Catch Rata. a bad the same quick manner. The ca& X?n J whlch, ""J8and pleased those who werS accus"prised Take a barrel or washtub and reer of Schwab has been almost metomed slower and uncertain effect of less powerful reme- 1u,ck,y that therels but fliiu i.JBiE5,u,a lttce.teTd teoric. Plain Violation of the Law fill with corn or other grain and rcJl8,v,nff ili ri3?08it,'S?i!Ior,t' Jn. "!! a rheumatic painsVneural-5it'- Ji put in a stable or other place in Theso are perhaps the most conE SWIFTLY dolne wonderful work. Many Victims nfth 7r rituaita , Hushed Up Harvester i.i fested with rats and leave It unspicuous figures In the group of Jact'on that Itxures an attack la a fraction of tho time required J covered for a week or two until new men of great fortunes In this "' ucniuicuu Investigation. rats get in the habit of coming to country. wnnSSi.1? S.fl,T0.,Mht.fleh ailments of animals. Owers a group that It Sbl..li.de(latocklao ,l highly for two reasons: it heals sores In Financial Record of Re- younger than isthe men with for-is get the grain. Then remove the ckl eavs no dlsngurlntr scars. m.iS02S2ti1u Is needed In every homo. If its great cower and tunes made from oil and the rail- VOTES FOUR DOLLARS AI'lECE grain and fill vessel nearly full of efficacy wan generally known, no family would bo cent Years. without It. water, sprinkle chaff or wheat road development of a quarter of a Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 per Bottle. (By Clyde H. Tavennor.) Twenty-flv- e bran on top of the water and tho century ago. years . HWHHETOW May 4. That the rats will Washington, Jump on tho chaff or JAMtt T. ST. LOWS, MO. EVEN SINCE THEjjPIISH WAR ago few of these men had even the small beginnings of a large fortune. aiepi irust is wining to spend mo- - oran ana sink tnrough and drown Stephen Eye Salre Is n safe and speedy remedy for Sore Eyes. Almost without exception their for- ncy to elect men to public office Quite a Number of Alen Have tunes, running up Into the millions, who are willing to serve it after ISoldAmo RicoMMtuptDflyl WHAT IS A MAX? have been made since McKItrloy they get Into office, is again being O O Become Prominent was inaugurated nnd the Maine demonstrated. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO attention to the kind of corn plant When Theodore was sunk In Havana Roosevelt was harbor. Cl ed. Millionaires. I'OKMS YOU'LL ENJOY. A Chemical It is stated by Commisslone President of the United States he View New York Sun. An average O o of Agriculture Newman that he has permitted the Steel Trust to absorb man of 150 pounds contains the o SCIIHMKS its p'rlnclpal rival, tho Tennessee constituents found in 1,200 eggs. O The Herald's Special Selections. O had great difficulty securing enough TIIK GRAND UNION OF FORGES O O good seed corn to supply the 10,00(3 Coal and Iron Company. This per- There is enough gas in him to fill O O members of tho mission td violate the law was a gasometer of 3,649 cubic feet. cldbK The great railroad nnd Industrial The following Is ono of tho Wl,fll lllllln ttAnn uuu are tusing or i ...- -. of dollars to the Ho contains enough Iron to make development of this country which ..u,v uccu H .1 DRINGS GREAT RESOLTS worth millions Steel Trust, because It practically! four nails. has gone on since the Spanish War His fat poems of Wm. Lamont, the noted ganizea in the State among the assured the trust a monopoly, would make 75 candles and a good- - Grayson county (Ky.) poet, con school boys. Unless the farmers! has produced a remarkable crop of men whose futures have mounted Typified in the Work of Teach- leaving It free, by the simple pro- sized cake of soap. His phosphate tributed to the Loltchlield Gazette look carefully into the quality ol cess of tightening the screws on the content would make 8,004 boxes of by Mr. N. C. Tilford, with this ex- tho corn that they plant this snrin Into the millions at a rate unknown tho crop In Kentucky will be short! ers A Great Meeting public, to extort most any price it matches. In any previous period of our There is enough hydro- planation: "A short time after his .Mr. rvewman says. gen in him in combination to fill a desired for Its products. Just Ahead. reformation, upon entering The absorption of the Tennessee balloon and carry him abovo the One who died recently was John e company by tho Steel Trust was in clouds. The remaining constituents the at Caneyvlllo, Ky., fit, jonn u., btaton, Joyce, Ky . hat W. Gates. Mr. Gate's fortune has .. M .... AVlr.if vAvupiuuuiij severe attaCK on If you should dip up Lake Erie direct violation of both tho spirit of a man would yield, If utilized, while Mrs. Ell Harned, tho postappraised at $11,000,000. just been wjiuoping cougn. He says: "If Harri-ma- n in n tin cup, pint at a time, and and the letter of the law. No one six teaspoonsful of salt, a bowl of mistress, was quoting a few lines Like Mr. Gates, Mr. E. H. had not been for Foley's Honey tn(B from Whlttier in "Maude Muller"possessed a fortune made pour it on the big turbine wheels denies this. Not even the attorneys sugar and ten gallons of water, wheel-pit- s al1 sa(I wo"ds of tongue of) pen, lar Compound I would have bee'i A Physiological and at Niagara Falls, for the Steel Trust contend now, or practically within this period. It in the Anatomical "ot arc these, 'It might compelled to quit work. Instead was a much larger fortune than Mr. jou could hardly get them dump. ever did contend, that the deal was View A man has 500 muscles, 1,- - the saddect have been,' " the words fell upon never missed a day, and Foloy'i 000,000,000 cells, 200 different Gates's, and the estimates of It at But let a greatbody of water tum legal. Honey and Tar Compound eaveme the tunnels, and the This is not the only favor Theo bones, 4 gallons of blood, several his ears, which seemed to nppeal Mr. Harrlman's death ran as high ble through generate ener dore Roosevelt did for tho Steel hundred feet of nrterles and veins, to his sensitive feeling In such a instant relief and Is tfle only cough The Harrlman wheels are driven to as $150,000,000. medicine wo ever Contains! estate paid taxes on a fortune of gy sufficient for running all the ma- Trust, or the Harvester Trust, at over 25 feet of intestines and mil- way as to cause tho expression, no opiates. Sold byuse." dealers, all mi How true!" Wherechinery within two hundred miles the request of Geo. W. Perkins, lions of pores. HTs heart weighs "How truo! $71,000,000. These new American fortunes, to of the falls. The water has might then partner of J. Plerpont Morgan. from 8 to 12 ounces, its capacity is upon, Mrs. Horned handed him a Inrnpnctiutori. volumes. Roosevelt's Commissioner of Cor- from 4 to 6 ounce! In each ventri- tablet and pencil and requested him which attention has been called by only when it falls in la-in the Supremo Court not long! to write her a few stanzas on the since an official, when the Judge This principle holds as good in porations Investigated the Harves- cle, and Us size Is 5 by 3 by 2 the death of these two men, might be divided Into two spoarate and political and social science as in ter Trust, found It Illegal, but at Inches. It Is a hollow muscular or- "Might have been." It was a cold, called out for the crier to open the pounds of dreary day, snow flakes falling and "uu"i buiu; distinct groups, namely, those cre- physics. The sum of the forces of the suggestion of Mr. Perkins, the gan and pumps 22 way it piease yourj blood every minute. In 24 hours It bleak winds blowing. Instead of Honor, the crier can't cry ated by the Industrial combinations a number of units Is greater, the report was not made public. The most exhaustive Case! search of pumps 16 tons. It beats about 72 loafing around the saloons and becauso his wife is dead." which began In the McKlnley era closer the aggregation of units. of Na the records of Congress during the times a minute. In one year an av- mixing with the rabble, as he was and Comment. rushes Tho Irresistible and those due to the resurrection and expansion of dead railroads poleon and Oku; the successful years that Roosevelt was President erage man's heart pumps 11,680,- - wont to do on former occasions, he which the prosperity of the period work of parties and sects; the pow- fails to show the passage of a sin- 000 pounds of blood. The heart is" took a seat on a box near the stove made possible. Mr. Gates was as erful Influence of organized public gle measure that even In tho most a willing slave, but it sometimes and in a very short time, presented BRONCHITIS her with the following lines: conspicuous an example of one as opinion In any great matter all remote manner affected the monop- strikes and it always wins. theso, though widely differing, are oly or the huge dividends of the Practical Druggist. Mr. Harrlman was of the other. "THE MIGHT HAVE UEKN." "Next to Mr. Harrlman the most based upon the principle illustrated Steel Trust. Hundreds "of such To Whom It May Concern For cholera morbus, cholera in new millionaires above. To make Intellectual or menBlirPR WPTA fntrnrillPArl In nnih BluevaleOnt. May" 4. 1910 "I w conspicuous of the A wonderful realm is "The might elck for two yeara with chronic hron who have been made essentially by moral forces most effective, they the House and Senate while Mr. fantum, diarrhoea from colds, and have been," chltls and a consequent con Is Edwin must be made to act In the same di- Roosevelt was President. Each and wind colic, McGEE'S BABY ELIX-I- lt manipulation railroad dltlon. I received no benefit from dooM That far in the distance lies, is a remedy of extraordinary every ono was chloroformed In com Hawley. Ten years ago he was re- rection at the same time. With its hopes and fears. Its Joys tors or from a trip which I took foil Each teacher in Kentucky is a mittee, nna Air. Roosevelt garded as a newcomer on the finannever power. It relieves colic pafns In my health, and I had to Klve un work and tears, stantly, checks diarrhoea and setcial stage and was being described unit of force. Every one of the ten raised his voice in protest. Its shadows that fly with the pass- VInol was recommended, and from thefl Mr. Roosevelt is now a candidate tles the disordered stomach. Price as "Wall street's new constructive thousand teachers of Kentucky is second bottle I commenced to lmfl ing years, doing a faithful, earnest and In for office. Every politician in the 25c and 50c per bottle. Sold by genius In railroad operations." prove. I gained in weight and strength Like a cloud across the skies. my Droncmal trouble disappeared, and It was to James J. Hill that Haw most cages, efficient work. But how Innd Is aware that he is spending Hartford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., ley a few years ago sold the Colo- vastly more efficient work could be more money to obtain delegates Donovan & Co., Beaver Dam, Ken- There are fairy isles in "The might I am' at work again. It is the combined action of tho m rado and Southern, a railroad sys- done by theso units of teaching than any candidate for the Presi- tucky. have been" curative element of tho cods' llversJ tem with more than 2.000 miles of force acting together by aggregat- dency has spent In the last quarter With fountains of living youth; andl that deal until It was consummated, ing. Tho Kentucky Educational of a century. Where is this money OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO And beautiful flowers in their own aided by tho strength-creatinproperties of tonic j O SPECIAL NOTICE O track. Wall street Tsnew little of Association Is sounding a clarion coming from? Let us see: bright bowers, iron contained In Vinol which makes J in regard to y O And Mr. Hawley controls more call to all teachers in Kentucky Eton Huntington Hooker, treas- O Sabbath calm ot the holy hours It bo successful in curinc bronchitis. miles of railroads than the Vander-bllt- s. nnd asking for their presence at the urer of the Roosevelt League, has O OIUTUARIES, RESOLUTIONS O That como when the heart is VInol Is a constitutional remedy fori OP RESPECT, &c O His fortune Is estimated by Louisville meeting on June Just filed with the Secretary of O enronic coughs, colds, bronchitis andl truth. some at more than $20,000,000. It for the purpose of more effective State of New York a list of con- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO pulmonary troubles not a palllativol There are oasis fair In "Tho might iiko cougn syrups. has been made within the last 12 organization, n uniting of forces tributors to the Roosevelt cam Tho Hartford Herald has adopted have been," years. Try vinol. If yon dont think It for the benefit of the school and paign fund. This sworn affidavit a new rule In regard to Obituaries, 'Mid the glare of the desert sand,, helps you, wo will return your money. One of Wall street's most Inter the teacher as well. reveals thnt In the city of esting figures In these years of rap-I- d of Respect, Cards of And mirages bright that dazzle the James II. Williams, Hartford, Ky. alone, Geo. W. Perkins, or- Resolutions A Cliecrlslied Memory. fortune-buildin- g sight, Z. Wilbur Mitchell, Heaver Dam, Ky. has been formganizer of the Harvester Trust nnd Thanks, &c, whether written at tho Time may rob us of our teeth er Judge William H. Mooro. Of all director of tho Steel Trust, spent tho behest of lodges, churches or In- And storms that beat on tho breast millionaires, his and hair, says Mack Cretcher, but $15,000. Frank A. Munsey, the dividuals, of might, these newly-mad- e and that Is, we shall memory of Are abroad in that wonderful record Is unique. Within the same It can't take away the largest Individual holder of the charge at the rate of two cents per period the period that began with how good the ground used to feel Steel Trust's common stock In the lino for all such articles, excopt obitland. the consolidation of tlio great In- to our bare feet along about this country, contributed $15,000 more. uary poetry, which will bo ono cent Kansas City There are loves that were lost In dustrial plants Judge Moore has time of the year. Thirty thousand dollars of Steel per word, stralght.Thls Is too small"The might have been," one fortune and has Journal. made and lost Trust money spent in a city of one est rate wo charge for anything and But never a one that was won; made nnother on the ruins of the Is only one-fift- h of our regular rate. State alone, and there are 48 States There aro tears long shed o'er the first. In tho Union! This sworn state- Tho amount, In cash or stamps, loved and dead, He was 'a good corporation lawment shows that In New York City must accompany each article, or OF But none for tho living who're yer, and ho turned this to account not bo printed. Six $59,125.75 was spent to get about It will loved Instead, BOURBON POULTRY! when the consolidation fever set In. 15,000 Roosevelt votes, or practic- words average a lino In ordiIn our land ot the shadow and He organized the Match Trust and The Evidence Is Supplied by ally $4 a vote. nary reading and every separate CURE sun. followed that with the American Senator Stephenson spent only character or Initial letter counts as Local Testimony. down the throat ot a etplnl Illscult Company, and got himself half as much per vote In Wisconsin, a word. Tho heading and tho sig- We have sailed the shores of "Tho Eaicnen, aetiroys tno worm) julckly known as a consolldator. sod tavei the chick' Ufa. and it was, declared that ho thus de- nature both count ono line each, might have been," A few drops In the drlnklnj If the reader wants stronger bauched American They made a fortune for him, and water cures ana And the coast was fair to view, standards, and even If they are only a word or two. then, a few years later, In 1896, the proof than the following statement should not be permitted to occupy All PREVENTS DISEASE pootry, obituary straight And you and I with a deep drawn Cracker Trust, which he had put and experience of a resident of a seat in tho Senate! For the treatment of White Dtarrhoealnchlcbs through, one cent per word. sigh buu uiucjueaii ana oiner aiieates In turkc- together, went Into tho hands of a Hartford, what can It be? The point of this article, howev A shudder of pain Contributors pleaso remember. and a tear- Henry Nail, Hartford, Ky says: er, is receiver, and Judgo Moore failed BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS NO EQUAL that the Steel Trust stands by dimmned eye, Ho started right "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills jtB frien(j8 for $0,000,000. , Higher Chemistry. Regret that it was not true. In to make another fortune. First for about a year and have found One 30c bottle makes 12 gallons of medicine, In other words, the eggs gave off Mrs. Rose A. Freeman, Clifford, the odor which all high school boys But a King reigns o'er "The might he reorganized tho American Bis- them to be an excellent remedy for SOLD IIY Z. Wilbur Mitchell, Beaver Dam. know as "H2S04." To bo explicit, 's cuit Company, which helped to get kidney complaint. I had pains in Va., says they have long used have been," my back and in my sides. Seeing Remedies and want to say a the eggs were rotten, despite tho him out of the hole. Whoso will is perfect law, John A. Miller, McIIenry, Ky. Then ho began organizing all Uonn's Kidney Pills advertised, I jood word for them. She writes: euphemism of the stltule. BosAnd He wills, in His might, that sorts of trusts, among them the procured a box at the Ohio County "Foley Kidney Pills cured my hus- ton Herald. our earthly sight, American Tin Plate Company, the Drug Co. They did me a world of band of a long standing kidney Bo veiled with a cloud of darkest Stiff neck 1b not only painful but American Sheet Steel Company and good and I can therefore recom- trouble, after ho had 'taken other night, G0 To get rid of it quickly tho American Steel Hoop Company. mend them to anyone suffering medicines without .relief. Llko the morrow we never saw. We annoying. rub tho affected part with BALwas taking advantage of the from kidney trouble.' would not be without Foley & He & samo revival In the steel business It So we'll wander no moro in "The Tho abovo statement must carry Co.'b medicines In our house for LARD'S SNOW LINIMENT. might have been," that was being utilized by John W. conviction to the mind of every many times their cost." Sold by all penetrates the flesh and relaxes the -- FORWith its false, Illusive light, Gates and others of the group to reader, Dpn't simply ask for a kid- dealers. jn muscles so that the pain ceases Immediately. i Price 25c, 60c and But Journey along with our tears make fortunes. In 1900 when he ney remedy ask distinctly for "Carpenter and Repair Wojk and our song, $1.00 per bottle. Sold by Ha'rtford Chsilot moved to this city from Chicago Doan's Kidney Pllla the same that TIN WORK and FLUE CaW Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., Donovan And pray for the faith that can with bis brother, he was credited Mr. Nail had the remedy backed FOR FLETCHERS Pumpand Furnituro Repairing J make us strong, & CO., Beaver Dam, Ky. m with $10,000,000. Ho has much by home testimony. 50c at all For whatever God sends, Is right .ooiaonng anu Cjaw jling, Hug- - 4, i more than that now. stores. Foster-Milbur- n Co., Props.', .gy To Covered and Lined. T ' Daniel G. Reld Is a man who has BUffalo, N. Y. IT IS UNLAWFUL TO WARNING TO FARMERS You'll find uain tho Dr. made a large fortune in the same "When Your Back 1b Lame MUTILATE YOUR COINS FOR FLETCHER'S , AS TO THEIR SEED CORN "" Mitchell office on Main Street. record-breakin- g time and in much Remember tho Name." the same way. With him should be For sale by all dealers. Price CO It is a crime to mutilate or deBeaver Dam, Ky. Frankfort, Ky., April 29. Seed classed the' late William B. Leeds, cents. Foster-Milbur- n Co., BUffalo face gojd or silver coins', and if you corn in Kentucky this1 spring is for they, hewed their way together, Now York, solo agents for the were to ask a Jeweler even to punch runnjng 8o poorly that a warning; "two little Indiana boys," Roid United States. a hole in- a $5 gold pleca bo that VO II RHEUMATISM KIDNKYS AND 8LA8SM has been Jsaued by. the' Department used to call them. you could carryit on'your walch Remember the name Doan's of Agricudturo to the farmers, of (or The Serald $1 a 7ear As the youngest, possibly, of this and take no other. Chain, you probably would be told the State urging them to pay more K KlBIHm AMD SLABS 'J&0 Hartjord Herald 0 .. THEJPIISI5 Snow Liniment Rmdy the '??i Ballard's I I CM v"jr rn.l mw ooooocooooooooo ooooooooooooooooo corn-growi- ten-pen- (La-mont- 's) post-offic- nll. - go run-dow- n blood-makin- g g To-da- 25-2- 7, New-Yor- k ONE DfiOP, ; Fo-'ey- " JOIler T0 Kummaget ; ran cry CAgTORIA Ghltdrwn Cry i John! FOICT'KlDNEYttllS CASTOR1 A kkih '"WiM K; ..ft-i- t. IIH'i,, itafivtr ! iyMiif, -- 1 r 7T if mi - a"" rrr-- T' .,!.; j iiih ii K myiiinV1 wimaaGwmj ' "' lnpfi.,,Mi,i .i;n "i 'f '?! i i; ; " ,.i,,,i, mt i" l " II t l' v;jrT ,.. n;- -r If WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1012. THE HARTFORD HERALD the face without spot or wrinkle, beautiful with a comely red! Jls nose and mouth aro exactly formed; his beard Is' the color of his hair and thick, not of any length, but forked. In reproving, ho Is terrible; admonishing, .courteous; In speaking, TAGE SEVEN. THE STANDING i OF THE POTATO Lis Steadily Rising Over the Country. PLAYS UN IMPORTANT very modest and wise; In proportion None have of body, well shaped. seen him laugh, many have seen him weep. A man for his surpassing beauty, excelling the children PART of men. Elnpseri Time. "Mabel," said the girl's father, "I want to talk to you about that young man of yours. When did he to you last evening?" say 'good-b"At 10 o'clock," replied the dear y' girl. "What? Why, it Was 1 o'clock SHOllTAGE IS NOW EXISTING at least." "Oh! That was when he finished The humble potato Is now comsaying It." ing from long neglect Into public prominence. It Is emerging from 'useful obscurity Into the limelight IT DEVELOPED HE WAS HOSS of publicity. Fifteen years ago the humble poupon tato was the stepping-ston- e which Hazen S. I'ingree, then Mayor of Detroit, and later Governor of Michigan, stepped Into the hall of fame. It may once more perform a similar service for some ambitious oung, man In Congress. It IS 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 JUST HOUND TO HE In the Affairs of Commerce Don't Raise Enough for Ourselves. "There's a certain politician around the country Just Taft now," said a man at the Customs House, "who reminds me of an old negro who used to Work for my father. He's ol June. According to the Government the shortage will exceed bushels. This shortage is thn more likely to be felt all of the high price of meat at present. When the price of one commodity advances, the customer looks for a substitute. When the price" of meat Jumped skyward, the poorer families were compelled to eat less meat and the demand for Now the depotatoes Increased. mand Is greater than It has ever been In the history of the country, and the supply Is shorter. New potatoes from York Is Importing Only last week a shipScotland. load was received by New York commission merchants. The South Is being supplied from Cuba. The demand is growing and foreign markets are being drawn upon. It eems ridiculous to think of a potato famine In a country so rich with agricultural possibilities, but na a staple article of diet the potato It "antedates cannot be equaled. the discovery of America. It has been in demand since Spanish explorers transplanted It from South America to Europe. Ever since that remote day Us cultivation has spread rapidly. Most of us Jump at hasty conclusions and look upon the humble potato as a positive plebeian among This has been largely vegetables. due to the cheapness of potatoes. With the shortage In thlB coun-rdue to the summer drought nd the difficulty In finding an adequate supply In Europe, the prediction of a potato famine seems logically based. The New York Importers are nbw lefore Congress with a demand that the tariff of 25 cents a bushel be removed, and unless some sort of re'.lef Is extended by Congress, the cost will be even greater. Statistics show convincingly that we d,U'not produce potatoes enough They for our own consumption. how. that during the past 10 years e have Imported an annual aver- ge of 2,000,000 bushels of pota- oes each year. Thefe Is no excuse for this. Wo grow our own supply. should Memphis Commercial-Appea- l. y, rt, bound to be boss. "Old Ike was given a Job one day by father, cutting up some wood in Dad gave Ike a the backyard. quarter to do It. Later in the day ho went out and found the old negro sitting' on a box and directing the work of anothor black, who was Industriously cutting and sawing. " 'Why, Ike,' remarked dad, 'didn't I pay you to do this work?' " 'Yos, suh, boss, yo' sho' did.' " 'Well, why aren't you doing It? " 'I giv' ills nigger 33 cents to do It.' Why so " 'Thirty-fiv- e cents? much?' nsked father. I " 'Well, boss, it's dls a way: reckon It's wuf 10 cont3 ter be boss Louisville onco In a while. " Times. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O KESOLUTIOXS OK HESPECT O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Whereas, An Allwlse Father has removed from us the mother of our brother, Iiethel L. Duke, Resolved, 1st. That In tho death of Mrs. S. E. Duke our brother has lost his dearest earthly friend and comforter, one always willing to bear his Joys and sorrows, and a friend never to be replaced. That Hartford 2d. Resolved, Camp No. 202, Woodmen of tho World, extend Its deepest sympathy to brother Duke and his family in this hour, and for his guidance point him to the Great Commander, who does all things well. Resolved, 3d. That a copy of these resolutions be furnished our brother, a copy spread upon tho records of this Camp, and a copy furnished the local newspapers for publication. LESLIE BENNETT, OTTO C. MARTIN, J. NEY FOSTER, Committee. Whereas, the sad Intelligence of the death of Mr. William Plrtle, brother of James and Ira Plrtle, members of Hartford Camp No.202, Woodmen of the World, has reach ed this Camp, be It Resolved, 1st. That In the death of William Plrtle 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 father. Resolved, 2d. That we smypa-thiz- e with our brothers and the other members of the bereaved family who mourn his departure; but we can only remind them that i he is not dead, ho Is only asleep iI5AIHIC OP JESUS, THE CHItfKT resting to await the Resurrection m K Tho following epistle Is sald to have been taken by Napoleon from records of Rome when he de- ' the prlved that city of so many valua- It was written at iblo manuscripts. and on the spot where i the time Xjesus commenced his ministry, by yl'ubllus Lentulus, Governor of Ju- lea, to tho Senate of Rome; Cao-ka- r, Emperor. It was tho custom in those days for the Governor to write homo any event that transpired whllo ho held 'his office. It 'follows: f Conscript Fathers: In those our -- morn. Resolved, 3d. That a copV these resolutions bo spread the records of Hartford Camp No. 202, Woodmen of the World, and a copy furnished to tho local newspapers for publication. LESLIE DENNETT, OTTO C. MARTIN, J. NEV FOSTER, Committee. T;scn;ic.s An AwfuKFiitc. A of upon thousand tongues could not express the gratitude of Mrs. J. B. Cox, of Jollet, 111., for her wonderFor Sale. acres of woll Improved ful deliverance from an awful fate. Slxtj-fir- o UIIW UUIUVU HV.OUO "Typhoid pneumonia liayS, aiJlJUmeu had left mo land lnRough river bottoms, 2,4, Arc brings Infirmities, such as slugIhrlst, who Is yet living among us, with a dreadful cough," sho writes. miles west of Hartford. For furgish bowels, weak kidneys and bladGentiles' Is accepted as a "Sometimes nd of tho I had such awful ther particulars, iddrosa X, care of der and TORPID LIVER. irophet of great truth; but his own coughing spells I thought I would Tho Herald. 2tf isclples call him the Son of ,God. dlo. I could get no help from docVOTK FOB BHKSIDKNT r hnth mined the dead and Cured tor's treatment or other medicines W'lhh KXCEKI) 15,000,000 He is a till I used Dr. King's New Discovill lirShner of diseases. bian of stature somewhat tall andj ery. But I owo my life to this wonWashington, April 29. countenance, That have a specific effect on these organs, tomely, with a ruddymay both love derful remedy for I scarcely cough more stimulating the bowel I , causing them than 15,000,000 persons in, the beholder at all now." Quick and safe, It's ' to perform their natural functions as fear. His hair llUhe tolor of a the most reliable of all throat and the United States will record their and in youth and filbert when fully ripe, plain to his lung medicines. Every bottle guar- votes for President in the campaign IMPARTING VIGOR . ar, whence downward t is more anteed. Sue and JX.00. Trial bot- of the present year Is evident from to tb kidneys, bladder and LIVER. Xt Orient color, curling and waving the official statistics of the PresiTbey arc adapted to old and young. m tle free at J. H. Williams. dential vote published In the Stain his shoulders: In the nfddlo of tistical Abstract of the United' ate head la a seam of long hair, af States, which has just been Issued ter the manner of the Naxarjtea. by'tho Bureau of Statistics, Depart- LAB8I Hid forehead Is plain and delicate; ttfitMKMH KIBMKTSANB ment of Commerce and Labor. Prior to 18?8 no Governmental official record of the votes cast for President existed, but an act passed by ii.nniimwiiiir'irsr-w'- F Congress on February 3, 1887, made It the duty of the Executive of each State to report to the Secretary of State the names of electors and the number of votes given For Infanta and Children.- As Promulgated By or cast for each person voted for, and these reports, made by the Secretary of State in 1888, and In each subsequent Presidential election, DESIGNED TOAMEN GREEKS form tho basis of the official record of Presidential elections in tho i.l AVeSelable Preparation, for As United States. similating tticFoodandRcgula- To Encroachments of Philip This record, which has been publingtlicbioinacusamuowcisoi lished for several years In the StaMacedon Patriotism of tistical Abstract of the United States, suggests that the total numWas Aroused. ber of votes cast in tho Presidential Promolcs DigcslionXheerrul-nessandTiest.Con'al- ns election this year will for the first neither THE EMBODIMENT OF ORATORY time exceed l.", 000,000. The total Opium.Morpltine norMincral. number In 1008 was 14,887,000; In K 11 WkM NOT "NARC OTIC . It was'On or near this date, twenty-- 1900, 13,965,000; In 1892, 12,044,-00six hundred and sixty-thre- e and tn 1888, 11,381,000. J&npe oTOldHrSAXVIlIITCUKJi years ago, that Demosthenes delivt twnan oaf ered the first of the immortal series SOMETHING ABOUT THE of orations known ns the "PhilipORIGIN OF HANDSHAKE sUCieSetd pics," so called from the fact that R III faforiaJrJ&a they were designed to awaken the Did you ever ask yourself why ftmfied Siifar Greeks to the encroachments that you shako hands with a person hintymt naron were being made upon their liber- whom you know? Here is the reaii Apcrfccl Remedy forConslin.i-Tlon- , ties by Philip of Macedon. son: Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Demosthenes at the time of the days, when every man In the old Worms .Convulsious.Fcverish-nes- s delivery of his first Philippic was who had any pretensions to being Sleep. and Loss in the Hush and glory of his young a gentleman carried a sword, it was manhood, having Just turned thir- the custom for men when they met, Facsimile Signnlure or ty. Tho herald cried, "Who among to show that they had no intention the citizens above fifty years old of treachery, to offer each other XEW YOIiK wishes to speak; and, after them, their weapon hand that is, the which of the other citizens In his hand that would be used to draw turn?" The subject of Philip and the stvord and to withhold tho his policies had been so often dis- hand was usually the signal for a cussed that no one seemed disposed fight. fl EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. to mount the Dema, and then it wa3 did tills habit become So fixed that Demosthenes arose to mako that long after men ceased to wear THK CKNTAUN COMPANY. NfWOftS fT harangue to the swords they still offered the weapIlls first public sxzximja on hand to a friend and declined to Athenian Assembly. All accounts unite In describing offer it to an enemy. To this ikiy the effect of tho speech as magical. when you refuse to shal'e hands Inspired by tho preternatlonal elo- with a person It signifies that you quence of the young orator, the are at war. Among savages, who To cried out as one man: never carried swords, tho slinking Athenians of hands is unknown, and It affords "Let us go forth to light Philip!" Now is the time to begin to anticipate your Fence For thirteen years did Deniotho-ne- s them nmuseiiii'iit to see white men wants. We have ."just received two tar loads of the celeNow York Sun. between the would-b- e do it. stand Macedonian usurper and the liberbrated American Steel Wire Fence. We bought it right, ties of Greece. Deyond the reach so we can givejyou a very low price on any specifications O of threat and allurement, the migh- O WHAT IDEALISM MEANS. O you may need. By Thomas Hamilton. ty orator stood at his post, appeal- O Call and see us about your fence. ing to the men of Athens to be OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Yours truly, achieveworthy of the glorious ments of their sires. There are no Idealists extant In It Is at once tho sublimest and tho world. So many people boast most pathetic picture In all history, of their ideals and tho ideals of DUNDEE, KENTUCKY. the fight of Demosthenes against others, without stopping to think i Philip. Demosthenes failed, through for a moment what sort of mech- -' no fault of his own, and Philip anism constitutes Idealism. won; but as long as the world enWhen men and women have bedures, the Philippics will live, the come masters of their own will and the power, then they have hewn the wonder of oratorical-effo- rt TO BUY Inspiration of all who shall he way for Idealism. But how many struggling for human freedom. neonle on this revolving sphere of Peas, Millet, Clover Seed, Timothy, And here the question naturally ours have become masters of their Play, Corn, Oats, Stock arises: How is It that, In a faculty will? Is there one? No, not one. Red Top,, and all kinds of Field Seeds. Also InternationHis heart Is which is common to the whole spe- Man Is too credulous. al Sugar Dairy, and Horse Feed. Sucrene Dairy and Alfalcies, that of communicating our too filamentous of unworthy deeds. fa Horse Feed, and Poultry Supplies. thought and feeling in language, Ho has too many fickle recipes, the palm should, by the unanimous and ofttlmes overtaxes his own consent of all nations and ages, be heart with them. given to Demosthenes? Man can have pleasant words and Xo. r,6J. KV. The speeches exhibit no ostenta- pleasant thoughts, but he can never Phone God never protious rhetoric; evince no particular become an Idealist. learning; show no glaring orna- duced Ideal men, He did not have ments; but rarely touch the heart even thoughts of such productions, with a soft and melting appeal; ars because past ages nor modern ages quite devoid of wit and humor, and would not permit of them. Christ yet, In spite of all these things, the was the only Idealist that ever exspeeches are unrivaled In a class all isted, because ho was a Heavenly by themselves, tho supreme master- Being, modified by everything that pieces of the world's eloquenco. is good. Man has but few modifiThe mystery is explained by the ers that are good, therefore, he can fact that" the orator was himself a not be, and will never be, an ideal(l.VcOKrOtfATKD) living part of his orations. He was ist. Man, when sounded, Is an soul; but he absolutely in earnest, thoroughly of his own sincere, honest to the very center of chances to tell you that he Is an -" lJ his mind and soul, and when he as- Idealist. cended the Bema and began to Once upon a time I heard a t, No speak, he was Irresistible. young man make this roniark about r, demagogue or a certain professor of a very cele- "Yonder coos however gifted he might have been, lirntoil Institution: could have made those wonderful our president, and he is a wonder be speeches. ful character. I should call him an Demosthenes died at the age of Idealist, for he is charitable, and sixty-twfrom the effect of poison such an optimist Is he." administered by his own hand. Not Tills young man was densely igcaring to survive the liberties of norant, and had not the slightest A MONTH WHY NOT MAKE his country, lie took tho fatal drug conception of what an Idealist is. and quietly expired In tho montli of - Let us throw off sucli a burden $50.00 a Week, almost SIO.00 a Day October, 322. TRev. Thos. B.Oreg-or- y of dense ignoranco and put into our In Chicago Examiner. heads n system that wilt circulate Boiling Victor Safes nnd boira to mervliunln, doctors, linvycrs, drntUts nnd pure, nnd unadulterated clean, furmvru, ail of whom ronll'c the ticpd A ."Mortal Blow. ot it safe, but do not Know liovin?y ltiatoown thoughts. one. Salerimen declare our proposition one of "What's the matter with your Hartford, Ky Route fi. tfcriiril the best, clean-cu- t money.miil.lnu oiiorttint o wife? She's all broken up lately." tlea over received. Without ireloun exiKTi-cneYOU can duplicate thn siiccciss of others. Flue Subscription Offer. "Sho got a terrible Jar." rutalog Our handsomely Illustrated Evening will ciiuulti you to present the tubject to cus I'ost The Louisville "What has happened" as imcrfsiiiiK a wuiint-- xh iiiouku tomers in "Why, she was assisting at a (dnllv) from now until November you were piloting them turouch our factory. Men appulntttl as salesmen receive advice and Instructions for Bellini. safes, cri v lt.tr rummage sale, took off her now 10, 1912, and the Hartford Herald convincing talking points which It Is ltupolble for a prospective customer to deny. Why your vicinity before someone elee gets tho territory r tho hat, and somebody sold It for thirty-f- one year, for only $2. Subscribe don't YOU be onlyllrtt to apply from of each locality. one salesman out We can favor tf now! ive 'j ne nut nnniverary or our cents." THE HISTORY OF THEJHILIPPICS CASTORIA iffifiinnfflH The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears of tie Signature AAl 0, ni Use of For Oyer Thirty Years Our Farmer Friends and Patrons: nnaoocoooooooor DUNDEE MERCANTILE CO., ..AXEn FARMERS' MARKET PLACE AND SELL RAPIER GRAIN & SEED CO., OWENSBORO, KEnlTlX""0CK"Z E. G. Light and Power Company BARRASS, MQR"., liyp-ocrl- time-serve- ' Will tcire voitr house at cost. Elcclric Lights arc clean, healtliy and saf'c9 Xo home or business house should witliout tliein when tot thin reach. $200. o, - - Thai's ure-nro- well-to-d- o o r Advice to the Aged. islfW-ff- i I till Sill IBaBisaBrysiiiEIHal Our New Horn. Capacity 20,000 Sales Annually. 1 9aaaoBBrmiiSHrriilMaaaaanBaBBBadS'? company was celebrated by erecting tho most modern safe factory In the worlds men who received our sptilal felling Inducement rendered Itnceessary todouble our output. We arc spending many thousands of dollars sales organization, but to learn nil particulars, It will cot you only the price of a postal card. Ask for Catalogue 16T. Wide-wake THE VICTOR SAFE & LOCK GO. CIHCIHHATI, OHIO i FOlJEYiKlDNEYPUiS loiMKiDNEYPms The Mil j,J.."-ll.. Only S1.CQ a Year f i f . "" ' ! "V" H EIGnT. GEORGIA GOES THE iiV HARTFORD HERALD fill! I SOLID If BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder tiade from Royal Grape Cream of artar NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE scholar. We welcome him into our midst. Mr. Gordon Young, who has been In the Polk Sanitarium in Louis-Wil- e for quite a while, being treated for stomach trouble, has retrun-e- d homo greatly benefited. He has bought the property which was owned by Dr. Mooio, situated In the Gray addition of the town. Dr. Willis, of Cromwell, will move to his new home here next week. As the Doctor Is a fine physician and he and his family are christian people, we welcome them to our town. HOPEWELL. Mrs. J. It. Shull and granddaughter. Miss Loavel, spent last Wednesday and Thursday with re!atl03 In Tayiortown. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Shull gave the young folks a nice entertainment last Saturday night. Miss Mary ttnglcr and Mr. Uur-nl- o Humphrey were married at the residence of Mr. Holder, near Paradise, the 2Sth ult. Itev. Hiram llrown pronounced tho ceremony. The newly married couple are living on tho farm of tho groom's grandfather, 1'ncle Hilly Smith. Misses Reulah Mlloa and Olga Hunley have returned home from Hartford College. Itev. George Gordon sold two mules at Wyso last Wednesday for $247.50. Mrs. Hiram Taj lor and daughter, spent Miss Neva, of Tayiortown, last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will Shull here. Mr. Tom Engler has moved to his new house which ho built near his uncle Chester Overton's. Sir. Strother Engler, who has been visiting his nephew, Mr. L. S. Engler, has returned to his home near Doonevllle, Ind. Miss Margaret Taylor Is visiting Mr. nnd Mrs. E. V. Bennett at Central City. The water has been over a great deal of the low bottoms but Is falling now. Mr. John Cummins has his dwelling house. The old roof had been on for 33 years. May G. ROYAL FOR OSCAR UNDERWOOD 'X Who Will Get Entire 28 Votes Wilson Beats Clark r i.i. 'WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1012. D 3G E. P. BARNES BG 11 " AUTOMOBILES W J. A, CLAY n I and Harmon. Atlanta, Ga., May 3. Delayed returns from the Presidential pri- 'The U. Hartford Herald TA- tt. & E. KAIIiROAD TIME BLE AT HARTFORD, KY. The following L. & N. Time Card Is effective from Monday, Aug. 21st: North Hound No. 11?. due at Hartford 7:19 a. m. No. 114 duo at Hartford 3:40 p. m. South Bound No. 115 due at Hartford 8:45 a. m. No. 113 due at Hartford 1.4C p. in. 11. E. MISCIIKE, Agt. CONFEOERATE'REUNIOU SPECIAL A Number of IS WRECKED Persons Killed and On Many Injured Way mary held In Georgia Wednesday continue to add to the plurality of Official , results Oscar Underwood. have been received from 106 of the 140 counties, and these, with the unofficial returns from the other forty, show a plurality for the of 13,215 votes. The official canvass, It Is stated,, will change these figures but slightly. The total votes for the four candidates are given as follows: Oscar Underwood, 71.55C. Woodrow Wilson, 5S.341. Champ Clark, 20.8C0. Judson Harmon, 8,257. Although Gov. Wilson carried more than thirty counties In the State, Including all the larger cities, he will not get a fraction of the to tho BaltiGeorgia delegation Under the order more convention. of tho State Democratic Executhe Committee, the State convention which meets May 29 will be composed of delegates Instructed for choice of the State. the popular This means thnt Mr. Underwood ls delegates sure of the twenty-eigh- t from Georgia. an it We have the Agency in Ohio County for the Famous ,,Automobiles I Ford Model "T" Made by the Studebaker Corporation. Also the Celebrated FLANDERS 20 and E. M. F. 30 We sell the products of the biggest and best motor car manufacturers in the business for the price. We carry cars in stock at our garage in Central City. We would be pleased to have you visit us and look at our cars. Correspondence solicited. To Macon, Ga. Hattlesburg, Miss., May C Four trainmen and six or moio passen-L'cr- s were killed and at least forty passengers Injured when the first suction of the Teas Confederate DIG CHURCH KKKCTF.D IX LESS THAN A DAY -- .SpaltahhurprS.-vC., May4." A reunion special, en routo to Macon, (5a., was wrecked at Gunn's Mill, on the New Orleans & Northwestern railroad, six miles north of Hattlesburg, at 8:45 a. m. FIo bodies were brought to big on the cars of the on the special which remained Hat-tlesbu- rg church, not a stone or stick of w'llch w'hh stnnding at sunrise this morning, is bclrig worshipped in to night by ;i great congregation that fills the building and overflows Into i announced by the Bethel of Methodist mombers Church thnt they would erect a building In one day, the church to be known as Thero wero those who doubted, but when more than 200 workmen, well organized, gathered at the scene this morning It the street. It had been ' Barnes & Clay Machine W'ks II L! catalogs 1N 1 sEsrr if- ohne Fe: QUESTS ' KAL II 11 I, ii - - - - JMLINIUUVI. 3G ii 1111 track. Four bodies were removed from the wreck after the relief train, with five bodies and the injured, Still left the scene at Hattlesburg. other bodies can be seen under the wreckage. The engine, baggage car, the day coach and three tourist sleepers left the track and rolled down an emremaining The six bankment. roaches of the veterans' special were hurriedly transformed into a morgue and hospital, and as soon as an engine reached the scene, the dead and injured were brought here. The 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 crdss-In- g an embgankment with a trestle In the center. Just as the engine reached the trestlo It was seen by a Mr. Ounn of Gunn's mill, to rear up and leave the track. The five cars followed the engWe, somo tumbling down the embankment on one Bide and some on the other, forming a tangled mass of splinters and twisted Iron. Two of the against poles of the cars Hashed Company, Cumberland Telephone thirty feet from the track, demol ishing tho poles and severing com municatlon with Hattlesburg. DEAVP.lt DAM. Mrs. W. A. Austin departed thlB life April 30th, after a long illness of stomach trouble. After short funeral services at tho home conducted by Rev. W. D. Wright, of Hartford, her remains were Interred In the Liberty burying ground, attended by a large concourse of borrowing relntlves Mrs. Austin was a and friends. daughter of Henry and Bettlf Smith Baltzoll, a family that was well Tinown In Ohio county In days. She first married Mr. John Martin, who preceded her several years ago. She left one son by her first husband, Mr. Forest Martin, who Is mantel and living ut Central City. The widow if Wm Smith, living n mile South of Beaver Dam,dled tlie 4th Inst., at hsr home, of heart trouble. She nnd her husband, together with the Barrass family, emigrated from Enzlind to this counyears ago, and try about twentv-Pv- o have lived In Taylor Mines and vicinity ever since. She leaves eight children, four boys and four girls. All are married except her young' st girl and three boys. Mr. Frank Casebier has sold his residence on Iroad street to Mr. Mr. Jones has lately D. F. Jones. moved to our town to take the place of Mr. John Waddle In superintending the flour mill, Mr. Waddle's health having failed. ,Mr. Jones Is an expert In the milling business and also a good Sunday School May . nnte-liollum RICKRTTS. J Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Patton and 's daughter Elda C. visited Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Miller, near Dundee, Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Hula Mldklff, of this place, Howard, of Ralph, and Mr. went to Rockport, Ind., and wore married last Saturday. Their many friends wish them much happiness. Pat-ton- May C. Mr. Mack Daniel, wife became' apparent that the undertaking would be accomplished. and child, of this place, spent SatIt is estimated that 5,000 persons urday night and Sunday with Mrs. visited the building during thd day. Daniel's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John , Motion picture machines played up- Gray, at on the crowdB and upon the buildMiss Tlldle Morris, of near Coning at every stage of its eredtlon. cord, spent from Wednesday till tho building standi com- Saturday with Miss Jra Royal here, pleted, painted, papered, carpeted Mrs. Era Black, who has been at and furnished throughout. the bedside of her sister at Beaver Dam, has returned home. spent Sunday Mls8 Ira Royal When your food does not digest well and you feol "blue," tired and with Misses Corlo and Orle Maple, discouraged, you should use a lit- of near Victor schoolhouse. The singing at Mr. Bird Lee's tle HERBINE at bedtime. It opens tho bowels, purifies tho system and Saturday night was largely attendADARURG. restores a fine feeling of health and ed and all reported a good time. May 3. Mr. Riley Greer's son, Messrs. C. N. Daniel and N. G. energy. Price 50c. Sold by Hartwho has been sick for some time, ford Drug Co., Hartford, Ky., Don- Patton, who have been III, are was nigh unto death at noon ovan & Co., Beaver Dam, Ky. m Mr. John Raymon Is In Whltes-vlll- e on business. Plays the Gnme IjilMtJp Woman. The State convention of the"Llly Mr. C. L. Patton and sister Mary In other words, though T. R. In- Whites" faction of the Republican shopping. are at Ralph sists on having a square deal, he ob- party, held In Alexandria, La., split Mr. and Mrs. John Raymon visit jects to letting the other fellow cut into two wings, each electing deleed Mrs. Raymon's parents, Mr. and Dethe cards when he's dealing. gates, one set being Instructed for Mrs. Stewart, on Barnett's creek, troit Free Press. Taft and the other for Roosevelt. To-rtlg- ht y. YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND A Practical Cooking and Baking Demonstration or the C y New Perfection Blue Flame Oil Stove At my Store for three days, SlJfSa Heel lfcGjMMnft to-da- MONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY May 13th, 14th and 15th. Spring Time! mmmmmmmmaamammmimmmmammsmmmmmKmmmmmmmm I Expert Lady Demonstrator in attendance. Come and learn the merits and economy of this stove. CENTERTOWN. May C. vantage of the few days pretty weather in rounding up their spring work. Mr. Williams, of Butler county, hns purchased the store of E. S. and will take possession at once. Esq. Jackson wont to McIIcnry Frid.iy on business. 'Messrs. E. S. McMillen nnd W. S. Whnlln went to Beaver Dam Saturday. Mr. F. M. Alien lias sold his farm to Alva Callowav. Mr. Claude Chapman and wife, of Broadway Mines, are visiting their parents here. Farmers are taking ad- , am ....Good Things to Eat Served Free.... . S. L. KING Kent IMF What Tenns Admire Is hearty, vigorous life, according to Hugh Tallman, of San Antonio. "We find," he writes, "that Dr. King's New Life Pills surely put new life and energy Into a person. Lwife and I believe they are tho best made." Excellent for stomach, llv-- r or kidney troubles. 25c at James m H. Williams. Bishop Earl Cranston, of Wash-- ; ngton, D. C, In addressing the General ConMethodist Eplscopil ference, declared tho fact tvas critical that tho church's membership showed but a 2 per cent. Increase. Town property, vacant y dwelling lots, cottages and A. C. YEISER & CO.! Hartford, Ky. Call and see our line of Dry Goods, Clothing, Furniture and Star Brand Shoes. All new no old, stale goods in our store. Also Farming Implements, Cultivators, Field Fence Wire, and Fencing of all kinds. NOW IS LOOK! YOUR CHANCE wo- - TO get a good Piano at a real bargain. Organs from $20.00 up. Call and see our line of Bbeet music; it is the very latest. We repair Pianos and Organs. We will move your piano with tho piano trupks and coyera; no danger of damaging it." PiaiTb boxes for sale. If you will calf St our store you a song book. will give mm e. s. McMillan, CENTERTOWN, - KENTUCKY. PHONES: :Cim. J. HERTFORD MUSIC CO., FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE FOR fc High CraleJPianos, Player Pianos and Organs. HARTFORD, KENTUCKY. Vr- -- For Pnic two-stor- Farmers 15-- 2. Plenty of Good Reading n The Herald and it'Cosfe You Only One Dollar a Tear. N!t,l,t,aj. Iffffcl wa fr.i 'V ' ;: -. - ,