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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, October 9, 1912.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, October 9, 1912. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912100901 These pages may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, October 9, 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. bCr1d rr THE HARTFORD HERALDfI Subscription 1 Per Yearsin Advance i CcJIIt18 Jeraldoff I NiIJ World the im orlI MJHI Lunttrii at MI Batt All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed 8th YEAR HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 1912 NO41 EARFUL PLUNGE UP IN Mid AIF ndJ Man and Boy Went Hurling to Death MRINPETTUNOWNHERI And Whose Relations Live Here Met Death From Flying Balloon BODIES LITERALLY CRUSHE The following Is an account froi the TriCitles Dally of a frlghtfu accldetit which occurred last Thurs day evening at Tuscumbla Ala just as the last number on the pro gram of the Colbert County Fair Was being rendered Young Mr Petty who met such a terriblt death by falling from the balloon was the son of Mrs R R Wedding of Hartford and besides his mothei lie leaves two slaters Mrs W D Landers of Harrisburg Ark and Miss Elenor Petty of Hartford and also two brothers Mr Arthur Pet ty who has long been a valued em ploY f the Hartford Herald and Mralton Petty of Harrisburg ArkThe unfortunate young man was t t 31 years old and was well known j and respected in Hartford For a number of years he had been en gaged In the circus and entertain ment business traveling about from place to place The telegram announcing his death was a severe shock to the people of Hartford It was deemed best on account of the mutilation of his body to Inter his iKtnalns at Tuscumbla for the present The TrlCltleB Dally gives the following account of the very sad affair The last number on the program Wf the Ct lb9rfrfCountyFaif1nTM8 cumbia yesterday resulted In a hpr rlble and appalling accident cost log the lives ofa man and boy J A Petty aeronaut and Lorenzo Howland of Tuscumbla a lad 15 years of age The accident was witnessed by hundreds of people and followed the last horse race aboOTo oclock For an hour or more the aeronaut had been engag ed in inflating the balloon A num ber of boys including young How land were assisting In holding the big bag while It was being filled IfrwlthI gas In the meantime Petty had attached himself to the para chute In which he was to descend and at his command the balloon ti was let locae and shot upward Young Howland was caught by the ankle by one of the ropes and was carried upwardall the time en deavorjng to extricate his foot whlcl he finally succeeded In doing The aeronaut could be heard call Ing to tho boy to come down where he was In the parachute which the lad did It Is not known whether or not the combined weight of the man and boy broke the rope which connected the parachute to the bal loon or whether In his excitement the boy unconsciously touched tho trigger rope but the parachute was seen to suddenly leave the balloon after reaching a probable distance of 400 feet with the nreonaut and young Howland clinging to it A shudder of terror shot through the cjwdwhenlt was seen that i the jSJrachute had failed to open and the occupants fell like stones Women screamed and brave men stood paralyzed In a brief space of a few seconds A dull thud was heard and scores of people rushed to the spot where they had fallen which was in a corn neld ony a few hundred yards from the grand f standA creek Intervening was swum by a number of mon and boys anx lous to reach them They hurried back with the sad news that both were dead They had fallenI In a heaps pd never know what killed k themThev were plcl edup a limp bleeding mess of broken bones and quickly convoyed to an undertaking establishment where young Hollands body was proparj ld to be carried to the home of his 4 parents and that of Petty 6 await nytrucMons for its disposal oldestdonVnd prominent citizen of Tuacuny f a aad a passenger engineer on Ir a t i t y the Memphis division of the South ern railway Pottys home IB In Hartford Ky where bs mother and brother re side Ho was 31 years old and un married By some It Is said that yester days attempt was the Ural ever made by Petty to go up In a bal loon He owned the balloon but the balloonist employed by him Prof Blackey was temporarily did abled l TARE + 8KVEX i1L BE THE ENLISTING TERM Notice In the form of a circular Is to the effect that all recruits en listing after November 1 will enlist for a terms of seven years Tho old Urn of enlistment was for only three years and the new schedule moore than doubles the time However under the new act only four years of the seven are to be served under the flag unless the man may desire todo so The oth er three years may be spent at home but always at the call of the war department While the new enlistment is longer than the oldIIt Is not thought that it will any difference In the number of firstclass recruits as those really desiring to serve would not mind enlisting tor thelcnnjasthrceof these can be spent at home which reduces the number to only four years actual service However ther circular warns those In the recruit ing service that there will be some trouble until the nature of the new enlistment is fully understood and Instructs them to redouble their efforts in securing recruits The new term of enlistment does not affect those already In the ser vice Any man in the service can now reenlist for only three years and as many other threeyear they are continuous Also the new enlistment instructions do not go into effect until November 1 so those enlisting before that time are compelled to jserve tbree years only t A MEASLEY OLD COW WRECKS BULL MOOSKRS Lima 0 Oct 2Four Northwestern Ohio Bull Mowers tonight werehurled Into a ditch three miles west of here when their auto struck a cow The machine turned turtleW Elmer Rudy of Lima Third District Congressional candidate William Klrtley Jr of Definance Progressive candidate for State Treaaprer J B Atkins and Dr J C Pence of this city members of the local organization were in the car Kirtley and Ruby who were sit ting in the front seat were thrown forward and alighted In a cornfield Both were bruised Pence and Atkins also were injured The cow was killed The men were on their way to Wapakoneta to take part In a political meeting i f ACID FINALLY PROVES FATAL TO YOUNG LADY Greenville Ky Oct 51lIss Anna Goodall who swallowed ear bollc acid at her boarding house hero last night died about noon today having made no expression as to whether she took the drug Intentionally or accidentally Miss Goodall came to Greenville Monday to learn the duties ota telephone operator and had been studying the switchboard She appeared in ex cellent spirits a short time before leaving tho office and no ono knows of any reason why she should have desired to end her life She had In her trunk a small bottle of llsterlne and one of carbolic acid Some believe that she made a mistake and In taking the listerine as a throat gargle she got hold of the wrong bottle She was a sister of Miss Pear Goodall a prominent school teacher In this county and has a brother Jo Abb Goodall who lives In California f Sirs T R SlcBcath Leltchfleld Ky Oct 5Mrs Hattie McBeath 69 wife of Judge T R McBeath died suddenly at her homo here last night of paraly sis She had retired about 9 oclockfeellng as well as usual and wan stricken shortly afterward andIII lied at 11 oclock Her husband and two daughters Mrs J L Dent and Mrs John TV Moorman all of this place survive Wr theiixploelon1 TenneslfeeI an3ilJnn p m QT 1 0 Notice ImporWvf In order to conform to the Postal laws Arid instructions of thet Third Assistant Postmaster General Washington D C we have had to take off of our list all subscribers names Halo were more than a year In arrears We have been calling attention to this matter each week for some time So If The Herald fallsmach you and you chance to see this notice you will know the reason why If by error any subscribers name hay been prematurely taken ofT we will take it as a special favor If you will so notify us A statement will IMS mailed each subscriber whose name has been taken off and we would thank them for a prompt remittance HO the matter ran be closed up In not case will a second notice be mailed After waiting a duo time tortM response and none Is received each of such n county will necessarily have to be placed in a collection agencys Manila who will take the matter up with you By remitting amount due and requesting It we will gladly reinstate any subscribers name on our list AVe hope these matters can be speedily and amicably settled pad each name reappear Yours trulyIon our list HARTFORD HERALD Per F L FELIX lub1lIlhert SOME DOINGS OF- BUlLMOUSERS In These Parts are Rather Interesting IEEHHBSOFTIBOLTERS Xfiftather Poorly Patronized The Case is Quite Plainly Stated LEARNED PROFESSOR TALKS Pursuant to the call of Supt of County Schools Henry Leach who by the way is supposed to be out on his official duty of paying his yearly visits to the schools of the county a big meeting of the Republican bolters who are swal lowing the Roosevelt pill was held at the schoolhouso in Horse Branch Tuesday night A large following was present three in all and two of them Taft Republicans and list ened to a splendid tirade from the learned professor who told them all about the iniquities of the par ty which elected him to the office which he now holds Time able doctor prescribed for the sick members of his party and told them that there was only one remedy and that was the Roosevelt pill and then shut your eyes and take what comes After this splendid abuse of his old comrades by the Pro gressive Professor a Roose velt and Johnson club was organized with a large membership one in fact having agreed to join Another big meeting of the bolt ers was held at Centertown a few nights ago with a large crowd pres ent ten in all to hear the able leaders of the Bolting Party J Ney Foster and C P Keown abuse the old Republican party They told all about the stolen nomination 1 of President Taft but failed to mention about the at tempted steal of Mr Roosevelt They also steered clear of the Standard 011 Contributions and others Mr Keown forgot to men tion that not longer than a year ago he was ready to fly at the throats of those whom he Is now hugging with loving embrace and that he accused them of steal ing a nomination from him He of course delivered an eloquent tirade against the same party which twice elected him to one of the most lucrative positions In the county Like the learned Professor mentioned above they advised the Re publicans to swallow tho Roose velt pill telling of the great wrongs of the Republican party but falling to toll of any good that his champion ever did Hip Hip Hurrah Let the good work go I onA Blue Republican That Movable Plank The Fourth District Loader which is supporting Taft says The latest invention is n mova ble plank platform The operator may remove any plank at pleasure end substitute any other plank which he or his constituents may prefer Mr Roosevelt Is using ono in his present campaign and finds It IIto work admirably Ho always slips tletarltrplunk which will best suit the locality where ho is ached uled to speaks For Sale Farnm All sizes from 16to300acres Wo can please you If you want to buyland A C YE19li CO II b fadHartford Ky fl1 S P01 J 0 i L L A FINE MEETING OFtaSOFER S E I Held At Livermore KyI Last Thursday c ENCOURAGINC REPORTS MADE And Important Business Is- TransactedOpposed to FiveYear Pool TO MEET NEXT IN OWENSHORO Green River District Union A S of E met in Livermore Ky on Oc tober 3d and held a very Impor tant session There was a strong delegation present from all counII ties of the district together with a full board of officers Meeting wasI called to order by Vice President Stevens and President Holland of Hancock county was then called to the chair and presided over the meeting After reading of minutes of prevlousiJHieeting the convention proceeded at once to fix price on 1912 crop of tobacco Following were named as committee to take report from the several counties and determine what the price should be Hj A Kirtley E C Baird F K Moseley and J P Ad kinsA committee on resolutions was1G appointed composed of the follow ing named J W Garret L M Robertson T F Tanner and C S GreathouseReports ere made as to the amount of tobacco pooled In each county and these reports Indicate very clearly that more tobacco Is pooled this year than In past years and yet quite a lot of pledges are out and will greatly Increse the amount reported Also reports werei to the effect that the people are well pleased with the way the pool Ing and management of the bust ness has been conducted the past year and are very strongly of the opinion that the reason so much more Is being pooled Is because of satisfactory management and the executive board are determined to so conduct affairs with the help and cooperation of the members of the A S of E that the business will merit the confidence and pat ronage of all growers Among other encouraging re ports we had report to the effect that a delivery point would be es tablished at Centertown as the house Is already bolng erected thisI has been much needed and will be appreciated by the growers of that sectionCommittee on resolutions report ed many good resolutions but we will have space to give only a part of them The following was offer ed and adopted viz Inasmuch as there has been about 1000 acres of tobacco pooledI III with the A S of E and Home Warehouse Company near Curds yule JyJll as liiiu are ample foci IMes tit that paco for handling allII of the tobacco that should be hand led there end would not discommode anv one we the Green River l District Union A S of E a sembI1 1e1 on October 3d do agree to mnkp Curdsvllte p delivering point I for thore people this yeArtt Wo tho Green River District UnII Ion A S of E are unmistakably j opposed to a fiveyear pooling pledge and are opposed to any partos circulating a fiveyear rlfdge and tplllg the growers that It Is a comblnprt pI9dicASof Ev Home Warehouse and Green1 River T 1 0 Association pledge and would r c ommend that our peopledenounce actions of the people who are circulating such a pledge- A motion was made and adopted that we now go Into the election of one delegate to attend the National Convention to be held In December one delegate to attend our State Convention to be held December 1112 and one delegate to attend convention to be held In Cen City on October 18th Henry Plrtlo was elected to National meeting J S Cullen to State Convention sail President J B Hol land to attend the Central City convention with O S Ford as alter nateWhereas Mayor Morton of Livermore has very kindly furnished convention a suitable and commodious hall in which to hold our sessionsResolved that we tender said Mayor our sincere thanks for same and salso other courtesies Resolved that we have much appreciated the hospitality as shown Us by McLean County Union A Sot B and we do tender said Union hearty vote of thanks Adjourned to meet In Owens boro January 1913 CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS STILL COMING IN LIVELY The total reported last week wasI IIfollowingj III received HARTFORD KY A E Ellis 500 Tames Lyons 200 James Glllesple 200 Arthur Petty 100 W F Schapmlre 100I A I Nall 100 OLATON R L Armes 50 G W Daniel 50 J D Cooksey 25 C B B Felix 25 T W Daniel 25 Tom Felix 25I R L Woolen 25 iI Joe Smith 25 H G Daniel 10I CENTERTOWN Alvin Rowe 500 0 L Ross 200 W E Brown 200I Fl M Morton 100I C W Swain 100 S M Dexter 50I Lee Mason 50 1 A Vincent 50 H Ashby so- T B Wade so- T M Uer 25 PRENTIS W A Casebler Beaver Dam Ky R F D 1100PO- RT PLEASANT A B Tlchenor Matanzas Kyl30 Total to date 37785 Program Teachers meeting in Division No 1 to be held at Beda schoolhouse beginI ning 100 p m I I 00130Organization- 130140Appointment I of Com mittees140200What we are here t- odoL B Tlchen- or200220CoOperation ofI r I School and ParentsHow to secure It Sherman Taylor 220240 Reading How toI Tench Beginners Gentry Itaymo- n240300Causes of Disorder How Eliminate ThemW R Car son300320Some Faults of SchoolsGeorge 320340Class Wedding OurII Lula Mldklff 340400The Alms of the School Ernest HInton I ellucaItlonI C B SHOWNCommittee After Forty Yearn Ncw York Oct 7 Separated tr 40 years after a quarrel In Knl pmazoo Mch where they IIvedlMac H Woodruff fi4 years and Mrs Mary E Jones 72 years old were married today In Brook i lyn after coming face to face seer dentally on n cty street on IonII dry Sinco parting In 1872 each married twice Woodruff losing both wives and Mrs Jones both husbands by death FOR SA1FVallnyGam Piano Made by the Baldwin Tiano ComI pany Guaranteed for seven years Had very little use and In perfect condition Price reasonable In riireT Mrs L H Hammonds one mile South of Morton 40t4adv AND THEY NEVER POINT TO ITALY As An Illustration of Tariff Rates HIGHLY PROTECTED COUNTRY Which is Seldom Heard of in the Tariff Matter TJieres Reason ITALY A JOOI ILLUSTRATION By Clyde H Tavenner Washington Oct 5Why do protectionists never point to Italy as an Illustration of how excessive tariff rates protect the common peopleItaly Is one of he most highly protected countries of Europe It Is famous as a country Mowing with milk and honey Yet they never talk about Italy do the upward revisionists V While In italy three years ago the writer learned at first handsome of the reasons why our pro tectionists never say Look at ItalyItaly puts heavy duties on both agricultural and manufactured im port She pays her people exceed ingly low wages She charges them very high prices for the necessities of life They emigrate In large numbersTo understand the situation clearly we must go back to 1SS7 About that time a violent revolu tion In the system of Italian customs was brought about A power ful political group of textile manufacturers Joined forcesfor their politicalIwere heartily increased But not on everything That powerful band of textile manufacturers took good carp that lesser manufacturers who made articles needed In the textile factories were not enabled to put up their prices Hand In hand with the powerful manufacturers the big landowners came out for a slice of the tariff pie In order that they should be sufficiently compensated for being In politics the landowners had a heavy tax placed on wheat In It sly It Is only the big landowners who grow wheat Three out of ev ery four landowners In Italy are possessors of small properties cul- tivAting fruit for wine They have to buy a considerable part of the wheat they eat So It happened that where ono largo wheat farmer jot bigger profits three small fruit farmers got hit That Is the way nrotectlon Invariably works out What Is ono mnns protection Is an other mans poison Hark however this further remit of tl1eItalian tax on wheat Millions of Italians never eat wheat except In cases of illness or on special festivals They make a bread maize In this and In other respects the standard of living of the Italian people Is very low be cause prices are too high An enormous fiscal and protec tive tax was also put upon sugar The prices rose so high that Italian farmers watched their oranges lemons peaches and other products of a warm and generous sun rot on their trees In order that the 33 manufacturers of the sugar syndl cato might levy upon consumers a yearly tribute Far and away the chief of the Italian Industries are silk reeling and silk throwing These Indus trlfs havrbren seriously hampered bv protficlon And Italy Is the homo of tho ejllorm It Is calculated that while ten Italians lose by protection only Ilolle stands any chance of gaining does not always gain for the country does not progress The In terests of Italy are sacrificed to the mil In ten In other words excessive tariffs ilrT Bsnd the cost of living to the Italian people just as the Payne Aldrich law Is Increasing the cost of JJvlnsr In tse TnItetl States Is 1 av wonder that the protec tionists never ask us to Look at ItalyI I Ihmters from Indiana and llllrols must par a nonresidents Hren p to Ke tncKy to shoot ducks on the Ohio river II IIL kl r z L I pr 71 t I I- iiI TWO THE HARTFORD HERALDY1TlriEHDAY OCT 0 1012 I iDIPHTHERIA IS F r IN 20 COUNTIES I I 3- I State Board of HealthI I ITher 1 Tells How I 1 It TO PREVENT DREAD DISEASE n Would Isolate CasesRec Jommends j Use of AntitoxinI l rAtFirsr Appearance iKXKKAL INSTITUTIONI tiFINK II Bowling keen Ky Oct 4Rep- orts made to tho State Board ofi C Health of which Dr J N McCor i mlck of this cityIe secretary I r show diphtheria present In twenty counties The rate of fatality Is re tj 1ported as quite large owing to theIII I tact that the disease is not recog j nized Sn time for a prompt use of antitoxin and effective Isolation Ir order that the public may have cor Iriot1Knowledge of this dangerous and ntlrcly preventable disease the State Board of Health has Is sued the following circular When a child has sore throat and especially if diphtheria Is in in the neighborhood it should be immediately separated from other children until a competent physi cian has seen It and decided wheth er or not it Is affected with a contagious disease If dlphtfierla strictly Isolate the case at once In an upstairs room If possible and as disconnected as practicable from the living and sleeping apartments of other children No one except the physi clan and nurse should enter the room and they should take every precaution not to carry the infection to others The board urges the hypoder matic use of a standard antitoxin as Alexanders in at leastti tisuch doses as soon as the disease Is recognized or seriously t suspected and that this dose should tfbe repeated or doubled within twelve hours unless marked Improvement has taken plate If taco is seen after the first twenty Sour hours use from 7 to 25000 units the first dose depending upon severity It recommends that Im munizing doses of 1000 units be f used for all children and especial ly for all Inexperienced relatives acting as nurses who have been se riously exposed Placard the house and keep all ther children all having the care t children and all who go where hlldren are away from It Notify thehealth officer of the town or county within twentyfour hours as the law requires and he will co operate with the physician and family to keep the disease from spreadingThe from the mouth and nose which especially contain the germs of the disease should be received on soft cloths and burned I and other discharges should be disinfected and all refuse from the sick room burned All utensils used In feeding the sick should be I washed separately from other dishes and should remain some time In boiling water Disinfect all bed and body clothing and other like things as soon PR removed by immersion for t at least six hours in a solution of chloride of lime four ounces to the gallon of water They may then be wrung out and put In the wash r Remember however that no dlsln fectant In the occupied sick room t can do away with the necessity for abundant fresh air and sunlight The Isolation of the patient should continuo for ten days after all trace of the disease has disappeared and until ho has had a dis r infecting bath and been clad in gar ments which have not been In the sick room No person from a house where them Is diphtheria should be permitted to go into public assem bllcs and no child from a house where this disease has prevailed should bq allowed to attend schoal Without a certificate from theI i health officer that It Is safe to dot so r After complete recovery orIt 4 death always thoroughly disinfect the room and Its contents profera a It Tily with nascent formaldehyde or Where this is not available by burning three pounds of sulphur t moistened with alcohol for each 1000 cubic feet of space previous ly stopping all openings and damp 1 1oningi the floor bedding and cloths t tilugand leaving the room tightly tI closed for twelve hours The room should then be thoroughly venti r I fated and all ledges woodwork if etc washed with strong soap and j rinsed with a dlnlsfectlng solution j11 I Iin case of death the body 1 should be wrapped In a sheet satur i andt4o t y Y burled Wlt out public seilceInl jlvlns notice of death newspaper should state that It was from dlph therla and that children and those having the care of children shouldI not attend the funeral To be effective the precaution t herein suggested should be hlgldl observed Imperfect Isolation an11 disinfection ore worse than useless giving rise only to a false and mis leading sense of security County and municipal boards of 1ealth have full authority under our laws to enforce these rules and will fall short of their duty If ther fall to do s- onanrcnN1r OK HKiailT1- 1AKH YOUTH KItOM AllM Louisville Ky Oct 5An ap pllcant for admission to the United States Army was rejected here by the Louisville Recruiting Station on the ground that the height of the candidate changed from day to day The candidate Gilbert S Thom as 21 yea s old of Bedford Ind for one week underwent a series of j physical examinations Each meas urement of the mans height show ed a different figure from that of the day before and a range in stat ure of slightly more than four Inches was observed The maxi mum and minimum heights record i 721andOnly one theory has been offered i by Louisville physicians in explana tion of this physiological phenom enon The suggestion Is made that the cellular composition of the thatIItI generally accepted because of the nonexistence of corroborative physical symptoms The recruiting officers with the greatest reluctance I rejected the mans application for I they say he was a most desirableII andldate in every other i MOOXSHIXK COlNTUY CONTINUES TO TIIIUVK Information furnished in these columns a few days ago In regard to the moonshining business In the South is supplemented by details given In the report of Commissioner Cabell According to that report last year saw the unearthing of 961 Il licit stills in Georgia 420 in North Carolina 375 in South Carolina 249 In Alabama and 300 in Tennessee a total of 2245 In the States namedAs it Is estimated that not more than 10 per cent of the moonshin Ing establishments are found by the revenue officers some Idea may be formed of the tremendous exI tent to which the Illicit manufac ture of Intoxicants Is carried on in that section Baltimore Sun WHY 7 iOYKItXOIt WILSOX WILL SUIIE 1m EJECTED Governor Wilson is making the sort of campaign that wins He Is making the sort of cam paign which proves not only that the party has a good candidate but that the country will have a good PresidentGovernor Wilson has shown a dignity a fairness a sincerity which has gained the confidence of the people wherever his words have reachedGovernor Wilson Is the reverse of a spectacular grandstander Yet on his western trip he has had by odds tho largest audiences that have gathered during this cam paignThey have come not to see a show but to judge a man not to pay homage to a selfmade Caesar but to hear and pass upon a Pro gram of national work They have heard they have judged they have approvedI They have found Governor Wil son a man whose prime desire Is not to exalt himself but to serve the people They have found Governor Wil son a man who refuses to be drawn from the issues of the campaign in to an exchange of barren personal itiesThey have fount Governor Wil son a nan who never hesitates to say anything good of an opponent that may with honesty be saidIThey have found Governor WI1I ton a man who respects the officeI of the Presidency too much to seek It by a campaign of billingsgate- In a word the people have found Governor Wilson the sort of man hey want in tho White House They will put him thereChlcago Journal Fortunes In Faces Theres often much truth In the I saying her face Is her fortune said whore pimples kineruptions blotches or other blemishes disfigure It Impure land is back of them all and shows the need of Dr Kings New LICe Pills They promote health and beauty Try them 25 cents at James H Williams adv I FOURR NICE GIFTS OF 100000 PLUNKS EACH Given Republicans in 1904Ca- mpaignTreasurer Shel don on the Stand Washington Oct 4Fo1r con trlbutions of 100000 each from John D Archbold of the Standard 011 Company J P Morgan it Co S C FrIck and Geo J Gould were made to the Republican nations campaign fund In 1904 according to the records of the late Come llua N Bliss which passed through the hands of George R Sheldon treasurer of the 1908 Republican committee who testified today before the Senate campaign contributions committee Sheldon said he was positive nc record of the return of the Arch bold contribution appeared In the records turned over to him by Bliss He testified the disputed Edward H Harriman fund of 240000 had been received by Bliss for tho New I York Republican State committee Senator Dixon the Roosevelt warmithat the campaign managers of lIng candidates should also be summonedThe between Senators Pome renu and Dixon reached the point where the former invited the latter outside Dixon charged that the committee was directing the In quiry against Roosevelt which was quickly denied by the members Dixon told of 96000 more Roosevelt funds used in the tight before the Chicago convention that he collected and expended personally he said SAYS HKPIULICAXS AUK GAIXIXtt IX OCR COUNTY I The Morgantown Republican says Mr Otto Martin a prominent at torney of Hartford was In Morgan- town last Friday and stated to the editor of the Republican that there had been a change in Ohio county favorable to the Republican ticket Hon Ed Morrow will speak In Hartford on Monday Oct 21 Butler Ohio and Grayson coun ties were considered Roosevelt ter ritory six weeks ago by many poli ticians Now the third party le dead and burled in Butler county and In Grayson and Ohio Republicans are fast returning to the fold 0 Sick headache is caused by a dis ordered stomach Take Chamber lains Tablets and correct that and the headaches will disappear For sale by all dealers adv T1IK SOtXI OK IT WAS- NOMKWHAT DECEIVIXO The Ladles Aid ladles were talk Ing about a conversation they had overheard before the meeting be tween a man and his wife They must have been to the Zoo said Mrs A because I heard her mention a trained deer Goodness me laughed Mrs B What queer hearing you must have They were talking about going away and she said Find out about the train dear Well did anybody ever ex claimed Mrs C I am sure they were talking about musicians for she said a trained ear as distinct ly as could be The discussion began to warni up and In the midst of It the lady herself appeared They carried their case to her promptly and asks ed for a settlement t Well well you do beat nil she exclaimed after hearing each one Id been out to the country overnight and was asking my hus band If It rained here last night After which the three disputants retired abashed and In silence2 LippIncotts r Deafness Cannot be Cured v by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear There IIH only one way to cure deafness and that is by constitutional remedIes Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous Unr Ing of the Eustachian Tube When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rum ling sound or Imperfect hearing and when it is entirely closed Deafccsa Is the result and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube estored to Its normal condition hear- Ing will be destroyed forever nine aces out of ten are caused by Catarrh vhlch is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars tor any case of Deafdesa caused by atarrhthat cannot be cured byHalls Catarrh Cure Send for circulars ree F J Cheney it Co ToledoO Sold by prugglsts 75c Take Halls Family Pills for constipation adY 1 I EXPRESS MESSENGER IS PINNED UNDER CASKETr And Slowly Burns to Death f Piteous Appeals Were of No Avail Elkmont Ala Oct 4Begglng piteously that he be rescued Ex press Messenger Sam M Chilton off Springfield Tenn pinioned in the Louisville and Nashville wreck near Elkmont died today under a casket which contained a corpse Hundreds of men women andI children heard Chilton plead for his life heard him repeat the name a r his bride of two weeks who was iIn Nashville without knowledge that her husband was pinioned under a corpse without hope of being res cued No one knew the name of the messenger nor that he was a newly married man until he appeal his ed for bride his life and the happiness atI Dozens of men answered the messengers cry for assistance but they were driven back by the heat after they had pulled the hands and arms of the man until the parched skin had been torn from his hands After being overcome by heat they were compelled to seethe fire eat Its way into the coffli and consume the corpse and end the agonies of the messenger Eight cars left the track Includ Ing four Pullmans two day coaches the express and mall car A scorei of passengers were injured The wreckpccurrfid early this morning and the passengers had to flee many of them in night clothes Among the injured are BIshop McCoy who suffered a sprained shoulder J Y Walker of New York Mrs Bertha H Henney ol East Highlands Cal and a passen ger named Brasenburg of Brook lyn Judge McClellan of the Alabama Supreme Court escaped in Jury TIn CHAMPION COW OV- AMKRICA IIKR PIlODtdI In the current Issue of Farm and Fireside appears the following- A new champion cow has scored The greatest cow In tho world Is owned by Dan Dimmick Co of East Clarldon O She gave In a year 274044 pounds of milk which contained 105834 pounds of butterfat This Is equal to over thirteen hundred pounds of butter Four good dairy cows as cows go would not have done better And she ate no more than a poor cow would have eaten Her name is Banostlne Belle de Kol but she Isnt to blame for that The name comes from the Idio cy of the HolstolnFrleslan breeders custom of hitching the city di rectory of some town in Friesland to the tall of every fine cow Mr James V Churchill 90 Wall St Auburn N Y has been bother ed with serious kidney and bladder trouble ever since he left the army and says I decided to try Foley Kidney Pills as they had cured so many people and I soon found they were just the thing My kidneys and bladder are again in a healthy condition I gladly recommend them Many an old soldier has never recovered the effects of army life Foley Kidney Pills are tonic In action quick in results The genuine Is in a yellow package For sale at all dealers adv or Undeniable A soapbox orator the other night at the close of a fervid appeal wound up with the following lucid and expressive peroration And now comrades after everything has been said after every thing has been done the great masses of the people will still constitute the bulk of the population FOIL BALK A scholarship In the Vanderbilt Training School for boys Elkton JC y Howling Green Business Unt erslty Howling Green Kentucky rnughons Business College Nash rule Tenn or any branch school and Bryant Stratton Business College Louisville Kentucky Anyone contemplating attending either of the above schools can save money by writing or calling on The Tartfonl Herald adv ALUAHLE ADVICE ON WHEN TO BREED PIGS Wellgrown gilts may be bred when eight months old This will bring them to farrow at one year the period of gestation being 114 lays or approximately 15 weeks It suitable buildings are at hand profitsleera are available early pigs are roublesome and farrowing time had best be delayed until early lay Two litters per year may be ocuretl from mature wellcared tor sows the fall farrow being J 1 x dropped during September or earl October Brood sowsshould not be atrslaughter j3ufallllttera weak pigs uneasy mothers often result iron such i practice Neither should she be expected to thrive on an oxclu live corn and water diet T3reedln 1 animals of every class thrive more vigorously on a mixture or varlet of feedstuffs and require regula exerciseNew Jersey Live Stock Commission CANNIBAL SOCIETIES ARK STILL IN EXISTENCE According to the Sierra Leone Consular report for 1911 then seems to be no decline of cannibal lam In the Protectorate rejcordedcharge of being In possession ofIt I canInlbalI The most active of these organi I zations are presumably the Humar Leopard and Human Alligator So cieties for although onceInIII j I 1910a case purporting to to the Human Baboon Society was I Judicially Investigated there appears to be hitherto no conviction l for murder on record of professed members of that body Apart from the murders which take place from time to time to gratify a lust for human flesh there are Indications that in the Imperri and Tlmdale chiefdoms which are situate within the latter district events such as the corona tion of a Chief or the death of al prominent personage are frequent ly made an occasion for a human sacrifice by either the Bornl or theoITomah Society London Chronicle 00000000000000000O IX THE FOLD O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO I Sheep oro fond of pumpkins but it aids them to slice them up first and add some salt Wheat Is excellent as a food for preparing sheep for exhibition purposes as It produces plenty of firm fleshNo grain food Is better adapted for sheep than oats while they are being prepared for full feed 011 cakes make a good feed for feeding to lambs at an early age or as a part of grain ration Feeding beet pulp has becrt found to give good results either to sheep for breeding uses or fattening I Mangels when finely sliced are greatly relished by lambs A fretful sheep soon becomes a sick one and the sick ones die usu ally If not carefully attended to Do not bring new sheep Into your flock until you are sure they are free from worms or other diseases You will save yourself much trou ble and loss by following this rule It Is a poor plan to let sheep drink ice water It lowers their temperature and affects their diges tion and requires more feed to bring them back to a normal condi tionDo not use barbed wire around the sheep lot The barbs catch the wool and make the sheep look rag ged One rtrichm of powdered ginger and one drachm of laudanum will relieve colic In sheep Blue vitriol red lead and nitric acid mixed In equal parts by weight Is a good dressing for foot rot Chalk and charcoal will relieve lambs suffering from acidity of the stomach and kindred troubles The care of sheep Is pleasant work for the wife or the boys and one that they can understand and requiring but small capital at first It can be worked up to a profita ble business A few roots fed every day will give zest to the appetite and tone up the system Mrs T A Town 107 6th St Watertown S D writes My four children are subject to hard colds and I always use Foleys Hon ey and Tar Compound with splendid results Some time ago I had a severe attack of la grippe and the doctor prescribed Foleys Honey and Tar Compound and it soon overcame the la grippe I can al ways depend upon Foloys Honey and Tar Compound and am svTre of good results For all coughs and colds In children and grown per sons and for chronic coughs of el derly people For sale at all dealers adv Yes Indeed Mrs Proudman tiur Willy got meritorIous commendatlqn at school last week Mrs 0BullWell well Aint It awful the number of strange diseases thats ketched Iby schoolchildren T cblirrra Orjr FOR FLETCHERS CASTOmA HIS WifE PASSEDpp ANO NEVER SPOKE Straightway Went and r Killed fJimselfek HAD FATAllY WOUNDED WifE After Seeing HerWife Had Left Him Without Giv 4 ing Any Cause s TOOK THE DYNAMITE ROUTE West Pelham Mass Oct 4 i George Shaw n wealthy farmer probI dynaImite which he placed in a stump and sat upon Shaw had come from Hart IIMrsConn to place flowers on her eons grave She had not seen herkhusband since she left him in January Ufl until she encountered thim near his home today as she was driving to the cemetery Mrs Shaw at the time was accompanied by her daughter Mrs H W Griffin k of Chlcopee and Mrs William t Barnes of Springfield No words were exchanged be tween Shaw and his wife when they passed on the road but the man Immediately went home procured n lightdriving rig and following his wife caught up with her In the cemetery Jumping to the ground ho began firing at her with are volver as she sat in her carriage iiiIMrs Shaws horse ran away throwing the three women out IShRw ran up to his wife whim she Ifell to the ground and poun1od her over the head with his fists and with the revolver until she was In sensible Leaving her apparently dead the man made his way to his home When search was made for him a little later bits of his body were found scattered about an open lot Investigation showed that Shaw had placed dynamite in the stump I of an old tree in his back yard and f then after seating himself upon the stump exploded the dynamite 1An1 was fractured and her right arm broken Physicians held out little hope for her recovery Shaw was a successful farmer and waa Interested in lumbering His wife was five years his junior The couple had been married years manyjj Nearly two years ago Mrs ShawII suddenly left her home and all ef forts of her husband to locate herjj were unavailing though he said believed he could win her back If he could once see her The cause of their separation was not made l public I Its Never Too IatoII Lawrenceburg lad Oct 1Alv- ah C Delph 82 years old pioneer of Southern Indiana today Is suf fering from a severe attack of whooping cough which he con tracted while playing with one of his greatgrandchildren This is the first time Air Delph ever had the disease He is a retired farm nr and an oldtime fiddler having fron many prizes at musical con eats He plays an old fiddle he made when a boy I CASTOR etAI Pot Infanta and The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the nSignature of d iVamingThe Kentucky law lately passed ID regard to the abolishment of the public drinking cup requires that all stores hotels boarding hrfuses depots and other public places usuallykeptthe law printed thereon posted close by said drinking water The Herald Is prepared to furnish these cards at ten cents apiece by mall or by hand Better keep within the bounds of the law adv Homo Made- I shouldnt care to be the wife of a man who never smoked Well tIs comfortable to see ones husband sitting down after dinner to enjoy his cigar and then UtereIs something rather soothing about the aroma of a good cigar too k aboutthaas long as my husband smokes it will always be BO easy to tell him how to begin when he Insists that WehRTe got to economize jI c f lr7- y rrrtK P nR x n rw 4Vr r s r rrr tt JtI IDIVESDY T D IC2 THE HARTFORD HERALDITulE WHY un WILEY l IS fOR WILSON And Marshall in Present Presidential Race AN APPEAL TO REPUBLICANSS Who Like Himself May Be Dissatisfied With Roose jveilor Taft IClOSI S THK FOOD DOPERS By Harvey W Wiley forme Chief Chemist of the US Department of Agriculture- My appeal Is chiefly to those who like myself have been steady lifelong Republicans I believe that no kind of an administration nI Is going to ruin the country I have a high personal regard for each one of the candidates for Pres Ident and Vice President on all the tickets All the political platform are mainly sound and all promlsi effort In behalf of the whole people Jly choice Is not based on a platform It was determined by my Impressions of the real attitude of the candidates respecting the nubl k welfare We are creatures of he redity and environment In ou attitude towards great public ques r I tlons we aro almost altogethe- creaturesi of environment What tYJ3 men nre by environ ment least likely to be swayed by special Interests and most likely t be guided by devotion to publli I welfare Two of the have already been tried In the I Presidential chair and we know by experience what may be expected f If either of them resumes his form I er seat on March 4 1913 Mr Roosevelt by reason of his attitude towards the Food and Drug Act abandoned the consumers of the country to the rapacity of a few 11mercenary manufacturers Under authority of Congress I had carried1I 1 on extensive experiments with my socalled poison squad and foundI that certain substances viz ben pzoic compounds sulphurous com a pounds and sulphate of coppei blue stone were Injurious to healthThe law conferred upon me as j chief of the bueau of chemistry th duty of acting as a grand Jury an I determining whether foods an I drugs were adulterated or mis branded Instead of appealing from my decisions to the courts as the law requires the users of these poisons appealed to President t Roosevelt He not only listened to Athem but he abrogated the plain provisions of the law appointed aboard not contemplated by the law f and directed that these predatory I interests might continue their at tacks on the health of the peopleI until this board unknown to the law should decide otherwise Can we safely trust the campaign for public health to Mr I Roosevelt I cannot believe that to b0 the proper course Mr Taft Inherited this exceedingly bad condition of affairs from his predeces sor and has notonly continued this Illegal board under whose patron age adulterators are atlll poisoning the people but lie did worse In the matter of the adulteration of distilled beverages in which Roose welt upheld the legally constituted authorities Mr Taft reversed policy and threw the mighty weigh- of the executive office to the sup port of the worst lot of adulterators that ever disgraced a country Mr Wilson and Mr Marshall by their strenuous efforts in behalf of the food laws of their respective States have given a positive promise to end such a threatening state of affairs They will support to the t utmost the offlclals under the law who are trying to protect the pub lic health and will make short shift of those who have brought about these present unoearable condi tionsWilson and Marshall by their education and environment are free from bias In favor of predatory interests and are inspired by true patriotic welfare- I support the Democratic nominees In the full knowledge that many of the prominent Democrats in Congress have been In full sync pathy with the paralysis of the food law In behalf of the unholy J dollar But when the Democratic President and Vice President lend the aid of their powerful sympathy In behalf of the public health thou of their own party not In sympathy with them will be robbed of their power for evil If Roosevelt or k Taft be chosen the eoldlers of t fraud and adulteration will be Irae pregnably entrenched fo another four years and beqioates sulfites and adulterated alcoholic beverages e i a- ti i I VT f t 0 0tjo will have a new lease on life I believe also that President Wil- sons will renovate the department of agriculture reeking as It ha e been for tie past twelve years with i scandals end favoritism He wll see to it that the bureau of animal Industry will protect the public health Instead of the efforts of the packers to sell diseased meats under the deceptive phrase U S Inspected and Passed Untie PinSg vice no more unspeakable McCabe will exercise dictatorial powers There will be no more cotton leak and Jungle atrocities no more everglade swindles Buccaneerlngboast Ing and buncombe will give pace tc sane efforts for the promotion of real agricultural work and the pub lIe health Under Wilson the department o t agriculture will Ve restored tc speiklng terms with tha state agri cultural colleges and experiment stations and the State officials willhl r o long r be regarded as Inferior beings living only on the largest of a Washington cabal I ask allI who want honesty and faithful ser vice In the department of agricul ture the promotion of publicJ health and executives who have grown to manhcoil and lived in ani environment favorable to thin t which makes the public welfare to vote for Wilson and Marshall KKILIIMrAX IAItTV SIMT cll1DE JV JOlISUII 1Earlrregistratlor ganization In Louisville was shot to pieces About onethird of those who registered as Republicans on tlu first day of last years registration registered as Progressives today 3Whllo n comparison of figures plrtrof Republicans and Independents a big gain Is shown on the part of the Democrats Many of those who registered as Independents lastl year registered as Democrats In fluenced probably by the fact that the new primary law provides thatt lily those who declare their part i maItake part In the primary election connectionIwith todays registration Is thatt the negroes for the most part reg istered as Republicans the Progressives getting their strength from the white voters who formerly registered as Republicans In eighty precincts out of a totalt midnightI taI day In the eighth ward 212 wom en went to the polls and In the ninth ward ninetyone women reg istered r J W Copeland of Dayton Ohio purchased a boffin of Chamberlain Cough Remedy for his boy who hadI a cold and before the bottle was all1 used the boys cold was gone Is that not better than to pay a five dollar doctors bill For sale by all dealers adv I If You Had Been the Horse Wouldntt You Have Hulked The following Is taken from Uie current Issue of Farm and Fireside I knaw of a horse that was wellI started along the balking line when Its owner found that there had been a short tack left In the collar He hadnt policed It when he bought IL The horse pulled n while then gave up It isnt always ornerl ness that makes them stand still TRIUMPHt A Hartford Citizen Testifies For the Public Benefit A truthful statement of a Hart ford citizen given In his own words should convince the most skeptical about the merits of Doan Kidney Pills If you suffer from backache nervousness sleeplessness urinary disorders or any form of kidney Ills use a tested kidney medicineA citizen tells of Doans Kidney Pills Could you demand more convinc- Ing proof of merit Daniel King Hartford Ky says I used one box of Doans Kidney Pills some time ago and they did mo so much good that I am pleased to recommend them to others knowing of their value For some time I suffered intensely from pains In my sides and In the small of my back Doans kidney Pills had been used by friends with such excellent results that d thought I wojjld try them j got them at the Ohio County Drug Co Their use ag directed permanently cured me For sale by all dealers Price 60 BuffaloKeViUnited States Remember the name=poani and take no other adv 1II If f KR c ttttti h t ENGLISH FLAG CAST OVER BODY Saves His Life After Be ing Captured MEXICAN REBELS CREATING Fierce Havoc in the Fiery Battle Grounds of the Fighting Mexicans STOIIV OF A XOXCOMIJATAX1 1nlchmond Ind Oct 4Ec- Cward Wiggins of Richmond has been in Mexico as a mlnln g prospector several years has Just reached Los Angeles Cal after be Ing driven out of the country b Mexican rebels and In a letter re cetved here today tells of return Ing to civilization penniless and tin work of years of toll totally de stroyedWiggins and Edwin McMasters his partner were owners of mining property 30 miles from Cullacan and In connection conducted a general store and mill On the morn- Ing of September 20 a band of 10 0 Mexican rebels rode Into the Wig gins camp and demanded that all stores be turned over to them aS 1well as all valuables Wiggins re fused and the rebels fired the store I house otter carrying out all sup- pliesj therein Wiggins McMasteriH and their men tired on the rebels and In return a volley of rifle shots 1came back McMasters and three of Wlpglns men were killed At this Juncture the foreman ot the mine asked Wiggins for the key Ito the powder magazine The re quest was granted and gathering a I I dozen sticks of dynamite attaching fuses and placing them In a gunny pack the foreman threw the ext plosives Into the midst of the reb els Nineteen were killed and the I foreman himself lost his life Wiggins was made captive and after being bound with ropes was suspended from the side of a chirp ney of his abode with the explana dolt that after a period of torture he would be shot to death Xelthei 1tho pleadings of Wiggins nor hit wile that he was not responsible for the throwing of the dynamiter hadzany effect on the determina lion of the rebel Captain to end Wiggins life As a last resort Wig gins wife brought forth an English Hag and threw It over her husband declaring that he was an English man and not an American whom she knew the rebels so thoroughly despisedThe was successful In saving Wlgglnss life He was cut down and ordered to leave Three thous and dollars In gold which Wiggins had In his adobe was taken by the rebels Wiggins reached Los An geles with his wife and the widow ahd daughter of his murdered partner A Lug on the Track Of tho fast express means serious trouble ahead if not removed so does loss of appetite It means lack of vitality loss of strength and nerve weakness If appetite falls take Electric Bitters quickly to overcome the cause by toning up the stomach and curing the indigestion Michael Hesshelmer of London Neb had been sick over three years but six bottles of Electric Bitters put him right on his feet again They have helped thous ands They give pure blood strong nerves good digestion Only 50 cents at James H Williams adv rIXnUSTHIAh GROWTH OP THE GREAT SOUTH No one will question the liberal provision made by Mr Rockefeller for the Improvement of living con ditions In the South No one doubts the wisdom with which the gifts made by him and other philanthropists have been administered No one with eyes to see and heads to understand will say that the South Is not more prosperous than ever before in Its history but some credit should be given to the people of tho South for working out their own salvation and In a way that has been almost as sur prising to themselves as it has been to those who have looked on from the outside wondering at the absolute genius of their recovery from conditions which would have caused a less selfreliant people to despairThe industrial development in the South defies adequate descrip tion Fortunes vanished In a night the best men of the South dead on the field of battle and dead with honor Its civilization gone its labor system destroyed its affairs administered by strangers and aliens there appeared to be no s t 1 0 r C prospect ofa revival of Its Indus tries Ten times richer now In all the material things which go to make a people great and powerful and richer because It lost nothing Of heart and hope the South Is now the richest and fairest land In all this great country and Is growing richer and more selfdependent every day and year Tho greater part of this work of true construc tion has been done by the people of theSouth themselves and this can be said and is said without dis paragement of the noble work of Its sympathizers but Is said be cause It ought to be said In Justice to a struggling and triumphant peo pie of our own countryNewY- ork Times Saved By Ills Wire Shes a wise woman who knows Just what to do when her husbands life is In danger but Mrs It J Flint Bralntree Vt IIs of that kind She Insisted on my using Dr Kings New Discovery writes Mr F for a dreadful cough when Y I was so weal my friends all thought I had only n short time to live and It completely cured me A quick- e cure for coughs and colds its the mss safe and reliable medicine for many throat and lung troubles Trip bronchitis croup whooping cough quinsy tonsllltls hemor hnges A trial will conlvnce you 10c and 100 Guaranteed by James ri Williams adv Children Cry FOR FLETCHERS O ASTO R I A The Democrat lire dcpcndlns on this small ooiitrlhulnr to help elwt Wll son mid Marshall The appeal being made to tin iHople and the people are responding Wilson will tank the most accessible president who has ever occupied the White Hoiixe lie IIs typically a Dem ocratic man Farmers have awakened to the folly nf the so mlled blessings of a protec rive tnrlR- NtIION1L A NTH KM al- bdaliNJ1A VKItSi The Japanese national anthem Is the most poetically worded In the world with the possible exception of the Norwegian Jn vlI elsfcer written by UJornstJerne Ujornson That Is ofcourse a matter of opinion but the Japanese anthem la commendably short and makes In Its English form an eminently pleasing poem Its 10 lines are as follows Until this grain of sand Tossed by each wavelets freak Grows to a cloud girt peak Towering above the land Until the dewy flake Rending this blossoms gold Swell to a mighty lake Age upon age untold Joy to joy manifold Add for our sovereigns sake London Chronicle I AM PREPAREDTo do any kind of Veterinary work Horses Mules and Cows need not die for want of attention Celia answered day orn ight w H RILEYVETERINARYSURGEON Hartford Kentucky tvLEUMKIDNE AND BLADDER t i Are You Nervous What makes you nervous It is the weakness of your womanly constitution which cannot stand the strain of the hard work you do As a result you break down and ruin your entire nervous system Dont keep this up Take Cardul the womans tonic Cardu is made from purely vegetable ingredients It acts gently on the womanly organs and helps them to do their proper work It relieves pain I and restores health in a natural manner by going to the source of the trouble and building up the bodily strength I I CARDb I I Mrs Grace Fortner of Man W Va took Cardui I This is what she says about it I was so weak and nervous I could not bear to have anyone near mc I had fainting spells and I lost flesh every day The first dose of Cardui helped me Now I am entirely cured of the fainting spells and I cannot say enough for Cardui for I I know it saved my life It is the best tonic for women Do you suffer from any of the pains peculiar to women Take Cardui It will help you Ask your druggist Write to Ladic Advisory Dcpt CJiattsnooei Medicine Co Chattanooti Tenn for Specie Instructions and Wpace book Heine Treatment for Women tent free J fO + + + 4r 4 + + + I 4 r + + + GO TO + Albert Ollertl+ + +1 FOR + + Carpenter and Repair Work + + T1X WOIJK mid FLlECAIS + + Ill III P and Furniture Repairing +I + Soldering and Saw Filing Bug to pv Tops Covfrid and Lined +I YoulHindf him iu tilt Dr John f1 Mitchell office on Main HrcctI 1Leaveri Dam hvm + + + or + to + I I I + + + HAVE A- ROUGH RIVER TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RE3I DENCE OR PLACE OF BLS INESS AND IUTYOURSELI IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH LongTHEITO ALL STATES FOR THE CO nANYS SPECIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRESS J OBANONLocal Hartford K W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Heaver Dam Ky NoticeI- f you want clothes of any kind cleinel call on the Hartford Pressing Club We can clean any kind of clothes you have and guarantee that theywill be satisfactory if not nothing will he charged We are ready to clean your clothes for spring We also have a new line of late Bain pies and we guarantee a per fact fit Call on us when in need of work in our line Hartford Pressing Club Y N c A Bldg FRED NALL Mgr McCalls Magazine and McCall Patterns For Women Have More Friend than any other magazine or patterns McCall s is the reliable Fashion Guide monthly in one million one hundred thousand homes Besides showing all the latest designs of McCall Patterns each issue is brimful of sparkling short stories and helpful information for women SaTO Meaty and Kp Styl by lubicriblng for McCillt Magazine at once Costs only 50 cents a year Including toy ooe of the celebrated McCall Pattern tree McCaR Patten Lead all other IIstyle Itsim Bomber told Monllidryemoom landdn thin ay other two BuytromMcCALLS MAGAZINE 236243 W 37th St New York City drteanraNOaq r1huC1 wb 0 feubscribi3 tot Tlar 1 ERALD and get rh J latest new8 1 i Onh 1OO per1r ia- r1l llru fr- I c IVomarfsI i Prrtf irnnl firi BARNES SMTH Attorneys At Law HARTFORD KENTUCKY MKMUH Iirornd t Smith Hiiiifiiinr tlml tti lirtvi Inriuril urluerfII KIM fur Hi K nil prnrlirr w IX rrn rrlmhittl mill ihMiri fe Mr smith lie nc iinuly 4Iii i nrt I in txnldl1 frinii wiltirdltldolly1111 lluiilonl KepnlillrMii ImllilliiK Hint firnl hy- Jrh POKIER Attorneyt at tLaw BrAVEK DAM LY Will prurfte nn uioiromoii IIr ohlr and at olnlBircuiiBltcii Special oltrnllcn gltratcr btilnr enttUKliV tr hii fate j jFANK L at FELIX Law HAHITORD KY Will practice hio profewlOB Ic Ohloanairf li ApoIrialtiniAttorney at L wvII- AinTOIll KV Olllco up stairs over Vllsu 1 Crowe opposite court house Wil practice his profession in nI tin courts of this nnd adjoining coun ties nUll Court of Appeals Commer cial and criminal practice u spec Salty PARKERS HAIR BALSAM means Uid btatiflef thf hair lraiiu tet ft IIcxuriaU growth OnITnAlrITcvinu hair rulllnc- in AM 01 Out lirarrlit ESTABLISHED 1858 11dlamoad11 I OLDEST MAIL I W ORDER HOUSE r IN TilE SOUTH For almost half a century we hate served ez todyfiforBox 20 Loutsritie KyIII Every ArUclo Guar I Gillespie Bros i II W H J F GILLESPIE 3 PROPRIETORSII BLACKSMITHING And nepairwH- orseshoeing A Specialty HARTFORD KY ckx ooocooooooocooooboo3w J V Subscribe for The Herald a 4L a rfi r i Ta OCT Of 1012 iPAGE HERALDWEDNESDAYFOUR THE HARTFORD rThe Hartjord HeraldI 1 HEBER MATTHEWS FRANK LFELIX EDITORS PRANK L FELIX Pub and ProprI J Entered at the Hartford post omc- t e t u mall matter of the second class I I DEMOCRATIC TICKET 1 f Woodrowi1r Wilson of Newy t For Vice JerseyIII 1 R Marshall oft J For Congress Fourth District Hon Ben Johnson of Bardstown may talk about hard jobs t the hardest work that AfL f I IYouIt to a fellow these days is for J J Republican to keep t ttIsforces In line The Roosevelt t I I are having a hard row t llRepublicans I I Republican has of Its notices of a meeting oft I Ionei i advI I Roosevelt forces marked fthe this extra Everybodyf space rr knows that what it will get out ofII J Teddys coffer will not amount to I Itt makeI i 1 tt tI1 Few men have ever ran for the s t I IIreshlenc who have had as fine a personal record as Woodrow WIl j son There Is no disaffection In his I party and there seems to be no obIj stacIe whatever In his way The F I I dignity of the man coupled wIth- I his well known fairness is winning him votes every day I Terry Crowder hits the friends of his party a pretty fellowsI when he says the Roosevelt may laugh and roar and crow now1 but they will have to get on good terms with the Taft crowd after the I election If any of them ever i expectII to run for office Its not be all one way by a long shot and some of the Taft fellows will probably I be found at the polls next month also I a Dr Wileys appeal to old Repub licans of which he Is one contain- Ed J on another page of TheHerald today Is strikingly characteristic 1andstrong His strongest appeal Is in behalf of the abolishment ofI the adulteration of foods and beverages That the big trusts whoI control the food and beverage prodI ucts are poisoning the American j i people all the time In a slow way i IIIlfthe well founded Allegation of I i Wiley am he suggests a sure cure for this business tue election I of Wilson and Marshall rIt Is said Mrs Russell Sage iIIj bothered to her wits ends all the timefor some form or other to spend the Immense fortune left by her husband which Is coming in Im mense instalments It doesnt seem i possible In this day of enlightenment that such could be possible There are dozens of ways in which the money could be spent advAntag- eously i and with all due regard to religious sentiment if she has any I There are millions of little child famishing for fresh air sunshine I IrenI and food every day They also need medical attendance And there are the poor whom we have always with us Her latest fool ish enterprise announced Monday Is the gift of 150000 for the pur chase of Marsh Island near New Orleans as a refuge for wild birds How will the birds ever know abou- it and what good will it over really do THE STRUtttiMj IIETWEEN TILE DOLLAR AND n t I rr f 1 Indianapolis Oct LOut of I I I t some 1500000 deaths annually ii- p In the United States at least 630000 I are preventable declared Prof Ir ving Fisher of Yale University 111 his address before the Fourth Na t t tional Conservation Congress here f rr- ii rI Destroys i f fDandruffHair Vigor keeps thet clean and healthy1 ffAyers all dandruff and r promotes the growth i of the hair You will cer tainly be pleased with it as- a dressing for your hair It keeps the hair soft andt 1smoothf and promptly checks1 any fallingof the hair It 3 ri I does not color the hair and cannot ilJurethe hair or scalp Consult your doctor about these hair problems Ask him what he thinks of Ayers Hair Vigor I Ihd br uJO AYEB Oa laftO IIt- i f i f today Ths means over 1700 unnecessary deaths per day or more than the lives lost in the great Ti tanic disaster The Titanic dlsas ter spread a pall of gloom over the world while the dally average death rate rarely gets a passing commentProf Fisher said that the people of the country must look to the newspapers Insurance companies and the Federal Government for the saving of human life In the last analysis the war against preventable disease is aI struggle between the dollar and the death rate E E Rittenhouse of New York told the deleates And most of our communities prefer a high death rate to a slight increase In the tax rate There Is not an adequately financed health depart ment In the country He concluded with a plea for better support of the health depart IOther mentsOther speakers this morning L E Cofer Washington and Prof Liberty Hyde Bailey of Cornell University WIIV OIL ADVANCED AX KVKRVDAY LESSON IThe advance In oil prices follow ing so closely on the heels of the Governments dissolution of Standard Oil has naturally given rise to much disparaging comment regard dismemberIThe charge has been made that prices were being artificially boost ed to the detriment of the consum er It is Impossible to escape the priceIrtseimate factors of demand and supply The increase In oil production Ihag not kept pace with the increase In consumptive requirements of au I tomobiles motordriven air and water craft and the comparatively new call for fuel oil It is esti mated that there are 300000 more I automobiles exclusive of motor trucks In the country than last year The quantity of oil consum ed by railroads last year was 27 774521 barrels against but 15IJ7G77 barrels In 1906 an In crease of over 78 per cent The navy also used 13000000 gallons of fuel oil In 1911 and Its consumption for 1912 will be 21 000000 gallons Production of petroleum last year advanced 5 1er cent over 1910 and in the last dec jade has gained 217 per cent but consumption has been at a muchI more rapid rate In recent years Wall Street Journal TO GIVE THE FILIPINOS THEIR INDEPENDENCE One tremendous expense being borne now by American taxpayers that will be lifted In the event of the election of a Democratic President I and Democratic House Is the cost of governing the Philippine Is lands which is being done against the desire of 95 per cent of the Fil ipino people Ten years ago Sena tor Hoar stated in the Senate that Up to that time the cost had been 600000000 Since then we have kept in those islands an average of 12277 troops It costs the Goverh ment 1500 annually to maintain each soldier The cost alone of maintaining the military forces In the Philippines last year was over 26000000 It Is safe to affirm that the sum which would be annually saved were the United sovereigntytover the Philippine Islands would not fall short of 50000000 Dem ocratic success means the divorcing suci cess means their retention ADAItUPG Oct 9Mr John Raymon went to KnotUvlllo yesterday There are still several cases of diphtheria in this neighborhood- Mr C L Patton returned from Indiana Wednesday night He pur chased a farm there and will move his family there in the near future As Messrs C M and C L Pat ton were driving out from Whites vllle Wednesday night the piece on the breastyoke holding the tongue to the buggy broke They were coming down a hill and the buggy running on the mules frightened them so they ran away throwing both occupants to the ground It was a narrow escape but neither Is seriously hurt Mr Clayton Patton wife und baby called upon Esp J L Patton and family at Ralph Sunday after noon Mrs Sallie Gray Oweneboro Is visiting her daughter Mrs Osca Sapp Mr Ben Helm and wife and Mr Albert Helm are visiting the form ers daughter Mrs Mitchell at Ma sonvllleI1 GHII lrn Cry I FOR FlETCHErS ASTORIASubscribe for The Herald 1 a yew y y ROOSEVELT COULD ROT REMEMBER A Single Contribution in Year 1904 SURPRISED AT TRUSTS GIFTS Says Charges Against Him Infamous and Untrue A Sweeping Denial IIARRIMAN FUND FOR STATE Washington Oct 4Theodore Roosevelt demonstrated today be fore the Senate Campaign Fund Committee that his memory Is just as bad as that of the trust mag nates who have been appearing be fore congressional committees dur ing the past year or so He could not remember definitely a single contribution to his gigantic cam paign fund of 1904 and claimed not to know anything about the fi nancesof his primary campaign for the Republican nomination this yearFor several hours the man who was President of the United States for seven years and who during that time posed as the champion trust buster was forced to de fend his record They made him even admit that Ire did not know that i31K per cent of the contri butions which helped him to carry the country In 1904 were from th6 very corporations that he boasted of trying to bust He appeared surprised when Informed by the committee that this was the esti mate of George R Sheldon assist ant treasurer of his campaign com mittee In that year He had the word of George B Cortclyou former Secretary of Commerce and Labor and as such supervision of the Bureau of Cor porations and all Its trust secrets that the Standard 011 Company had not contributed a cent to his cam paign and upon that assurance he made a public announcement to that effect He was at a loss to ex plain why George R Sheldon judgeCharles H Duell John D Archbod and others Interested in the campaign of that year could re call distinctly the making of a 100000 contribution by the Standard 011 and Its entry upon the books of the National Republican Committee with never a sign of its having been given back I did hear something I believe about H H Rogers having given liberally to the campaign admit ted the Colonel but I did not con sider that a violation of my instruc tions njt to accept any money from the Standard 011 Company Mr Rogers only relationship to the Standard OH Company lay in the fact that he was Its president But the Colonel was buoyant Although he could not recall J P Morgans 100000 contribution when cornered he managed to wriggle out somehow and to muddy the waters with charges of corrup tion against other folk He declared most emphatically that Sen ator Penrose of Pennsylvania ought to be thrown out of the Sen ate on his pwn admission that he advised the Standard 011 committee io submit to blackmail of the late Cornelius N Bliss treasurer of the Republican committee in 1904 for fear some harm might come to the company He demanded that Chairman Hllles of the present Republican National Committee and Representative Richard Bartholdt of Mis souri be forced to make good their assertion that 3000000 was spent to nominate Col Roosevelt at the Republican convention this year or that they be driven out of poll tics on the theory thatibearlng false witness Is the same as steal ing Col Roosevelt arrived lore early today to be the star witness before the committee The Colonels train Rot In shortly after 7 oclock and with his party he passed through the railroad station greeted by a few lleaders of the Progressive par ty here and went to breakfast at a hotel within sight of the White House Mr Roosevelt breakfasted with William Loeb Jr formerly his pri vate secretary and now Collector of Customs at New York before going to the Senate office building where the hearings of the committee are heldSeveral hundred people llwere lined up In the corridorsor the building two hours beforethe time set for fthe hearing faoplngto get Into the little committee room with Its capacity for about 100 Hun dreds of others packed the door ways and surroundings of the building to see Col Roosevelt en ter Seats had been reserved by Chairman Clapp for Sir George Reid Australian High Commission er and Lady Reid who had been Col Roosevelts hosts abroad- A murmur of applause culmi nating in a cheer greeted Col Roosevelt as he entered the build ing about five minutes before the time set for his appearance He forced his way through the crowds In the corridors with some difficul ty and found his way to Senator Clapps private room There he met the members of the committee The crowd continued to grow and every door of the big room was sur rounded by an anxious crowd Col Roosevelt learned this morn Inc that Gov Hadley of Missouri had declared in favor of President Taft He would make no comment upon the Governors action nor would he express an opinion upon the nomination of Congressman Sulzer as Democratic candidate for Governor of New York- I have nothing to say upon any subject said the Colonel FOR THE BUSY REDDER Senator Jonathan Bourne of Ord egon defeated In the recent Repub lican primaries will have his name on the November ballots as an inde pendent candidate George Copp was fined 1000 In the Federal Court at Detroit on a plea of guilty to the charge of smuggling two Chinese into this countryWhen Miss Maude Malone a suf fragette Interrupted Gov Hiram Johnson Progressive Vice Presidential candidate while speaking in Carnegie Hall New York she was ejected from the building Many witnesses will be called by the Senate committee investigating campaign contributions during the week among them Charles P Taft brother of the President Preliminary steps toward the or ganization of the LakestotheGulf Good Roads Association were ta ken at the meeting at Mammoth Cave when 400 representatives were present from Indiana Ken tucky and Tennessee American marines routed the Nlcaraugan rebel forces and the rebel leader Gen Zeledon was captured and killed Four Ameri can marines were killed and a num ber wounded Private Charles Hays Durham whose mother lIves at Junction City Ky was killed The Government forces lost 100 killed and 200 wounded Big Jack Zellg East Side gangster and prospective witness in the trial of Police Lieut Charles Becker for the alleged murder of the gambler Herman Rosenthal was killed in New York it Is claim ed by Phillip Davidson a fruit dealer who declares the gangster robbed him at the point of are volver Judge Sehorn In the Kansas City Federal Court assessed a fine of 18000 against the Kansas City Fruit and Produce Exchange charged with being a fruit trust It was announced at Progressive headquarters in New York that Col Roosevelt will speak in Louisville October 16 DUCK HUNTERS MUST PAY A STIFF LICENSEf Frankfort Ky Oct 5Hunters from Indiana Ohio and Illinois who wish to shoot ducks on the Ohio river this winter will be compelled to pay 15 into the treasury of Kentucky for the privilege That U the price of nonresident hunt ers licenses and the license they take out In 1912 will expire the night of December 31 when they will have to take out new licenses The jurisdiction of Kentucky ex tends to low water mark on the op posite shore of the Ohio and the Game and Fish Commission yester day received an opinion from the Attorney General supporting Exec utor Agent J Q Wards contention that the game laws can be enforc ed on the river as far as the low water mark The question came up at Louisville and Indiana hunters requested that If they were compelled to take Kentucky licens es the license issued this fall be extended for a year After considering the request Executive Agent Ward decided that It Is optional with the sportsmen whether they take out licenses before January but If they dpthe licenses will expire with the calendar year just OB all the others do ice Notice The AS of Eo Committee will ship stock from Beaver Dam Monday Oct 14th Parties rtrnlrlng to ship will please notify the com mittee at once R T PTRVEVS L U TIOHENOP H PORTERCommittee IMh for At 1era141 a In The fall Shoe season is gradually creeping upon us The Oxfords must be discarded for High TopXIi Dress Shoes THE OLD WORN OUTwork Shoes must be replaced by a strong sturdy pair that will keep out the dampness and cold OUR SHOE BUSINESS grows steadily from year to year It takes more Shoes every season to satisfy our demand This alone ought to be sufficient evidence toNconvince any wavering man or woman that our Shoes are right II WE SELL QUALITY SHOES for1 Women as well as our own special brands that have stood the tests for years Ladies Shoes 150 200 250 300 350 4and5The little patting bare feet that creept in so noiselessly now must soon sound like a few young mules stalking in We have Shoes for all your little rascals and we make a special effort to supply the children with the kind of Shoes I they ought to have We have the light medium and heavy weights I 4 Prices at 50c 75c 1 11251501751 I 200 and 250 I Bring all your Shoe troubles here We will satisfy you i r E P Barnes Bro BEAVER DAM KY SPECIALSWe brated Henderson Road Wagons for sale Let us show you their good pointsAlso our usual line select Family Groceries and the low est cashprices Give us a callor phone No 83 LIKENS ACTON Hartford ent ckl1 M ItliSubscribe forThe Herald 100 a yr BUY THE BEST M B KENDRICKS QUILLAI DARK SOAPS AND CLEANING COMPOUND Now 10 cents formerly 23 cents These are the original genuln1 KENDRICK PRODUCTS whlcl have sold for 25c for 28 years QUILLAI MARK TOILET SOAP SoapHendrlcks coolingElectric Soap removes oil tar grease pitch or paint from silks carpets and woolens without Injury to the fabrics Compoundfor Ten Cents a Cake Awarded First Prize Medal over all competitors at Thq Southcn xposltlon Loulllxllle Kyn 1884r Has been a prize winner ever since torExcellExpoltlon byulalla Cake aADjTEIExclpelve t Three Dollars 4t dar by using yorr tpr Writetfor M ft KENDRICK 1 COv Newport Ky4 t I 1or ci fl fS 4r v i WEDNESDAY OCT 0 lou THE HARTFORD HFRALD 1MGE FIVE I riR MILLINERY Qluml The rush is now on in our MILLINERY PARLORS New Goods are coming in daily Early buyers are i the ones who get the 1 iJ adviseiJi iconsultMRS SARA COL p yourp= IfBesides I t aretI of Coat Suits Cloaks Dress Goods and Silks to be found I anywhere with suitable I line oftrimming to match See us for these goods and Ie J f remember that IT PAYS TO TRADE WITH A t HOUSE THAT SAVES YOU MONEYr1i i Go I t I SAJEI Prices 100 nj to 500 Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded R D BROOKS GRAHAM KY tII ooooooooooooooo 0 LOCAL NEWS AND 0 t 0 PERSONAL POINTS O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO L i Dr E W Patterson Dawson Y j Springs Is In town Mr Hade Hurt Olaton was a i pleasant caller Wednesday h i MrParadiseKy Is visiting Judge Jno B Wil son city WANTED A COOK At the Commercial Hotel Good price for a good cook adv 0Miss Clara Patton Hartford J Route 2 gave The Herald a pleas ant call Friday Cash Coupon Tickets from 5c up given an the Talking Machine at Ohio County Drug Co adv t Boys Suits in Grays Tans Blues f iI and Fancy Worstedsat 150 to 6 I I Iadv ROSENBLATTS Prepare yourself for the taU with an English Silkfinished I 11rains adv Coat at 500 ROSENBLATTS t Mr L B Tlchenor President of the A S of E ofOhio county was a pies am tbcaller at the Herald office Thursday Whenever your purchases amount to 25 ntthe Ohio County Drug Co store you get a Harmony Talking Machine free adv Mr W W Lloyd and wife of jI Barretts Ferry were the guests of Judge 4and lo rst R Wedding a- ii few days this week i 4 4T ttlIlell8rs James Dawson Hartford I If Route C and E B tartley 81m j raons were pleasant caUrsl1t The I Herald office MondayI 1 t Ctoaks Coat St jta and klrls arr riving daily Beet assortment to leTectfrom in Hartford J adv r ROSEN BLATTS I r9tllIiti rit1 8gJJJrjg 2f cent ehorr for a4QltJ seryiFm Y ifSiY nlg + t acid it lift good one too There will1 We Mother big bill this week with ti complete change of k It program For Sale Town property vacant tl lots cottages and twostory dwelling- A C YEISER CO adv Hartford Ky Rev H D Burch Frtedaland Messrs E R Bennett Barretts Ferry and John Allen Olaton gave The Herald pleasant calls yes terday I FOR RENTHoteluoing nice business Everything new and up todate Call on Dr L B Bean Hartford Ky Also Livery Stable for rent adv For all kinds of building mate rial call on or address Fordsvllle e Planing Mill Co Fordsvllle Ky and get the best material at cheapest prices adv Mr John C Riley cashier of theI First National Bank attended the State Bankers Convention at Louisville last week He was accompan- Ied by his wife Mr John C Thomas of the firm of Thomas Bros had a severe at tack of acute indigestion last Thursday which was follpwed Saturday by a malarial attack and a chill He is recovering slowly WANTED 150 Chestnut Tele phone Poles 25 feet long Not less than 6 Inches In diameter at small end Ohio County Farmers Mutual Telephone Co Hartford Ken tucky 41t3adv The District Meeting of the Im proved Order of Red Men occurred in Hartford yesterday Quite number qf tribes were represented and a large number of braves wer In town WW MM B MMHM If you need a good Wheat Drill call and see me about thell kind I dayswiltto buys 4 S L KING fUltZaclr Hartford i Ky Tbe I Herald has j received news fr iCQbi1 rttutotthe death on P toDor 4 t1812A02f t jUc1i rd W Townsend eon of William iBv and Mar6aretE i TownsehoV Bged25 years 8 months and 19 days He l avfBa wile and par eats to mourn his doss i4- W J Have Just received a carload o fJ sixInch Drain Tiling Also have good supply of 24lnch Well Tiling W E ELLIS Produce Merchant 41t4adv Hartford Ky We carry the most complete line of Shoes ever carried in Ohio coun ty We have Red Cross and other good makes for ladles WalkOver Florsheim and FossPackard fo- rmen150 to 600 adv ROSENBLATTS Mr J B Tappan the Center Street Jeweler has purchased from Mr Marvin Bean the business house which he has occupied as a jewel ers store for several years past It Is valuable property and a good lo cation We did not learn the price By Invitation Judge R R Wed ding will give a lecture on educa tion at New Baymus schoolhouse on Friday night October 18 1912 This is Judge Weddings old home district and It goes without saying that his numerous friends In that vicinity have a treat In store for them Everybody Invited Rev O M Shultz of Livermore Iy is now engaged with pastor Birch Shields In a great revival with his church at Rockport There have been 10 conversions to date and great Interest Is being taken In the meeting In the town and com multy The meeting will continue throughout the week All are In vited to attend Hon E T Franks of Owens boro passed through Hartford Monday morning en route to Mor- gantoWn whet hospokp at one oclock p in returning Monday evening He was accompanied from Owensboro by Capt J M DeWeese Mr R B Martin Joined them at Hartford and returned Monday evening They went to Morgantown In Mr Franks large touring car The Hartford McCreary Club which did such efficient work In the State Campaign last year met at Democratic Headquarters over the Hartford Drug Co Friday night The president of the club Judge J S Glenn presided It was unani mously decided to change the nam of the organization to the Hartford Democratic Club and to make i permanent The following officer- were elected Judge J S Glenn fires McDowell A Fogle secy James H Williams treas A large number of leading Democrats wer enrolled as members The club willII meet every Friday night at 730 oclock at Democratic Headquar ters and all local supporters of Wil son and Marshall are urged to at tend and help win a great vlctor In November both in the count and the nation I Horse Fell In Well Mr Zack King who Is hauling railroad ties from the Bond Bros saw mill above Hartford stopped to take dinner at Bernie Felixs better known as the Albert RiallI place yesterday He fed his horses and turned them in the yard to graze and while there one of the horses walked on some planks that covered an old well The planks broke and the horse fell into the well which had caved in and f about 12 feet deep The neighbors were called in an a trench was dug from tile well deep enough that the horse wa led and pulled out not much the worse for the fall It took about 2 Vs hours work to get the horse out Dr Tirhcnor ngThe Owensboro Messenger says Dr B F Tichenor State Sena tor from this district who has been residing at Pleasant Ridge for sev eral years where he is one of the leading practicing physicians Is making preparations to move to Hartford Ohio county where he will continue the practice of his profession Dr Tichenor Is well known in this and adjoining coun ties and Pleasant Ridge loses one of Its best citizens in his removal The Herald would add that we are glad to welcome Dr Tlchenor to Hartford Luther Dauglicrty Killed Luther Daugherty of near Baize town this county fell over what is known as the James Albin cliff last Saturday morning a while before day aryl Was instantly killed He raccoonahunting and the dogs has treed a treeet Daugherty started out to chase the raccoon and In doing sovran over the chit His remains were Interr liltfI ithei family burying runds- SundayW K l I i riv 8v otTj Isepiedgthat my14 far old boa s would have to loge hjs leg on account of an ugiy ulcer caused by a badbrulse wr teDFH ward AquonppN CliAll remedies + and 3dctiorBV treatment tailed IjtHl we tried Bucklens Arnica Sila6tarid cured him with one box Gores burns bolls skin eruptions plies Zip at James H Williams adv I Y c Aw Iilt jooooooooooooooJO COt Xr COURT NOTES 0 O O O O O OOOOOOOOOO In the case of the Comth vs Fege Morris and Tom Crahan charged with assault with attempt to rob the evidence WES heard be fore Judge R R Wedding Monday heldtogrand jury Bond was fixed at 500 each Falling to execute same they were remanded to Jail to await the actIon of the grand Jury Com thoS Ed Drake charged with uelng Insulting and abusive language towards another verdict of iury guilty and fined 500 anal costs oath vs Lee ChInn charged with renting house to another wherein liquor was soldageed judgment 100 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 HAITIST CHURCH 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOf SvnSay Sc ocl Rally Day 945 Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 730- Teachers i meeting Thursday ev enlng at 700- Preaching Sunday morning and evening by pastor E B English Regular business meeting at praer cervlcq Wednesday evening presIentprogram come and bring some body withI you 11EAVEU DAM Oct 7MrC D Ghlck vrent to Louisville last week to enter the Southern Baptist Theological Sem inary preparatory to the ministry bavin give up the practice of law for that calling On last Tuesday evening at the Northern Methodist parsonage Mr H J Drtulen of Attica Ind and Miss Orha Stevens daughter of Mr Silas Stevens living near Cromwell were united In marriage Rev Hunter performing the cere many Miss Orpha has been assist ant postmistress at this place for stayemade nnny friends who regret very hertStatesI Lou Henry Austin wife of I IMrB H Austin after long of pneumonia and other MondayeI morning If Mrs Austin had lived until December she would have passed her 70th mlleetone She was married 4D years ago In Da vless county to her present hus toyAllyare dead She Is survived by her husband and two grandchildren Mr Austin Rhoads living In Arizo na and Miss Maggie Rhoads at present living with them and go ing to school After funeral services by the Rev A L Mell her re mains were laid to rest In the Josh en cemetery Mr Owen Hocker of El Paso Texas Is in town visiting his fath er and mother here 111 WYSOX hassjust closed at Cool Springs held by Theredwas much Interest manifested The hads29 conversions and 23 additions to the church The baptizing took place Sunday afternoon at Roches ter Rev Tow Is a great worker In a revivalMiss Williams of Para disc visited relatives and friends In this community a part of last week Miss Pearl Davenport Is on the sick list Mrs Allen Taylor who has been very sick of neuralgia of the heart Is able to be out again Miss Maggie Taylor of Hopewell visited Misses Lizzie and Gertie Moore Saturday and Sunday A wagon ran Into Mr Lee Nelsons buggy at church Saturday night and broke six spokes out of a wheel but nobody was hurt Miss Ural Pirtle of McHenry is visiting her sister Mrs H E Hill and family- A series of meetings began at Wysbx Sunday night School at this place Is progressing nlcfilv under the management of Mr Marvin Taylor MrW P Bennett made a busi ness trip to Louisville last week KICKETTS Oct 7The farmers are very busy working in their corn and sowing their wheat Mr and Mrs Steve Weeterfield of Hickory spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs Lee Royal of this place Mr Lee Royal made a round trip to Livermore last Thursday to at tend the A S of E meeting The Woodmen will unveil Mr E D Tatums monument at McDaniel burying ground the third Sunday in October The school at this place iff pro gressing nicely TheHerald 91 a year 1 r4it r 1 wSN1111N141SSKHNM1KNI N1 MA1M NLNVIMNMIIWKNN NN 1- RS I1WWa bY rI 3Iilli1 i J JI V Ji41STSj i 1pC9tte4M1Jt5ll10 Sl I n c3I I 1 350 to 600Ij I Ii Other Good Makes I at 150 200 250 and 300 j i k i i 1rosenDtatt S i c e I i HARTFORD KENTUCKY if c tit1tihK4K1N1M14VKNSI NM1NN1Stti tt SSNN1 N1KSMtNN1 NLVt 00000000000000000I I I OOOOOOOJOOOOOOOThe met In court hall hero last Wednesday with the County Judge County Attorney and all the Justices of theI Peace present Ordered that all claims allowed at this term be payable out of the 1012 levy except as otherwise provided Following persons allowed the sun opposite their names on ac 111dogI gus Barrett 1000 L L 600 W E Hinton 35u J Wji Renfrew 1700 D C Hewlltt JCOO In W Park 500 t Hartford Republican allowed j j 25uO for three receipt books and toilet ja paperII est on Fiscal Court order No 4 OS dated October 5 1912 Said war rant to draw 7 per cent Interest from October i 1912 until paid- LI W Hunsaker allowed 22040 on account of Fiscal Court order No SS5 to ba paid out of levy of 1912 I keepIBennett as I Live Stock Inspector of Ohio counf I ty from Tune to September R B Martin elected to make set tlement with Sheriff T H Black for year 1912 E G Barrass allowed 75 for furnishing material and laying sew er from jail and court house to town sewer County Attorney authorized to deduct 8550 from the taxation of the cost In suit of Dr A B Baird vs Ohio county same being for witness fees Bank of Caneyvllle allowed 2 500 with 7 per cent due and paya ble In six month County Clerk di rected to Issue Fiscal Court order upon presentation of certlucate of deposit from treasurer of Ohio countyIsland Deposit Bank allowed 17500 on account of Interest on Fiscal Court order No dated April 11 1912 and due October 11 1912 Beaver Dam Deposit Bank allow ed 253985 which amount Is a credit of 2500 on 5000 Fiscal Court order No dated due September 3 1912 The 3985 being the Interest on said warrant to October 14 1912 This leaves a balance of 2500 due said bank on the 5000 warrant Coun ty Clerk directed to Issue warrant for 253985 payable from levy 1912 The 2500 to be paid Jan uary 14 1913 Bank of Hartford allowed 90 InterestC Crowder allowed 10562 on account goods furnished alms houseCarson Co allowed 4279 on account merchandise furnished to Ohio county jail Mrs Dorothy Barrass c allowed 35000 on account of Interest on 5000 note to October 4 1914 Clerk directed to draw warrant and credit note by the amount- L A McDaniel allowed 1000 together with 7 per cent interest cue end payabe January 5 1913 County Clerk directed to issue Fis cal Court warrant for said amount upon presentation of certificate of deposit from County Treasurer Esq O EScott appointed as a committee to purchase of J F Casebier undertaker Beaver Dam 25 coffins at 200 each or cheaper and have them stored In some con trll Jf venlent place The sun of 5 Is appropriated for this purpose The c cor of almshouse keeper deferred to January term 111 13 The recommendation of a road = iiplntsr to Io appointee by the Count Jude on approval of Fis cal Court deferred to the January term 110157 W P Mldlilff allowed Hf en account of services as jailer from Aurust 10 1012 to October 1912 County Attorney C E Smith Jno B Wilson and Deputy Clerk comI ofIpresent road law and If same can not be had said committee Is em inwervd to have synopsis of said law printed In pamphlet form to be distributedE W P Mldklff and Dr A B Riley appointed as a com mittee to have a cell made on the first floor of the Jail for women The committee is also directed to have jail repaired and plumbing done Here Is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long experience viz Mrs P H Brogan of Wilson Pa who says 1 know from oynorltwce that Chairberalnn Cough Teniedy is far superior to IsIby all dealers adv The Kentucky division of the V C V will hold Its annual reunion at Pewee Valley next FrlJay VHICll SHALL ITC BE Having tried all other reme dies will you continue to suffer through false pride DONT BE FOOLISH Repeated Eye Headaches sap ones vitality and bring about a general nervous breakdown LET US ItKMKVK YOUR IIHADACHK IJV REMOVING Till CAUSE Save your Eyes and nerv ous energy J B TAPPAN The Reliable Jeweler j IIHART Optician KY fie I Have Opened Up MILLINERY1Headquarters Over Rosenblatts store Main street Hartford entrance up opposite the preparedto the latest In headwear at the most reasonable price- s1Apprentice wanted Poppiei1HARTFORD KY J m HERALD11EnFDAY OCT D101a4 PAGE SIX THE HARTFORDi t The Havtjovd Herahl Illinois Central Rnllroad TIme Table at Denver Dam Ky North Bound South Bound No 132 405 am No 1211135 prI No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm4 No 102248 pm No 131 855 ptrI J E Williams Agta i THE AMBITION OfI THEVWOMEN FOLKSI For Fine Dress and SociaI Pleasures t LEADING CAUSE FOR OIIOBC J ti Declares Noted Minister in a Timely Address to t Hygiene Congress I i III DATA OX DIVORCES IS NEEDEDI ij Washington Oct 4Technlcal i icauses on which divorces are granted are seldom the real causes declared Rev Dr Samuel W Dike Secretary of the National League for the Protection of the Family In speaking here to the fifteenth In ternational Congress of Hygiene and Demography There Is great difficulty In getting I i at the truth of divorce Dr Dike asserted wherefore there Is t no reliable statistical Information the subject AmbltlottCor dress F social pleasures ho classed as 1 1tinleading cause of divorce with un to bear children influ of sex vices Influence of prop erty and quarrels over Its distribu tlon Inadequate wages and Innutrl tlous food as other causes 1 If we are ever going to have a clear Idea of marital tendencies said Dr Frederick L Hoffman of Newark N J we must have accurate l data on the divorce question Proper statistical Information Is c f necessary to advance in legislation tI aliiII f I i Congress decided to present to the I Congress as n whole a recommon ofIfortsi i and divorce Information gathered III- III If alcoholism were the cause of mental diseases we would all be I II r imbeciles today asserted DIII I Maxlmlllian P E Srozmann I1 rector of the National Association I for the Study and Education of ExIij I ceptional Children for our ances I tors drank excessively and took big f night caps and he added aliij the Germans would bo imbeciles whereas they are a nation otII strongminded artisans and BClen I t r tlstsII r ease familiesI suffering from mental weaknesses If II IIIIII I rr Farm hygiene presents a dreary lIurlpicture according to Dr J N f ty of the Indiana Hoard of lIealthII + who told the delegates that theI tarn was In tin patent medicine r stage The life of farmers should i i J IKI from 30 to trn per cent lonlerC I he said most of the Ills which they 1 1suffer being selfimposed Dr Hurty who was commis I sioned last year to Investigate the reportedIFt t among r r ors The ordinary farmer he said IK almost a tntnl stranger to water Country cooking wa scored by t- hiefiiI I We hear of the One country j I IIlInners and of the farmers table I groaning with good things said iI Dr Hurty Truly the seven kinds I of jams and jellies and the fried chicken arc good and that Is the I r Frcmrtwo to four kinds of pickles are also present and these stimulate the appetite causing overeating The dyspepsia on the farm the r auto intoxication with its rheumaI tlsm headaches called malaria vertigo and eczema are easily traced to the table groaning with good things It panrtin the farm pickles being used to f whet the appetite and cram the victim full of overfermented and in I I guflclontly baked bread and too much smoked pickled and salted f ham added the speaker The United States probably will reap an Increasing harvest of insan ity as a result of the failure by Congress to pass immigration laws requiring mental tests of Immi th grants declared Dr Thomas W f fsaimon of theUnltedStates Pub 1 c f a S J is llie Health Service in speaking tto the Congress here Segregation of feebleminded children In colonies to prevent sc clety from being burdened with many criminals drunkards prostitutes and paupers was advocate by Dr Koods Hutchinson of New York QOOOOOOOOOOOOO JO IOBMS YOULL ENJOY O I0 t0 O The Heralds Spccinl Selections tt- DO 0I Of OUR PRESIDENTS i Washington firsthe arranged the Finance Then came John Adams who quarreled with France Thomas Jefferson third Loulsla na he bought Fourth Madison under whom Eng land was fought James Monroe gave the doctrine and let in Missouri Then Adams whose tariff aroused I men to fury Jackson seventh refused to the banka new charter IIRnieIWilliam ler was followed I Under Polk all the troops in a bloody war wallowed Tayor eleventh had trouble with And slaverII Compromise bravely Then Pierce struggled through the j Nebraska division I I And Buchanan was In for the Dred Scott Decision j Great Lincoln was wise In a time i j of de1resslonIWhen Southern States fought for i the right of secession Andrew Johnson came next was j Impeached end acquitted I Ulysses S Grant for two terms seemed fitted Hayes followed then Garfield I whom Arthur succeeded Then Cleveland whom Congress by vote ImpededIHarrisons term gave the tariff aI Stll UPIAnd Cleveland again held the Democrats end up McKinley waged war with the poor Spanish nation And Roosevelt came and upheld arbitration i I William Taft has the chair untilIji I 1913 t I And who then will follow remains I to be seen Mrs Peter Hoi IIHOI I DuckeeIIIIII I Rd Cleveland 0 says I can recommend Foleys Honey andIi Tar Compound My little boy hadIi bad case of whooping cough some times he was blue In the face III gave him Foleys Honey and Tar Compound and it had a remarkable effect and cured him In a shortC time Remember the name Fojj leys Honey and Tar Compound and I do not accept any substitute ChllIj ren like It grown folks are quicklYII helped by It and it noII opiates For sale at all dealers adv Great Weekly at ti Low Price The Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer I twelvepage paper recently transformed t I Into the size and appearance of a dally will be furnished In connection I with the Hartford Herald IIThIsIII I quirer is an Ideal newspaper con I taming a big variety of reading and Is especially suited to the farming classes It Is Democratic and pro gressive This Is certainly a low price for a lot of good read Ing tfndv The Xiinilicr of Eggs American Hens Lay hi n Your The following Is taken from the current Issue of Farm and Fireside Chanticleer may well crow with gusto for Biddy these days In view of hor Industrial performance Ten years ago our annual homeproduc ed egg allowance per capita wnlJ 207 which had a market value of 186 or 9 cents each The lastsI pertcapitaI ter as 200 but the value of each egg had advanced to 17 cents or our eggsupply for the year cost each of us 340 Collectively our American biddies filled a sizeable eggbasket containing eighteen bil lion eggs These eggs would re quire 6600 full capacity freight cars to transport them to market Mrs Paul Wehllng 316 Smith St Peoria Ill had kidney and bladder trouble with terrible back JustIhad headaches and dizzy spells was fast getting worse when I topic Foley Kidney Pills and now all my troubles are cured Foley Kidney Pills have done so much for me I shall always recommend them1 Foley Kidney Pills are rich In curative qualities and contain noI habit forming drugs Try them For sale by all dealers adv J t 1 I SAYS ROOSEVELT IS IN GONSPIRAGY With Geo Perkins Trust Magnate and Others I HOW 00 YOU STAND ON i MEII Is Sole Test of Progressive iiI Senator La Follettes Sensational Charges j SAYS ROOSEVELT IS A FAKl Chicago 111 Oct 4 Kcotcvellt Is In a conspiracy with Perkins ant others to catch votes by tram Thirdtermer offered to t Le Follette write every word of the platform If he tLa Follfttt euid get out of the race La Follette refused because be believed Roosevelt to be a fake Progressive IDuring seven veers ta ttt WMi House Roosevelt did aothtac to reduce high tariff duties Roosevelts confession ai faith Is i confession of guilt si Ia How do you stand on nt If Roosevelts sole test of etrsletlaf- or a Pro reule When Roosevelt beas e Prt4 dent there were US rosin ia the fnlted States When he ftirsed tW office over to Taft there were l 020 corporatioas Ila eombiaaions Roosevelt remains silent on tIM over capitalizatlon of rillrosif aai Industrial orrjmitatJons because kotherwise would lose cite faaztel support of Perkins MeCorsjk aad other trust magnates 5aator Robert M La Follette Theodore Roosevelt is ecsared with George W Perkins Stel Trnst magnate and others ina form of campaign conspiracy founded on j fraud and pretense for votecatch I ing which makes the stolen nomination fade into insignificance Without using a harsh word to match the Colonels invectives against the Taft leaders in the Chi taro convention Senator La Fol I I lette has written the most remarka ble political document of his career Its style is so deliberate and its i I ImpaIII I i restraint and say In SO many words that Roosevelt Is engaged In an en i denver to commit grand larceny I with the Presidency as the coetedII loot or in a conspiracy to chair In the White House under false pretense One of the most Important parts j loc the work is devoted to attempts j which Roosevelt made to get Follette to withdraw in his LaII from the race for the nomination The negotiations were carried on through a group of senII FolIletteI the message that If he were nominated La Follette could write the I platform and that not ft single comma or the original draft wouldI be chanledILa Follettes reasons for his re fusal to go Into the deal promise to match In current Interest Henry Clays Id rather be right than be President Briefly they were that Roosevelt was a fake Progressive and that he would violate pledges made In a platform as easily as he violated his pledge against a third term Good For lillllousncss I took two of Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tablets last nIghtand I feel fifty per cent bet ter than I have for weeks says J J Firestone of Allegan Mich They are certainly a fine article for biliousness For sale by all dealers Samples free adv WHAT OV WILSON1119 BONE IX A FEW YEARS Governor Wilson has worked to secure the social and industrial justice which Theodore Roosevelt merely talks about During Governor Wilsons ad ministration In New Jersey the fol lowing laws have been placed on the statute books In that State A law providing for tire escapes and amending the factory laws of New Jersey to further protect the workersA providing for sanitation In bakeshops and licensing the same A law to protect the safety and health of foundry workers A law Increasing the number of Factory Inspectors for the better enforcement of other factory laws A law prohibiting the employment of children in mercantile es tabllshTnenta during school hours and prohibiting night rork for children v r A taw pmbl ting the erploln1 j meat of young boys as telephone and telegraph messengers at nighl in large cities The minimum age for night messengers In cities ot second class at IS years I Ithe employers liability and com pectationlaw A law regulating and licensing employment agencies- A law ellinlnatlnr contract labor In penal institutions j A law providing for an eight hour day on State county and mu nlclpal work This Is only a partial record ol the achleyements of the Woodrow Wilson administration in New Jersey in the line of sociological progress alone In less than two years as GoV- ernor Woodrow Wilson accomplish ed 10 times more actual reform than Theodore Roosevelt put into effect during more than seven years as President Chicago Journal AN mm LAW PASSED BY CONGRESS RECENTLY Which Seeks to Go Into the Bnisness Secrets of All Newspapers Ta country is beginning to bca at the provision in the postal ippo UUan bill which seeks to KM the liberty of the press and tM aevjpaper business generally noel BO law that excites much rid- icle ran bf very well enforced h be fst pace the provision rtqmiriac that all the secrets of the Nstaess of a newspaper shall be- pbilsaed t vie a year Is a take s H a frond Jt actually rieyer reg lady paid Congress The most bfxtitBab features of the pub Ikity elapse were Inserted In con tereot Readers generally do not know what t at term means To axead a lam in conference means that after the measure has paf i Vcth Houses If there Is any sitter o whirI t a difference of laasge axis s the bill as It passed the House and the differing bill as it passed the Senate are referred to a conference consisting of three members of each branch of the National Legislature These six conferees meet and agree In this Instance they insert ed the provisions requiring affidav clrI theII floor of either House and they simply sMpped through Coheres either went too far or not far enough Surely If It has an Interest in knowing who lends money to a newspaper either for six per cent or to influence its opln lions it should have a higher Interest In preserving the eyesight of the public Therefore why not a provision that all newspapers and pe riodicals not Issued In large type which the Postoffice Department deems not large enough shall be excluded from the malls Why not a provision that all newspapers that print Illustrations or all that do not print Illustrations shall be barred These are quite serious questions that escaped the hayseed members of the SixtySecond Congress New York Herald A WESTERN TOUR IS PhAVXKI FOK MARSHALL Chicago Oct 2Gov Thomas R Marshall of Indiana Democratic Vice Presidential candidate will make a short speaking tour through several of the Middle Western States this month On October 8 and 9 he will speak in towns in Iowa and on October 10 will speak in Milwaukee and the following evening In Paris 111 Gov Marshall then returns to Indianapolis for the week end and on October 15 and 16 he will speak In Nebraska October 17 in Kan sas and October 18 and 19 will be spent in Oklahoma JUST ONEWORD that word lg rUttIt nfento Dr TUttd UnrPUtand MEANS HEALTHA- reyou constipated Troubled with latlcMtiraT Sick headactoe- VlrtJfoT Bilious Insomnia andmtaytbrsIdlctIaac T iis lIs Taktf No Sbbstitiite r ropy KIDNEY nniarJW fI HLUMAiISM luDNEYI AND WAUDW t wad Fa Jbd Fairbanks Scales Are Best r FOR Farmers and Merchants Today Fairbanks Scales weigh 75 0of the commerce of the world Why Because They have the Confidence of the Public 4 Theyre the Most Convenient to Install Economical to Maintain and Built to Last a Lifetime Now is the time to buy Send for Catalog No SWIJIT Fairbanks Morse Co 517 W Main St Louisville Ky 3 AUTOMOBILE TRANSFER m I 3 FromF Hartfordd to tarnj Dam aDli Return fe Splendid car meets all truins A fast and easy ride Telephone or can fit our stable when you ewant to leave or have relatives coming 7 COOPER CCatHARTFORD KENTUCKY t I IIA Mail Order Deal Down in Oklahoma the other lay a man went Into a store to buy a saw He saw the kind he wanted and asked the price It was 105 the dealer said Good gracious said the man I can get the same thing from Sears Roebuck Co for 135 Thats less than It cost me said the dealer but Ill sell it on the same terms as the mall order house just the same All right said the customer You can send It along and charge It to my account Xot on your life the dealer replied No charge accounts You cant do business with the mall order house that way Fork over tho cashThe customer complied Now 2 cents for postage and 5 cents for a money order Vliat Certainly you have to send a letter and a money order to n mall order muse you know The customer inwardly raving kept to his agreement and paid the nickel Xow 25 cents expressage Well Ill declare he said but paid It saying Xow hand me that l saw and Ill take it home myself and IIQ rid of this fooler Hand it to you AVliere do you think you are Youre In Okla homa and Im In Chicago and youll have to wait two weeks for that smut Whereupon the dealer hung the saw on a peg mid put the money In his cash drawer That snakes 107 he said It lies cost you 2 cents more and taken you two works longer to get it than If you had paid my pried In the first place COME TO SEE US WE CAN FURNISH MATERIAL PROMPTLY AND SAVE YOU MONEY Fordsville Planing MillI Co JNCOIUOIUTKD IIFordsville Kentucky I 1 t 9VwTIA7El YQfE- very kind of Jbulness needs advertising nowadays to makeIt succeed there arc two kinds of advertising the good and the bad the kind that brings results and the kind which does no good Of course you want the first mei tloned In order to be sure of the result WM iHII I To serve you in the right way Advertising In a good live fcaper wltfi largel cjrcnlatloi like THE HERALD brtigs sure results Tell us whafyou want andfet us figurer you aa estimate The figuring Is free aid the advertislie wont cost you Much It will help yoi Try It T I THE HERALD t HartfordKyww t N Lf Jt l Fil AIt 1 rl I 1 t riiniijt q j I iocro1012 THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE SEVEN BIG EXPOSITIONWILLBE f Promptly on Time Says I President Moore a JHE MAIN WORK SOON BEGINS And Then Progress Will Be Steady and Sure Un 1 til Completion NOTHING ItlKK IT EVER GIVEN iI fr San Francisco Oct 5The Pan amaPaclflc Exposition to bo held in this city during the summer of 1915 will be ready on time So declares Charles C Moore the ex f posltlons chief The great build t k ings will be completed in June f 1914 fully ten months before the 50000000 show Is scheduled to open That will give plenty of time fflr the beautifying of the grounds and Kie Installation of exhibits tulle other expositions have emxlyeda great number of men shortly before their opening and have consequently lost a great deal in time and efficiency we shall dis tribute out labor so that Hie maxi mum employment will come a long time before the exposition opens recently declared Mr Moore A large number of men will be given employment withln nlEety days j and this number will be gradually I increased until the fall of 1913 I when the work of construction will bet Its height on all buildings 1 anitas rapidly as these are completed the number of men will become less from month to month The early start upon the expo sltion will give It an Incalculable advantage and greatly contribute to its prestige and successs It will serve to stimulate the entire work which Is now in all Important phases relatively much further ad Ivanced than at other great worlds t expositionThe exposition is receiving a 1 1meaiure of attention that has been acco ded none other of the great expositions in history This Amer ican wonder work the Panama car nal grips the Interesst of the world and has assured a participation by the foreign nations In Americas1 celebration that has proved pecu gratifying to all Americans iilIarlyCommonwealths of the United impelled by patriotic inter to that of California are preparing for representation upon 4 a scale tha will in every way be worj Jiy of the great event to be eel ebrated- According to Mr Moore and Ills associates the PanamaPacific Exposition will outdo anything of the kind ever before attempted The exposition palaces will be the loftiest and most impressive ever t constructed the grouping of huge buildings will give the effect of al most Inconceivable massiveness and grandeur the decorative plan will j produce an artistic effect never sur- Passed fl In November the first building i contact will be let and from that f time on hustle will be the general order on the grounds at Harbor I View young children It you have you have perhaps noticed that disorders of the stomach are their most common ailment To correct this you will find Chamberlains Stomach- ii and Liver Tablets excellent They are easy and pleasant to take and l mild and gentle in effect For sale by all dealers adv 00000000000000000o O ifl in regard to 0 O OBITUARIES RESOLUTIONS O O OF RESPECT c 0 i o o o o o 00 60600000 The Hartford Herald has adopted ja new rule In regard to Obituaries Resolutions of Respect Cards of Thanks c whether written at the the behest of lodges churches or in dividuals and that Is we shall charge at the rate of two cents per line for all such articles except obit uary poetry which will bo one cent per word stralghtThls is tile small est rate we charge for anything and Is ouf onefifth of our regular rate The amount In cash or stamps must accompany each article or It will not be r printed Six words average a line In ordinary reading and every separate character or Inillal letter counts as a word The heading and tho sig nature both count one line each even If they arsonlyI a word ortado All obituary L poetry jtralght through onec ttypetword 1 mtEYKIDNEY PHtI ACKACH6 KIDMEY3 MO SWJC c 1S KING SOLOMONS MINES They May Have Been the Ancient Gold Workings at RhodesIa Rhodesia that province of British Africa lying between the Zambezi add the Limpopo rivers has considerable deposits of gold Tho ancients mined and carried away enormous quantities of the precious metal but under the scientific mining systems of the pres eat day their operations will be greatly surpassed It has been thought that Rhodesia was the naclcnt land of Ophlr the land of tho mysterious King Solomons mines but this theory to strongly combated by same Investigators Tbo ancient gold workings are tbo beats of modern workings Kor every tou square mllea of Rbodesin It W stated there was one ancient rainthat to there are 7WWO old worklnpvswhich means that a stupendous wealth was dug out of the Mirth before the days of Cecil Rhodes Much of this wealth must kara gone to the north and east It was probably wrought Into the crown of the Queeo of Sbetw and filled tbo coffers of Solomon The ancient smelting furnaces are said still to bt of rosy recognition They ace wink into the floor The fnraace blowpipes are made of tlw flaM granite powder cecncnt and the necElea of the blowpipes are cowered with splashes of gold The linings of the boles are covered with specks of gold Whoa the first lining became worn by the beat a front lining of ce ment of an excellent quality which ice outlasted time wan smeared round on top of the old lining It is said thM 000 eon take nn old lining split our thq layers with a knife and find ajnld splashes In abundance The toeh of the ancient workers which have so far born discovered in elude a small soapstone hammer and burnishing stones of water worn rock to which gold stilt adhere There are evidence that the ancients earned on an extensive Industry In the manufac ture ot gold ornaments and utensils NORMANDY NUGGETS s M That Find Their Way Into the Month of Many People It Is a far cry from the lonely stretches of the wove klw ed shore to false teeth but by unexpected paths xro often descend ubruptly from the sublime to the utllltarhm Many a man calmly chewing an indowtruclble steak in America little dreams that the picturesque coast of Normandy has been sacrificed to provide him with molars Such id the painful fact however If you walk along the southern shore of the English channel between Dieppe and Havre you will see men and boys marching for stones of a certain size and shape from a varied collection of rocks which form the beach These are put Into sacks and shipped to America where they are converted Into porccluln The industry for such is the term used to designate this invigorating oc cupation bns grown to considerable proportions In the past few yours Its simplicity IIs perhaps Its greatest charm Having once le rned the kind of stone you are looking for all that U required of you Is to pick It up Ityaudo this steadily and uncom plainingly for vernl hours you will be sure to Oil a suck Then all you have to do Is to fling It jauntily over your shoulder run across the bowlders to the superintendent and demand 1 mine With this wealth in your pocket you van then sit down and look dreamily over the water while you allow your Imagination full play You m to see the stones after a long voynge across the Atlantic being slowly rescued from their rude state Bit by hit they are drugged from their priml tivo nothingness up to the heights of twentieth century ponelnln fhey are then shaped jolished mounted on a Kold pivot but why go into It It is too painfulMinnenpolls Bellman BOY LOST A Perhaps you bavenI1geta boy lKWiffi i Ivr lost 5MI1Hj C ELSE put an id In this paper and WELL HELP YOU TO FIND ITS +l+t+rlIi+l1I FORTUNES TWO I Both Came Suddenly to the Same Person and One Was Many Millions By DAVID WALTER CHURCH Copyright by PfclatlonI tIIII I I f I I J Why should we read fairy stories with marvelous happenings when there aro lOch occurring in real life Tho Imagination is not capable of creating too potkilbillUoa that occasionally occur among 1jwrsons who aw made of 6eh- and blood and have souls What hung ination H century ago in a long stripling Illini slap could detect the lead er of tlw greatest political crisis tbu work bee over known And in the acquisition of wealth what morn won Jarful Development In fancy than tin story of a real Mexican peon who cam Into an income of 10000000 a year in a town of northern Mexico in an adobe house lived an old man Pedro Alvurado by name a peon who with bU Indian wife worked wad saved till ho hud accumulated 100 With the money the couple bought a plltlO of land on the top of n rocky bill near by the town in which they tired Why they put thoir haul eared savings in this barren and not very ac cessible summit and continued to save and to puy SIO a year tuxes on it when they needed the very nccessarlw of lifu Is not known It Is possible that the wife balng been nn Indian bud heard n tradition handed down tami her forenthcrs That there was n treas ure burled there lie this as It may thero must have been some reason for the old couple putting nil their money In a barren rock and this view is borne out by the fact thut old Alvarudo having willed his purchase to his son nnd three neph ews called upon the former to swear that be would never part with his in terest In It When we remember that this legacy ttKquffithed to young Pe dro was supposed to be worth but 2 we cannot but assume that his father must have had on inkling that Its value was much greater After the old couple died the summit of the barren rock was not divided among the heirs but kept as one property Then came men who believed that there might be silver under the rock They hat plenty of money nnd were ready to risk it in an Investiga ion They offered the heirs a large mm for the property nnd Pedros cous ins were willing aud anxious to sell Cut Pedro true to his oath refund to part with hn share In vain the oth ers bogged him not to stand In their way of taking advantage of tip offer Pedro stood Jinn lint after awhic n friend loaned him the money to buy out his cousins Interest and make the Investigation us to what the property contained One day men begun to work on the top of the hill with pick and shovel A month passed and nothing but ordi nary earth and rock was displaced The cousins came to see and Jeered xt Pedro for a fool But Pedro hd Ibeen loaned sufficient money to pursuo his Investigations to the end and worked on Another month pawed and yet another with the same result Then one day in a twinkling all was changed A vein was struck Indicating that the Ialmllln mine as It wan called was the richest silver mine that had ever been operant And now this story takes on H wonderful change Pedro Alvarado son of u Mexican peon father and nn In Alan mother heir to a lbeggarly estate supposed to be worth but 25 sudden y sprltix IIvJo an In owe of 030000 a day Tho fairy waves her wand and the udobe hut In which Pedro was born is changed Into a sumptuous pal ace furnished from the manufactories of the old world Money without Belt is given away thrown away Whatever the silver king fancies he buys Those in his employ are loaded with luxuriesIt to be the desire of nil men to live In a palace for all men who ac quire Immense fortunes build such structures to live In Nevertheless their abodes are typical of their orP gin Pedro built his palace and when ho got It finished and tarnished It was wonderful to behold especially In the latter respect The furniture all came from abroad The must costly bedsteads chairs and cabinets were slip ped from Purls rugs came from the orient and Pedro instead of walking on the wooden floor or more likely the dirt floorto which bo had been accustomed sank In the soft substances manufactured by Persian workmenBut most curious freak of this suddenly enriched man was a mania for pianos His palace was filled with them They too came from those toe tories where the most skilled work men were employed In their building and their mechanism was encased In the most costly woods often beauti parorsanywhere everywhere where there was room for them and room In Pe dros palace was abundant Singularly enough but one selfish motive guides this suddenly enriched man The rest are all altruistic He is besieged by persons eager to buy hspanegellthay4uabrdt that at least a part of It By selling and permitting educated business men to work it the Income1 could be greatty Increased lJutno rrumtnt no co r 1 Y amount oC cajoling could move the man bow bad sworn ne would not selLThen it was represented to him that by certain simple business reforms bn might himself make his mine pay more largely AU the ore taken from it was carried down the hill on mutes Why not build a little railroad for the purpose which could be operated at much less expense But what would those do who now mako their Urine by driving tlw mules asked Pedro The simple business scheme is re fused Wastefulness continues The owners employees draw immense sal aries and how much they steal bOo slden does not appear except in too opulent manner in which they live Will the mine always stand tills waste this drain Will there not como a day when the vein will rain- out And then Well then tho oil vw king and those who ore sucking bkt wealth will collapse Among them all there is one who foresees such Ii result Pedros wife had drudged ns a peon until tho mine was opened She remembered that part of hw life and bad no desire to return to tt Why not from this river of wealth on which they were floating turn aside something to support them in case the fountain should dry ups And BO she did Instead of putting sway a few copper coins at a time asher fatherinlaw hud dote with which to buy his rock she took 1000 bills end hid them For years sbe stored sway these blue No one knew that they were being hidden no one knew tnelr hiding place The waste the ex trI1Tft Once tbo money sucking by employees relations dependents continued but every now and again the former peon wotnun hid away a thousand dollar bin True enough what Bonora Alvnrmto foresaw nt last came about The earth taken out of the mine became less rich Insteadof producing 30000 a day It produced but n tear hundred dollars to the ton All It was worth must be paid to those who carried it from the mine Into the valley and for getting the silver out of It Pedro bad seen his fortune loom up almost In a night now lie sow tt slaking rapidly away Then fc rpown his Ilose water uppxenrvdhn Lila mine Water is the great danger tlw great trouble when It comet In mining Tunnels must be built expensive pumps must IKS put In either one or bo h Pedro had but one business Idea in his heed That WM to bold on to his property Cut now even that Idea hud ceased to be practicable Ills mine was no longer valuable unless worked on business principles and Pedro was not a business than Since there hud been nothing put away no there was nothing when the end came The man who had given awny and wasted millions now found himself unable to give or waste any longer It was the old story of the fairy who hud raised palaces anti oth er luxuries for the pauper by mutter Ing another Incantation caused tram tovanishThen Senorn Alrarado who bad been tucking away thousand dollar bills very conveniently died In dis tributing her effects H maid who had been n long while In her service was naked if there was anything that tad belonged to her mistress she would like to have She said there was an old quilt the senora had always used which it would gratify tier to possess The beloved woman had slept under It for many years and would never let It go out of her own keeping Surely this would be n treasured souvenir nut Pedro remonstrated agalnfH the faithful servitor having nothing but an old quilt much worn and not over clean lie urged the multi to nntno something of greeter valiw She however clung to the quilt and would not bo comforted without this article no Intimately associated with hor mistress low Pedro was aware that his wife bed not sympathized with him In Ills xtravngance indeed she had repeat edly warned him that ho would come to grief by it Knowing this he won j i dered If tho good woman land not lmti something away for n rainy day ThoII eagerness of the mold to possess the j quilt caused him to suspect that j thing might be hidden in It OUleII of giving it he began to rip it Out amo n thousand dollar bill Ripping oti ho found another nod so as Pedro had grown fabulously rich overnight In finding silver under n 11k1ill now Ij gained n fortune In an old quilt life took out 800 thousand dollar bills quite enough to soothe him for the running out of his mine nnd to enable him to live handsomely for the rest of his days Pedro Alvarado yielding to the iinev itable turned over his mine to others Some Americans are the new owners and are working It on modern princi plea Meanwhile the owner lives on tho income of the 600 onetbousai dollar bills that were successively say Id up by his more farspelng wife In Itine old quilt through n long term of years There Is an unexplained feature In this story that appealing as It does to be curiosity is the most Important part of it Why did the senior Aim ado put nil the little money he hl111I mlnc1ilDdI solution seems to be that some SponII lards years ago prospected in reII gion and from the trend of veins of silver found suspected that the top of the bill in question contained the same metal This may hare been known to the Indians and been hand ed down from one generation to an MhertTbatthe hill contained the Im I mfrisV treasure that Pedro Junior dlII covered no one could have known ThtsIiI I must of necessity be one of the re narkabia freaks of fatt I 1 J Ls IIe ITho Kind You Hare Always Bought aria which has been use for over 30 years has homo the signature of and has been mado under his per sonal supervision since its infancy Allow no ono to deceive you in this All Counterfeits Imitations and Jnstusgood are but Experiments that trifle with anil endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Oostoria Is n harmless substitute for Castor Oil Pare goric Drops and Soothing Syrups It is Pleasant It contains neither Opium Morphine nor other Narcotic substance Its age is Its guarantee It destroys Worms and allays Forccishncss It cures Dhirrhwa and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles cures Constipation and Flatulency It assimilates tho Food regulates tho Stomach and Bowels giving healthy and natural sleep Tho Childrens Panacea Tho Mothers Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sf Bears the Signature of- T 0 I The KM You Haw Always Bought In Use For Over SO Years TMBCCNTAUH COMPANY TT nun HAT TKICT MCWVONH crrr f MOLES HND WHRTSO Removed with MOIKSOKF1 without pain or danger no nuttier how 0 O large or how far riiisvd atxivc the Kiirfaro of the akin And they 0 O will never return anil no trace or stair will 1 be left 1IJoSOFP O O is applied directly to tin MOMJ or VKT which entirelyI ilisap 0 O pears in aliout slv days killing the germ and leaving the skit 0 O smootli and natural 0 O MOLKSOFF Is put up only in One Dollar lM ttlos 0 O Each bottle Is forwarded postpaid on receipt of price Is neatly 0 O packed In a plain case accompanied by full directions and con 0 O talus enough remedy to remove eight or ten ordinary MOLES or 0 O WARTS We sell MOLESOFF under a positive GlAUAXTEE If 0 O it falls to remove your MOLE or WAnT we will promptly refund 0 O the dollar Letters from personages we all know together with 0 O much valuable Information will be mailed free upon request 0 O Guaranteed by the Florida Distributing Co under the Food 0 O and Drugs Act June 30 1906 Serial No 4JC33 0 O Please mention this paper Florida Distributing Company 0 O when answering Iensnroln Florida 0 000000000000 0000000000000000000 EEIwi V TUCX Light and Power Company INCOlirOHATKUJ E G BARRASS MGR Har1ifordJKy Will wire your house at cost Electric Lights arc clean healthy and safe No home or InisitHtai house should be without them when wit tin reach JOB PRINTING The kind that makes you look good in the eyes of the whole sale dealer and the coy merchant that makes your neighbors proud of you increases respect and sets you right in the minds of all people this kind is NEATLY DONE bAnd promply delivered by the HARTFORD HERALD Everybody in any kind of business needs Printed Stationery Noie Heads Curds Envelopes Statements Etc nowadays Prices the lowest work the best Call or write us the HERALD Hertford fyII HARTFORD HERALDS Clubbing RatesFO- RYEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS The Herald nnd Weekly Courierdournaili1 51 II IIelklv loulsvlllo Herald 13 u Louisville Dally Evening Post U50 III II Farmers HOIIIO Journal lQU a Dally Owennlioro Messenger 350 4 Cincinnati Weekly Kiiiilror 135 II 4 II Twlcenwcek Owemliorn Messenger 173 II Dally Owcnsboro Inquirer 321 I u o Twlcenweck Owcnsboro inquirer 173 II 4 4 Kentucky Farmer Louisville 123 1I- I y ii Bryans Commoner 150 4 t it Tlirlceaweek Near York World 105tIII 4 II McCalls Magazine Fashions 130 115IAddress THE HEPALD Hartford Ky av ASk xi r 4- y L HERALDl1rDNESlAVf OCT 9 1912 r GEEIGItTTtrE HARTFORD I The Hartjord Herald U 11 E RAILROAD Turn TA r BLK AT HARTFORD KY The fol1 w nLN Time Card U effective from Monday Aug 21st a North BoundI No 1IF due at Hartford 719 a m No 114 due at Hartford 340 p m South Bound t No 115 due at Hartford 845 a m I H No 113 duo at Hartford 146 p m t J II E MISCniCE Agt f I IIAHKKTTS FERRY I Oct 7Mr Maley Gentry andI 1 I Miss Verna Magan were married at j Owensboro last Saturday Th I iiwedding came as a surprise to thou li f friends who supposed they hatI ttgone down to attend the fair Doth 1 popular young teachers of thl- i It tarei and we Join their many friends In wishing them every success In lifet It has recently been learned thel t Miss Alma Gentry who Is teaching near Central City was married I rely weeks ago to Mr Roscoe Har din cf Dundee this county The y ire aso very popular young people I f and receive the best wishes of ev 1ervoneI M3 Maggie Wedding left lasttl j I Friday for Evansvllle Intl where t she has accepted a position as mil r j jlinerKev and Mrs H W Morto- spent a few days last week visiting friends near Oakes I Mr Alva Gentry who has bee In Arkansas for the past two months has returned home Mr Ollie Young and wife ot 1atesvllle are visiting relative- i I i here this week Messrs Willie Smith and LymanII Barrett made a business trip to i GJendean Saturday f Mrs Fred Boling has been ver sick for the past two weeks Mrs Willie Harl has typhoid fever j i Mr W W Lloyd and wife went to Hartford Sunday returning MondayNoah L Ford the 1year old son of Mr and Mrs Spurrier Ford died last Wednesday of stomach trouble and was burled Thursday In the Olaton burying ground SIJ IIOKTOX Oct SFarmers In this section I have most of their tobacco housed I Among those that attended the Owensboro fair were Mr and Mrs j C E Crowder and son Dude Gott and Mr and Mrs Dorman Hurt i I Mr Albert Austin and family re turned home from Oregon last I I ItIt week j I Mr Alf Atchison has bought Mr II P C Plummers blacksmith shop Mr Ben Plummer left here for V nton La Friday to work In thee fields Mr and Mrs C E Crowder and family visited friends and relatives around Balzetown Saturday and Sunday I iI Mr Cecil Potts of Red Hill vis J ted his sister Mrs Oscar Smith SundayMr Chas James of Leltchfleld was In town Monday Mrs Klnch Martin of Beaver Dam visited Mrs Elizabeth Austin j Sunday afternoon I tot EQUALITY I ThompsonIj last He SaturdaII I I1IIarI I SmallhousIII meetings Monday night after l second Sunday In November theII Mr Owen Browns son who very 111 Is thought to be taking diphtheria Mss Belva Thompson who has been rick of fevers Is some betterI Mr C D Ross who has been very 111 of fevers Is Improving I Mr and Mrs Berry and daugh itF BluffFt MEXICAN HKCUKT MAX JIVES illS TESTIMONYI POEO Tex Oct 5Fellx A I Im Mexican Government representative In the United States and personal agent of Pres- Ident Madero testified today be fore Senator V 111 lam Alden Smith chairman of tho senatorial com mittee Investigating the American attitude toward Mexican revolu tions The result of the examina 1t tions will not be made public until I the committee reports at the next session of Congress Senator Smith also examined Col Pascunl Orozco Sr and Juan Pe o odro Didapp former representative It at Washington They wero taken b fore the Senators from jail c I where they are held pending extra dition proceedings I Senator Smith said their statements c were of value to tho senato rial report C E Kelly Mayor of El Paso also was examined Sena tor Smith will depart tomorrow for Michigan but will return Sen lei t 11 11rA ator Fall of New Mexico will continue taking evidence here Federal Judge T X Maxey today dismissed an Indictment against Aunlufo Chavez charged with attempting to smuggle arm from the United States Into Mexl co The court held that mere pOSe session was not competent evidence of an attempt to smuggle arms Twentyfive other persons are un der Indictment here on similar charges PRENTISS Oct 5Mrs Sarah Condlct re turned to her home at Centertowt last Tuesday after a weeks visit U her brother Mr Terry TIchenor Mr J A Barnes who has been improvingeMrs Agnes Patterson of Mc Henry visited relatives near here last weeks Mr Henry Bracken who If teaching school near Mining City visited his home near here today Mrs Amanda Tichenor who has is had fevers Is able to be out again j Miss Ems Gentry who is attend visitedaher s home near here Saturday night Mr George McMillan and wife visited relatives near Beaver Dam SundayDr LivermorelisMr John Wallace and wife o Dalhart Texas are visiting her Darnelnnear here Mr D Plummer and wife visited Frin day until Sunday Mr Albert Patterson and wife visited Mr J D Hocker at Beaver Sundays j Mr Clarence Baker and family moved to Cromwell recently f f101hllELi Oct 7UncleTom Reid preach fifthyI Sunday He has been sick for a few days but Is better now He Is at Elbert Hunleys at this writing I Mr W E Johnson who has been on the sick list Is better I Mrs Pat WIdox who has b enII very sick Is Improving We are glad to note that Rev Tow has had a very successful meeting at Cool Springs About 251 professionsIMr L S Engler attended the A S of E at Livermore last week j Miss Margaret Taylor spent Sat urday with Misses Lizzie and Glrtle Taylor of TalortowniIIEAIIS T H SPEAK I t AND DIES NEXT DAY Raleigh N C Oct 2Richard- P Gray member of the North Carolina bar died today following a stroke of paralysis suffered when hearing Colonel Roosevelt speak last night Today a second stroke killed him In five minutes He was fio years old and the father of Rob ert Lilly Gray editor of the Rich magihis earlier years he was prominent I In politics but never held office HeII leaves a wife and three children j and four brothers all of whom iI have won distinctionI roitMKIl LOUISVILLE a WOMAN I HONOHEI IX LOS AXGELES 7lrs1I Los Angeles Cal Oct David Chalmers McCan prominent I society and club woman was today I appointed Civil Service Commis sioner by Mayor Alexander She Is the first woman to hold such a position In the history of the Unit States She was formerly Mrs Ild H Yenowlne and her hus was a newspaper man for many years In Louisville When you have a bad cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to cure It with as little delay as possible Here Is a druggists opinion I have sold Chamber lains Cough Remedy for fifteen years says Enos Lollar of Sarato ga Ind and consider It the best on the market For sale by all dealers adv 000000000000000003 MAIIRIAGE LICENSE 0 000000000000000DI Route 3 to Dora Stewart Hartford Route 5 B F Baize Render to Lydn Daffron Hartford Route 1 r oboooor00cO FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH C O W n Wright Pastor O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Preaching every Fourth Sunday morning and evening Bible School every Sunday at 930 a m- Communion service at 1030 am Prayer meeting every Wednesday evening at S oclock FOLEY KIDNEY PILLfOR BACKACHE B Plirys AND HAD t Subscribe for The Hartford Herald a CIGARETTES ARE 1 BAD FOR WOMEN 1 Mrs Woodrow Wilson Has IDe cided Views on Subject t- AN ERROR IN NAMES Wif of Democratic Candidate 0iyas Out Letter Taking Strong Stand on J Smoking Habit Now YorkFor tho first time slabs Woodrow Wilson became the Demo cratic presidential candidate IInsMr Wilson appeared She attended In person her husbands dally coufercdco with reporters although heretofore isshe Ims made special requests that she be not quoted nor written about In the papers What Mrs Wilson wished to havo fully understood was that If she be comes the Brut lady of the land she will nut us has been said In a widely distributed Interview have packages of cigarettes In her personal desk at the White House and Indulge In smok ing them with her caller Through Governor Wilson Mrs Wil afletter she bad written to the editor of the State Journal at Columbus 0 repudiating an alleged Interview with her In which she defended cigarette smoking for women The Interview had tome to her In a letter signed American Citizen which snM Dear Madam I can scarcely think of any greater calamity to the young worn en of the nation than to read such a preachment us your Interview offers them 1 am a workingman and 1 see men lose their jobs almost every day because they are Incapacitated for work by the use of the cigarette If smoking doss this for strong men what will It do for girl and women The intervlewrvns Indeed a cordial Indorsement of the woman smoker Ilorc run siiiiu of IIts usHiiritig phrases nil credited to Mrs Wilson A woman writer for H syndicate of Sunday newspapers naked Mrs Wood Irow Wilson If abe agreed with Ger Atbertous opinion of the smok ing of cigarettes by women She smlU ingly exhibited three cigarette boxes I piled In the cornerof her desk all bat empty Why shouldnt a woman smoke If she enjoys It she queried rightjI agree with Mrs Atherton that any ex isting prejudice against women smok ing Is to the last silly and absurd quetiU9qtmanners good fellowship Some women foal that a ctearettja calms their nerves and hell their bruins Into working order Personally smoking diffuses my thoughts Instead of concttiitnitlni them I enjoy It as 1 enjoy after dinner coffee Doth are pleasant ways of ending and finishing off both ndd to conviviality and good fellowship M The editor of the Ohio State Journal It was clear had been much Incenccd at the apologies for the cigarette habit among women attributed to Mrs Wil sop as hp wrote on Aug 10 liD edito rial In which lie called for the defeat of Governor Wilson or a repudiation from hiwlte If there was no rule take about It he wrote Mrs Wood otIWilson was certainly not less Jill After the reporters bad said they would gladly publish her letter to tho Ohio editor sbo asked for un bourji time In whatIsheDear tilrf have just received a opy of the Journal with your editorIal entitled Smoking Women and I beg leave to Inv dignantly deny the statement that I approve of women smoking cigarette The Interview uton which your editorial pas based Is a pure Invention I Intensity dis like the cigarette smoking hublt for wom enln fact no strong Is my feeling on the subject that my real danger lies In being unjust and unkind In my judgment of those who differ with me In this respect But certainly no woman In our household ever has or ever will smoke Quite apart from the bad taste of It 1 believe with you that It has an extremely Injuri ous effect on the nerves ELLEN A WILSON Mrs Woodrow Wilson Governor Wilson In approving the letter sent out by Mrs Wilson offered what ho thought might prow no ex planation for the Intervteva- IiI do not think It was mtllcioualy invented be paid There in a rather well known writer who signs herself Mrs Wilson Woodrow and she no doubt has been confused with Mrs WilsonMrs Wilson Woodrow was formerly married to a relative of Governor Wllj son and It Is understood that her views on the matter of women who smoke ate different from those held in the household of the Democratic candidate The divided Republican party la like the boy blowing against the wind There will be a lot of bluster but fit will not take votes away from Wilson and Marshall t Winning with Wilson means more I than a mere Democratic victory It means restoring real prosperity Wllaon la the boat equipped maw nominated for the presidency since Lincoln George W Perkins U sure a buffProgressive Service and Saving in theseI Stylish Printzess Coats and Suits Every Printzess Garment has the essentials of true style which give it enduring as well as endearing charms Let us show you exactly what we mean by Distinction in Dress You cannot understand the full significance of the term until you see Printzess Coats and Suits lJ When the makers of Printzess Coats and Suits guar anteed them for two seasons they Ifnew that every Printzess wearer would want to wear them a second season from choice not necessity Number 854 One of the Chester models coming in wide variety of desirable materials including Serge I Whip Cords and Diagonal Mixtures almost all colors represented Price 25 The Jacket32 iinches long has the Chester back with center slet seam and belt The mannish front has two side pockets Closing with buttons The skirt has a panel front with box pleats and a slot seam to match the Jacket Number 1926Snappy Coat of true Norfolk style has collar and cuffs of harmonizing velvet and is made from a wide assortment of desirable coatings in solid colors or fancy mixtures Price 1650 The Norfolk vogue will hold sway this fall and this is one of the desirable styles Number 669Here is the Coat of the season Trintzess Chester The Coat is fullllength with belt ed backandwide mannishatcb poolThey collar 1 convertible can be worn either openW closed andIS attractive either way Price 1650 Here are a few Samples of our Stock Try them on Today You are Welcome CAflBCNa I d Incorporated Hertford Kentuckyc 1 J f rl ttit UdIO t