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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 14, 1912
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 14, 1912 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912081401_sn84037890 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): August 14, 1912 Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.) Jno. P. Barrett & Co. Hartford, KY 1912 $IMLS This electronic text file was created by Optical Character Recognitio n (OCR). No corrections have been made to the OCR-ed text and no editing has be en done to the content of the original document. Encoding has been done through an automated process using the recommendations for Level 1 of the TEI in Librar ies Guidelines. Digital page images are linked to the text file. fc THE HARTFORD HERALD. "I Corn, He HeralJ of a Smjj World, Ibe l II Subscription $1 Per Year, in Advance. Jim of 111 Naliim Lnmbtring at Hj Bad." All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed. NO. 33 whole, about like that in neighboring States that held primaries. In ten Republican States voters were given a chance to express their il.olce, and In these States Mr. Taft was rejected by two to one carrying only one of them, Massachusetts, and that by a small margin. Thes ten Stae3 contain three and a quarter million Republican voters; but the issue was settled for them bv the southern mercenaries and the northern bosses. A very small coterie in command of the machinery outweighed millions of mere voters." 38th YEAR. BEAVER HARTFORD, KY., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1912. FIRE Losses also have been great in TenAlabama, nessee, the Carollnas, Mississippi and Louisiana. particularly On some of these, Louisiana, they exceed the million mark. The corn, cotton, sugar cane and ripe crops from Louisiana . to the Atlantic have been affected. WAS STA1JBKI) TO DEATH OVER A GAME OF CARDS 01 WILSON'S SPEECH OF ACCEPTANCE ways, of the building of an quate merchant marine. "We have got into ade- STILL JJ(STER Estate Fire Marshal Called On to Solve It. ESTIMATED OfDemocraticPresidential Nomination LOSSJS $30,000 A J Large Part of the Business Section Was Totally sort. Wiped Out. The -- Owenton, Ky., Aug. 10. J. T." Kenelver, 48 years old, a respected HAS THE PBOPERRINB TO IT was stabnewsdealer of Owenton, bed to death by Ollle Jump, last r.lght in Crap3 Hollow, a secluded Not to Catch Votes, But for spot near town, known to residents of Owen county as a gamblers' reRight aud Justice to INSURANCE FOR ABOUT HALF Fire of a suspicious origin broke jjjut at Beaver Dam about 1 o'clock I ,A"r FHdav moinlnK ana for awnue uio I .....1 UUB1UCDB .srllnn rf ho tfjWIl Dcmtwii w. WllUiU ...!.. seemed doomed. swept away a large section ofthe town on the west sjde of Main street, nearly opposite the Beaver Dam Hotel, entailing a total loss of about $30,000, with only a little over half that amount of Insurance. The origin of the fire Is still a mystery, but there are rumors that burglars were probably the cause of It. The young lady night operator at the Beaver Dam telephone exchange, which was situated in the block that was burned, was called at 1 o'clock and told that It was thought burglars were breaking Into the safe In Gentry's store. Some one passed the store and saw a light In the rear, Inside. It was only a few minutes later that the telephone operator and scores of the citizens were alarmed, by an As It was, the lire men were engaged In a game of cards. Harsh feellng3 had existed Jump and Kenetver for between some time. At the time of the murder both men were under the influence of liquor, and It Is said Kenetver accused Jump of dealing tho cards unfairly. The fight followed. 'Kenetvor died within five minutes after being stabbed. Jump was arraigned fh Judge Vancy's court this morning and guilty ttf the charge of pleaded murder In tho ,rst degree and a special term of court will be called to try the case. Kenetver Is survived by a wife and one child. Jump has -- a wife, and live children. Six other men wero arrested on a charge of gambling, to which they pleaded guilty. I'AMDEX AXD EAGER TO HEAD STATU COMMITTER Louisville, Ky., Aug. 9. Behind closed doors, In the Tyler hotel, the Democratic State Central and State Executive Committees, In Joint sesnamed J. N. Camden, sion, of Versailles, as chairman of the Committee, and Stato Campaign Judge S. W. Hager, of Owensboro, as vice chairman. Tho resolution naming them was offered by W. B. White, member of from tho Committee tho Central and empowers the chairman to name the remaining members of tho committee, to consist of not less than ono member from the He also Is to name a secretary. he would not deHo said upon his appointdefinitely cide ments until later. No name, other than that of Mr. Camden, was offered In connection wlththe campaign committee chairState-at-large, Statc-at-large. ht the People. GREAT IDEAS OF A GREAT MAX that the dry goods store was a mass of flames. The volunteer fire department was called out and did lino work In ..n.,i,r thn flrn to one block. J. F. Casebler's hardware store, located on the corner, over which Is the telephdne exchange, was saved from total destruction by the volunteer firemen. explosion. Then It was discovered i are a number of people believe that burglars started the fire. Mr. Oentry had recently installed a gas lighting plant in his store and it Is suggested that it wa3, the cause of the fire and that the explosion resulted when the fire reached the gas tank. The cause of the conflagration is manship. still a mystery, and the local auA thorities have called on the State JOHX V. BIBLE OWXS BIG IIL'Iilj MOOSE HEAD investi-tloFire Marshall to make an There who do not n. Hopklnsville, Ky., Aug. 10. Col. list of the losses and the carried fol- Roosevelt and others may be interamount of insurance ested to learn thnjt the biggest low: bull moose head In the Gentry, dry goods; loss on mounted J. F. It came $7,000. world Is In Hopklnsville. Insurance stock, $11,000; from John F. BiBuilding owned by J. H. Barnes; by express ble, president of the Kentucky Manloss, $3,500; insurance, $1,500. Association, from l.h D. M. Stewart & Company, dry ufacturers' A to-da- y goods; loss, $S,000; Insurance, $4,-000. Building owned by J. P. Stevens; loss $3,000; insurance, $1,000. S. T. Mason, groceries; loss on $1,700; Insurstock and fixtures, ance, $1,000; 1ps3 on building Insurance, $500. J. A. Tate, restaurant and confectionery; loss, $800; no Insurance. Building pwnod by W. T. Austin; loss $800; no Insurance. livery and Stevens & Company, loss on building and feed stable; All $3,000; no Insurance. feed, the horses and vehicles were saved. groceries; D. L. D. Sanderfur, on stock and fixtures, $1,000; loss no insurance. J. F. Casobler & Company, hard- ware; no damage to stock, but $500 damage to roof of building. 9( $1,-000; former home in Michigan, and Is a trophy of one of his hunts. The moose weighed 2,350 pounds and stood seven feet and a half high. Official sporting records show the head Is the largest In preservation. Mr. Bible has refused an offer of ?6,000 for It. m m Lightning' tent Fatal Pursuit. to-da- Cleveland, O., Aug. 10. Persisy in Its pursuit, lightning and his pair of killed Dan Williams l;or?C3. Two weeks ago Williams, a farmer of South Brooklyn, near here, lost a pair of horses when lightning struck his barn. y he went to Elyrla, bought another pair and was driving them home when a bolt descended, killing Williams and his team. To-da- DAMAGE FHOM ARMY WORM $8,000,000 IX A MONTH Aug. 10. Washington, More J 1 - R. than $8,000,000 damago was done to crops In the South last month by the army worms, according to unofficial estimates of the Department of Agriculture. Whether the season's second brood of the Insects, already appearing In South Carolina, Alabama, 'Georgia and other States, will m increase this loss, Is of much conAll Bedtime Plntfornis. cern to Government experts. If all the impossible promises In the means at the department's disposal are being used to meet the the Bull Moose platform could be emergency. carried out, all the people of this to the department say country would have to do would be Reports the army worms, at some places to go to bed; tho Government would Philadelphia Press. halt a foot deep, on railroad tracks, do tho rest. trains. Tho loss is have stopped placed at $1,000,000 In Georgia, f nT.n' PAPEns TOR SALE at The while in Arkansas 20 per cent, of j Herald office. Nice and clean, tied the corn and 10 per cent, of the up In bundles. Five cents a buntf cotton planted have been destroyed. dle, three for ten cents. .- Woixlrow Wilson's Picture. The New York World Is giving away free to Its subscribers a fine photogravure picture of Gov. Wood-ronominee Democratic Wilson, for President. It is a beautiful likeness, 15x20 Inches, done on fine crayon paper suitable for framing, The Hartford and Is copyrighted. ,NewYork Herald andThrlce-a-Wee- k World (including the picture) will both be sent to any address one tf year for only $1.65. w -- --' -- - By a feat Now York, Aim. 12. of modern surgery a boy, admitted to the Post Graduate Hospital live weeks ago with deformities which in the light of medfice. ical science of a few years or even County Attorney C. E. Smith, ago would have made him months Justices Grant Pollard and Mack a hopeless cilpple for life, returns Cook appointed as committee to Iny sound to Waterbury, Conn., vestigate as to the advliabliity of and normal In limb and functions. straightening Caney creek near Bone transplantation, the newest report to Fiscal Bob Daniel's and line of experimentation in twentieth Court. the leclalmed century si.rt'ory, Ordered that the contract with young cripple. Bones tnken from the Champion Bridge Co. to conthe bodies of healthy Infants who struct bridge at Hlte's Falls, be apdeaths and had suffered violent proved and said bridge to be paid placed In cold storage, were transfor by Grayson and Ohio counties planted into the body of the boy, nn at cost of ?n,."00. can entirely new operation, which County Attorney C. E. Smith, now be pronounced successful. Circuit Court (leik K. G. Bnrrass The little patient was born with and Jailer W. P. Midklff appointed deformed feet, commonly known as as committee for earning for rubclub feet, due to the fact that there bish at court house and removing number of were not the normal court house fence and connecting bones in the feet. the court house toilet with the city measThe ordinnry corrective sewer and report their acts. ures hitherto employed by surgeons Sttatton h Terslegge Co.. Louisthe cut-tln- s In similar cases required ville, allowed $112. SO for 6S ballot, of the ligaments and tissues boxes aud 12 dozen locks for priand the gradual straightening of mary election. August :', 1912. the feet by the use of brace; and Ordered that W. S. Tlnsley be apparatus. This treatment occupi allowed $15 on account expenses to ed yenrs, nnd even if it produced Louisille as special commissioner corrective effect, never gave requir to bonow monev, and purchase baled strength to the feet to bring lot boxes for the primary election, an efabout what might he August I!, 1912. KEXTVCKIAXS PLEASED fectual cure. Ordered that E. W. Jackson be SPEECH WITH WILSON'S allowed the sum of $500 together HEAVY FLOW STRl'CK BY Washington, Aug. 10. Senator-elec- t with 7 per cent, on account of DRILLERS IX NICHOLAS Ollle James, chairman, and money loaned the county and payav ble one ear from date. Carlisle, Ky., Aug. 12. A heavy Representative Ben Johnson, Justices Thomas Panders. Mack Notimembers of the Wllf-owater Lick mineral flow of Blue x it'i w:.rt? rirl'I'-- . ro'. wlfi was struck by the drillers on the fication Committee, returned to Cook and Grnnt Pollard appointed 'acs questions of party, not with a con- property of the Blue Lick Springs Washington this morning from Sea- as committee to asceitaln the adtest for office, not with a petty "onipanv at Blue Lick springs, this girt, both satistUd nhnolutoly with visability of constructing bridge struggle for advantage. With great county, at a depth of 500 fet. In the ceremony Wednesday and the across Adam's Fork creek on road questions of right and of Justice, a few hours the mineral water had acceptance speech of Gov. Wilson. lending from Narrows to Magan. rather questions of national de- raised 470 feet in the well. The "It was a great day and every- Said committee authorized to have velopment, of the development of strike was made near the old well thing looks tine for Wilson," said the bridge built. Moved that J. A. Johnson, M. A. character and of standards of action on the north side of the Licking Mr. James. Barnard and P. A. Moxley be apno less than cf a better business river, where the strong vein of this Representative Johnson said: system. The forces of the nation Iwa'er recently failed. With tho "It was a splendid speech pro- pointed as committee to construct assorting themselves against ev- bringing In of another strong vein gressive enouch and conservative X V miles of pike on Hartford and ire Llvermore road. By substitute moery foim of special privilege and of the water and the building of the enough." tion, the matter was postponed unirlvntc control, and are seeking Cincinnati, Licking Valley and Virtil October term of Fiscal Court. L. & X. Earning. bigger things than they have ever ginia railroad through tho springs. LouIstIIip and T. E. Butler allowed 20 on acKnrnlngB of tho heretofore achieved. it will probably become one of the two groat things to leading summer and health resorts Nashville Ralroad Company for the count of four tripr to Leltch field as "There are first week In August Increased $35.-12- commissioner for Ohio Fiscal Court, do. One Is to set up the rule of of the country. compared with tho samo week In regard to constructing p bridge ar.d of light In 3iich matters mi Justice across Rough river r.t Hlte's Falls. last year. The earnings were as the tariff, the regulation of 'the Wealthy Boy EimIh Life. n io, while for the first week of Moved that a sufficient amount and the prevention of motrusts Ky., Aug. 12. The Covington, appropriated to August, 1911, they were $1,023,-59- bo and Is hereby nopoly, the adaption of our bank- body of Kenneth Carpenter,' twenty-eigpay election officers for primary ing and currency laws to the very wealthy years old, son of a From July 1 to August 7 the election held In Ohio countv Auguses to which our people must put farmer residing near Rlchwood, Estimated SH50. nn in- ust 3, 1912. them, the treatment of those who Ky., was found dead on the steps In earnings were $5,518,765, crease of $208,427 over last year' do the dnlly labor in our factories the rear of the Rlchwood district JOOOOOOOO'JOOOOOOOO receipts. and mines throughout all our great 'school at 7 o'clock this morning. O MARRIAGE MCRXSE. 0 under'mln'trlal and corvrr'rclal A wound in his forehead and a MACHINERY OITW EIGHER takings, and the political life of revolver lying a ew icci num M1LLIOXS OF VOTERS the people of the Philippines, for gavo evidence of tho manner Dam, to A. E. Maxey, Beaver whom we hold governmental power In which he met death. The motive The Saturday Evening Post gives Nettle A. Hocker, Raver Dam. service, not our for the act is not known. In trust, for their About Royd Swain, Prcntis, to Maude "In own. Tho other, the additional 'eight years ago Carpenter attempt us this interesting reminder: Jamngln, Prentts. Is the great task of protec-In- g ed suicide by draining the contents 1908 there were seven million and duty, Geo. T. TInslov, Simmons, to voters In the a half Republican our people nnd our resources of a bottle of Paris green. country. Last month Mr. Taft was Znda Carter, Hartford. R. F. D. 4. of keeping open to the whole and Ollle D. Pcttv, Ford3ville, to Omn by 561 delegates, of nominated people the doors of opportunity $1.23 Round Trip. rockrlb-,be- d K. Moxley, Fordsvllle. through which they must, generHartford to Hardlnsburg, on ac- whom 20S came from ten Democratic States in the South Hogs For Sale. ation by generation, pass, If they count of tho Breckenrldge County !o33 than fcre to make conquest of tholr for- Fair August 20, 21, 22, 1912. that contain, all told, welshing from Some nice shnr-ttunes In health. In freedom, In Trains leave Hartford 7:19 a. m. 400,000 Republican voters. He re- 50 to 90 pounds. Call at residence Ky., will ceived 132 ballots from Inwn, Indi- In Reaver Dam on Saturday, AugIn the People from Fordsvllle, peace, and In contontmcnU g:e. performance of this second take the same train at . Ellmltch ana, Michigan and NewYork, whore ust 24 th. duty wo arc face to face with ques- 8.05 n. m. Return train leaves the voters had been carefully denied a RICHARD BAKER. fair chance to express their choice tions of conservation and of devel- Fair ground gate at 5 o'clock. Braver Dam, Ky. but where the complexion of Requestions of forests and opment, waterpowers and mine's and water Subscribe for The Hartford Herald. publican thought must be on the Subscribe for The Hurtfonl Herald. ld s e, wide-spreadite-m- ed Ken-tuek! I j ' 0, $1,-05- 9, ht 0. I Seagirt, N. J., Aug 7. Impressive austerity marked the delivery of the speech of Gov. Wilson this afternoon accepting the DemocratThe ic nomination for President. executle unfolded a fabric of political beliefs and invoked a rule "of right and Justice" in politics. A motley throng gathered at the summer capital, deluding the committee, Democratic governors, college profes&ors, summer folk and marching clubs. Attentive seriousness was the attitude of the was freaudience. The applause was 111 at quent. The Governor ease because of the reading of the address instead of speaking extemporaneously, as he Is accustomed. Senator-elec- t Ollle James' speech of notification was punctuated by frequent demonstrations from the crowd. From the broad veranda of the white-coate- d house where the Governors of New Jersey are wont to spend their summers, the nominee Grouped bedelivered his speech. willows neath the and elms were the most prominent in by clumps of guests, hedged ferns and bushes. After thanking the committee of notification and expressing his profound sensepf responsibility In accepting the nomination, the Governor said he realized that ho was expected to speak plainly, to talk pol itics and open the campaign "In words whose meaning no one need doubt." And he was expected to speak, he added, to the country The as well as to the committee. following is an excerpt of his speech: "We must speak," he continued, by way of preface, "not to catch votes, but to satisfy tho thought and conscience of a people deeply stirred by the conviction that they have come to a critical turning point in their moral and political development. "Plainly It. Is a new age," he went on. "It requires self restraint not to attempt too much, and et it would be cowardly to attempt too little. In the broad light of this new day, we stand face to notl-l.catl- in trouble because these largo thlijgs, which ougiit to haw been handled by taking counsel with as large a number of persons as posslble.because they touch every Interest and the life of ever class and region, have In fact been too often handled In private conference. They have been settled by very sn'all, and often deliberately exclusive gioups of men who undertook to speck for the whole nation, or, rather, for themselves In the terms of the whole nation very honestly lt,may be, but xery lgnorantly sometimes, and very shortsightedly too a poor substitute for genuine common counsel. No group of directors, economic or political, can speak for a people. They have neither tho point of view nor the knowledge. Our difficulty Is not that men hnve wicked and designing plotted agalntt us, but that our common affairs have been determined upon too narrow a view, and Our by too private an Initiative. task now is to effect a great and get the forces or the whole people once more into play. We need no revolution; we need no excited change; we need only a new point of view and a new method and splift of Counsel." CM - cy recent jears chiefly m people EVERYBODY Solicited for Wilson and Marshal Ticket. IS 11 C1NCEJ0 ed Fund To Contribute to An UntaintAll Can Help ooooooooooooooo FISCAL COURT NOTES. ooooooooooooooooo O O Some. MODE.sT OFVeRS ACCEITER HOPELESS CRIPPLE MADE sorxi) P.V XEW PROCESS Special (By Clyde H. Tavenner, Washington Cor. of The Herald.) Aug. 10. A camWashington, paign fund contributed wholly by tho people, and untainted by a single dollar of contribution trom trusts and monopolies: This is the watch ord of Hon. Jame3 T. Lloyd, chairman of the National Democratic Congressional Committee In starting In to raise a campaign fund to carry on necessary organization and educational the election work looking townrd or Democrats" 10 Congress tula fall. The work of this committee in the 1910 campaign was something Every Democratic canenormous. In the United didate for Cong-.eiStates was glen valuable assiat-aucand millions upon millions of books, etc., speeches campaign tin were distributed, increasing number of Democratic workers everywhere and creating a xast sentiment. amount of Democratic The result was the election of a DemoHouse of Representatives cratic by a majority of ti.. Is confronted This committee with an even more Important camy wholly without paign, and is funds as a result of Its refusal to accent "easy" money from special Interests which w.ould be In a pofavor sition to p.xpect legislative should tlulr contributions bo accepted for campaign purposes. livery reader of this article can help the cause of Democracy pnd good government by making a contribution now while tho committee WhethIs badly in need of funds. er your contribution is large oi small, it will be useful. Checks or currency should be sent direct James T. Lloyd, chairman, or H. D. Flood, treasurer, of Dip Congressional National Domoc-at- lc Committee, Washington, D. C. Contributions made earlier will do the most good. At n special term held last Friday and Saturday Judge R. R. Wedding presiding nnd County Attorney C. E. Smith and following Justices present: It. S. Chambeilln, J. L. Patton. Gr:.nt Pollard, O. E. Scott, J. C. Jackson, J. H. Milos, Mack Cook and Thomas Sanders, the following buiiinwg was transacted: Hartford Republican was allowed ad. $190.25 on account of notice to sheep bhippers and printing election supplies, ballots, (Sic. John P. Morton & Co. allowed $80.20 for binding Assessor's books for year 1912. Henry- L. Koelor Mfg. Co., allowed the sum of SIX. 00 on account election seals, pads and stenciU for primary election, year 1912. , All contracts for bridges, road levy and all other work In which a written contract Is entered Into, was by an order, directed to be recorded In County Court Clerk's of24-in- oocooocoooooooo s -- j m MJ . tr "'.' V ,s -- I T?! t)?u''ym.!i,w'v-",-',r'-T'.''iiw,- ' i"r",i'"V1j.,1 nr '"'ti.'lny r"rr,rf"'!"r j j"vim,"w't"''""1 yT" f " t -- j 4 '"W-4' wl,,,'lff,i?yywlyy 14, 101a. !l t'i page two. tion In Chicago as a delegate for THE HARTFORD HERALD WFPNFn.yf august 800 CROWDING THEM t! c Eighth district. NOTICE TO SUBCRIBERS. The Hartford Herald lias received notice from the Third Assistant General that Me must comply with the new postal regulaThere tions in regard to subscriptions more than one jcar in nm-nrs- . are evernl who have not paid during the past year nnd we nre now compelled to comply with the ruling. During the past year we have iniide u special elTort to get these old accounts collected up, mid most of them Imvc responded, hut there are u .good .many .who .have .not responded to our request. .If you. want us to continue The Herald when in nricnrs more than one year, you must notify us in writing to 'that eircit, otherwl.se we must take your name olV the list If more than one year in nirear.s. With us It Is not a question of etciidlng you credit, hut n question of complying with the U. S. Postal res.!la-tlon- s. Any iinine taken on does not release the person from their obDepartment ligation to pay their back subscriptions, so the I'o't-Ofllc- c rules. This, of course, applies to all subscribers, regardless of financial standing, and we do earnestly appeal to those who arc more than a yfur In arrears to call ut The Herald office at once and settle or remit by mall the amount due. The label on your paper will show where jou are paid to. Please consult that NOW and he governed accordingly. We do not want to lose a single one of our subscribers, butl jour pionipt attention Is very necessary If you wish The Herald to coi'tlnue its weekly visit. When a .subscription is discontinued, one notice will be sent to the subscriber and if a prompt response is not we will necessarily have to place nil such accounts in the bauds r a collecting agency, who will take charge of the adjustment of same. Please he prompt. Rest plan Is to pay in advance. er feet above tho sea, while la a closa second, Wy-cm'.- 001 OF THE PARTY w Moose Portraits Inflame Leaders to Action. THEP1CTURES OF C, M, BABNLTT And Other Moosers Consigned To Junk Heap Adopt Rigid Discipline. iiAiti:;vG rxni-:siuAiUii:s out 7. Tlie ReCommittee publican State Central convened In called session to take ui important party matters In the lieadquartcrs In tho Gait House at with the folH: IT. o'clock lowing members present: Scholl, LouisC. L. ville, and J. F. Hosworth, Mlddles-bor- Loulsllle. Ky.. Aug. to-da- y, At-lar- o. I S If! ? I V t N i The Trials of a Traveler. "I am a traveling salesman," wrlfps E. E. Youngs, E. Berkshire, Col. John W. McCulloch, of Vt., "and was often troubled with Republican National Com- "onxtlpatlon and Indigestion till I mitteeman for Kentucky and also a b"jan to use Dr. King's Now Life trember of the State Central Com- PI'ls, which I have found an excelmittee, offered a resolution intend- lent remedy." For all stomach, ed to discipline the State, county, liver or kidney troubles they are t nnd precinct Republican or unenualod. Only 25 cents at James ganizations of the State by purging' H. Williams. m all'ihe committees of persons with "Rull Moose" tendencies. Ills plan CENT DIVIDEND Is to prefer charges against all perON THE COMMON STOCK positions on sons holding official New York, Aug. 9. The Amerithe party organization and that un- less tho "Rull Moosers" under sus- can Tobacco Companv announced y pension resign, that they be kicked that a dividend of 20 per off tho committees. emit of the common stock will be John I'. Haswell, of the Fourth paid on September 3 to tho holders district, agreed with Col. McCul-- , o' check cards of August 1.", The loch, but he wanted incorporated In funds of the dividends, It was exthe resolution a clause giving those plained, were realized by the sales who vote tho "Rull Moose" ticket a o." one-haof the company's holdchance to tome back to tho Repub- ing of the American Tobacco stock, lican party after "Roosevelt Is dead about one-haof Its holdings of "an politically." Col. Mc- - ordinary share" of the Imperial Toand burled Culloch accepted Mr. Haswell's view bacco Company, and all of Its holdnnd said that his resolution was ings in the United Cigar stores' only Intended for "Hull Moosers" funds. Tho extra dividend was an occupy Indirect result of the dissolution of who and "Insurgents" places on the party committees.! hp Tobacco Trust. Col. McCulJoch said he was willing A vast amount of 111 health Is to "keep tho doors open until judgment day for all the erring breth- ''.''c to Impaired digestion. When ren," hut that ho was opposed to the stomach falls to perform Ita any enemy of tho Republican party functions properly, the whole sysA few official position In tho tem becomes deranged. occupying of Chamberlain's Tablets is , doses party organization. The appeal of tho caso of J. H. all you need. They will strengthen Invigorate your Swope, of Danville, against J. K. your indigestion, Involving tho liver, and regulate your bowels, Tunis, of Danville, chairmanship of Boylo county, was entirely doing away with that misthat Mr. erable feeling due to faulty digesdiscussed, It developing Swope had Joined the "Bull Moose" tion. Try It. Many others have movement and was now attending been permanently cured why not m the "Progressive" national conven you? For sale by all dealers. v. di.-trlcJO-PE- i: lf lf First District J. W. I.andrum, Maytield. W. McCul- Second District J loch, Owensboro. Tlilnl District J. F. Taylor, Glasgow. Fourth District J, P. Haswell, Hnrdinsburg. Fifth. District .T., M Chilton, Louisville. Seventh Dlsrtclt H. G. Garret, Winchester. Klehth District G. 1). Florence, Stanford. H. l Ernst, of the Seventh; F. H McCarthy, of tlie Nnlth; .1. A. Scott, of the Tenth, and A. T. Slier, of the Eleventh district, were expected, but had not arrived when the committee went Into session. Rteht o.T the reel, ChaUman E. T. Fianks said that he noticed several pictures of heretofore prominent Republicans who had left the party adorning the "alls of tho State headquarters, naming Theodore Roosevelt, Clcoro M. Harnett and Thomas L. V.'alker, and he said he would entertain a motion as to what disposition should be made of Scholl, of C. L. these pictures. Louisville, said: "Let them stay up on tho wall that we can express our opinion of them." Col. J. W. Landrum, of Mavfleld, moved that tl.u pictured of the thren "Hull Moosers" be taken out of tho headquarters. Tho motion was ndopted unanimously with ? whoop and Franks ordered SecreChairman tary Bennett, In charge of tho headquarters, to remoc tho pictures, and they will be promptly consigned to the dump In the basement. To fill vacancies In the offlce of of Elector, Charles T. Rallard, Louisville, In the Fifth, and K. O. Hleronymous, of Lee county, In the Seventh district, were unanimously D. Rlack, elected. In the case of the Republican Klector of tho Eleventh distilct, who It was reported had accepted the same place on the "Hull Moose" ticket, the secretary of the State Central Committee was directed to ascertain tho facts. Mr. Mallard takes tho place of Marshall Bullitt, who resigned to become of the United General Solicitor States, and Mr. Hleronymous sucwho was receeds C. V. Pnrrlsh, cently appointed Postmaster at Mld-v.a1 I of Charles L. Scholl, Secretary Bennett Louisville, v as directed to have the name of Clceio M. Rarnett, of Hartford, removed from the official stationery of the Republican State Campaign Committee as a member of the Finance Committee and to notify Col. Harnett to return to the Republican headquarters any funds he may have collected since uniting with the "Rull Moose" movement. Bradley In Fn-- or of l'uttlnjj the Mooters Out. Aug. 10. The acWashington, Republican tion of Kentucky's "jtatc Central Committee, in adopt-n- g a resolution at Louisville reading out of the Republican party all KentucKlans who had "turned Progressive," was heartily y by .Senator Brad-leIndoised right," "They did perfectly said the Senator. "Nobody has any right In the Republican party who very I am Republican. Is not n triad the action was taken." The consensus of opinion of Ken- turkv politicians hero Is that Representative Caleb Powers has got himself Into a bod bole. Just how can extricate himself, now that Roosnvnlt has advocated his Col. ueieai, ami hiiil-- ne iuia ui;iii'u uic displeasure of Senntor Rradlev and President Taft as witness their ig e r.orlng Powers In Is i problem that the Eleventh District congressman win have to work out alone. RpPiPtor Rtndlev will not discuss m'p i.iovenm iJismci i ongri'B!iuiiui situation for publication, but he Is displeased Vnown to be decidedly with the general course pursued by the necessity Powers In bewailing f supporting Taft. and at the same 'Imp making overtures to the "Hull Moosers " Senator Bradley dors not know lust when he will be able to pitch Into the Kentucky campaign. On motion rf feet lower than Colorado. mum elevation, Florida and Louisiana dispute for second place after Delaware, their average elevation being, for each, 100 f.eet. Taking the United States as a whole, our country lies slightly above the av erage elevation of the land of the globe. CLERGYMEN'S .SALARIES ARE MUCH TOO SMALL only 100 In mini- JOHNSON CHOSEN To Head New "Progressive Party" Ticket. SESSION ENOS WITH SINGING to-da- v. KENTUCKY GUI LAIS ' FRAIL LITTLE CRAFT GROSSED BROAD OCEAN ID Of Same THEOPEN SEASONS Substance of the New Alotorboat Detroit Was In Many Perils During Long Sea Voyage. bo mis- the pe- ot post-offic- State Fish and Game Law. WOODKOW WILKIN ..W) FOREIGN IMMIGRATION newspapers Some Republican are Gov. trying to make it appear that Wilson Is a foe to Immigration, using a certain statement in one of the books ho wrote as the basis for their charges. In the book In question Dr. Wilson deplored the practice. In use at the time he wrote the c book, of certain steamship companies In artificially Immigration from stimulating Southern Europe, ''"hose steamship companies got out huge advertisements and posters, setting forth that every man who came to Amer ica would be given a free farm and n good Job, and other ridiculous promises. Gov. Wilson wrote that this had the effect of bringing many people here who were not In a position to make a success in this country, and who would have been better off at home. Gov. Wilson Is not opposed to Immigration. He wants this country to continue to be a haven for the n'lporesEied peoples of Europe, but h wants sane and reasonable regulations, such as at present prevail. He doesn't want steamship companies to hold out false promises to prospective Immigrants, and It Is significant that practically all of the foreign newspapers published In this country are In accord with his views. trans-Atlanti- Aug. 0. The Queenstown, In order that no one .need motorboat, Detroit, untaken as to the game laws, Saw Through the .Scheme.- of Capt. Thomas riods during which It Is lawful to der command In n little In a recent election shoot In Kentucky are here given: Fleming Day, of New York, arriv- town of Northwest Arkansas, ore afQuail, Pheasant nnd Wild Tur ed here at S:30 o'clock of the candidates for city marshal ter a voyage from New Rochellc, N. received only live votes out of some key November 1." to January 1. Sep- - V., which occupied nearly twenty-fou- r 13 to Rabbit November 500 cast. He took his defeat very days. This was the much to heart and had many bitter nnd tember 13". 13 to Feb- - second leg of the contemplated trip things to say of the "po'ltica! ring" Squirrel November from Detroit, that he claimed had brought about runry 1 Also June 15 to Soptem- - of tie motorboat Mich., to St. Petersburg. bor !"'. his defeat. Tho voyagers wc e welcomed by Duck and Gce3e August 13 to To a friend who wns sympathiz great crowds of people, the chair- ing with him he unburdened him April 1. I oves August 1 to Februnry 1. man of the Harbor Hoard, the pres- self. "They think I ain't on to Woodcock June 20 to February ident of the town council and other their little game," he said. "But I officials, who extended their con- know why they worked and voted 1. gratulations to Capt. Day. In an In- against me. They didn't want me Snipe At any time. t It Is unlawful to shoot any terview the captain declared that to be city marshal. That's why." thrush, meadow lark, linen, martin, he was never in a better boat. Granulated Soie Eyes Cured, Capt. Day said he proved the swallow, woodpecker, red or blue"For twenty years I suffered bird, catbird, or any other song or feasibility of a motorboat race from New York to Europe and he be- from a bad case of granulated sore Insectlverous bird, at anytime. The substance of tho gnmo law lieved that a cup for such an event eyes," says Martin Boyd.of Henrietand the way It Is enforced are here would be offered at an early date. ta, Ky. "In February, 1903, a genThe Detroit will remain here for a tleman asked me to try Chambergiven: days and will proceed for lain's Salve. I bought one box and A commission of four ap- few First of It and my pointed to enforce the gnmo laws,. Cowcs nnd thence for St. Peters- - used about They to nppolnt a chief game war- burg by way of the English Chan-- 1 eyes havo not given me any trouble den at a salary of about $2500 per nel and the North and Baltic seas. since." This salvo Is for sale by all m year and as many additional war- The crew of the Detiolt are all well.! dealers. dens as necessary. They receive all but suffered from stiff limbs, owing space. Tho little money from licenses, lines and bales to the cramped FOR FLETCHER'S craft encountered terrific weather of contraband goods. Second Any game warden can and a succession of gales with high arrest a person caught in the act of sens. She was obliged to heave to Mandy'H Reply. violating the laws, without a war- nino or ten times and pitched nnd g young Mnndy was a rant, seize his gun, net or other s. rolled tremendously. many admir On one occasion the gasoline took colored girl and had and convoy such person or Posfire In the engine room and was ex- ers. Her mistress often lectured persons 'before a Magistrate. with propriety, session of an animal or bird within tinguished with some difficulty. Tho her on behaving prohibited time Is evidence of guilt. fresh water turned foul and thirst One evening the mistress, going Articles thus seized are turned over wns one of the burdens they had Into tho kitchen, was surprised to find a strange darkey with his arm to commission nnd sold or disposed to bear. i around Mandy's valst. of by them. Mr. W. S. Gunsalus, a fnrmer "Why, Mandy," said the mistress Third Countv Attorneys, Com- living near Fleming, Pa., says he Indignantly, "tell that man to tnko monwealth's Attorneys, Sheriffs and has used Chamberlain's Colic, Chol- his arm from around your waist." Constables aro required by law to era and Diarrhoea Remedy In his "Tell him yo'self," said Mandy, see that the fish and game laws are family for fourteen years, and that haughtily. "He's a puffect stran enforced. Hunting licenses arp Is- he has found It to be an excellent ger to me." Fourth remedy, and takes pleasure In recsued by the County Clerks between ommending it. For sale by all Siiliorrllic for The Ilrrnlil. SI n year. 20 and Decemthe dntes of March dealers. m ber 1.1. The cost Is $1 per year for, a person who has been a bonnfldel Dog Faithful When Dying. resident of tho State for a year and . Forgetting his own pain, Clar$1.1 for ence Whitney, 5 years old, Inquirmay hunt on ' ed anxiously Fifth Persons about his pet dog, their own Innd or the adjoining Spot, that went down with him Alany a Hartford Reader Will neighbor's land without license. when the wheels of an automobile Feel Grateful for This Sixth Tho fine for hunting with- -' struck tho lad on Tuesday mornyour license ing. The dog, when It saw its' ant license or loaning Information. to another is not less than $2.1 or young master In danger, ran up to more than $100, or jail sentence. him and tugged at his trousers Just If your back gives out; Seventh You aie not allowed to as the automobile struck them. Becomes lame, weak or aching; shoot, hunt or fish on enclosed Both wero run over. Tlie dog If urinary troubles set In, grounds without consent of owner. was killed and Clarence was bruisPerhaps your kidneys are "In a Violators aro subject to fine of $10 ed. There was a spark of life in bad way." to $2.1 for trespassing. tho dog after the accident, and It Don't delay use Doan'a Kidney Eighth It Is unlawful to dyna- tried to raise itself and lick tho Pills. mite, seine, trap or catch Hsh with hand of the man who picked the Hero is good evidence of their any device other than hook and boy up. Telegram to Cincinnati worth: line, except seines 10x4 feet, or New York Tribune. Mrs. W. N. Bartlett, 620 Trlp-le- tt smaller, are allowed for catching Ky., says: St., Owensboro, Are Ever nt Wnr. minnows for bait. This does not There aro two things everlasting- "Several years ago I used Doan's apply to the two border streams dannot say too the Ohio and Rig Sandy rivers. ly at war, Joy and piles. Rut Buck-len- 's Kidney Pills and For a long Arnica Salve will banish piles much In their praise. Violators subject to fine of from In any form. It soon subdues the time I had nearly every symptom $25 to $100 or Jail sentence. Itching, irritation, inflammation or of kldnoy disease. My hack ached Flying Men Full swelling. It gives comfort, Invites terribly and at night I did not Victims to stomach, liver and kid- Joy. Greatest healer of burns, boils, sleop well. During the day I was ney troubles just like other peoplo, ulcors, cuts, bruises, eczema, scalds, nervous and In ' bed all the time. with like results in loss of appetite, pimples, skin eruptions. Only 25 My feet became swollen and I nervousness, backache, headacho, cents at James H. Williams. m knew I required a good remedy to n feeleuro me. I had often heard Doan's and tired, listless, ing. But there's no need to feel HIGHEST AND LOWEST Kldnoy Pills highly recommended, STATES OF THE UNION so I procured a supply and began like that, as T. D. PeebleB, Henry, Tenn., proved. "Six bottles of taking them as directed. Doan' Almost everybody knows which Kidney Fills cured mo and they Electric Bitters" he writes, "did more to give mo now strength and Is tho smallest and which is the aro the only remedy I will ever use good appetite than all other stom- largest State In tho Union, but how for kidney trouble. I can highly ach remedies I used." So they help many know which Is the lowest and recommend them, as they lived up everybody. It's folly to suffer when which is tho highest? According to the claims made for them." For salo by all dealers. Price 50 this great remedy will help you to the measurements and calculaCo., Buffalo, from tho first dose. Try It. Only tions made by tho United States cents. Foster-Mllbur- n 50 cents at James H. Williams' Geological Survey, Delaware la the New York, sole agents for the drug store. m lowest State; Its elevation above sea United States. level averaging only 60 feet. ColoRemember the name Doan's Subscribe for The Hartford Herald. rado is the highest, averaging C,- - and take no other. , two-thir- record as saying clergyman's salary ought never to be less than $1,000 per year. If the clergyman Is married, the minimum should bo 1,200. It seems a modest Ideal. One thousand dollars a year Is a little less than $20 per week. Milk drivers In Chicago get $23 per week, with a bonus on sales. Drivers of beer wagons get from $20 to $23 n week. At the time tho pressmen struck on tho Chicago papers they wero getting wages ranging from $25 to $45 per week, and there has been no attempt to reduce that scale. But to the clergyman a minimum salary of $1,000 per year seems almost too good to over bo true. It is not so long ago that a responsible church nuthorlty declared tho av erage salary or tno clergymen or Wisconsin was only $700 per year. This was the average, mark you, not the minimum, and to got that average a good many $5,000 salaries were Included In tho total. Chicago Journal. A Bishop Is on that a New Offshoot of Republican Party Starts Out With Much Ado. NEW YORK NEGRO TO FRONT y , Ckllelror Cry OASTO Rl A good-lookin- de-Ice- I run-dow- Chicago, Aug. 7. Singing "Onward, Christian Soldiers" and the "Battle Hymn of the Republic," the delegates to the first National Convention of the new Progressive paracclaimed Col. Theodore ty Roosevelt, of New York, as Its candidate for President and Gov. Hiram W. Johnson, of California, as Its choice for Vice President. Marking anew departure in tho proceedings of national conventions tho two candidates Immediately notified of their were Informally and In the midst of nomination, deafening cheera, appeared before the delegates to voice their acceptance and to pldge their best efforts to the coming campaign. For several long hours during Urn .afternoon and early evening the big throng In the Coliseum had to a flow of oratory In listened nominating and seconding speeches In which the dominant note expressed was the belief that victory would come to the new party In the November elections. Raymond Rob-bin- s, of Illinois, pledged a 100,000 majority for the Nntlonal ticket in Plnchot preIllinois, and Glfford dicted n 300,000 majority for Col. Roosevelt and Gov. Johnson In his home State of Pennsylvania. These statements were cheered to the echo. Tho party formally christened it"The Progressive party," self. leaving out tho prefix "National," by which It has heretofore been known, but provision was made for tho recognition of "real" Progress slves In any of the States by whatever name they should be locally designated because of State laws. adjourned at The convention 7:24 p. m with tho delegates singIn lusty voice. ing the "doxology" During the three days It was In session thcro was not a single roll-ca- ll nor n ballot taken. The delegates1 asked no such formalities either In placing their candidates In nomination or In voting for thorn. There was not a note of opposition either to Col. Roosevelt or Gov. Johnson. Tlie delay In nominating them was due to the large number of seconding speeches allowed. As has always been the case In national political 'conventions, the bulk of the work of the Progressive gathering was carried on In the The only semblance committees. of a conflict of opinion on the floor y as to was n brief dobate whether or not an hour's recess should be taken. Tlie point was not material, but, as one delegate expressed It, "we just had to fight about something to make It a regular convention." There was a sharp discussion, however, In several of the committee meetings, and no little difficulty In agreeing upon the platform as finally adopted. Col. Roosevelt worked with the subcommittee In charge of tht platform 'until late this, afternoon, going over their work of the two previous days and nights and vigorously helping to mold the draft which at last proved acceptable to him. The platform did not take up the negro question. In this connection one of the Interesting seconding speeches of the dav was that of F. R. Gleed, of New York, a negro. Gleed declared that tho negroes had faith In the now party; faith that It wouid do all In Its power to right the wrongs of tho race. "We stnnd.by the platform," he said. "Wo stand by Col. Roosevelt's letter; we stand by his speech. And as we stood by him at San Juan Hill,, so wo will stand by him In November and fight for victory." Miss Jane Addams, of Hull House, Chicago, was among those who seconded Col. Roosevelt, and she was enthusiastically greeted. Tho new party formally placed Itself on record as favoring equal suffrage, and further recognized tho Buffragette movement by providing for four women members at large on the National Committee. to-da- One of the most common ailments that hard working people are afflicted with Is lame back., Apply Chamberlain's Liniment twice a day and massage the parts- - thoroughly at each application, and you will get quick relief. For sale by all dealers. m Ji A- - "WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1012. advances in prices of the trust's products. How Trie's Ka'-- Ooun With Aid of the Taiiir. ' The following table shows how the trusts have grown In the last c THE HARTFORD HERALD l'AUU TMK2E. HOW IHE GREAT TRUSTS FATTEN m 55 BULGING STORIES IS HIGH Item years: &r ? a. 1 u Capitalization And 775 Feet Above $1,419,428,500 1,079,582,500 Level. SS 3,027,910,561 1899 1900 3,249,001,061 t. 98 COMPLETED 117 5,202,350,560 HAS JUST BEEN 1901., DESPITEJHEBMHN UN 1902 136 5,723,741,560 1903 146 5,941,042,560 153 6,576,918,500 At Cost Of $14,000,000-Fifte- en It Is False tpSay They Lower 1904 1905 6,843,891,760 163 Hundred Men EmPrices, Says Editor of 178 7,284,750,760 1906 1907 186 7,367,745,000 ployed in Building. Moody's Magazine. 194 1908 7,506,004,000 7,608,426,000 1909 200 TARIKK THE CAUSE OK IT AMj 1910 We have thousands of such letters, and more are 7,706,621,100 SOME OP TUB "INCIDENTALS" 206 1911 8,066,290,861 224 arriving daily. Such earnest testimony from those who From the top of the lantern Kotwl'tistandlng the John Moody, a financial authorihave tried it, surely proves the great value of this vegetatrust prosecutions una the enforce- ty of note, attributes the devel- dome on tbo new Woolworth Buildble, tonic medicine, for women. ing, 775 feet above the street level, Inment of the Sherman law, the opment of trusts to the tariff and Cardui relieves women's sufferings, and builds weak combinations have kept on not to any Inherent tendency of the the Stars and Stripes will be flung dustrial women up to health and strength. If you are a woman, to the breeze for the first time out increasing In size and number until times toward Industrial give it a trial. It should help you, for it has helped a milat noon. their total capitalization Is more that Srate." lion others. It is made from pure, harmless, herb ingredian The last bit of steel is In place, bo It Is than $8,000,000,000, ents, which act promptly and surely on the womanly organs. the last rivet on the titanic strucnounced by John Moody, editor of It is a good tonic. Try it I Your druggist sells it FOR $500,000 THE SUGAR ture "has been headed, and there re- SIMPLY EAT SEAWEED financial Moody's a Meclizine, Write to: Ladies' Advisory Dcpt . Chattanoosa Medicine Co., Chattanooja. Term.. mains only the addition of a few monthly. tot Special Instructions, and book, "Home Treatment lor Women." tent free. J 58 AND BUST THE TRUSTS "Moreover,"" adds he, "this KINGS GOT $12,350,000 thousand tons of terra cotta and a few thousand more of steel trim to accreeate does not In maVe the greatest building In tho which clude Industrial concerns SaysMinnesotaWoman Professor Nearly All Of world a reality. are not trusts. There are thous- In Dividends L yy The men who have made this ProfHtfiiil Cnnl ands of manufacturing concerns GREAT A PRESIDENTIAL! A New Plan To Live This Has Been Made builder's dream an actuality haven't the benefits of the tariff CAMPAIGN OFFER & Smith much to say about it. It has been a which cannot be Included, strictly Cheaply. Since 1896. long, steady, quiet fight for them Bpeaklng, In any list of trusts. The Attorneys At Law c have evoi Tlu iihM lllicial the romance and the plcturesque-nes- s Federal Corporation Government's - KENTUCKY. HARTFORD, Aug. 9. EviSan Francisco, Aug. 9. That the nude. THE IIAUTFOIM) IIEKAI.l) San Francisco, of It all Is too much a part of Tax Teport for 1911 shows that the ,H It urn t himI C. K. Smith 1, l!(l:l, mid the d.il-- ! the instinct that makes them devo- toboggan could be placed under the until .Jniiuury limn frinrl ti imrtur Hiinmim - llial 1i total capitalization represented by dence that ownership of one-hapoltlp fur 111 or imv, ex- 1(1 upiit.iI irHali Industrial concerns was about $26,- - of the common stock of the West- tees of their hazardous calling for high cost of living by taking advan- ly Evening 1'nst until November f (it criminal iiml tlUoir iiim'h, Mr. Mnlth time) tor Just It Intf I Hi.it I tage of the unlimited quantity of IIX'J (count the ttortif), priHiittiI frum the ern Sugar defining Company, the them to really give tongue to it. This Includes 000,000,000. Mr It irtifH w 111 tli'lni; mm li dim iii'Hf MiiaII) But when one of them climbs to edible seaweed washed up on the SI. 00. This is k-- s tlinn iine-Iiiimany clote corporations, concerns John D. and A. B. Spreckels connwfit inli pnift.it OttlreH In Httrifiird 10,hiIiI1i hii hullilliit;. Hint regular price. has netted (he dizzy height of the nftyrflftli California coast, is the opinion of tlu of small canltal which while 'In cern of San Francisco, I'tnl, Tin Mtiinci yiKi send hi yo'tr interests In the story as yet but a swaying iron .Miss Josephine E. Tllden, professor dustrial' are not trusts In the ordl the Haeraeyer the iiioi-- you Mill get for jo-t- r American Sugar Refining Company skeleton, seemingly miles above the of botany and algology al the nary understanding of the term." J. M. PORTER. who passed money. In dividends In the last utreet an expression of almost revof Minnesota, "Mr. "Moody says the evidence Is $12,950,000 He sure to semi jour iirilcr imI'! twenty-on- e years, was offered to- erent satisfaction comes over his through this city recently on her clear that there Is no truth In the y to the HartUfcaVER DAM, KY. way to the day during the hearing of the Gov- face that tells the story well. Islands of the South this h'pclal rate Idea that trusts lower prices. Will practice hit prclemou In Ohio nd td ford Herald. tf peoWere It not for the hurrying Seas. ernment's suit to dissolve the AmerSpecial ttentlon elTentoil' olnlnif countlr "Industrial combinations, In the ican Sugar Refining Company un- ple and the gilding ships, one might " "A'gae glac?," "klp soup," btiiluerientruclrd lo hlcre. cases," he goes great majority of der the Sherman law as a combina- imagine the view from that fifty-fift- h or any other euphonious designaon, "have been found primarily for tion In restraint of trade. ? ? ? ? ? J story to be painted on a great tions for dishes deilved from the Jt ? J FRANK L. FELIX, j the purpose of tontrolllng or ad seaweed, might serve to humble It was testified that for all but canvas stretched at one's feet. GO TO- prices to the consumer, two years vancing these Even on a hazy day, there are popularize this source of food supof the twenty-on- e HARTFORD, KY. While the theory has been persist payments were made on an Invest- many miles of straight stretching ply, Miss Tllden believes. She Will practice hl profession In Ohio and ad' ently urged for many years that the ment that represented only $300,-00- 0; streets, countless buildings that ap- points out that the benefits received lining conntlea and In the Court of Appeal main purpose of combination was ipeclaltr. w'rlmlnal practice and Collection! that more than $12,000,000 of pear modest In dimension even would be twofold, widening the vaOffice In the Herald building to reduce producing and operating the amount has been paid since when one knows them to be really riety of foods and Introducing a FOR costs, and thus Increase profits 1896, and that the first payment of giants of their kind, endless car food source which could not be corWork" Carpenter and Itep-u'without the advancement of prices. $50,000 was made on Oct. 21, lines, all seemingly laid out with nered and which would furnish Otto C. I TIN WOUIv and FLl'EC'AIS shown during the en- 1891, when the records wholesome and Inexpensive edibles. the Havemeyers had mathematical order and precision Pump and Furniture Ivepairing tire trust era go to prove that such $1,000,000 Invested In the concern,. in fact, for the first time does one "The occidental nations are be- ! Soldering and Saw Filiiifr, Utijr- nas not been the case. The great .j. j. HARTFORD. KY. .An official statement of the West- really get an adequate conception hind in this regard," explained Miss enlargement in profits has for the ern Sugar Refining Company was of the tremendousness of New Tilden. "Japan, for example, hns . py Tops Covered and Lined. . You'll find him in the Dr. John Otllro tin stairs over Wilson & roost part been accomplished by produced and Identified by W. H. York City. reaped a sturdy fighting nation "J Mitchell oftice on .Main Ciouc, opposite court liou.se. Will Street. price advances and not by cost cur- Hannam, secretary of the concern. panorama is beautiful which shows exceptional capabiliThe vast the tailment." Beaver Dam, Ky. ' practice of his profession in nilcounFor every dollar the Havemeyers in Its polyglot material way It Is ties for scientific advancement, on T courts this and adjoining Moody's Idea Is that a proMr. got, the Spreck- "New York as some mad, Inspired a diet consisting largely of seaand their associates S ? tective tariff, particularly the Ding-le- y els party got a dollar. A ? ties and Court of Appeals. CommerImpressionist might have got it on weeds. Japanese, Chinese and cial and criminal practice a specnot any natural or tariff, and elapsing between Oct. canvas In one wild splash of light many other nations have made In time ialty. evolutionary tendency toward busi 21 theDec. 27, 1891, dividends to and color and shade. dainty and healthful dishes from and ness centralization, Is to blame for the amount of $1,150,000 were deWork for the foundations of the the plants of the sea. the growth of the trusts. clared and distributed. In 1892 building was begun on November "The properties which raafce beef "At the end of 1902," he says, the capital stock was reduced from 15, 1910, and the building is ex- or all classes of vegetables valuaPARKER'S HAIR BALSAM "there was a widely held theory $2,000,000 to $1,000,000. In ac- pected to be ready for occupancy by ble are found also In seaweeds. Yet Cltftnttf and btaotJitf the h&Ir lromotei a luxuriant growth. that the trend toward Industrial Never Falls to Restore Oray with this action $500,000, an army of 10,000 tenants by Jan- with all our study of the high cost Hair to its Youthful. consolidation had reached its limit. cordant their investment, was re uary next. The first caisson was of living, this vital, protentlal food Ulllnc. rrtrtnti half ont lrnrintt or half VQf ani Subsequent events, however, have funded to the Havemeyers. PI.ACED IN YOUR RESI- pbegun January 16, 1911, and then supply has been totally ignored." this proved the unsoundness of UENCE OR PLACE OP IJL'S- In the year 1898, on Jan. 7, Jan in rapid succession the 69 piers of Idea. For steadily, throughout ev- 17 and Sept. 16, the Western INESS, AND PUT YOURSELF the foundation, the largest of them IIKMMI'HO.NK THE NEWEST ery year nt the past decade, trust IN DIRECT CONTACT W'TH Refining Company paid $6,000, being 19 feet in diameter, were' DEVICE FOR TELEPHONE capitalisation has continued to In- 000, the Havemeyers THE getting half sunk 125 feet into the ground, and crease. By the end of 1905, the the yield. The biggest dividend the building was fairly under way. Mr. Everett L. Holbrook, of Chiyear In which Theodore Roosevelt was declared on Jan. 20, 1893, One thousand five hundred men, cago, Is the Inventor of n small Inbegan bis second administration, when TO ALL. STATES. passed drawing an aggregate wage of $.",-0- strument, not much larger than a was $2,250,000 the figure had Tlsen to $6,843,891,-76- around. There were no dividends FOR THE COMPANY'S SPECIAL a day, are rushing it to comple- watch, which he calls a helaphone, and In the year when Mr. Taft from 1904 to 1908. On Nov. 20, tion under the direction of Archi- and when attached to a telephone, CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS entered the "White "House, a further 1909, another item of $2,000,000 tect W R. Sunter, the personal rep- makes a conversation with a person CALL ON OR ADDRESS expansion to $7560,004,000 was was entered on the dividend record. resentative of the designer, Cass 1,000 miles away very easy. In fact W. O'BANON. shown. And now, with Mr. Taft Gilbert, and Superintendent of Con- It Is claimed for it that a whisper Local Manager, xwmnm MAH closing his term, we note that, notThese can be heard that distance, Hevinrc of Ointments for Cntarrli struction Frank Holmes. it has Hartford, K; . trust withstanding the men "have put In place 25,000 tons be'n tested between Chicago and! That Contains Mercury, ORDER HOUSE prosecutions and the enforcement As mercury will surely destroy of steel, which required 8,00 freight New York, giving results entirely W. C. SEXTON. M TUP finilTH. Inof the Sherman law, the total Bnr .lmot half s centurv we have (erred ex Local Manager. satisfactory. Mr. Holbrook worked the sense of smell and completely cars to Tiaul It; they have set cluively the Southern trade. Wrl'e dustrial trust capitalization has derange the whole system when enBeaver Dam, Ky. Aaarest, for our free inuatratea catalogue. bricks, 25,060 cubic feet of on his Invention for two years be- Incorporated. reached the astounding total of tering it through the mucous sur- stone, and 40,000 square feet of fore he had it perfected to the point Py & C. face. Such articles should never be terra cotta. that he was wholly satisfied that it Box 26 Lonlavllle, Kjr. "It will be noted that the growth used except on prescriptions from figures that are really too would stand the severest test. Other Xrery Aztlcls Quarantsed. of trusts during Mr. Taft's adminis- reputable physicians, as the damage big to mean much to the average Mr. Holbiook formerly resided in tration has practically all been ac- they will do is ten-fol- d to tho good man are such items as 40 miles of Owensboro, and his father, Mr. T. complished since the enactment of you can possibly derive from them. steam pipes, 50 miles of plumbing, II. Holbrook, resides there now. If you want clothes of any the present Payne Tariff law. kincf cleaned, call on the Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured 75 miles of electric wiring and 126,-60- 0 "It Is a noteworthy fact that the by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., electric Hgnts all In one Kurtford Pressing Club. We capital represented by Industrial contains no mercury and is taken building. There are 900,000 square oooccocxyjQCKyyy:yS'Xiooooc " can clean any kind of clothes u trusts In this county does not re- internally, acting directly upon the feet of floor space. For Infants and Children. flect, except to partial extent, the blood you have and guarantee that The estimate cost of the building and mucous surface of the Investment of money or property system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Is $14,000,000. New York World. The Kind You Have Always Bought they will be satisfactory if "While no exact figures on the sub' cure be sure you get the genuine. '8 not, nothing will be charged. ject are obtainable, It Is reliably es It is taken internally and made in TEDDY'S COMPLIMKNT Bears the We are ready to clean your TO GOVERNOR WILSON tlmated that not more than 25 per Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Signature of clothes for spring. We also cent, of the eight billions of cap- Co. Testimonials free. v in the Outlook, Mr. Roosevelt, italization represents original In have a new line of late sam O Her Yearning. Price, 75c Sold by Druggists. pays a deserved compliment to Gov vestment. The remaining 75 per per bottle. I Marjorle Louise leaned on ples and we guarantee a per-fee- t Little quotes with her grandmamma's knee and gazed cent, is what is commonly called Take Hall's Family Pills for con- ernor Wilson when he fit. Call on us when in following approval Is more definite stipation, sentiment Into space with a particularly soulthe 'water,' but which m need of work in our line. expressed by the Democratic candi- ful expression. ly described as the 'capitalization For Industrial date: of earning power.' FOR BALK. W. H. & J. F. GILLESPIE, "Oh, grandmother," she burst "No one pretends to find a reason out, suddenly, "I Just long to grow trusts, like franchise trusts, railA scholarship in the Vunderbllt Club Q Q PROPRIETORS. road trusts, &c, have all adopted Training School, for boys, Elkton, for not voting for Mr. Wilson in up and be a big lady and have the method during the past genera- Ky.; Bowling Green Business Uni- the character or in the ideals of Mr. corns!" Y. M. C. A. Bldg. not only the versity, Bowling Green, Kentucky; Wilson himself. It is plain that he tion of capitalizing original and current Investment in Draughon's Business College, Nash- approaches public questions from 8 the plants and property, but also ville, , Term., or any branch school, the point of view of the public in! & the net profits which can be shown. anil Bryant & Strattou Business terest. What be said the other day l 4 ''Thus It Is apparent that, in tbe College, Louisvlllo, Kentucky. Any- in a speech at Atlantic City is a case of those trusts which have one contemplating attending cither genuine expression of his spirit. He 4 jjj NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBEHS. been bull; up chiefly on tariff bene- of the above .schools can save mon- was speaking of an issue raised in fits, a large part of the net profits ey by writing or calling on The that place by lawlessness and corIn ordering the address of 4 lj A it, above all other tkufs, the. ruption, of the need of moral pride, your paper changed from one 4 8 shown, and in some cases 29tf Hartford Herald, three-fourth- s ready fer sickly, watted ckU-dr- a. profwillingness to fight evil of the and of the or place to another It Is absolutely 4 It Bowkaes aad baiUt "I was cured 'of diarrhoea by one at all costs. 'There can be,' said its, are the direct result of the pronecessary to state where you :: KY. j tective legislation which they have dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Chole- Mr. Wilson, 'so long as we are honhavo been receiving tho paper as 4 gHARTFORD, then up wkea erdkary feed ra and Diarrhoea Remedy," writes est' men, no quarter with any man received.';,.. aatetately faik. Be twre to well as where you want it chang- - 4 on JJiY E.aebhardt'Orlole, Pa.. There who deals privately or publicly In, a ed to. Please bear this In mind. 4 get SCOTT'S. AiiDmnbte. lWVi.fftf eS teel t Trusts dividends Its "water," MrT rioodyasIefW Ib nothlng"betterfwFor sale by all practice that is unrighteous; a, man . Scott h Bowne. BlootnAeld, 4 N. ). m who lays himself; his life, down for, , have beenaltogethert taken1 out at dealers. Hartford Herald, Only $1 Year f Under Continued System ' of Protection At Close Number of of Trusts. 1897 189S 33 43 the Street B that purpose, ought to die more happy than he lived. Life is a little thing. Life lasts only a little while, and if It goes out lighted with the torch of glory, It Is better than If It had lasted upon a dull level a thousand years. That Is the test of manhood, It Is the test of humanity, and It is the glory and sign of Christianity, that a man will lay down his life for another, no matter what the consequences may be to himself, either In this world or In tho next.' "These words, especially as they come from a man Just chosen to receive the highest gift In the hands of his party, present a view of public service that should actuate all men In publllc life. They are a pledge of bis own purpose. "So far as the country at large knows It, Mr. Wilson's record since he entered public life two years ago has not been Inconsistent with his lofty purpose or his high character. While In office he has been not only the chief executive of his Stnte, but also the leader of his party in ' j Couldn't Walk! "I used lo be troubled with a weakness peculiar lo 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 yeass." ; f vARDUI TAKE Yhe Woman's Tome Barnes t1 lf Mr, lf iir-ti- !. L'nl-u-rsit- y t I Attorney at Law, to-da- -- Attorney at Law, Albert Oiler Hartin Attorney at Lvw HAVE A ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE JM Sm-ga- Long Distance Lines 00 0, J. vninceT ffiS Notice Barnes Co.. m ? CASTOR! A Gillespie Bros. 'iI?"NBaWv C&&Tffl&&U Hartford Pressing FRED NALL, Mgr. I ..BLACKS1THING.. And n ! Horseshoeing two-thir- ds Specialty .""ft,. ( 1J-- 1J 444444444444 - Itt Vl s .t. J"?lVi . ! ru m iS'lSs '""Bf- - '7 2ZSXZZS23X. iBTjrTYrraajS V "" PAGE FOUR. THE HARTFORD HERALD Sixty years ago unequal. few millionaires and few y we have too many and both aro still on the To-da- WEDNESDAY, AUGUST of time on 14, 1012. ?rj jT&0 Harljord Herald euiTORb. L. FELIX, Pub. and Prop'r. post-ofllc- HEBER MATTHEWS, FRANK L.FELIX, FRANK paupers. CHRONOLOGY OF TEDDY, of both LEAD1MG "PROGRESSIVIncrease. A we had agreed to an extension ht, e Entered at the Hartford mall matter of the second class. kt 400000000G000 ooO O JU.NIOlt I.1XOTVPK SLTI'MKS KOIl .SALE O o One set of new rices Roman face. Three sets brnnd new com- btnation border matrices. ejector blade and One ejector blade liners, one and liners. hooks. Two One set assorted sizes carry- Ing wires nnd clips. Several other small parts of machine. Will sell cheap for cash. THE HERALD, Address: Hartford, Ky. line-carria- rant- - O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DEMOCRATIC TICKET. Wilson, of New Jersey. of political patronage In KenO tucky Is undisputed and his rulings O go without regard to the wishes of O the people affected by his arbitrary decisions. O O Senator Dradley is strongly In fn-O of kicking the Mooses out of O tho Republican party; says they O have no business In there, anyway. O And this is the same Ilradley who O for a generation has been worshipO ped as a political god by the very O men to whom he Is now giving the O boot. Even now his absolute con-tiol The new order of Bull Moose Is one of the Innovations of tho day In fraternity circles. The Initiation ceremonies aro said to be very rig goat being orous, the proverbial supplanted by n fine healthy speci men of the antlered tribe and the candidate must go three times signifying the third term around the ring without falling off. There are no tide degrees, the main "work" being deemed sufficient. or For I'ro-liN-- iit Cov. PrexMi-n- t Woodrow Gov For Vice Thos. It. Marshall, of Indiana. bull of the whole The bulllest bull moose pen Is now on the rampage. Look out for him! ' 1897-9going to attempt the wonderful feat gentleman A certain Owensboro Lieutenant-Colonof First Regitusks, of swallowing the Elephant together with his colleague who ment volunteer Cavalry, commonly ears, legs and all. manufactuters "whiskey without a known as "Rough Riders," In war It Is averred that Woodrow Wil- headache," seem to have been made with Spain, 1898. After war, proson never kissed anybody's baby ex- very dizzy by gazing at the musty moted to be Colonel. cept his own In his life. Oood! We mugs of some of their erstwhile of New York 1899-190Governor party lieutenants, hanging on the will probably have a germ-prowalls of the Republican headquar President. Vice President United States, ters In Louisville and ordered them are three big consigned to the Junk heap. Per-ha- 1901. Xow that there Became President on death of tickets In the Held, the contest will they want to substitute a large probably shape up about like a size crayon of the skinny old horse President McKInley September 14, game of "cut throat euchre" two with the negro and jug of liquor 1901. Elected President 1904. against one. which is used to promote the sale Retired from Presidency March The Herald feels compllmcn'od of the celebrated Owensboro head- 4, 1909. that the Richmond Climax appro- ache remedy in most all parts of the Sailed from New York March 23, priates some of our editorial stuff, world. 1909, fo hunt big game In Africa. because that seems an Indication Continued sport till February 3, There Is no greater help In the trip received with that it was deemed good. people In keeping them 1910. On return affairs of Vienna, honors In Naples, Paris, ' It is said that fairly good liquor abreast of the times than reading Berlin, Christiana, London and othyou hear newspapers. Often is distilled at the bottom of silos. the er European centers. Rut this need not put all the people people attempting to discuss a matArrived In New York June 15, way which is d Is possible ter In a to building silos, for it 1910. fully set forth in the local and daithe thing might be overdone. Received request from Governly press, if they had but taken the ors of seven States that he become Record says: The Philadelphia little trouble to notice It. These and "The fact that men and women are are days when no one can afford to candidate for renomination always running after each other Is be Ignorant of current events simp- election as President, February 10, what makes the human race." And ly for lack of a little reading. It Is 1912. Replied announcing readiness to this Is true, If it has got a pun in an easy matter to be posted upon February 24, accept nomination the last line. general topics. Newspapers of all 1912, and made active campaign. News thinks kinds are cheap and their purchase The Ellzabethtown Republican for the Defeated the flea "makes the nearest ap- price, by the copy or year, is the nomination In June and to a gatherproach to man." Wrong, Harry. best Investment one can make. delegates, aning of "protesting" can give the The humble chlgger For Snle Town property, vacant nounced willingness to accept nomfiea cards and spades and beat him party candiy dwelling. ination as third-terlots, cottages and at this game. date. A. C. TEISER & CO.. Nominated as "Progressive ParA. O. Stanley, of Hartfora. Ky. Congressman ty" candidate for President AugKentucky, deserves much credit for ust 7, 1912. IOXTD IIIIOWX his handling of the steel trust InSUGAR HAS DISAPPEARED Stanley Is not only a vestigation. HOPEWELL. etatesraan, but a most brainy and Aug. 12. Rev. S. J. Thompson Perhaps you have noticed that active member of Congress. brown sugar, like gave us two good sermons at the the As might have been expected, the our mothers used to cook with, has Quarterly meeting here the 3d and dear "peepul" came In for much ex- practically disappeared from the 4 th. lost a very Mr. Blllle Johnson ploitation at Chicago last week. But market. as a matter of fact, hasn't the This reason fine mare and colt last week. The There Is a reason. (scheme all been boiled down to the consists of a "Joker" In the Payne-Aldrlc- h mare was" known as old Cricket. Miss Jessie Taylor has returned exploitation of the Interests of one tariff law, under what Is man? as "Dutch Standard No. 16" to East St. Louis after a three-weeknown visit to her parents, Mr. and When we speak of the "Chicago test. When this test was fixed It meant Mrs. C. G. Taylor. Convention" now, we will have to Mrs. Herbert King and son, Masspeak of it In Eome way to distin- the barring out of the brown sugar, cheap and good, and ter Paul, of East St. Louis, are visguish one from t'other. Teddy was brand of sugar has iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. that is why the prize meat at both of 'era, but disappeared this from the market. G. Taylor. most anybody ought to be able to Squire Miles was In Hartford last Whenever a tariff bill Is in the maktell bull moose from elephant. ing, the agents of the Sugar Trust Friday and Saturday on business It Is becoming tho custom nowa- are on the ground to see that the for the county. Messrs. Albln Shull and Elbert days, In some quarters, for prison- "Dutch Standard" is maintained. ers to apply for a pardon with They had no difficulty In getting the Hunley are having a lot of crosstles poems setting forth their cases. makers of the Payne-Aldrlc- h tariff made on their land. Mr. Porter Hunley and daughter, Several instances have been record- to accede to their wishes. little Miss Evlin, attended the ed where the scheme won them Street Fair at Centertown last Sat their liberty. It Is perhaps Just a urday. plain case with the pardoning powMisses Ida and Ola Engler, of er, after reading the poetry, to eithGreenville, are visiting Miss Pearl er grant the request or Increase the Engler, of this place. uentence. Quite a number of young folk at The negro voter is getting to be tended the singing at Lone Star last more and more a disturbing eleSunday. They report a good time ment In the Republican party. The and fine singing. Moosers tried to shake him at their Are you so fortunate as to TnE DISCOVERY OF OIL in Chicago last week, convention BRINGS BIG LITIGATION but fin ally decided to ignore him be well satisfied with your hair? Is it long enough, nnd say nothing. The regular RePrinceton. IndT.' Auk. 9. Asa organization detests the thick enough, rich enough? publican personality of thedarkey but craves And your hair does 'not fall .result of the oil boom in Wabash 111., county. across the Wabash The negro is becoming his vote. out? Well, well, thatfc good. river from here, a' suit has been wiser every day as to his exact But you may know some raised over the ownership of a farm Btandlng In political circles. not so fortunate. Then just whtcb involves a fortune. It is 100 Sixty years ago the per capita tell them about Ayers Hair acres In. the very heart of the oil field, where almost fabulous prices wealth in tfce United States was Vigor. They will surely thank y Are now being paid for leases or on ft is about $f,300, $307. you after using it, if not be purchases outright. Some time ago .an increase of nearly 300 per cent. But who has this wealth bow Is it fore. Remember, it 'does George McFarland sold the, farm to scattered? Do you see any of it not color the hair- -; Show Jacob Smith, who was to pay $7,- 000 for It in "payments of $1,000 a among the great common people? the list of ingredients Not much! Wh.Ile the wealth of your doctor. Let'hihiijtockte year.and the interest. Smith made .1.1- tuc in Ofc jJauiuuif uuv iutD cm nan the country as rated by tbeier capvalue. He knows. unable to meet it. He paid the in ita process has greatly increased, then t, Um 0. ATEIt 00.. Lowell. Made J. Uw terest, however, and McFarland the distribution of it has been most 8. el 0. ps half-postetwo-storOI.D-FAS- It is said tin Hull Moose is now party was good The Republican Roosevelt In enough for Theodore a number of past campaigns when he used Its prestige and Its suffrage (o boost him Into office and carry out his personal requests, but now thnt he cannot continue the chltjf boss of the whole aggregation, he turns upon It with scorn and would ride his chariot over Its most cherished traditions. Such is politics and such Is the political caree- - of this noted party smasher. Martenzoon Van Rosenvelt, who came to America from Holland In 1649; through ancestors acquirTheoblood; son-o- f ed Scotch-Iris- h dore 'Roosevelt, of New York City, and Martha Bullock Roosevelt, of Roswell, Gn. Born In New York City October 27, 185S. Graduated from Harvard University, IS 80. Miss Alice Hathaway Married Lee, of Boston, October 27, 18S0. Member New York State Assembly 1882, 1883, 1884. Mrs. Roosevelt died when daughter was born In February, 1SS4. Chairman New York State delegation In Republican National Convention, 1884. candiDefeated as Republican date for Mayor of New York City, Clues 1SS6. Ca-ro- the other.havlng in meantime given Smith a bond for a deed to the Efarm. A week ago came the oil strike on the farm adjoining this land. Leasers learned how matters Short and Accurate Life Sketch stood, and telling McFarland the land was his, they paid him large of the Famous Bull lease money and sought possession Smith resisted, and the case will be Alooser. (fought out In the courts. The farm Is at present valued by oil men at Theodore Roosevelt, decendant of $25,000 to $40,000, it Is said." ADABUP.G. F ertilizers FOR WHEAT. 1 Aug. 9. Misses Ethel Phillips, Westerfleld, Phillips, and Lorena Etnavllle, visited the Misses Ray-mohere Wednesday night. Mr. Clayton Pntton, wife and baby will start to Evansville in a few days for a few weeks visit to friends and relatives. Huber, the son of Mrs. Mary Powers, of Narrows, Ky., was burburying grounds led In Antloch Monday afternoon. He was hurt several months ago while Jumping from a moving train. Misses Oda and Zoda Raymon left Friday for Knottsvllle, where Miss Zoda will deliver her graduating essay on Abraham Lincoln. ns Our Fertilizer Warehouse is Loaded Down With Horse Shoe Brand Fertilizer for Wheat and Grass for Fall Sowing. i MRS. LOUTILDA LYNGR Married Miss Edith Kermlt GRANTED PAROLE of New York, In Loildon, De cember 2, 1886. United States Civil Service ComKilled Her SoninLaw, Ambie missioner 1SS3 to 189."i. New York City Board President Is Now in HelpBuck 1893 to of Police Commissioners, 1S97. less Condition. Abrilftant Secretary of tho Navy, IS Tho Owensboro Messenger naya: Mrs. Loutllda Lynch, who has been In the penitentiary for the past year, during which time she has been serving time on an Indeterminate sentence of from two to twenty-on- e years for the killing of Amble Buck, has her been granted a parole and Is again In Owensboro. The woman Is paralyzed, and for that reason the prison commission has allowed her to be removed to the home of her husband In Daviess county. It will be remembered that the woman walked a considerable distance to the home of her carrying a shotgun, at the muzzle of which she forced her husband and two other male kinsmen to accompany her and that at the home of Buck, when he came to the door, she fired the contents of the gun Into his body. In the trial, which was held after the woman had been connned In the Jail for a long period, it was. developed that she had a number of peculiarities, if indeed she was not insane at times, and the defense was made out largely on the idea that at the time of the shooting she was mentally irresponsible for her acts. The Jury that heard the case, however, determined that she knew what she was doing at the time she fired the shot, and a verdict of guilty was returned, the court finally sentencing her. Since being In the penitentiary, she has been ill a large part of the time, and her condition has become worse, till the commission took 'action and allowed her to return to her home. Bon-ln-lason-in-la- If you want to make money farming, use good fertilizer liberally. Don't be afraid to put 200, 300 or even 400 pounds to the acre. Pick out 3 acres; use 100 fe pounds on one, 200 pounds on one and 300 hundred pounds on the other. Keep accurate account of the cost and also of your returns, that you may know which pays best. We are prepared to furnish Good Fertilizers for all crops and are at your service along any line 1 at any time. E. P. Barnes & Bro., BEAVER DAM, KY. Condensed Statement of Condition OF THE BEAVER DAM DEPOSIT BANK, OF BEAVER DAM, KY., At the Close of Business, June 29, 1912. Resources. Loans & Discounts $197,018.36 11,948.43 Cash in Safe Cash in Other Banks 52,803.52 17,504.00 Stocks and Bonds 540.33 Overdrafts Ileal Estate, Furniture 2,000.00 and Fixtures Total $281,814.G4 Liabilities. Capital Stock Surplus Dividend No. 30 Deposits 825.000.00 27,822.10 1,250.00 227,742.54 i Pay Your Taxes. Taxes for year 1912 are now due, and we are ready to receive same. T. H. BLACK, Sheriff Ohio County. 26tf MAX'S CLOTHES TOIIX OFF KY A PLAYFUL CYCLONE Total $281,814.64 For Hair the Tenn., Aug. 10. A Clarksville, storm that passed ten miles south of this city last night blew down a sawmill, several mill houses and all the corn In its path; then struck the Durham home and blew Charley Durham from his bed through a window. Two miles from there another mill was blown away, and a man named Graves, while running from one house to another, had his clothing torn off. Six miles north struck the of town the Ilglitnlng house of Albert Woodson, resulting In Its destruction by fire. 81.2ft Round Trip. Hartford to Hardinsburg, on ac count of the Breckenridgo County Fair August 20, 21, 22, 1912. Trains leave Hartford 7:19 a. m. People from Fordsville, Ky., will take the same train ati Ellmltch 8.05 a. m. Return train 'leaves the Fair ground gate at 5 o'clock. LOCAL OPTION ELECTION ASKED IN UNION COUNTY Morganfleld, Ky.,- Accounts Solicited. Correspondence Invited. Promptness and Accuracy Guaranteed. I. P. BARNARD, Pres. JNO. H. BARNES, Cashier, VVVVVMVVVVVVVVVWVVVVV $1.25 Round Trip I HARTFORD TO HARDINSBURG ACCOUNT OF THE BR ,. August. 20, 21 and 22, 1912. 1 in ' . ffl of Aug. 5 10. A petition has been filed with the Union County Court asking that an election be called October to de To-da- termine whether or not intoxicating liquors may be sold in Union county. The county has tJeen "dry" for six years. & Trains leave Hartford 7:19 a. m. People from Fordsville, Ky., will take the same, train at Ellmitch 8:05 a. m. Return .train leaves the Fair Ground gate at five o clock. tp .t.S.-i.t.rii,C:-.v?- ........ For Bale, Faraas All sizes, from 6 to 800 acres. We can please yon it you Want to bay land. A. O. YEIBER ft CO., Hartford, Ky. Hartford iy'i4vW Herald-O- nly $ I Per Year WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1012. THE HARTFORD, HERALD JE TAGE F1VK. DC V- -" 3CI' I A Big Succe We mean our Big Kum Down Sale, We find, however, that our stock is not yet sufficiently low to give us room for our Fall Merchandise. Hence, on many lines presence o' a largo clr- Mr. A. T. Beard, president of and tery In 'he of friends and relatives. nreckenrldge clo the representing County Fair, was In Hartford MonRev. W. B. Wright preached two day .and yesterday, advertising the very able sermons at Beaver Dam big meeting. Sunday. At the night service the over, and unMr. Frank Foreman, mention of Hartford choir went has been made In der the leadership of Bro. Wright's whose Illness renderthese columns from time to time, dnughter, Mrs. C. E. Smljli, was glad to be able to state, Is ed an elegant program, which we are enjoyed. convalescent. Mrs. Mary White, of Charleston, Mo., Is the guest of her parents, Capt. and Mrs. S. K. Cox. She has Just returned from the Chautauqua at New York. Mrs. A. V. Goodln and children have returned to their home at Phnrlostnn. Mo., after a visit with the former's parents, Capt. and Mrs. S. K. Cox. Boys and girls, the Ohio County Drug Co. has an auto to give away. Save your coupons a 5c purchase gets you a coupon. See the auto In window and ask about It. on any Make your purchases Call for couthing In our store. pons and get a Talking Machine ABSOLUTELY FREE. OHIO COUNTY nhoac's, E. S. Howard, Myrtle WII- Aaron T. Ross. Ethel Raines, r,oo nnsklt. Everett Shultz. Addle celeB. Taylor, C. E. Allen, Eva Thorn-- 1 asson, Anna uaner, uum nu..ui, Johnnie Wallace, Ida Lambert, Ar- hienderSOn KOaCl , . t gent Shultz, Mack Martin, George Royal, Jesse WagOIlS lOf SSlC iCt Montgomery, Clarence , Ford. J. C. Jackson. Bell Berryman, gOOCl A. H. Ross, Lula Hardin, O. O. WII- - US SnOW yOU much complimented and . liams, H. E. Brown, A. E. Ellis. ' Mr. cTo Herring, of White Winona Stevens, W. R. Hedrlck, W. pOlIUb. Ky., visited relatives and f; Plains, J!!!!!' plncJ our friends In Olaton and vicinity from .MUIItB, J KM..", vera Magru- - -Saturday until Monday. He came tor, Grace Wllllims, "v-- . J , from there to Hartford and went der. W. C. Shultz, Mrs. J. H. Loyd, I. S. Ma- - ancJ SUDplieS 10 W-s- on, to Beaver Dam yesterday afternoon Grace Whlttlnghlll, Mrs. Ismay Mason, Arthur Kirk, visited his sister-in-lawhere he Mrs. Mollle Herring, and family, re Harry T. Leach, Jessie Raley, Cora eSl CaSll piILCb. 11 . Smith, V. M. Moseley. Mrs. Mary, turning home this morning. Ub d Call Ul White, Arble Brown, Bertha Leach, Campaign Hanger A copy of a 1 Q"2 Shultz, Mrs. Alice Bosket, Ozna TJ with the picture of Woo'drow WilHortcnse Moseley, pilOne Nora Wedding, son, Theodore Roosevelt or William Herbert Arnold, V. D. Robertson, H. Taft with every new or old sub; S. P. McKInney, Russell Cooper, w proscrlption to the Loulsvlllel'ost, H. C. Crowder, J. D T. Hedden, vided the suhscrlber asks for It at is sent In. Falls. the time subscription This Is also good on The Herald's NOTICE clubbing offer see third page. H-- SPECIALS We have the h-atl-- K - their der?' JX6 Ji- Also usual line Fomilv Cirnr.eries at the 1U. JJ. LIKENS & ACTON Hartford, Kentucky. m W it we are continuing our already low prices, and on some lines making still bigger reductions. Our special attractions this week are Ladies', Men's and Children's Slippers. Call and see them. Get our prices. Three months yet to wear them. Do this and remember that it PAYS S TO TRADE WITH A HOUSE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY. The fine is SS.OO per day for WATCHES REPAIRED weeds or high grass on your lot, pavement, gutter or grass pioi. FOR SALE 33 acres of land. BY FACTORY METHODS INSTITUTE IN SESSION Nnt desirimr to take snap judg About 40 acres cleared, remainder In woods. Will sell cheap. ir ym have a wnu-- t ie lepaii-gment, you are given five davsto m. G. W. HOHEIMER, .i..'t im. i ordinance. in line with this..... With a Large Attendance and Olaton, Route 1. Mils II M't Ol li.vt Iwrillisi 32t4 druc, CO. OHID COUNTY TEACHERS' . . ooooooooooooooo i , 4r. JV , ( 7" If AUgUSt Mtll, KM. ru ,r pahJames H. Williams, Mayor. d Tlie Ohio County Teachers' Inas K00'1 "s vo" ('",, K u'tl DT stitute met at court hall Monday, . ! ' LOl"nSJ 7erK Louisville or art a trnvi-llnAugust 12. 1912, with Supt. Henry to .1.. it. con., ... .... ; (M. in l.....U.,.,.tcy.' Leach as chairman, and Dr. Fred V. M. St..wr, , " 1 ' m- -J how I learned Mutchler, of Bowling Green State A petition In bankruptcy was ill- ' m.v.,1 other, ; Normal, Instructor. ed ,n Louisville, Ky.. las. Saturday .. nml I will -- .. J"" exercises were against V. M. Stewart & Co., of .tell The devotional conducted by Judge J. P. Miller. Beaver Dam. placing the company B. made a few an- in Involuntary bankruptcy. Supt. Leach 0 concerning the work assets, about The Tellable Jeweler and Optleinir. nouncements The estimated about which W. F. of the Institute, after and estimated liabilities S10.000. It was thought, however, Anderson was elected secretary. cave an Introduc ti.nt n settlement of the atfalrs Dr. Mutchler tory address In which he outlined could be effected without the for- 1 his work for the week. malin- o' the bankruptcy proceed-ng- s being gone through. The sudNoon. Joe Crahan, who broke Jail here To do any kind of VeteriHouse was called to order at 1 den tiling of the petition was. it is last Thursday night, had not been Thought, the result of the fire last nary work. Horses, Mules recaptured at the hour of going to p. m. press. He made his escape by tearProf. H. E. Brown gave an inter- Thursday night. Cows need not die for and ing the patch on of the hole esting address on "Purpose of - U-of attention. Rev. v n WHcht and daughter, wm lit Crowes made Course of Study." He says the through which the Evans-- , .inswered day Ol' lligllt. Smith, went to course of study does not meet the Mrs. C. E. their escape. where they J of the rural schools. vllle,, Ind., yesterday, Messrs. C. H. Maddox, Aysox; requirements was were summoned by telephone to tne, TT'V- Organization of rural school B. W. Evans, who John A. Miller, McHenry; C. B. by Miss May E. Rogers. bedside of Mrs. C. Albeit Cox, Hart- discussed VETEKIXAKY SHUiLO. Felix, Olaton; " .P,imlv ill. Dr. Mutchler gave nn address on i. ford. Route 1; Wm. V. Sproule. KentucKy as outlined. He Subscribe for The Hurtfortl ncrald. Hartford. and T. F. Tanner, the Course of Study Drakesboro, was Course of Study G Hartford. Route 7, gave The Her says "The n copied from the course of study pleasant calls Friday. ald from the city schools, and does not Mrs. Mollle King, wife of Andrew meet the wants of the pupils or Plngree Shaver, of Earllng- Mrs. residence at Ow- teachers In rural districts." Recess. O ton, Ky Is visiting her aunt, Mrs. King, died at her O LOCAL NEWS AND sister, Mrs. Sadie ensboro yester.day morning at 7 After a .few remarks by the SuPERSONAL POINTS O L. E. Potter, and O o'clock, after a week's Illness of ty perintendent, Miss Ficklin, of OwE. Williams. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Her remains will be ensboro, was Introduced. Her theme watermel- phoid fever. The first home-grow- n in Elmwood cemetery to- was Begun; interred Work "Primary Mrs. M. A. Faught and children ons appeared on our streets Mon- day. She leaves a husband and six How to Teach Reading, Music and Owens-borday. They seem to be of rather In- children. are visiting relatives In Drawing." ferior quality. Geogra;Purpose of Teaching Mr. Wm. V. Sproule, Drakesboro, Irvington Flour "None Such," was a pleasant caller at The Herald phy" was discussed by Mrs. S. O. Esq J. H. Miles, Paradise, was a pleasant caller at The Herald offlce and means Just what It says Mr. Sproule was Keown, followed by "Comparative offlce Saturday. again on sale at W. H. Moore & en route home from Dundee, where Value of Reading,'" by Miss Mary Saturday. Son, Hartford. he had been on a business trip. He Marks. Mr. J. B. Warden, Centertown, Mr. O. D. Carson ably discussed home by Mrs. pleasant caller at The Herald Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Cook and lit- wnn nernmnanied waB a of Owens Josie Duke and Mrs. U. S. Carson the subject: "Spelling, the Old and tle daughter Elizabeth, offlce Monday. New Way." the guests ol Mr. and airs. and children. Pearl Fisher, of Morgan-tow- boro, areSanders. Miss Mr. Woodford Dick, representafamily of Post- Herbert Lucy Tanner, who had been Mrs. Is visiting the tive of the Southern School Journal daughThompson Bros, will hold their spending the week with her master R. B. Martin. and other school papers, was IntroHltes annual colt show and barbecue on ter, Mrs. W. R. Hedrlck, returned duced. He made a few interesting Davison, Mr. Anderson Tanfarm at Horton, August 24. home with her son, Mr. T. F. remarks emphasizing the importFalls, was a pleasant caller at The their ner, who was in town last SaturEverybody Invited. Saturday. ance of good schools papers. Herald offlce day. Mrs. Tanner came from showed an enrollThe roll-caMessrs. S. W. Maddox. Wysox. Miss Mrs.' T." H. Black has taken where she had been visitHartford, Route 129 members. ment of J. L. Porter, Harriet Flener's position as offlce andwere pleasant callers at The Her- ing her son, Homer Tanner. The Institute was then adjourned 4, deputy for Sheriff Black. is Wednesday. T. B. Petrle and daughters until Tuesday morning at 8 a. m. Mrs. offlce little ald hVve been vis Mrs. J. F. Vlckers and The following is the roll-cal- l; Hot Ruth and Leila, who Mrs. Bettle Coppage, of rtanehter Marlon, of Owensboro, iting Mrs. Petrle's parents, .Mr. anu Minnie Baughn, Gertry Raymon, Springs, Ark., after a visit of a few here last week. Mrs. J. E. Fogle, left for Louisville Myrtle Burdett, Sherman C. Taylor. visited friends reldays here, left Monday to visit busito Saturday, where, after a few days Olas Bell, Eva Martin, Eva Rag-langirls to help with atives In Leltchfleld. Wantcd-Tw- o Dudley Wester-Helrelatives, they visit to friends and C. B. Shown, cooking and house work. as Mr. J. S. Hendricks, of Benton, will return to their home at Brazil, as L. C. Taylor, Irene Ward, ness DR. L. B. BEAN, Hartford. Pin-grKy., visited his sisters, Mrs. Ind. Hnrrintt Mldklff. Ernest Hinton. Mr. John J. McHenry. of Louisuse, Shaver and Mrs. Sadie E. WilMabel Cooper, J. T. Hoagland, Dona If you are contemplating buildville, spent Sunday here with his liams, here last week. Hoover, Cora Thomasson, George ing a new residence or repairing mother, Mrs. Jennie T. McHenry. Whltehouse, MarMrs. George Lewis and little son, don't fall to read Wedding. Rhoda of Hartford, of near Owensboro, visited the for- the one you have, shal Crowe, Lonnle Owen, Rosa Mrs. Ney Foster, the advertisement of the For.dsville Kelley, "was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harto to mer's parents, Dr. and Mrs. S. J. Planing Mill Co., found in another Brown, Dovle Greer, Otis Ruth Dam, Tuesday. Wedding, hero last week. ry Mp.nroe, Beaver "Quick Bertie Brown, Will Griffith, Robcolumn. Their motto is us Hartford, (formerly Sales and Small Profits." The vol- - Loyd, Mrs. Anna McFerran, Mlsa Mavmee Shown, Mrs. G. L. Thompson Bertha Westerfield, ert Taylor, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Miss Ollle Carson) and children, of ume of business does the rest. Route 3, Is Fount Crowe, Alpha Brown, O. D. Ernest Woodward, city, this week. Fayette, Ala., will arrive In Hartlots of The ciil baby born to Mr. and Carson, Verda Loyd, Orda Daniel, of Indian- ford Friday to visit relatives. Mrs. C. C. Wedding, Gentry. J. W. Kirk, Mrs. Mrs. Will Gillespie Wednesday died Morris apolis, Ind., is visiting Judge and Dr. C. "m! Htavrin, of Owens- Thursday afternoon. Interment in Irene Duff, Eula Wooseley, Lula a. a. Bauchn. Maude Mrs. R. R. Wedding, on Clay street. boro, and Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Hays, Oakwood cemetery Friday morning fMiriif are the guests of Mr. at 10 o'clock, after prayer service Shultz, Zona Robinson, Lyman Barof W. Taylor and little Louisville, Mrs. John M. L. Heavrln, city. by Rev. T. V. Joiner. This was a rett, J. C Lawrence, Orville Lloyd, daughter Vivian are visiting rela- and Mrs. young couple, as O. H. Park, Effle Duke, Eunice The Ohio County Drug Co. has a sad blow to the tives at Blrdseye and Unlontown, Rock, Walter Myers, Jesso Dyers, Talking Ma- the little one was their firstborn. find plan for you to own a Ind. Earl Miller, Isaac Christian, Alex FREE of ABSOLUTELY chine Cards were received in Hartford noswell, Eddlth Duke, Maude StewMr. Fon Roeers.- president of the charge. Ask about this plan yesterday announcing the marriage art, Winnie Raines, Frank Wright, National Bank, Plkes-vlll- e, Plkesville us Mr. S. Rosenblatt, of Hawesvllle, of Mr. E. Y. Allen and Miss Mattle Mabel C. Porter, Eva Whltehouse, Ky., was In Hartford yester Bros', building Moseley. which occurred In Louls- has rented Carson Elton Huff, Lee Alford, M. A. Eraday. on Main 6treet and will open a viiio Mondav. Mr. Allen, who is bry, Roy Stewart, L. L. Embry, d, Faught, Hart-lor- store here ' about the first of Sep- nrlnclnal of the McHenry High Frank Mesrs. Cullie Morris, Lillle Elsler, Elllf Route 2, and F. Mv Porter, tember. School, Is to be congratulated in Sanderfur, Elsler, Isabel Effle and hand of Miss Thomas, Clarence Alford, Rcdmon city, gave The Herald pleasant calls Lillle Ward, of Bowling winning the heart Miss ' Monday. r.roon. after visiting friends and Moseley as a helpmeet. Fer y, Belva Leacb, Oscar Stewart of L. C. Smith, E. F. LUes, Ezra Crow.Mclntyre, telephone relativts in the Nocreek neighborMiss Minnie Miss Mary Woodward, sister of near der, B. H. Morris, Henry Porter. operator at Beaver Dam, 1b spend- hood for a week, returned home Mr. Stephen Woodward, with friends Saturday. at her brother's Harry Annls, Maude Miller, Earl died ing a week's vacation Llvermore, Smith, May E. Rogers, Guy S. Haz-elr!- r. In Hartford. ' Mr. 8. "E! King, has moved hla last Friday night of a complication Frank Miller, Lillle Patter- several .months of I HRev..'JiTMiCrowe, of .FrdsyHle, hardware stock to the Nail properr i of! "troubles a. O. Keown. S. W, ,Tayi fy, north side Court" Square, corner standing. After funeral services at nn. Mr, passed - through .. Hartford Monday nr BnnMo Wllllnmfi. Norbert Ross 1 m. tieuian cnurcn,? ,bbuu, ouuuaj for Mt. Heraon, where be and Rev. cj, center hdu omr&cv dwovid, InHejschel Ross, John H. Allen, Mar-- 1 Call and get what ,you may o'clock p. m., her remains were protracted . are? jbcldlng a .Joiner. Berryman, Aiexj Effle Beulah church ceme- - vln Taylor, terred In the toeed in hU line.' meeting. Mr. Earl Coppage, of Caruthers-vlllMo., was in Hartford Sunday, leaving Monday with his sister, Mrs. Otto .Martin, nnd little (laughter, for a visit to their old home at Leltchfleld. Mr. and Mrs. Ike Sanderfur are the nroud parents of a girl that was born Wednesday evening. They have named the little Dr. A. B. one Martha Chapman. Riley attending physician. Minor's Fly Oil keeps the Hies oft your stock. One dollar a gallon. Also have sprny pumps to apply with; 30 cents each. Sold In Hart W. E. ELLIS, ford by Produce Merchant. 33t4 e, Much Interest Alanifested in Proceedings. J. P. Stevens is hereby directed to take warrants for all violators, making Un AUgUSl ... I, 171 IVi-- v, :i. ."" i.l J- 111 - et .pi ,m mhit ( tin to-- t and flint ilwtll l. llltff II. I....... in- - icjihkv, u. mid .. "" " '" '" "vt " s Hm-m- 1 J. TAPPAN", $",-00- AM PREPARED JAT&Gcy DSC o. v ! A. Jrl. txTT I MORE BARGAINS Now don't think that because n, YET! ll d, d, ee our special sale over that we We are raise our prices. quit closing our stock long we and you have anything you can will get it cheaper. We have close out the stock. do it on SHOES. Don t forget I We have splendid values yet. You know about the wear our Shoes, don't you? Not too late to Use out!! - to-da- y. while we are here. Barnard &. Co Hartford, Kentucky. l,y.fynfi; i sV-auW.- vm :.il,M') "5;V1 L - - YPf '" "tr? 'tij?353Y!3f-- l i - vJ iiji'jtti.Mi nmnimwi MMIWBMWlWMi PAGE ? SLX. THE HARTFORD HERALD WEDNESDAY, AUGUST !,. 1912.. , v ' 15 r' ta h :! BRECKINRIDGE COUlTT"Z FAIR AUGUST 20, 21 and 22. TIIECFiAV IVLOUnl Children's Diiy All Children Admitted Five Louisville WEDNESDA-Y- Special Trains from Day. up-lin- e points. THURSDA- Y- Races Derby Day. and Special Attractions. .11 any County Fair in the State. Saddle Stakes $100. Harness Stakes $100. Derby Stakes $100. Don't miss the Bull Liberal premiums for all entries unequalled Knee the first day. This is the only tournament of this kind to be held at any fair in Kentucky. Bulls mounted by Skilled riders. Music attraction treat best Brufcs Band in this part of the State. Music all day. Automobile racing. Amusements of all kinds. Something doing all the timo . Special for both old and young. Come one, come all! Come and see your neighbor everybody will be there. Make the Breckinridge County Fair the best of all-fairs- b' trains and reduced rates every day. For any further information or premium list, write A. T. BEARD, The Hartjord Herald Illinois Central Ituilroml Time ble nt Ilea or Dam. Ky. South Bound. North Bound. No. 132 1:05 a.m. No. 12111:35 p.m. No No. Tu- - President. ooooooooooooooo POEMS OU'LL E.NMOV. J. fl. SKILLMAN, Secretary. a man who was "something in the city." Ho approached a rich American with a view to floating a rubO The II cm aid's Special Selections. O ber company in British North Bor. o O neo. The American was favorably OO impressed with the scheme. "How many trees have you?" he JUST AS SUKE. asked. "We have not got any trees," reJust as sure as you shake things plied the promoter. out "How much land have you?" And live life right .with God, "We have no land." The things gone wrong will all go "What, then, have you got?" askright ed the amazed American. In the way you have to plod. "I have a bag of seeds," returned Just as sure as you balance acthe Londoner, composedly. counts, And many an enthusiastically And set yourself dead straight, undertaking has not even Von will find your affairs all right floated Youth's Companion. that! side up, With nothing to blame on fate. OFFICIAL COUNT GIVES Now, the best of us in our time and THOMAS 247 MAJORITY place Get off the track in a way, Greenville, Ky Aug. 9. In the And we yield to the world and flesh Congressional primary election for ah, yes the Third Congressional district T. To the devil himself, some day. B. Pannell, who was R. Y. Thomas' But the moment comes when we campaign manager, has received see the glow what aro said to be the official reOf the right shine clear and turns from every county in the diswhole; trict, as canvassed by the various And, oh, how eager we are to turn county election commissioners. The And the soul! majorities are as follows: Rhea Todd, 669; Simpson, 488; as we do it, men, Just as sure Logan, 1,710, making a total of As we look on the truth's pure .- i. " "face Warren, 254; Thomas Allen, And cry to the false gods luring us, 641; Edmonson, 85; Butler, 296; grace That there Is no life but Barren, 658; Metcalfe, 211; MuhThat instant, full on our hearts lenberg, 969, or a total of 3,114. there falls According to these figures, Thomas The balm of a peace unknown, has a majority of 247. The official we find the And all comes right and county was: vote of Muhlenberg dark Thomas, 1,281; Rhea, 312. And the night and gloom have On the Republican ticket, George " ., flown. ., 4..v., Baker received 283 votes in MuhJust as sure as wo stand up straight lenberg, ahd Thurman Dixon, 52, but Dixon carried all the rest of the As the Lord intended, again; Just as sure as we catch our breath counties of the district, which gave And are men with the strength him the nomination on the Republican ticket. The Bull Moose folof men lowers of this county claim that the Just as sure as we leave the dark vote for Dixon and Baker repreAnd live life right with God, The things gone wrong will all sents the Taft strength here, and are rejoicing. come right Wherever we have to plod. INDEX TO INTOXICATION Baltimore Sun. l. MOONSHINE COUNTRY THE HOU.V DAWG WHAT The late 'George B. Cluett beHE WAS GROWLING AT lieved profoundly In temperance. Mr. Cluett, at a temperance din"Yes," said the returned pilgrim day, "Arkansaw certainly ner, once said: the other "In moonshine districts, where lives up to its reputation for lean the whisky looks like water and is and lanky creatures. t "Last week I was riding along a drunk like water, strange Ideas predusty road, when I came to a cabin vail as to what Intoxication really set in a clearing. A lean, bony man Is. "In a moonshine village one Satsat out in front, smoking a corncob and gazing at invisible things. Twd urday afternoon a, man lay in the skinny fowls broiling sun in the middle of the or three pecked listlessly about the yard and road with an empty bottle by his occasionally a pig built like a side. "'He's drunk; lock him up,' the pumpkin seed slid between the pickets and went under the house Sheriff said. ' "But a woman interposed hastito He down in the shade. "Out in the dusty road a lean, ly. " 'No, he hain't drunk,' she said. rickety dog walked around and around, bristles up, apparently 'I jest seen his fingers move.' " growling at his shadow. Funny, It? "I went in and got a drink of If you call a man "levelheaded" water. Looking back I saw the dog still going through his peculiar ma- he Is pleased; If you call him a "flathead" he'll get mad. neuvers. Speak of a woman as being 'kit" 'Say,' I said to the native, tenish" and you will flatter her; 'what's the matter with your dog speak of her as being "cattish" and going mad?' "The old man looked over that you've made a lifelong enemy. Tell a woman she has the artistic way. " 'Don't see nothing wrong with temperament and you have made a friend; tell her she uses paint with him,' he said. " 'But' says I, 'look at him! He discretion and she'll cut you oft her walks around and around, growling visiting list. Tell a man he's got a great head at his shadow!' "The native looked indifferently and be admires your judgment; tell at a crawling grasshopper and lost him he's got the blghead and he gets mad. Interest again. "'Stranger,' he said 'that ain't Heard on the Train. no shadder that's another dog.' " Mr. A. Then you haven't much faith in the skill oT Dr. Cnttem. A LITTLE SOMETHING Mr. B. Faith! I wouldn't trust TO START SCHEME WITH that man to remove the appendix my dictionary. Boston The ease with which the "pro- from moter" counts chickens that are Transcript. not yet laid, appeals to when it docs not amuse the business man of conFOR FLETCHER'S x servative' methods, London1 newspapers are repeating m a story told by Mr. Harcourt, Secretary of State for the colonies, of Subscribe for The Herald. 91, m yer. Willie and three children, emlth, wife and one child, T. V. O Bratcher, wife and three children, 0 wife Mrs. Nora Mldklrt and four children, Mrs. Elizabeth Harrison, Miss (race Shadwlek. Mrs. H. It. Wedding and daughter Elenor, Anion Forman, Leslie Hurt, Jerry Luellen, Otis Cook, Jesse Cook, Cecil Wedding, Cullle Wedding, Herbert Wedding, Miss Mollle Bratcher, Mrs. Mary Daniel, Wm. Gentry and wife, Foster Thomas, Rollle Forman, Hurt, I very Lynch, Herbert Lynch. Orvllle Cole, E. C. Smith, Miss Rllla Therber, Eureka, Ind., Willie Smith, Brjan Gentry, Myrtle Gentry, Grace Gentry. Ev-ret- te f o OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO consolidated jo O O TWO GOLDEN DAYS. By o o'o Robert J. BurJette OOOOOOOOOU O that will cost between $15,000 and O $25,000. Several minor grades school is to be erected 12212:28 1022:48 p.m. No. 1012:48 p.m. p.m. No. 1318:55 p.m. J. E. Williams. Agt. TALK ABOUT IN COMBINING THEM PATCH Independents and Planter's of Coalition. Pro- GOV. MARSHALL'S tective Association Talk tribute to (iltAM) his mother ' il :s ft fe. Indian Killed on Track. Near Rochelle, II!., an Indian went to sleep on a railroad track and was killed by the fast express. He paid for his carelessness with his life. Often It's that way when people neglect coughs and colds. Don't risk your life when prompt New Discovery use of Dr. King's will cure them and so prevent a dangerous throat or lung trouble. "It completely cured me, in a short time, of a terrible cough that followed a severe attack of grip," writes J. R. Watts, Floydada, Tex., An Knjojiilile Occasion. 15 pounds in "and I regained The friends and neighbors of weight that I had lost." Quick, Mrs. W. W. Lloyd, of near Barrett's safe, reliable and guaranteed. 50c Ferry, gave her a very ugreeable and $1.00. Trial bottle free at hurprisQ in the way of a birthday James H. Williams. m dinner on the 4th Inst., in honor of anniversary. Those her sixty-fir1,1 13 Negroes In Nary. present were: There are 4,113 negroes In the G. C. Magan, wife and two child- United States navy, receiving a toren, Clarence Forman, wife and two tal yearly salary of $2,168,000. The children, Thomas Daniel, wife and figures were compiled by Beekman three children, Dud Forman, wife WIthrop, Acting Secretary of the and four children, J. W. Forman Navy, in response to a request from and daughter Mae, George Fentress Cyrus F. Adams, Assistant Regispnd wife, G. M. Harrison, wife and trar of the Treasury, who is a netwo children, Mrs. Ida Wedding and gro. It is understood that Mr.' Adtwo children, James Thomas, wife ams wishes to use the information and two children, Mack Daniel, wife as campaign material to show memand two children, Alva Blacklock, bers of bis race that they are being wife and ono child. N. B. White, well cared for under the Taft Adwife and four children, J. P. Lloyd, ministration. Washington Post. wife and two children, Mrs. Elvira "Were all medicines as meritoGentry, Oakland, Ind., Mrs. Janie Day and six children, Orvllle Lloyd rious as Chamberlain's Colic Choleand wife, Edgar Magan and wife, ra and Diarrhoea Remedy, the R. W. Qulsenberry and four child- world would be much better off and ren, Murray Coppage, wife and one tho percentage of suffering greatly child. Mrs. O. E. Bradfleld and decreased' writes Lindsay Scott, of daughter Ethel, L. Barrett, wife Temple, Ind. For sale by all deal m and three children, Uriah Coppage ers. and wife, Mrs. S. E. Coppage, Hot Springs, Ark., W. H. Forman, wife FOR FLETCHER'S and one child, T. W. Barrett, wife arid three children,' Llolen,;Hurt, st Aug. 0. Ky., Black famous Patch, which Includes all the counties in this region of Kentucky and Tennessee where the dark types of tobacco are grown, there is the keenest interest in conditions which affect both the Planters' Protective Association and independent tobacco buyers, and a coalition of these important factors In the trad.? may be brought abouU iy; AssoOlaUo'n officials are out in statements that unless a majority of the growers Bhow a sufficient interest In its welfare to sign pledges of membership before September 1, will probably be the corporation dissolved. For two years, owing to the high prices of the loose d of floors, hot more than" sold their prodthe farmers have The asuct through this channel. 0 sociation now controls about hogsheads, while a few years ago there were 65,000 hogsheads In its pool. Independent dealers In the region are holding about 7,000 hogsheads for which they paid high prices, and the recent slump in values is causThey ing them great uneasiness. have lately held a number of conferences with the association managers, who still have about 0,000 hopsheads of the old crop on hand, with a view to pooling their holdings, but the combination has not yet been effected. It is said to be almost assured that the independents will form a new organization. Mainly their hope of realizing profit on the tobacco they control lies throughout the Black in reports Patch that the crop in the field is not onlv short, but of inferior quality. The independents have 2,500 warehogsheads In Hopklnsville houses, 2,000 at Mayfield, 1,500 at Clarksville, Tenn., and 1,000 at Hopklnsville, Throughout the ''r" pne-thir- 32,-00- A correspondent of the New York Times sends the following excerpt to his papsr written by Govenor of Indiana. Thomas R. Marshall, A man who intertains such love for and vjio holds her his mother rememmemory in such sacrpd brance, Is the right man to be of the for United States: "I think back through the years, the lean and fat, the good and bad ones, to my earliest recollection. eye that I see a woman with an fishes as swift as an arch angel's wings and a mouth that breaks with laughter and hardens at sight of wrong, singing lullabies; a woman who, with hand grasping the Unseen Hand, walks the paths of life unashamed, unafraid, unharmed. She is clad in garments of beauty for me, and age does not soil them, nor years make Her them cheap and tawdry. tongue is without guile, having neven been the messenger of a lie. It Is seventeen years since her soul went home to God and her fingers became for me the fingers of an angel, but I have not forgotten all she said. She told me there was a Santa Claus, and I believe her. He brings me no longer drums and fifes. But he still brings to me visions of my mother and the music of that angelic chorus which sang at creation's dawn and at the hour of man's redemption." Vice-Preside- nt brier-border- ed 7. i.ii -- There are two days of the week upon which and about which I nevdays, kept er worry. Two care-fre- e sacredly free from fear and apprehension. One of these days is yesterday. i'esterday, with all its cares and frets, with all its pains and aches, all its faults, Its mistakes and blunders, has passed forever beyond the reach of my recall. I cannot undo an act that I wrought; I cannot unsay a word that I said on yesterday. All that It holds of my life, of wrongs, regret and sorrow. Is in the hands of the Mighty Love that can bring honey out of the rock, and sweet waters out of the bitterest dessert the Love that can make the wrong things right, that can turn weeping into laughter, that can give beauty for ashes, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness, joy of the morning for the woe of the night. Save for the beautiful memories.) sweet and tender, tnat linger like the perfume of roses in tho heart of the day that is gone, I have nothing to do with yesterday. It was mine; it is now God's. And the other day I do not worry about is with all its possible adversities, its high school course and a four-yeare to be comprehended in the curriculum. It is the intention of those in charge of the plan to- -' at least ten acres of ground In" . nection with the school where pra? tical instruction in agriculture may be obtained. All praise to John B. McFerran, who Is the father of tho plan! Frankfort State Journal. ar SOME NOBLE PRINCIPLES SPLENDIDLY SET FORTH In this .day at foolish talk and prattle, the following card, which, has been issued by the Chase National Bank of New York, contains-thoughtthat should rest in the minds of every American: A PATRIOTIC CREED. "We believe In our country tho United States of America. We believe In her constitution, her laws, her institutions and the principles for which she stands. We believe in her vast resources, her great posyes, more, her wondersibilities ful certainties. "We believe in the American people, their genius, their brain and their brawn. We believe in their honesty, their Integrity, and dependability. We believe that nothing can stand in the way of fheir commercial advancement and prosperity. "We believe that what are termdepression' ed 'times of business are but periods of preparation for greater and more pronounced commercial successes. "And we believe that in our country are being worked out great problems, the solution of which will be for the benefit of all mankind." Circus Yarns. k s burdens, its perils,-it- s large prom- long-legge- d, ise and poor performance, its failures and mistakes, Is as far beyond the reach of my mastery as its dead It is a day of sister, yesterday. God's. It's sun will rise in roseate splendor, or behind a mask of weeping clouds. But it will rise. Until then, the same "love and patience that held yesterday will hold shining with tender I promise into the heart of have no possession in that unborn day of grace. All else is in the safe keeping of the Infinite Love that holds for me the treasure of yesterday. The Love that is higher than the stars, wider than the skies, deeper than the seas. it is God's day. It will be mine. There is left for myself, then, but one day of the week Any man can fight the battles of Any woman can carry the burdens of Just one day. Any man can resist the temptations of today. O friends, it Is only when to the burdens and cares of carefully measured out to us by the Infinite Wisdom and Mighty that gives with them the promise, "As thy day, so shall thy strength be," we wilfully add the burdens of those two awful eternities yestersuch burdens day and as only the mighty God can sustain that we break down. It Isn't the y experience of that drives men mad. It is the remorse for something that happened yesterday, may the dread of what disclose. These are God's Days. Leave them with Him. Therefore, I think, and I do, and I Journey but one day at a time. That is the easy day. That is the man's day. Nay, rather, that is our day God's and mine. And while faithfully and dutifully I run my course, and work my appointed task on that day of ours, God tho Almighty takes and the care of yesterday and to-da- y. w to-da- y. y. to-da- y, to-daAll-lovi- "Rain? Say. it always rains when a circus comes to town." "Ain't it the truth!" "I remember once when the circus came to our town " "Back in Punkville, erl" Well, that "Back In Punkville. day It rained bo hard that the lot the circus camped on was a 'quagmire for a solid month. I wouldn't exaggerate. One month." The "That ain't nothing, man. last tlmo the circus came to our town it rained so hard that there has been good fishing on the ' pot ever since." Warning Cards. The Kentucky law lately passed in regard to the abolishment of the public drinking cup, requires that all stores, hotels, boarding hduses, depots and other public places where drinking water is usually kept, shall keep a large card, with the law printed thereon, ported close by said drinking water. The Herald is prepared to furnish these cards at ten cents apiece, by mail or by hand. Better keep within the bounds of the law. tf Legless Pitcher a Wonder. Wilmington has the champion legless pitcher. William Salter, a young man who lost both of bis legs and uses artificial limbs, yesterday pitched for the Christiana Athletic Club and 'shut out the Central Club, 8 to 0. He held bis opponents to three hits and struck out 10 batsmen. He is able to run the bases and Is the best player on Wilmington the Christiana team. Tedlons Tasks. ESTABLISHMENT OF CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS (Del.) Cor. Baltimore' Sun. The most and advanced step ever tak'en by educational circles iin Kentucky 1b looking toward the establishment of consolidated schools in Davi,ess and Warren counties. The experiment once tried, there will be little dane conger of retrograding to ditions. have no Let Kentucky more ot those one-rooframe schoolhouses. It is proposed to divide Warren county .Into four districts. At a central location In each district, a old-timm Chll4rn Cry wayfarers stood for an hour or more" in front of a oar-ke- t, watching employes clean Vfsh. "Ain't that the Unlit?" exclaimed one. '.'Can yon think of anything worse than a Job like that?" "Sure. I can,'.' the other replied. "That ain't half as bad as scaling the Alps." A couple of CHIIfrr Cry CA3TORIA ' CA3TORIA u e OLD PAPERS FOR BALE Herald up In .bundles. Flreicenta dle, three tor tea ceats., oce. 1 at Taej Nice, and clean, tli bun U B '" r"TlTii " f 'il IVf -- 1 - ' 'ni - l - i -- - iliitiii'ffiiifffiV -- r latto'iirttr -'- -- "'li.rf ' y - tfn'Ufflil Lfcti, mm filjttLy tfsjjin'"fnrtlwriirririii "WEDNESDAY, AUCUST 14, 1012. THEIR LAST HANDCLASP. HE HAD THE HARTFORD HERALD HIS HAIR CUT. EXPLOSION MANY PAGE SEVEN. BRAINY It PAUPERS. IMPRISONS GERMAN The Final Meeting of Charles A. Dana and Jacob Riis. mBSKtKKKlKBtMKMHtKBKHHBBBfMaHHBKtBKt with Charles A. Duna, the "old chief," as be was always called In the offlce. Forty Dead Bodies Recovered In all the years I was on the Sun I do not think 1 had spokin with him and Many of the In- 4)IED IN POVERTY AND WANT. a half 'dozp times. When 1ms wanted anything ot me personally his orders jured Rescued. Langford was In tbo Garrlck were very brief and to tho point, , It club in London when Albert Smith was generally something a reiort to accosted him: "Hello. Joel Who has" Soma Men of Genius Who Were Doom TIio Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has been Bochum, Germany, Aug. S. A be digested or the story of soma social cut your hair?" Joe wan In a dignied to End Their Days In Obscurity, in uso for over 30 years, has borno tho sfsrnatitro of mining disaster which imperiled experiment which showed mo that In While Their Fruitful Ideas Made his heart bo was faithful to bis early fied mood and resented the query. "1 Die Ilve3 of C"0 miners occuirnd lu aud has been inacio under his pcr- really don't sec," bo replied, "how It Millions and Fame For Others. love. Ho had been In his youth, as enn interest you who cut my hair." the Lorraine pit in the vlclulty or Sonal supervision since its infancy. taS7y, cUCAi Allow no ono to deceive you in this. Man Now and again a mnn Is burn whose everybody knows, nn enthusiastic re- Smith went downstairs and stood In tho village of Gcrthe All Counterfeits, Imitations nnd" brain fairly bubbles with Inventive former, a member of the Broos Farm the hall. The next member who came of the men wers rescued, but at n but senlus. New Ideas stroma from biui. community. IUit If ho thought 1 saw up to the morning room sauntered up Into hour this evenlii It was fearcl Experiments that triilo with and endanger tho health of and &U branches of sclcuco uro tuuu be let no sign escape tilm. II o hated to Langford with: "I see you've been tbut more than 10) had been killed. Infants and Children Experience agnhiht Experiment. jhams. Perhaps I was ou trial nil the baring your hair cut Who did It?" tered with hardly an effort. Twenty-fiv- e bodies had been re;lme. If so 1 believe that he meant .loe very sternly rpplleu, "I cunt imSuch was Frederic William Martini), ono of those many brilliant Jtallauo to toll mo in that last handshake that agine why you ask me." Then' he or- covered and the rescue parties were who left their native laud to seek ho had not found mo wanting. It was dered a glass of sherry nnd hitters. unable to enter the gallery In which on tho stairs in the Sun otllco that Tbo waiter brought It and gave u little the fire damp explosion occurred, fortune In n foreign country. Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, PareMartlno ciuno to England, and hl we met I was golug up: be was com-Jn- start of surprise as be presented It where It whs believed from llfty to goric, Drops nnd Soothing? Syrups. It is Pleasant. It down going home to die. Ho with a "Beg pardon, sir! It's along of 100 men were still entombed and name Is most familiar from tho contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic rifle, the breechblock of knew it. In me there was no suspicion your 'air. sir: It looks unusual." Joe had almost ce: talnly perished. A substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms which "was one of bis numerous In- of the truth when I tmue upon him went to the glass and saw nothing re- larpe mimbr of those rescued were cures Diarrhoea and "Wind and allays Feverlshncss. it tho turn of the stairs, stumbling markable, but as he was considering suffering from severe Injuries anil ventions. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation along In a wny very unlike tho usual his face CbarlPs burst upon him with. It Is an Irony of fate that Mnrtlno'fi It was expected that many of them assimilates tho Food, regulates tho and Flatulency. name should jjo down' to posterity springy step of the old chief. I hardly "Where on earth did you gut your could not recover. Stomach and Boircls, giving healthy and natural sleep. solely through a warlike invention icucw him when he passed, but as he hair cut. ray dear Joe?" The rescue detachments which Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. Ele which he himself thought little of turned and held out his hand I saw Joe could stand It no longer. when .3 greatest work was done In that It was Mr. Dana, looking some- went off to his chambers in Hay- - did such good work at the time of tho cause of peace, fqr Mnrtlno was how older than I bad ever seen him moud's buildings. J ray's inn. Next the French disaster at Court teres, ALWAYS tho discoverer of the process for con and changed. I took off my hat, and day be saw an advertisement In the near Lens, on March 10, 1000, when Times; "J. M. ay. Tarring basic slag Into manure, n ills- - we shook bands. who rut It? Was 1,2.10 miners were killed, arrived Bears the Signature of Vjy which has put millions Into "Well," he said, "havo you reformed It your own band or the deed ot an- here early this afternoon, but were .s .;'() pockets of German manufacturers. everything to suit you. straightened other? Confess ere It be too late."' unable to penetrate the galleries, every kink In but himself, it rf stated,from which hoa penny. It Is outPretty nearly," town?" falling into ilarwas only the flrn of a series of sim- owing to the flames and the pois-1 said, never reaped announcements, and the ingenuity Tho fluted rib for umbrellas, a now his tone of banter, "all except the Sun of bis toruieutors devised cuiitlnunl onous gases. The wives nnd families of the process for tho extraction of nickel ofllce. That Is left yet and ns bad as surprises for htm. Ou the day be j gathered were miners j went down to Chertsey from Its ore, n new development of ever." races be saw doomed "Ha.1" he laughed. "You come on. tbe walls placarded with enormous around the pit mouth all day, but .platinoid Immensely Important In We aro ready for yoiu Come right posters, yellow nnd block: "J. M. L. I electric work and a brilliant Inven were unable to learn any detnlls, ns tlon for the reduction of gold ore. along!" And with nnother hearty Once more, who cut It? You must the olliclals of the mine refused Inthese nre only n few of Martlno's dis handshake ho was gone. He never speak!" A band of Ethiopian mln- - formation, At tJ o'clock fifteen more In aw the Sun olllce ngain, covcrles. And yet he was so lacking 'sfrels was furnished with a melody to making It was tho only time ho had ever sing outside ltuyiiioudr8 OilllUlugs to bodies had been recovered,llfut-lionTHKCtNT. UN COMPANY TT MURRAY TRCCT. NCW YORK CITY. In bU3lne" capacity that In spite ot knowhV deaths' al his extraordinary output of valuabU held out his hand to me after that i tho air of "What Are tbe Wild Waves the total' ideas ho died at Glasgow in 1003 a first meeting of ours when I was a StivlnfrV thin verv nnnnlnr. And tnn forty. Tho day shift of fi.'O men had comparatively poor and obscure man lonely lad, nearly thirty years before. refrain was: while dozens of others have lieen made That time there was n dollar in It and What are de wild waves saying as dey lap Just descended Into the woi kings I spurned It do Waterloo Mnlr7 This time I like to rfcjier by his genius. and were distributing themselves his heart was In It And I took What are dem wild waves saying? Dcy along the various In 1SG0 the chemist I.enolr patented levels when the say. Who cut Joe's halrT a motor driven by an explosive mis It gladly and gratefully. Jacob A. explosion occurred. In despair, Laugturd went abroad, Or tin wrapper ai'iund your Herald. You will find a little yellow ture of nlr and gas. He used electrl Rlls. "The Making of un American." The detonation was heard at the and wheu. at Chumuiilx. be climbed to Ignition obtained from a battery ant1 llp. It lm printed ou it your name and a date after it. The date the Cascade de.s Peleritis be found surface and the olficlals on duty Imn Ruhmkorff coll, actuating n sparkln; liou.s when your Millet Ipti'im expires or when It did THE LAND OF CHEESE. This is plastered In front or him n huge yel- mediately formed rescue parties of plug very similar to that In use In tin all the book we keep of your subscription account, ami there is no low poster bearing tbe words: "J. M. the men belonging to the night modern motor. Tho system of valve excuse for you not Kimniiiu just how you stand with TIIK HtiUALD. Switzerland Has the Proud Honor of L. Confess, reveal, or be forever shift, who rushed back to the jilt by means of which the suction of tin Deserving This Title. We are trying to get our subscription list on a Mildly lost! Who cut It?" Joe's spirit was mouth together with tho villagers. piston drew In the chargo of gas foi Cheese, although an Important proda basis, .so as to aoid trouble anil iiiisiitKli'r.standing. We do. not the next explosion was nlso designed uct of our dairy farms and n reason- broken. lie sat down nnd wrote "I humble letter to Albert Smith: want to force the paper upon anybody aualiist their will, but we want by Lenoir. ably popular article of diet In the Unit-"- d yield. Spare me. My hair was cur In A LliTLK IIISTOKY OF Is give very attenIn 1SH2 he actually produced n car tim: iidi'sk ok vwv.v. ukxt all thatLookdue us. .Please yellow tills matter your your prompt It States, has never held quite the poMartin's court at tbe barber's on tion. at that little slip containing will mime. which. If crude, was similar In all re sition with us given It in some Euro- St left hand side. His charge was the tell you Just what you need to know, without any explanation from spects to that In uso today, save that pean countries. threepence. 1 am quite beaten " For more tran twontv years tho us. If it is wrong in any way, let us know. Anyhow, plea.se pay us ho employed coal gas Instead of petrol English and Germans arc far greater tluee-stor- y brick house nt 2U Hast .aw) this he actually drove hlmselt what Is due. It takes much money to run a good newspaper nowaonsumcrs of cheeso than we, while Her Opportunity. street, Covington, has been ilth through tho streets of Paris. days, hence we inii-- t keep subscription accounts collected up. both are surpassed by Norwegians. But In families, and Yet for reasons similar to those above all Switzerland Is tho land of story an old French Joke book Is a occupied by seveial Kither come to The Herald olllce ami pay the arrears and n year in to the effect that when nt Home he cheese. On more than one occasion 'ot one of the families lias paid which caused the failure of Martlno advance, or. If you are not coming to town soon, sciul us a check or public penances were customary a con- rent. All the occupants said Thura-la- y never received the rewnrd of his gen travelers have dwelt upon the funce fessor thought lit to order that ono of money-orde- r for tho amount due. We will appreciate it lus, and It was left for Daimler, nearly tions, social and sentimental as well they would hnve paid the rent, his and it will make us think you really want the paper. thirty years later, to produce tho first as astronomical, performed by tho She female penitents should be flogged. but no one ever came and asked told her husband, nnd bo volunof the practicable nutocars. fhceso of y.ennatt that remarkable teered to undergo the penuueo for her. them for It, and likewise, no one 11)00. por nnd un Lenoir died in cheese which Is so html that It has to The wife was present nt tbe flogging, over asked th"in to move. When known. be scraped with a kulfo or cleft with and whenever the confessor's energies one rutin did move, he did so of his Three years later. In 1003. the lift? of tn ax. (lagged she would cry: own volition, and then told friends George Sliergold enrae to an end In It Is said by one authority that the "Flog harder, father, for you know to move in nnd take fits quarters. Rhergold. origGloucester workhouse. patrician rank of a Swiss family In More than twenty years ago a inally a shoemaker, was the Inventor thnt part of the confederation Is esti- I'm u great sinnerl" friend of Kdward Cooper, an exof tho sufety bicycle. He built a ma- mated by the ago of Its cheese, and Not a Scot. chine of this order l:i the year 1S70. tho greater the respect due to or the pressman, of Covington, was told From some unexplained cnuso tbe by the front wheel of which was twenty-seve- n affection for a guest tho older Is the a frlnd that he could move Into Inches and tho rear wheel some cheeso set before him. There nre said engine attached to u Scottish express the house and not have to pay rent. once broke down near Y. A worthy , thirty-oneInches In diameter. r, to bo families who own cheese that Cooper did so, and reared his fam(INfOKI'Oli.XTKn) In 1000. when It first become gener-.all- dates back to tho time of tho first quickly put his head out of the win- ily Ho did not occupy the there. dow nnd inquired: known that the man whose InvenFrench revolution, which Is served whole houso, and he Invited anoth"What ou earth's wrang. galrd?" tion had made millions for others was only on solemn occasions, such as The guard was cross, for uo records er family to share It with him. Two as poor as when he had cobbled shoes. "hrlstenlngs. weddings or funerals. a public subscription was raised, and There nre In each pantry at least as ould be broken that Juuruey, and vears a.'o he invited the family of Chrr'e3 Shumate to move into tho for somo time an allowance of S shil- many cheeses as there are boys and testily be replied: "Well. Scottle. tho driver's a coun- lious", rent free, provided they lings a week was made to Sliergold. sirls In the fa'mlly, for nt the birth of But the funds became exhausted, ami eVo,.y child n cheese Is made, which Is tryman of yours, and the beggar has would tix the roof. Ihey did so. poor Sliergold ended his life In the named nfter the newcomer and Is first used all the hot water lu tbo boiler to Later, Cooper's family having left, mix grog with " be workhouse. cut into on his or her wedding day. on "Na, na. gain), tbo chlel's nao a ' o moved into one room, nnd Mrs. How many people hnve ever even which festive occnslon all guests parInvited her brother and Shumate .heard of Scheele? Yet this poor Swed-hi- i take of a piece of the groom's and the Scot." came tbe retort, "or he wldnn sister-in-laMrs. Jesse Mr. and chemist was perhaps the greatest bride's cheeses In order to secure for :ruuble muekle about tbe water." Shumate, toccupy part of the secdiscoverer of facts that the world has them all earthly thrift and happiness. A MONTH He Got There. ond floor. Cooper later moved out, WHY NOT MAKE ever known. Tho rest Is serv.od as a token of friendA New England bishop was on bis Wo always hear In England that ly souvenir nnd heartfelt mourning and the latter family now occupy S50.00 a V7ook, almost StO.00 a Day Priestley was the discoverer of oxy- after the tomb has closed over his or way one winter day to till nn episcopal 'he eu'ire second floor. Mrs. Mnt-gen. Yet Sehcele nfnde this most Im- bor mundane career. New York Trib- appointment In the lumber country Kordenbrook nnd 'nmlly of tlvr Bellini; Victor Sulci and when he ran into a old fashioned boxes portant of all chemical discoveries si- une. "1 I'dren rrvTrVyv:. 13 unit occupy the third floor. to nuTelmiitis, iliH'tuirf, luuyci"', Maine blizzard. He had u dozeu miles xveli.to-il(iirmi "i,uil of liom ren '1 o t lii'iu i'il multaneously with Priestley. And It ww''4' anything "No one over said of a uafit, lint ilo no: Know hmv urylcltlooun before him when It burst, and be was BrTh e rem irUI was Sclu'de who discovered chlorine one. Sulcsiupii tliclaru our proportion or.o of 4 'KM Jbout rent to us," said Mrs. Shu-na- 'e traveling lu un old fashioned mounNew Mexico's Early Name. uiiporfunl-tic- s the lK8t, L'ltun-i-u- t gas. Chlorine Is perhaps the most itsa ever rci'viteil. Wltnout prcxlou-- i cxm "About two years Thursdnv. What u pity tho name "New Mexico" tain stage drawn by two wiry horses. of all gases In commercial Important YOU en n ilupllcHle tlio e.iivt-.i- ' oioificrn. They fought about six miles bravely, an ndvorMsBrr.ont that M'e rr I catalog Our lmniUoiucly llliiKir.iti'd chemistry. It Is the prut 'bleacher cunuot be changed to "Cibola!" xvlll cnuuio you to urescnt tho tuluect to cus to look hppeless. 'i nil theu It begun Arizona, Arkansas. California 1)0 SOl.l Vf t'lO cltl' for &wWm ''0"e VP" to that gives us white linen or white Cibola! How well tomers lu as lntiT.'rilim a luniin. tm though these would sound The driver nnd the bishop were won piloting theiu tliraucn our diuiury. Men (!l(.'r', t"vnp, j'IvIt- t'le nwier's you xvero rptAlv, Milvk'i' niut liitriu'llnns for sAllln appoint! d ad straw hats. It is also the best (llsln In 0iLlpsmpn fcul si. L'llni? musical roll call of the dcrlng how they and the horses would Tnri-the m Tie'ehav, and his residence convincing talking points wnlch It U liuio-sibfectant known. It Is essential to tbi states!) already was for a pruxpfcilxe customer to deny. Why Such the primeval name, live through the night when there don't YOU be the arm to apply fmni yuur vicinity before toiaconc else gets the territory! manufacture of the great palu killer, is Danville, Ky. I do n know We can favor only one salesman out ot each locality. chloroform, and It Is used extensively aud tho country was known ns the came n whoop. In n few moments six vhctl-pno the I'o'ise va snj 1. i ne sun anniversary 01 our "Land of tho Seven Golden Cities of husky lumberjacks mounted on six company was celebrated by for the extraction of gold from its ores. n rain" n cot na about it." erecting the most modern safe Vaca brought the first northern Maine horses cauie up to Chlorine's value to the world has t'lliola" after factory In the world. WideCovington Post.. reports of Its marvels Into Mexico. them through tbe swirl. awake men wlio received our yet Scheclc. the special Inducement, tien Incalculable, it, lived hungry man The sensitive Imaginations of the Span-lard- "Well, bishop," sold the leader, "we and discovered rendered ltnecesfary todouble His (Quarter. whetted by the tales told by was bourn! you should get through to our output. Wo are spending died a pauper. " many thousands of dollars enwort'iv jo'i in "I approach Professor Gorir died a comparatively Vaca aud Inspired to new flights by un that meeting If we could help juu larging our sales organization, Tho good bishop was deeply touched "liise Mr. Tl'e-a- d. but to learn all particulars, It W v a'lt tr poor man, yet Gore was the Inventor occasional Indian's romancing, picwill coft you only tbe price ot of tlie modern safety match, of the tured seven noble cities, each as large at this show of religious zeal aud trib- -- alee $100,000; " prominent phia postal card. method of electrodeposltlou commonly and as beautiful ns the City of Mexico. ute to him and bis cause aud so ex- lanthropist offers,, to contribute a Ask for Catalogue 1 6 T. known as electroplating and of mnny Fancy painted mirages wherein were pressed himself. "Yes." replied the man. "we'll get 'luartoi of It." other processes which have put mil- gold and sliver nnd rare gems without ' O'i, w'.l," ?al J!v. T t"wad THE VICTOR 'I lions Into the pockets of manufactur- limit D. II. MacAdam in Metropoli- you through. You see, we was paid iipstllv. "I don't mind i'vjn- - niofN yesterday, and the hoys has made up , tan Magazine. ers. Gore's book, "Electrometallurgy," ! SAFE & LOCK GO. mnrter. Can yo'i chanie a n tbunderlu' big pool on whether er US published In 1870, Is still a standard Houseke per. not you'd git there. We hoys bus got half?" Enlightening the Minister. work on the subject London An ClnCMnATI, OHIO Our Nmr Ham. Capaetty 20,000 Safes Annually. "We are going to have pie for din- u whole month's pay un your end. swers. You'll git there." ner." said Bobby to the minister. He did. aud be got half the pool for "Indeed!" . laughed the clergyman. Value of Cinders. t new schoolhouse. vmmmamtvxn&atXM'r'n-T-tir3.-A few years ago 'great heaps of cin- amused at tho little boy's nrtlessness. o. .vf)AM.'tKui ders piled up. often being dumped Into "And what kind of pie. Bobby?" ..A What Did He Mean? "It's n now kind. Ma was talking i Jot? places wbero now earth was need-fe.3- At a supper party shortly before the Manufacturing concerns were glad thlR morning about pa bringing you to The kind ihul m.kes vtj'i "i k v.mm.u in 'hr 'yr uf ih' wholeto get rid of tho accumulations. But dinner so often, nnd pa said ho didn't production at tbe Duko of York's theAfter eatln?, persons of a bilious habit sale dealer and TJie o'y ni icisuir ihi iu:ik: vour hmi nbi-rnow the cinders aro in great demand care what she thought and ma said ater In London of Henry Arthur Jones' xvlll derive ereat benefit by taking one play, "Tbe Princess' proud ol you, inci cases respect ami .sets vuu ncht in hc ruinas for use In tho foundation for cement she'd mako him eat humblo pie before said to the Into Sir W. Nose." some ono of these pills. If you have been S. Gilbert across the day was over, and I suppose we're and concrete work. They forma perof all people; this kind Is DRINKING TOO MUCH, the table: fect drnlnagomaterlal, and it has been going to have it for dinner." they xvlll promptly relieve the nausea, "What do you think of Jones' new found that frost acts very lightly on title. Gilbert?" SICK HEADACHE In the Future. them. Furthermore, concrete work in "Don't know what it is," growled tmdnervoutnesswhlchfollowi, restore Magistrate What! Drunk again? And promply delivered by th-- - HARTFORD HERAl n. Everywhich cinders are used fs sold to bo of the appetite and remove gloomy feel extremo durability. When cinders are When you were here' last timoyou Sir William. body in any kind ot business needs Primed Stationery rn e Injj. Elegantly sugar coated. "U Is qnalnt to say the Icastr" was ground and mixed with cement the promised to sign tho pledge. Prisoner "Ho calls bis piece The Take No Substitute. Heads, Crds. Envelopes, Statements, Etc nowadays -- Well, I'm goin to. yer honor, Jest as the reply, Prices mass becomes very hard. ' loso.": learn to been the lowest; work the best. Call or write us. rreasyM' the koojnVasv lessons, but write. I've made Princess' grunted Gilbert meOltattriri "I'm." I haven't trtkln' as The road to success Is as 13he HERALD. Hertford. Ky. "nope It will ran." much progress yet Toledo Blade, fottd to ruin. Benjamin ITranklitu Subscribe fcr Its Banli $1 a Tkp Bus-sell,y. Brilliant Inventors Who Reaped Pitiful Rewards. I lite to think of my last meeting And It 'Took a Long, Long Time to Find Out by Whom. One of tho most elaborate and sustained practical Jokes on record wan that rdayed on J. M. Laugford commonly known as "Joe" some tlfty years ago. According to tho version " given tn the "Life of Sir William 2 jCJ&T?rflf Just-ns-(;nod"n- ro What is CASTOR! A It It g y I I I CENU8NE I U-S- CASTORIA ! The (ZSAU EM You Have Use For Over Always Bought 30 Years. r be-.le- LOOK ON THE FIRST PAGE r post-olllc- iszzDsr'jrTj-c&zr- z Lipm ana Power Coisaav i E. G. y BARRASS, MGR., Will tiire your Iiohx; at cost. Electric Lt'lJits are. vletni, lutilthy and safe. No home or bashuss hon.se should without than trhr) tnifhin rutch. $200." - - That's flre-nro- l Mm money-makin- g (Ala-Imiu- c lr -- - ':' 1 d. .Wills z. job mil 1N1; s NEATLY )OXK ifrt iv'T -- " tVlil IT i $"? vvVBll"-'t"Wt" 1P- - , jm,im iniMy''(l"t"i 'Iff'" P'"ll"l""y U "tP WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1012. PAGE KIGHT. THE HARTFORD HERALD Jr., ol HE LOSS OF LIFE FROM K. Y. Thomas, gressman On the fa county. Muhlenberg of the returns Thomas won by 24" QUAKE HAY REACH 7,000 alleges thai Mr. Rhea majority. were practiced many Irregularities n the primary and that ho has been Terrible Want and Dis Informed that fraud was perpetrat Creates and at tne ed during the voting tressFissures Swallowed count. Ho says that ho Is satisfied fairly that he won the nomination Up Homes. will be uiil that his contention bqrne out when the contest Is (fonstantlnoi)le. Aug. 11. The heaid. The contest will be heard Interruption of telegraphic comElection Comby the State Hoard of munication makes It very difficult missioners. to obtain accurate details of the disturbances seismic disastrous Hrlil & Ot.'s Store limned. r T?oli a r.n.'a store and con i which occurred August 9 on both tents weio burned at Rockport, this Bides of the Dardanelles Nn nrMirnt 'ficures of the num county, Monday night. l,oss oh building estimated at $2,500, loss ber of victims can yet be tabulated, though some estimates place the ,on stock $3,000. The Masonic hall, a brick struc- death list at 1,000 and the injured ture, next door to the burned build- from 0,000 to 7,000. Origin which In the town of Shary-Koing, was damaged slightly. CO persons were was destroyed, fire unknown. of killed and 150 Injured. Fires are A Good Citl.en Gone. reported from many cities In which Mr. Logan Brown died at his res- numerous buildings were destroyed. idence between Point Pleasant and Fissures" opened to a length of Smallhous on Tuesday of last week, about a mile along the river at of the Infirmities of age. He was s, 40 miles southeast of 77 years old when death claimed Adrlanapole, many swallowing him. He leaves a wife, throe dwellings. From the apertures hot daughters and four sons. He had water, sand, foam and sulphurous been a member of the Methodist vapors were emitted. church since early youth and was a Everywhere In the stricken zone His remains christian. devout there Is terrible want and distress. were Interred at Equality Church Appeals for doctors and help are Wednesday, and there constantly cemetery being received at the vr.s a large crowd In attendance at capital, and the Government Is dobeing conhis funeral, the services ing its utmost to satisfy them. The A ducted by Rev. R. I). Bennett. hospitals here are crowded with Ingood man has gone to the reward jured persons. y of the upright In life. The Vail of Adilanapole Constantinople that the BENNETTS. reported to Aug. i::. The boys at this place loss of life there was small. The organized at ball team last Sunilaj. quake, huwewr, seriously damaged Mr. Roy Raines, of near Rosine, the public buildings of the city. was the uuest of his sister, Mrs. Three renewed earth shocks were McDowell, at this place, reJt here It is reported that Pierson - volcanic Island Is forming in the Saturday and Sunday. Miss Pearl Stevens, of Dundee, sea 0f Marmora. v'sited Mr. and Mrs. William Brown 'CHOP CONDITIONS SEEM the past week. TO UK ABOUT NORMAL Mr. and Mrs. Bornie McDowell visited Mr. Thomas Black and fam- Washington, Aug. 10. A special Ily, near Sanderfur's Crossing, Satreport Issued by the department of urday and Sunday. Miss Winnie Raines visited her igrlculture this afternoon made the parents near Reslne Saturday and following estimates: Condition of crop August 1: Sunday. teach- Corn, SO per cent of normal comMiss Mabel Porter, who is avering at Bennett's, visited her par- pared with S2.S, the ten-yeage; spring wheat, 90.4 against Crossing, ents near Sanderfur's average; SO. 3 per cent, the ten-yeand Sunday. Maples and family, oats, 90.3 compared with SI. 4 per Mr. Frank Mrs. Antlia Tatum and two child- cent. Total production of crop in mll- ren, of this place, vlsifed Mrs. CIc-r- o Bryant, nmr Rosine, Sunday. y, Lule-Burga' ar Sat-urdar The Hartford Herald U. H. i E. ItAIMlOAD TIME AT HAUTFOHD, KY. E Great Daviess County Fair Under Auspices of Improved Order of Red Men s ,1 The following L. & N. Time Cnrd ta effective from Monday, Aug. 21st: North No. 11? Ko. 114 South Ko. 115 No. 113 Hound due at Hartford 7:19 a. m. due at Hartford 3:40 p. m Bound due tit Hartford ,R: 4. a. m. due at Hartford 1.4(5 p. m. II. K. MISCHKE. Act. 5 Days, October 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. $4,500.00 GIVEN in PURSES and PREMIUMS More Attractions Than euer before, B HELPLESS FOR CRIPPLE SUES Big, Clean, Old-Pasbio- Fair $25,000 DAMAGES Backbone Was Broken By cident in Aline Negli- Ac- WITH A Corn, 2,811 against 2,531 last year; winter wheat, 390 against 430; spring wheat, 290 against 191; fall wheat, ISO against 221; oats, 1,207 against 922. Quality of wheat is 90. i against 92. Hon bushels: COW GIVES 11IHTH TO TWINS AND TIUPLKTS New $400.00 DERBY gence Charged. Suit for the collection of $25,000 damages has been filed In the Circuit Court by the attorneys tor Jesse K. Shacklett against the Mc-Iwe- For Information Write ELI BERRY, Sec'y, Owensboro, Ky, Memphis Mining Company, of Island, McLean county, the plaintiff claiming that he has been rendered a helpless cripple because of the Kross carelessness and negligence jn the part of the defendant company. The suit is filed by Richard Alexander, of Calhoun, and Hen 1). Hingo and Lavega Clements, of Building Material k -- At Reasonable Prices. If you comtemplate building or do- w o. Orleans, Aug. 12. Veteri- I ' i ' j 1 u..noHnB " , tlir,mh the celling of a basement cutting nhol room, o.i uimoii'-p- o m WTW mi ,,t vw through and then steel the In that the roof of the in'ne was not it floor of the vault of a bank In the braced or propped so as to make lower part of New York, ,a band of , wife and that , the company knew, or .- ., . i..,vvv ut imiih ut ne wic ltl.0-f- n i iuuuuib nmuiuu niuill lime . hliumi, ,m , .,. uiioum largo denominations, and mused .... . .!., I IfMUUK'H in lilt li w In cash. was unknown to him. $3, 000, 000 mole but that it Though the robbery was commitThe plaintiff prays for judgment In ted more than two months ngn, It the sum of $25,000. y for the first became public cloak of time. An Impenetrable HERTFORD'S SOLDI KB BOYS mystery has been thrown around HIGHLY CO.MI'LIMKNTKD tlie crime, and directors of the The fnllnwlni: ofllclal order has bank, the names of which have not lieen received by Capt. DeWeeso been revealed, have made up tlm conduct and loss from their personal resources smd compliments the sioldieily manner of the Third Reg- News of the robbery was withheld from police and newspapers because iment at the encampment at the directors feared a run on the Ala. Headquarters 3d Inft., K. N. O., bank. The robbers gained access to the Uopklnsvllle. Ky., August fi, 1912. bulld'ng through the coal hole, fol General Orders No. 4 It Is with pride and pleasure that lowed the chute to the engine room desires to and thence to an unused room ad flio mnniaiidtni! officer Regiment that the Joining, where they erected a scafsuinounce to the recent tour of duty nt Anniston, fold to reach the celling about fifAla.. .Tuly 2." to August .", was the teen feet high. They cut a hole large enough to history of '.noi--t successful In the regiment. The officers of the admit ii man'p body through the he ivgi'lur army attached to this regi- plaster celling and then drilled 100 comholes In a circle through the steel ment, as Inspector-Instructor- s, mend you for the prompt and eff- lloor of the valut. Sawing out this icient manner In which your work circle, a man crawled through the was done, and especially for the so- two holes stood upright in the vault conduct and passed all the cash he could ldierly and gentlemanly 'bile in camp or nt liberty In the find down to his confederates bei:ity or Anniston. The fact that tho low. They got $72,000, but In n small Kunrdhouse was empty and not a single man under arrest during the safe inside the vault law J3.000,-00- 0 more, and tho combination to imr Is significant of the effort put tills safe was pinned upon the wall forth. The citizens of your home sta- of the vault where the robbers tions should be proud of you, and could have read It and opened the the Commonwealth of Kentucky safe, had they taken the time. should' be equally proud of the re,Hocker rMavey. sult of this tour. You have uphold Mr. A. E. Maxey and Miss NetComtho honor of tho State and the Hocker, Beaver Dam, were marmanding Officer desires that every tle at the residence of the bride's regiment ried officer and man of tho parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip E. "known that ho deeply appreciates Hocker, at 5:30 o'clock last Wedand conduct. the splendid work nesday evening, Rev. Mell officiatBy order of Colonel Henry. ing. Mendelssohn's wedding mnrch A. O. CHAPMAN, Capt. & Adj. was beautifully rendered by Miss Lorraine Bowling. JOHN S. UIIKA PUKPARKS After the ceremony a delightCONTKST NO.M I NATI OV TO ful repast was served. Tho decorations were profuse and tastefully Augr. 12. Ky., Louisville, Claiming that gross frauds were arranged for the occasion. practiced In the primary, John S. For Snle. Ithea, of Logan county, candidate I have three Hampshire Boar tor the Democratic nomination for Pigs for sale at $5 each. Congress In the Third district, at W. S. DEAN, Wtifdry, has 33t4 Dundee, Ky. the recent State-wid- e determined to contest tho nomination which will be awarded to Con- - Subscribe for The Uerald. $1 a yeai I Mas employed to mine coal and to do no other work. He says that he was assigned to work In a certain room, some distance down In the mine and some distance from the ;ntry. He was paid by the ton for he coal that he mined. He further stati-- that in September of last j car he entere-- one of the mine cars going Into the mine, for the purpose of 'riding from the ..ntrv to a no nt whore he was ngaged In working, and that after lie entered the main entry, the roof over the main entry broke and a jsreat mass of slate, stone and earth breaking, bruising Tell upon him, :ind ma'igllir; his head, limbs and oody, breaking his backbone and spinal cord and tendering him totally paralyzed at the time and ever since thon from his waist line down. He says that as a result of the injuries lie received, he has since confined to l''s been continually Led. utterly helpless toniove the lower part of his body, and that he has linen retulercl n cripple for the remainder of his life. companv with He charges the 3 the plaintiff was, In SojtosiVer, 1'Jll, employed at the mine and It Is stated in the petition that narians here claim for Metairie Ridge, a suburban district of the city, the distinction of having the suicide cow of the prize non-rac- e gave birth She recently country. triplets, and the three calves, to contrary to what veterinarians say Is the precedent In such cases, are healthy. The same cow, ten months ago, gave birth to twins. Never Too Old to Klsli. Boston, Aug. 12. Mrs. Lydia A. Rockwell, who Is dead at the age of 10G years, at her home In Hyde Park, was, until two years ago, an She landed flsherwoman. expert last large trout on her 104th her birthday, while fishing with a party of friends in Maine. ing some repair work, send an itemized bill of the material you will require to us and we will take pleasure in quoting you price, freight paid, to your railroad station. j Fordsville Planing Mill Go. IN'COKl'OHATini Fordsville, - - Kentucky. sat for Wilson Gov. Woodrow three hours In a New York studio while an artist sketched a charcoal likeness of him. The portrait Is to be used during the campaign. Free--Ladies' '''' ,....,.,. ,,,,. " ,, wywwwwwwwwywwwv Gold Watch i k' ,.. For the first sale which is .,iiup ... ,.. ,,,. I JR The &" Al U i. f i Fown Sale of the Past. i At to-da- j n, Our business during this Sale was much better than we anticipated, and for this we want to thank our many patrons. We have just opened up a new lot of Fall Prints and Ginghams, and will receive within the next few days our first shipment of Clothing, Shoes and Hats. It would be well for you to inspect our early purchases, so you might be ableto secure choice patterns. Don't fail to take advantage of this opportunity. result of a prospective customer sent or referred to me, I will reward the lady who was the cause of this customer coming to me, with a fine ladies' gold watch. I must be the notified in writing, so as to keep track of the prospects.' HARTFORD MUSIC COMPANY, j M. A. Faught, Hgr. Factory Representative for High Grade Pianos, Player Pianos and Organ?. I HARTFORD, KY. 3 AUTOMOBILE TRANSFER! Hartford I to Beaver Uam and Ketfin. fc Splendid car meets all trains. A fast and easy ride. Telephone or call at our stable when you want to leave or have relatives coming. Carson & Co., INCORPORATED HARTFORD, KY. The Ee V & CO., COOPER KENTUCKY. st HARTFORD, WE - Herald-O- nly $1,00 a Year ;SfWWRWrWWfWWr SUBSCRIBE NOW! SP"i