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Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, November 6, 1912.
Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.): n. Wednesday, November 6, 1912. Hartford herald (Hartford, Ky.). 300dpi TIFF G4 page images Jno. P. Barrett & Co., Hartford, KY 1912 haf1912110601 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, November 6, 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. kW ii r I itIHE HARTFQJW HERALDiJ t4 t Subscription 1 Per Year inAdvance II QOB ttit Bereldof a Mi World the Nave of III fatioil LankrHg it lj But All Kinds Job Printing Neatly Executed 38tIf YEAR s HARTFORD KY WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 61912 NO 45 PROMIS S Ain IN TAX SUIT FIGHT V Ir cloy McCreary Issues aI Statement of Matter IS PLAIN THAI CORPORATION s Have Dodged He Asserts Says Cause of the People Must Be Defended PERTINENT HUIUKCT HANDLE N iCpRI McCreary has v Issued ia statement In response to the letter addressed to him and to others byF Mr Justus Goebel The Governor declares that all persons who haveII made proper IInvestigation know that the corporations In Kentuck have not been paying their Just proportion of the taxes and says thatI If the corporations which have InI t Btltuted the suits persist In their efforts the State of Kentucky and 1 1 1the causa of the taxpayers should 5ia defended In the courts by court b81l In every way well equipped and needIcdable attorneys who Instituted the aults I j The Governors statement fol owsThe letter of Mr Justus OoeI bel addressed to me and to all ad mlnlstratlve and legislative officer of the State and to all citizens of j the Commonwealth who are Inter I ested In equiJand uniform taxa lion has been published generally i In the newspapers and contains fvaljible Information and important suggestions He was present at the meetings Iofthe Board of Valuation and As sessment which occupied about liveI months and must be wellinformed on the subjects to which he refers MThe Board of Valuation and As sessment consisting of Hepry MI Bosworth State AudltorThomas S Rhea State Treasurer andC FI Crecellus Secretary of State did their work well and faithfully I All persons who have made j proper Investigation know that cor I poratlons In Kentucky have not een paying their just proportion pt the taxes and there has been unjust and burdensome taxation upon lie people as compares with what has been required to be paid by tho large corporations of our State I am opposed to discrimination and believe that taxation should be nlform and the corporations and he people assessed and taxed just ill anA fairly In my message to the ast Leg ilk Vte I recommended the pas rage of eight Important bills and all were enacted Into law except Itthe public utilities bill which gave Ijpe Governor authority to appoint 4n assessment and valuation com isslon to do what the existing I hoard of Valuation and Assessment ail done but as the members of that board had riot under former Administrations been active I had np knowledge that the existing bpard would be active untll 1 was assured by the members that they would do their duty and be Jjust and ltlr and the Public uUHUe8 billi was not passed j tieexisting Board of Valuation andvAssesBment based their 1912 assessment on evidence of the val nee placed before them at great length and Iam sure they have Presented what they believe after careful examination and conylnc Jnj proof are just and fair assess mints and of about four hundred corporations assessed only eight have protested In the courts The eight suits that have been ropght against the State may be contested through the Federal and State Courts and are of great 1m pottance to the people and the State reasury They Involve for the 6ate about four hundred thou sand dollars annually and for the county and city taxing distracts about eight hundred thousand do ars annually or a total of about one million two hundred thousand q mri t Yen the present admlnlstra lon eame into office Teas than one ear ago the Stateii indobtddnesi- N more than one million nan ThobtiifisJiedI and I regret th pIja I t A portant and powerful corporation are resisting the action of the Board of Valuation and Assessment and endeavoring to perpetuate tax atlon which their own admission show to bo unjust and unequal If the corporations which lave Instituted suits persist In their ef forts the State of Kentucky and the cause of the taxpayers shoutII be defended In the courts by coup sel In every way wellequipped andI by all the attorneys that may be needed to meet and cope with the many able attorneys who Instituted the suits itiave perfect confidence In the ability and known loyalty to the States Interests of Attorney General Garnett and his three assistants and also In the able and well equipped attorney Mr Rich who by request of the Attorney General In writing P have employed but 1 will be pleased to appoint anothe attorney or two others If theAttor ney General In writing should ask me to do so as under the law II cannot employ counsel to represent l iI the State withouthis request Subsection 5 of sections 11215 nrticfe 2 page 218 of the Ken tucky Statutes provides I The Attorney General and his Assistants shall attend to all lltl gatlon and business in or out of the State required of him or them un- derj thlsactor other existing law i or laws hereinafter enacted andI I also any litigation or I business thatl I I any State officer may have In con nection with orgrowlng out of hisI official duty and no State officer board of trustees or the head of j any department or Institution oft i the State shall have authority to employ or to be represented by any alter counsel or attorneyatlaw unless an emergency arises which In the opinion of the Attorney Gen i eral requires the employment oft other counsel In order to properly protect the Interest of the Common wealth In which event the Attor fney General shall In writing setting forth reasons for such employ mertt rque5t the Governor to em ploy such additional counsell Before sueh counsel Isl employed I his fee and compensation shall be agreed upon and fixed by writ ten contract by the Governor andI said counsell subject to the approv- all of the Attorney Genera- lIt Is therefore apparent that I cannot appoint an attorney to assistl the Attorney General in these suits I until the Attorney General In writing requests me to do so and also ogrees with me on the compensa tion the counsel employed is to re rJelve JAMES B McCREARY NO MONEY IN HANK WITH HIGH TO MKKT CHECKS Greensburg Ind Oct 31A- man I giving the name of AL Johns of Maxwell Ky came here and put up at a hotel for two or three days and then applied at the real estatet omCe of Habig C Ely for a farm He said he was in the market for a farm and Mr Habig showed him around He picked the A J Slth farm of 167 acres and wrote a check on a Maxwell Ky bank for 100 to bind the bargain He told Mr Habig that he Is afflicted with asthma and as he would have toII stop over In Louisville to consult a I specialist he needed some ready money Mr Habig accordingly cashed a check for him for 10 roth these checks have sincebeen I returned to a local bank marked no funds YOUNG DIVORCEE WEDS WITH BUm IN II Kit ARSIS Henderson Ky Nov 2 Mrs Martha Carter a mere girl aieiU9 but a divorcee was married at the court house Wednesday to R TI Waters age 4Jalso of Hehbards vllle who had also been previously Harried Truly Cupid plays queer pranksThe dlvorceebrjdo withbabe In her arms and her future hus band twice her age drove tn the city early Wednesday morning In a buggy drawn by a mule After securing a license they went to fudge Youngs office where they were united In marriage Instead of the traditional kiss a bearty handshake was the salute rlven the wife by the husband at the conclusion of the cerernonyi Mm Waters was qnly recently divorced from her farmer husband Lon Barter I 1 4 91xrwomen1werefixed for wear lp tCNarlltI jII Ji 4ria 1 pa7 their Aced I GOY HAULEY FOR 4 VICE PRESIDENT Eighteen of 24 Favor thei Missourian NO SELECTION IS TO BE 1 MADE Until Next Tuesday On Ac countof Very Unusual- Circumstances PROMINENT MEN MKNTIONE1 I New York Nov 4Elghteeni of twentyfour members of the Re publican National Committee whc hive notified Chairman C D i of their choice of a Vice Presiden list candidate to succeed the late01 James S Sherman favor Gov Had Icy of Missouri In a statement here tonlghlt Chairman Hllles declared that no selection would be made by the Na tional Committee until November 12 but helmade public the desiresi of the twentyfour committeemen who have openly stated their choice Of these asldo from the majority for Gov Hadley two fa vored John Wanamaker of Phila delphia one Secretary of War Stimson one Congressman S W McCall of Massachusetts one Jus tlce Hughes and one Gov Golds boro of Maryland The suggestion that members ol the Republican National Committee should authorize the JxecutlveI Committee or the committee to nominate a candidate for the Vice Presidency to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Mr Sherman is not feasible and there foeJia8 fIiIIt not received favorable con sideration said Mr Hilles lIt has already been made clear that it would have been a physical Impossibility for the members oft the committee to attend a eeting prior to election day there not be ing sufficient interim between the death of the Vice President andI election day for the committee to convene Proxies by wire would notl have been legal and action based on such proxies would have been II unwarrantable Innovation and would have established a dangerous II precedentA of the members of the committee to attend a meeting llcly expressed their choice for a candidate Mr Hale of Maine fa vors immediate action but has not yet Indicated his choice of a candi date While the member of the committee from the State of Idaho has not given voice to his views theRepublican State Committee oft Idaho has recommended the selec tion of Gov Herbert S Hadley ofr MissouriThe of the committee who have publicly announced their preference for Gov Hadley are Lewis of VermontBrooker of ConI nectlcutBarker of Alabama Jack Mlssls1slppl rich of Indiana Warren of Michigan Hawkins of Minnesota Neld rlnghaus of Missouri Harris of Oklahoma MacGregor of Texas Gov Hadley or Wanamaker Behn of Porto RJco Marlow oft Montana Maxson of Nevada Pex ton of Wyoming Spices of New MexicoFor W McCall Estabrook of New Hampshire For John Wanamaker Barney of New York McCulloch of Ken tuckyITo Justice Hughes Jackson of Maryland For Gov Goldsboro Martin of Virginia For Secretary Stimson McCoy of the Philippines Gov Hadley also has been rec ommended by State Chairman Herbert W Clark of New Mexico StateChairman Jesse F McDonald of Colorado State Chairman F C Williams of Vermont Congress man E W Martin of South Dako ta Congressman J W Fordney of Michigan Congressman William H Wilder of Massachusetts Con gressman E J Hujl of Connecticut I jongbt Death Found It 31ChrJstlanKlediun city flremari committed suicide toI1 day by jumping into the river near Prospect Point and going over the American falls JlI Read of Cambridge Mass was hellr thc man when he enterer the stream and tried to reach Kled hen The latter waved to Read as he went careening toward the falls and called out Goodby No reason Is known for tho sui cide Nothing has been seen of the body lJ emir SHOT nv FARMER WHILE OUT AUTO RIDING MaVsvllle Ky Nov 1Mss Mabel Dunin aged twenty of No I blesvllle Irfili a visitor at the home of Mr and Mrs George Owens here was shot last night and It Is thought fa+ al1y wounded by Best Gault a farmer of this county Miss Dunn and a party of young men and women went out In the country coon hunting in automobiles and were going across Mr Gaults places near Murphjvllle with several ne I men in the lead scaring up the 01gro Gault thinking it a Hallow- eenj party planning to destroy his property began firing at the hun jjters and ordering them from his I place At thh second shot a bullet I struck Miss Dunn In the Lack go- Ing through and ImbeddeiFltself In I her breast She was brought to this city where her wounds were dressed The ball went through a red sweater and It Is said may prove fatal j IGault gave himself up and Is overwhelmed with grief 1 Miss Dunn Is a daughter of W E Dunn president of the CitizensI National Bank of Noblesvllle Mr Dunn arrived here today a SIMPLE FUNERAL FOR I VICK PRESIDENTI ITimUtica N Y Nov 2In the presence of the President members of the cabinet Senate and House diplomats and men and women from every 4waHi of life final hon ors were paid today to James Schoolcraft Sherman Vice Presi flet ference to the wishes expressed by Sherman before his death and the i desire of the family the funeral ostentaI tlous display The public services in the First Presbyterian church Were brief and the burial In For rest Hill cemetery followed I +Appreciates The llfnilds1 Work For the Children Editors Hartford HeraldThe readiness of The Herald to serve the cause of the needy child must and will commend It to all rightly constituted men and women I heartily appreciate Its nld ever cheerfully given the West Ky Or hans Home in its work among de pendent children and beg to re mind your readers that he who helps a little child helps humanity with a distinctness and directness I I I wayIt wishes I beg to remain tII Yours very respty W D HUMPHREY Supt West Ky Orphans Home FOUR GENERATIONS IN j ONE FAMILY FOR WILSONr Glasgow Ky Nov 2DarJenII county can boast of what probably no other county In the State can and that is four generations to vote i at one time and one place The i tfour pursons are Uncle Thomps Goodman his son grandson and greatgrandson The four Good ij mans will ride together In the same vehicle to the polls Tuesday NOT vember 3 and all will cast their ballots for Wlson and MarshallI Uncle Thomps as he Is called by his friends Is past ninety years of age Is a lifelong Democrat and has been In the hotel business for over fifty years He Is favorably known to the traveling men of Ken tucky Indiana and Tennessee J No Race Suicide Here Franklin Pa Nov 4Slx child ren In a little over thirteen months Is the remarkable birth record In the family of Stephen Mageotte of Frenchtown Mrs Mageotte has borne fifteen children In twelve years and thirteen of them are liv ing On September 10 1911 she gave birth to triplets two girls and a boy and this week three sturdy boys arrived thirteen months and three weeks after the other trio Fur HaUtfFowii property vacant lute coinages and twoatpry dwelling C YEI8BR GO- adv Hartford Ky Photo p rair by American 1ress Association I WOODROW WILSON THOMAS RILEY MA- RSHALLALANDSLIDE For Wilson Marshall in the Election Yesterday Bull Moose Got Caught in the Brambles of Sleeping Democratic Vote Ohio County Democratic by from 500 to 600 Great Majorities for Democrats Everywherett Wilson Carries Enough States in Union to Make His Election- Overwhelming Everything points to a sweeping victory for the Democrats through out the country yesterday The Bull Moose seems to have been caught In the brambles of a Demo reratlc landslide and his destination at present Is uncertain President Taft made a poor race and al though backed by the powerful ma chinery of the Government he fall ieel to make n showing commensu rate with his prestige anil the lim itless backing which seems to have been at Ids command There Is cheer and comfort for Democrats from almost every election report received It was aday when the people came limo their own and the dawn of freedom from trust domination and control Is at last breaking The vote cast through out the country as a whole was rather light but people Interested in good government were at the polls In force and manifested their sovereignty by the emphatic man ner in which they exercised their suffrage It Is a victory of which every true American should be proudIn Ohio county the Democrats won a sweeping victory the vote standing as follows with two pre cincts to hear from Wilson 2309 Roosevelt 1792 Taft i 1033 Debs 1 312 i 20Prohibition i Socialist Labor i i i 28f Johnson f23101Tbp- mPeon jf ri ttiL M 1030- Bassett 1790 i L5 In Grayou county the vote stood Wilson 1C7S Taft lOGC- IlooseeH 113T Johnson lCSO Thompson IOft Das ott l14ri This gave Wilson a plurality In irayson county of 453 Hiuuock county b as follows Wllfon 742 Taft i 2T2- RoofeveU CG3 Muhlenberg county votes thus Wilson 2079 Taft 1029 Roosevelt 1GGO Butler county as follows Wilson 859 Taft 1078 Roosevelt 978 At 10 ocock Wilson had 267 electoral votes conceded Taft 28 Roosevelt 29 Necessary to elect 266In New York Wilson gets a ma v jority of 150000 and Indiana gives the New Jersy Governor a majority of 90000 Maine Is Democratic but the majority is Kentucky Is uncertaintt 000 and ten out of eleven Congressmen are elected Powers Is defeated by the Progressive candle 0 date In the Eleventh District The a city of Louisville Is 500 to 6110 for tfedDaviess county gives Nllsoiir 4 640 Roosevelt i862 Taft b tFourth r Den Jbhheon cerrfeethe District by over bdOO plurality He again carried overt county In tho District i fS S 41 e Y C 1 H4 7 rvrp 1i1 PAGE T510THEHARTFORDr HERALD1YEDNESDAY NOV 0 101 J f f MRS CLEVELAN- Ot t GOING TO WED A Professor of Archaeology i In April THOMAS PRESTON IS THE MAN Wife of Former Presides r Will Wed Distinguish ed Personage t FBOTh NEARLY TUB SAME AGE New York Oct 31Mrs Grove Cleveland widow of the forme President of the United States Is to be married next April to Pro Thomas Preston an honorary professor at Princeton University and now occupying the chair of archae ology at Wells College Aurora N Y the Institution attended by Mn Cleveland then Frances Folsom Mrs Cleveland was born July 21 1864 and therefore Is 48 years old Although formal announcement has not been made and probablY will not be made until after the debut of Miss Esther Cleveland this winter the fact of the engagemen has been known for several day among the Intimate friends of Mrs Cleveland and Prof Preston Thesecond romance of the wo man who as the bride of the White House charmed a nation and whose high character and devo tlon to her distinguished husband have been by example a national Influence toward high Ideals oC wifehood Is the outcome of an acquaintanceship of little more than a years duration Mrs Cleveland Is a graduate oC f Wells College and has been a Trus tee of that Institution since 1887 Her wedding to Grover Cleveland which took place In the executive t Imansion during his flst adminis tratlon was one of the notable events In the history of the White House Her father Oscar Folsom was a law partner of Mr Cleveland who upon Mr Folsoms death Ir 1873 became Frances Folsom guardianAfter his retirement from the residency Mr Cleveland made his permanent home In Princeton and Mrs Cleveland has continued to re side there since the former Presl dent died in 1908 Her two daugh ters Esther and Marlon and her son Richard Fare living with her hereThe announcement of the engagement was made here by Pres Ident Greer HIbben of Princeton University who said Prof Preston Is 50 years old He is a graduate of Princeton and one whom we hold In very high es teem As a young man he began his university studies at Columbia which however were Interrupted on account of Illness At that time lie gave up the Idea of completing his education and went Into busi ness In which he made a very rap id and notable success establishing him at the head ofa very prosper ous manufacturing company In Newark N J After securing a substantial for tune and feeling keenly that con tinued business success could not compensate for his abandoned college career he determined to at taut a long desled end which his earlier years had dented him Al though nearing the age of 40 ho nevertheless closed his active bus iness career and went abroad to study for two years at the Sorbonne Paris- Returning to America ho came to Princeton for two more years of additional study On account of the wide range and unusual excel lence of his work both In under graduate and graduate studies he took at the same commencement not only the degree of Lilt H but the degree of M A as wella very unique attainment He was also elected at that time to the Prince ton chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa SocietyProf Preston was exceedingly popular and made many friends while at Princeton lie was subse quently appointed Fellow of the American School of Classical Study at Rome and later won in a competition open to all universities of the United States the Fellowship of the Archaeological Institute ofI America After pursuing his stud ies abroad he returned to Prince ton and took his degree of Doctor of Philosophy He was then called to his present professorship at Wells College k ONE FOUNDER LEFT OF NOTED BAPTIST CHURCH oc1Rockport Ky Oct 30on tober 24 Mrs Margaret Wilcox dJ x at the home of her daughter Mr qt 1L HOME SWEET HOME I We foster it and you get the benefit What do we get out of it i YOUR ADVERTISING YOUR JOB PRINTING See the Point Let us give you estimates J G Williams of diseases Incident to old age She was 82 years old She was one of the constituent members of West Providence Bap- tistI Church which was organized IIn- 1853 The only one other survivor Iia Sirs Mabala Rowe Palo Pinto Texas She was n member of the Baptist Church here at the time of her death and was laid away here beside her husband the late D J Wilcox who preceded her mor than a year ago Funeral service were conducted by Elder B F Jenkins of Owensboror Three sons and two daughters survive her MOTHERS TEARFUL 1LEA FOR HER DAUGHTER FAIL Chicago Oct 31A mother tearful plea for her daughter Jost through misfortune failed to overcome the love the girl had develop ed for a kind foster mother who the two forces were matched In the I County Court here today and Mrs Lena W Mappln went back home toI Hot Springs Ark disappointed and I brokenheartedMrs Mildner who has reared little Anna daughter of Mrs Mappln by n former marriage since the child was forced from Its mother through the latters adversity retained the custody of the girl In a legal fight Judge Owens left the decision with the child- I dont know my real mamma said the girl Mrs Mildner is so good to me I want her as a mam ma The Court allowed the decision to stand In damp chilly weather there IIs always a large demand for BAL LARDS SNOW LINIMENT because many people who know by expe rience Its great relieving power InI rheumatic aches and pains prepare to apply It at the first twinge Price 25c 50c and 100 per bottle Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ky 44t2 iNot DIstrliiiliintlnK The old negro mammy had purchased lavishly of the things which delight the feminine mind and was on the point of departing from the store when her young son who had accompanied her asked Aln yo gwlne tor buy no plates an foks mammy The old mammy with arms ak Imbo looked scornfully down upon her offspring as she replied George Washnton Drown IhtInk t know how comes you wants t put on so much agony Ih low we all kin eat outen de pot with our lingers for a while ylt In severe cases of sore lungs you need an Internal and external rem edy Buying the dollar size BAL LARDS HOREHOUND SYRUP you get two remedies for the price of one With every dollar bottle there Is a free HERRICKS RED PEPPER POROUS PLASTER for the chest Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hartford Ky Donovan Co Bea ver Dam Ky 44t2 HlblcH of the Nation Among the nations of the world the seven famous bibles are The I theITrlpltakaofof the Chinese the Three Vedas of I the Hindoos and the Zendavesta of the Persians Doctors Endorse If we did not believe doctors endorsed Ayer Cherry Pectoral for coughi and colds we would not offer It to you Sold for 70 years Ask Your Doctor fcS flfizI THE VIEWS OF VICTOR BERGER On Socialism Why Hi Believes In It THE COLLECTIVE OWNERSHIP Of Ml Social Means of Pro duction and Distribu tion the Plan SOCIALISM IN A NUTSHEL In the November American Magazine appears an article entitle The Progressives Dilemma In It the fact is brought out that all the candidates this fall are making- a bid for the progressive vote Au thorized statements appear from leading progressives who give their reasons for voting as they Intend to Jane Addams and Herber Croly write In behalf of Roosevelt Herbert Quick tells why he Is go Ing to vote for Wilson Senator Charles E Townsend of Michigan explains his preference for Taft Victor L Berger the first Soclalls who ever sat In Congress tells why he Is for Debs Following Is an ex tract from his article Why am I going to vote Cor Debs As good a map as Eugene V Debs Is I am not going to vote for him In the sense one Is voting for Wilson Taft or Roosevelt simply vote the tlcK t of the So clallst party J have no hope tha the Socialist party will elect Its candidate for President In this election With us the Soclallst movement and its principles are para mountnot the candidate The Socialist party stands fo the collective ownership of all the social means of production and distribution In the Interest of the whole people Socialists say that this step IIs the necessary and natural outcome of the concentration of wealth and of the development of capitalism Antagonists of Socialism In the past claimed that collective owner ship of an Industry was Impossible because the personal supervision and control of the owner was abac lutely necessary to the success of any enterprise Today we see that the greates undertakings arc those In which the stockholders and owners have noth Ing to do with the management of affairs and are only drawing diva dendsIn all our large Industrial con cerns stock companies railroads and trustsbusiness Ig manager and carried on by a few paid offl clals Those men might just as well be paid by the State or the na tion as the case may be to carry on the enterprise In the interest of the people as paid by a few weal thy men to carry It on for their In dividual profit- Moreover we find that when ever the nation State or community has undertaken to own and man age any large Industry railroad mine factory telegraph telephone mill or canal etc this Invariably redounded to the benefit of the commonwealththe Inherent weak ness of our political spoils system notwlthlltandlng This Idea carried out graduallY and logically involves a complete change of our economic and political systemPolitical equality under the present system Is a snare and delu sion The wage worker who depends upon a master or upon the master class for nn opportunity to make a living Is not on terms ol equality with his master Political liberty and economic despotism are Incompatible The Socialist party proposes to supplement our political democracy- by Industrial democracy No one dreams of abolishing private property On the contrary- we propose to secure private property to every citizen to the many nllllon men and women who under the present system have no chance of ever having any Productive capital only Is to be owned Ih com mon by the nation the State or the municipality as the exigencies of the case may require Business will be carried on for use and not for profit This is the case now In the lostoffice water works public school etc wherever owned and managed by the people Such Is the aim of the Socialist party DISPUTE FOR THE MOST SACRED SPOT ON EARTH The one spot which more than any other tae controlled the hls tory of Europe lies strangely enough not In Europe itself but In Ala For the poeeeNlonof the t When the bone acho and the Joint are tnflamed with aeat toovercomorpenetrating at the affected parts you need a powerful 1 the attack BALLARDS SNOW LINIMENTII 1 IS A PAIN RELIEF OF GREAT EFFICACY to the afflicted It easereliefof Its wonderful penetrating power afford a moat gratifying sense strength and comfort In the pain quickly subdues all inflammatory conditions and rapidlY restores Rub It In well gently but aching joints It Is equally effective In relleg neuralgia and sciatica It reaches tho nerveS at the thoroughly Its beating and IItrengthenlnlt In a- controle uence Is manltestas lIoon restores aB normal condition L disorder andseat of the disturbance few applications the hundred and ono accidents that 1 As n household remedy for curing cuts wounds burns sores or the are always occurring to tho mesh it has no superior Put Up in Three Sizes 25c 50c and 100 per Bottle ST LOOTS MO JAMES F HALLAUD rnorniEToft In the ETetiSmrtln SensationFor Sore Eyes Granulated Lid IUdne1 of the Eyeball Weak Sight Use Stephens Eye Salve It U a remedy of proven merit OLD Awn ItCOMMICNDEOll HARTFORD DRUG CO HARTFORD KY DONOVAN CO HEAVER DAM KY site where Christ suffered was burled and rose again more blood hasbeen shed than for any other An Immense number of lives were laid down during the Crusades andI for 600 years before the Crusades and even to the present time 1a constant stream of pilgrims has poured Into Jerusalem to worship at the spot made sacred by crucifixion of Christ theI From the fourth century after Christ until fifty years ago this site was generally conceded to be with In the Church of the Holy Sepul cher Now two sites dispute the claim of being the actual Golgotha The latter claimant Is known I1S Gordons Calvary though to an American Dr Harlan P Beech of Yale University Is due the uctua discovery of It Gen Gordon the hero of Khartoum having first se cured for It general recognition I The Christian Herald soi HERES THE RIGHT KIND OF RAILROAD PRESIDED Col L J Irwin President and General Manager of the Henderson Route was here Friday on an In spection tour He said he found things looking good here and hi wanted them to look better Col Irwin takes great pride In his road He looks after every little detail from the laying of a tie to the building of an engine and he knows when the work Is being done right He Is striving to make the Henderson Route one of the best roads in the country and he will do it He not only looks after the In terests of his road but Its patrons and the farmers along his line Hi wants to see them prosper and hi is helping them in more ways than one He says his road cant pros per unless the farmers and busi ness men prosper and he Is willing to help them He says what Is needed In Breckenridge county is better country roads and more up todate methods of farming Breckenridge News Random Shots Few people are killed by the ac cidental discharge of duty We admire a man with lots o- fPushbut not when he pushes us Man is like a race horsGthe faster his gait the lower his record Economy is the road to wealth but most of us are looking for short cuts for Hartford Herald THOROUGH WORK How Hartford Citizens Can Find Freedom From Kidney Troubles If you suffer from backache From urinary disorders Any curable disease of the kid neys Use a tested kidney remedy Doans Kidney Pills have been tested by thousands Grateful people testify Can you ask more convincing proof of merit W M Young farmer R F D 3 Hawesville Cloverport Ky says A member of my family used a box of Doans Kidney Pills about three years ago and found them very beneficial She had pains In side and across the small of her back Seeing Doans Kidney Pills so highly recommended In the lo cal papers she got a supply at Gib sons drug store and began using as directed In a short time she was cured and has not had any further need of a kidney remedy For sale by all dealers Price 60 cents FosterMllburn Co Buffalo flew Fork sole agents for the Untied states- Remember the name Doana lad take no other DONTDontI Dont refuse to advertise II- Dont patronize mail order houses I Dont fail to give us your orders for all kinds of job printing II- Oont forget to stand by your nom paperi and it will stand by youIl I nooooooooooooooO WHAT IS BEER C- ooooooooooooooo What Is beer asks the De partment of Agriculture Sometimes It Is the contents the Prohibitionists malt ofII bottleIt Is something the English and Germans say we never get In this countrySomething I very young men order when they kid themselves into belief that they are going to the dogsSomething older men order when they kid themselves Into the be lief that they havewell practlca ally you knowcut out alcoholic beveragesSomething your friend Jones Is drinking altogether too much of you never take n glass but what you see him drinking one also Something you swear youd give 10 a bottle for when you think you cant get Itand then you kick when youre charged a quarter for onePositively not the thing that is making you fat shortening your breath softening the muscles of your legs bursting out those small veins In your cheeks giving you palpation of the heart and affecting your circulation You always had a tendency toward that sort of thing anyhow Something you take just before you go home so that you can reply truthfully to your wifes Inquiring gaze Well yes I did have a glass of beer It cant be whats the matter with your liver can ItNewY- ork Sun There is more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together and until the last few years it was supposed to be incurable For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local diseases and prescribed local remedies and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment pronounced it Incurable Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treat ment Halls Catarrh Cure manufactured by F J Cheney Co Toledo Ohio Is tbe only constitution al cure on the market It is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to c teaspoonful It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure Send for circulars and testimo nialsAddrcssF J Cheney Co To ledo Ohio Sold by Druggists 7Bc Take Halls Family PIUs for constipation CASTOR I AFor Infants and Children Til KM Yit Han Always tight Bears the- SfgaatBn Sip f Zof M 7 7 u5Ua j Sacrtlle fur The Hartford Herald v1 y 156 PAPERS A YEAR FREEI fMarvelous Offer Made By Atlanta Tri Weekly Constitution BIG COMBINATION OFFER The TrlWeokly Constitution Is almost a dally paper It contains all the news of the world worth know Ing pictures of people places and events mentioned In the news as wellas cartoons and funny pic Jtures fiction stories written by the I best story writers of America de partments of particular Interest to farmers women and children Jn short It is the most wonderful pa per in the entire United States at Its price 100 a year The publishers are preparing to spend thousands of dollars during the coming year In new features for the amusement Instruction and en tertainment of TrlWeekly Const tutlon readers and to Introduce this great paper to persons whoI I have never read It they offer to give a years subscription 156 pa persfree of charge to each personff who sends in a club of five yearly subscribers with 500 The subscription price of the Tri Weekly Constitution Is only 100 per year and with each subscrip tion goes a choice of one from a splendid list of handsome prem iums many of which you could not buy at retail for less than a dollar each Write today and send names of six of your neighbors for a sam i pie copy of the TrlWeekly Consti tution and ask for our list of premiums and clubbing offers A post card will be enough Address TRIWEEKLY CONSTITUTION Atlanta Ga The TrlWeekly Constitution and The Hartford Herald both one year four papers a week for only 176 This includes any one of the splendid premiums as for In stance pair of 8Inch Shears Boys Barlow Knife Vest Pocket New Testament Library Wall Chart f a Handy Package containing 291 use ful articles c Send your subscriptions to the Hartford Herald Thrice a Week Edition New York World Practically a Dally at the Price of a Weekly No other Newspaper in the World Gives so Much at so Low a Price The great Presidential plmpalgnrr1 will soon begin and you will want the news accurately and promptly The World long since established a record for Impartiality and any body can afford Its ThrleeaWeek edition which comes every other day in the week except Sunday It will beoC particular value to youInow The ThriceaWeek World also abounds in other strong feat uresserial stories humor mar kets cartoons In fact everything that Is to be found In a firstclass dally The ThrlceaWeolc Worlds reg ular subscription price Is only 1 fpersfdP newspaper and THE HARTFORD P HERALD both together for ono year for only 105 The regular subscription price of 7 the two papers Is 200 Send The Herald theNJws wale pprtcateit y rTiJ i he I no WEDNESDAY c Not 6 1012 THE HARTFORD HERALDTuEE tjf f JERUSALEM IS- GROWING FAST Population Increased from iOOOO to 90000 IN THE PAST THIRTY YEARS Plans to Establish Suburban Colonies Are Meeting With Success LANK TIIKKK IS SKLMXO illtil Jerusalem Is growing Tapldly and several movements are on foot In addition to those begun by Nathan Strauss the philanthropist of this city and others for the amelioration of the living condi tions of the Jews there According to Q report made to the Department of Commerce antl Labor the population of Jerusalem particularly the Jewish part BOB I growrf remarkably and chiefly Iin the last 30 years increasing in tfiat period from 10000 to not less Ulan l 50000 out of a total population o between 80000 and 100000 The Jewish quarter within the walled city continues the report has long been crowded and theI new arrivals frum Russia and Gall cla Bokhara and Yemen Persia and Morocco spread over the out skirts of the city mainly to suburbs I to the northwest oft the Jaffa road Sir Moses Mpnteflore the Anglo Jewish philanthropist of thv nine teenth century did much for the amelioration Ml the housing condi dons of the Jewish population of Jerusalem 1n his honor a testi monial fund of about 50000 wasI collected In Engand which hasI been employed in continuation of the work he Inaugurated The mono Is used to make advances to local building societies nI condition oT the members of theI societies finding part Of tho cost and submitting their building plans for approval to representatives of the committee Tile advances areI repayable Without Interest In 10 years from completion of theI scheme and the money is thenI again advanced for a fresh enter prise In this way five suburbanI colonies have been erected each containing CO to 70 houses In the newest ol them the minimumS amount spent on each dw 1000 The construction through out Is neat and substantial though owing to the remarkable tine In the price of Innti near the city the site on which the colony is built cost four times as much per square yardI as that of the other settlements More space has been allowed for the roads and trees have been planted along them Other religious denominationsI have erectea immense buildings around Jerusalem such as theI Orthodox Greek convents on the Jaffa road anti the Mount ot Olives the Roman Catholic orphanage andI the German Protestant Institutions by the Damnscus Gate and on th northern heights But they have not done anything considerable for the Improvement of housing cor th agood laying out of suburbs Th result is that between the Abund ance of great stone churches and Institutes there are rows of wretch ed slums A few wealthy Bokhara Jews have built fine mansions bu l there are few rich members among Jerusalem and low who can affor i to build for themselves a houseThe project has therefore been mooted In England of forming n small garden suburb outside Jeru salem In which the houses could Ire let to the better class artisans who can afford to pay u rent of 40 to 50a year The idea of garden suburbs has achieved striking pop ularity in England and Germany if and it is recognized as offering the best solution for the Housing prob lem of the large Industrial cities of our time and at the same time as fostering the love of the land and of nature which the modern concen tration of the population in towns has threatened At some little dis tance from Jerusalem land can still be purchased fairly cheaply and it is calculated that R substantial lit tle house with half an acre could be provided for about 1000 The garden space could be planted with figs and olives and garden produce for which there Is a ready market In the city and thus the tenant would be able to make a little In hairAyerGladto know ohave r1tt Tell your Head feUtotfl halt1edeWY l Ask Your Datfetal Goea ATTRACT ATTENTION SO DOES AN AD IN THIS PAPER I And an ad ATTRACT- BUSINESS I Let Us Boom Your Trade lcome by the care of his land The accordingIto a plan which would preserve the tlltsupervision of the dwellings and commof1 buildings would be in the hands of a local committee Communication with the city would be established by a diligence or bus unless the tramway concession of which so much has been heard materializes In which case the line might be brought out to the suburbNewY- ork Times o r I otto lllcos New Wonder From tar away Porto Rico comes reports of a wonderful new discov err thai is believed will vastly belt ctlt the people Ramon T Mar chan of Barceloneta writes Dr Kings New Discovery Is dohs splendid work here It cured me about five times of terrible coughs and colds also my brother of a se vere cold In his chest and more than 20 others who used it on my advice We hope this great mail cine win yet be sold In every drug store In Porto Rico For throat and lung troubles it has no equal A trial will convince you of Its merits 50c and 100 Trial bot tie free Guaranteed by James H Williams m To Our Correspondents We print alist of subjects below which will be of much assistance ta correspondents In writing for The Herald Always send us accounts of deaths births marriages real estate Seals live stock sales con flagrations accidents condition of crops unusual weather conditions visiting abroad not neighborhood visits Tsoclal meetings lodge meet Ings church news school news condition of roads family reunI- ons short accounts curiosities relics robberies murders some thing good about people anything of general interest Also please send all accounts of deaths and marriages in as soon as possible and do not wait till you send 1 in your regular letter Mail your let ters so they will reach us on Mon tfeOnly II Fire Hero witah 1 round box Fellows he shout ed this bucklens Arnica Salve I hold has everything beat for burns Right Also for bolls ul cutts sprains braises Surest pile cure paindIVIIt liams m Punctuation Murks Returning from school the other afternoon a little girl informed her mother that she had learned how to puncshateWell dear tsaid her mother and how is It done Why when you write Hark you put a hatpin after it and when you ask a qtietlon you put a buttonhook November Lippln COltsIrheumatismTwinges of back ache stiff joints and shooting painsI all show your kidneys are not work Ing right Urinary irregularities loss of sleep nervousness weak hack and sore kidneys tell the need of a good reliable kidney medicine Foley Kidney Pills are tonic strengthening and restorative They build up tho kidneys and regulate their action They will give you quick relief and contain no habit forming drugs Safe and always sure Try them All dealers m Fashion Note This fashion journal says that there wI1Jbo no change IIn coats this winter said Mrs Nagg And something tells me that pantosnappedyeyed bla frayed trousers VICE PRESIDENT SHERMAN DIES Members of Family Wit ness Final Scene COMMITTEE MEETING CALLED T6 Take Action In Filling VacancyNo Inconve nience to Voters IMtOMlNKNT MEN MKXTIOXKD Utlca N YOct 30Afer along illness Vice President James Schoolcraft Sherman died at h1 oclockStonight of uremic poison caused by Hrlghts disease He had been sinking since early morning and It was realized that death was a question of only a few hours There was slight relief shortly after 7 oclock caused by an apparent Improvement In the condl tion of the kidneys but it rId not prove Teal or lasting and at best gaveonly temporary hope 1At 9 oVlock the patients temp erature rose to IOC From that time life condition rapidly passed from bail to worse until the end Mr Sherman Was unconscious when the end came and had been In that conclltiou for hours Soon after Mr Shermans deathI Dr Fuette H Peck the attending physician Issued the following statement The Vice President tiled at 942 p m without regaining consciousness for n moment He was per presg ence of his wife her brother ant1 slstw his two brothers and his three sons and their wives He hay been entirely unconscious slnc3 7 oclock when ho hud a period of partial consciousness lasting foi about fifteen minutes He riled In a uremic moma as a result of Brlghts disease heart dlseaso an arterlo sclerosis ells Committee Meeting New York Oct 31 Chairman Ullles of the Republican National Committee shortly before 1 oclock this morning announced that he hail called a meeting of the Nation al Committee for November 12 In Chicago to select a successor to the late James S Sherman as the Re irablican candidate for Vice Presi dent 3Ir Hllles made the followin announcement The national convention met In Chicago In June delegated to the National Committee power to fill vacancies on the national tick et The death of Mr Sherman candidate of the Republican party for Vice President makes It Incumbent upon the National Committee to nominate a candidate in hl place The nomination however cannot possibly be made prior to the election next Tuesday Such a nomination can properly be made only after due and reasonable no tice to all the members of the committee and such notice cannot be given In less than six days It therefore manifestly impossible to hoh1suchn meeting prior to the election Meantime no difficulty or Inconvenience arises to the vot ers at the election next Tuesday because toe votes to be cast then are for electors and not for candi dates for either President or Vice President snit the death of Mr Sherman therefore does not afrec- the validity of the election of the electors I have called a meeting of the National Oommlttee to meet upon the twelfth flay of November In the city of Chicago at the AnUltorlum Hotel at 12 ticlock noon to select a successor to the late James S Sher man as candidate of the Republican party for Vice President of the United States- Already there has been discus sion of the availability ot Gov Hadley Gov Ceneen Senator Bor ah Senator Cummins Senator La Follette former Vice Presidentl Fairbanks Senator Root Senator Burton Senator Lodge Gov G013 borough and othe- rsChUdrore Cry FOR FLETC- HEftSCASTOPIAI A FUtlU RENTED FOR FIVEEARS FOR 25000 There are persons in cities many of themwho regard a farm as a place to go when you have money enough to spend in good living and when you can afford to own property a1 an annual loss But here In Franklin county a farm of 742 acres lleaded the other day for five years for 126000 Think of It r io YOU MUST SOW Before You Can Reap 9You might as well try to make farming pay without sowing seed as try to make a mercan tile business pay without adver Using In Your Home Paper An annual rental of 5000 for a farm of 742 acres to be used for farming purposes The lessees must get that much out of It before they make a cent for themselves Few kinds of Investments arc as solid as investments in fertile farming Innd And at such rentals the Todd place Is paying about as handsome returns us any kind of Investment yet promising returns to the ren tersFranklin Journal Is your husband cross An IrrI table fault finding disposition IIs often due to a disordered stomach A man with good digestion Is near ly JilwnyH good natured A great many have been permanently cured of stomach trouble by taking Cham berlains Tablets For sale by all duulers m A Society Game 1lino did the poker game tom out at your girls house- II was nearly killed 1 held four ices while the old man held n pallr df nines He won thatdHe had them on hisfeet Dan J Joyce Sanville Henry county Virginia says 1 took 11 cold with n cough which hung on for two years Then I commenced l using Foleys Honey Tar Com pound and the cough finally left me and now I am perfectly strong and well Is best and safest Cor children and contains no opiates All dealers n thingsgbut at the same time the bigger 1the fish the less necessity there la for lying about It SYMPTOMS OF CONSUMPTION Yield to VinolJ sThe medical profession do not bo lieve that consumption is inherited but a person may inherit a weakness or tendency to that disease A prominent citizen of Evansville Ind writes I was 111 for five months with pulmonary trouble and had the best of doctors I had hemorr waysThrough tho advice of a friend I tried Vlnol and I feel that It saved my life It Is all you recommend it to be I believe it Is the greatest med cine on earth I have advised others to try Vlnol and they have had the same results Noon furnished on request Vlnol soothes and heals the inflamed surfaces and allays the cough Vinol thetdigestive organs and gives thepntlent strength to throw off Incipient pulmonary diseases Try n bottle ot Vlnol with the un derstanding that your money Will bo returned if it does not help you For Jitlo by James II AVIliluin DniK ist Hartford Ky IIMONEy1 IThiWe tell JOIIhow and paybest market deaterlretabllshednthan agents or commission merchants References any bank In Louisville Write or weekly price list M SABEL d SONS 2274131 433 ESarkit SL lOUISWIE IT Dealers In FURS HIDES WOOL 99000 TO 10000 A MONTH For your spare timeExperience not need ed Want an active man In this locality To Introduce ua to yourfrUnda We pay largest caah benefits when sick Injured and at death for smallest coat FreeIn uranoe and Cash Donua offer to first ap plicant from this place Write quick for particular THE ILU 835 Covintfton Ky roLEYKlDmpuis fOB BACKACHE KIDNEYS AND BLADDER 11 tI r A j1 H 1t Couldnt Walk i I used to be troubled with a weakness peculiar to I women writes Mrs Anna Jones of Kenny IIIIIFor i nearly a year I could not walk without holding my sidesff I tried several different doctors but I grew worse Finally our druggist advised Cardui for my complaint I was so thin my weight was 115 Now I weigh 163 and I am never sick I ride horseback as good as ever 1 am in f fine health at 52 years lieARDU TAKE I We have thousands of such letters and more are arriving daily Such earnest testimony from those who have tried it surely proves the great value of this vegeta ble tonic medicine for women Cardui relieves womens sufferings and builds weak women up to health and strength If you are a woman give it a trial It should help you for it has helped a mil lion others It made from pure harmless herb ingredi l7 1 I Write to Ladies Advisory Dept Chattanooga Medicine Co Chattanooga Tcnrt for Special Instructions and Wpaje book Home Treatment for Women sent free J 58 N f jI K V V IAMI PREPAREDTo do nny kind of Veterinary Work Horses Mules mill Cows need nut die for want of attention Coils answered tiny orn IshtI i V H RILEYVETERINARY SURGEON Hartford Kentucky + + + + + 01 + + + + + + rao ro- E Albert Oiler + 1 FOR + Carpenter and Repair Work + + TIN WORK and FUECAPS 1 + Pump anti Furniture Repairing 4 4 Soldering and Saw Filing Bug + gv Tops Covered and Lined A+ Youll ndlhim in the Dr John + Mitchell office on Main Street Beaver Dam Ky t r + + + + + 01 + + + + + + + HAVE A ROUGH RIVER- TELEPHONE PLACED IN YOUR RESI IJENCE OR PLACE OF BCS 1NESS AND PUT YOURSELF IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH TH- ELong Distance Lines TO ALL STATES FOR TilE COMPANYS SPECIAL CONTRACT TO THE FARMERS CALL ON OR ADDRES- SJ W OBANONLocal ManagerHartford K W C SEXTON Local Manager Incorporated Beaver Dam Ky FOLEY KIDNEY PELSFOR RHEUMATISM KIDNEYS AND BLADDER NoticeIf you want clothes of any kloc cleaned call on the Hartford Pressing Club We can clean any kind of clothes you have and guarantee that they will be satisfactoryif- not nothing will be charged We are ready to clean your clothes for spring We also have a new line of late sam pIes and we guarantee a perfect fit Call on us when in meed of work in our line Hartford Pressing Club Y M C A Bldg FRED NALL Mgr 44 + + 4 + + 4dr444 + + t4 1- I NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS 4 In ordering the address of oft your paper changed from one 4 4 place to another It Is absolutely + tt necessary to state where you 4 t have been receiving the paper as 4 t well as where you want it chang 4 4 ed to Please bear this in mind 4 4 1 444t44444444444Y1 FOIEY RIDMYKI1STO- R RHEUMATISM MONEYS AND BLADDER rt ytixa h IWORlans6 I is organsIt 4 PrtllMMlnrlI T7ardM BARNES SMITH Attorneys At Law HARTFORD KENTUCKY iwlthilii for tlm cfiivnil pnutlee of IHU ix rrpt flIIIIIa1I anil illvoiiM rnr M r Mill til liflnir Cfiiinly Alloriiiy l iirvvnitril from willIudltldunllyIn Iliulforil Sic puIii It u liullilliiK putt lord Ky J M PORTER Attorney at Law BEAVER DAM KY Will practice bin prolrmlon lu Ohio and td olnlnc counties Special intention Ktveatot builnoi entrusted to hit cure FRANK L FELIX Attorney at Law HAETFORD ZY Will practice his profession In Ohio and ad alnlng counties and In the Court of Appeals Criminal practice and Collections a specialty Office In the Herald building Otto C lHartin Attorney at Law HAltTlOKI JilIOlllce up stalls over Wilson 8 Crowe opposite court house Will practice his profession in nil theI courts of this and adjoining coun ties and Court of Appeals Commer dill and criminal practice u spec I laity PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Cleanin and bMotifiei the hair IromoUf a laxurunt groin earIIatrlrvrnt hair railinc- Vwv unit Mitt Urnnrlitii ESTABLISHED 1858 K its a ring c diamond a watch jewelry or allter ware you can get HI the but quality at rthe lowest prices from the t ostOLDEST MAIL i ORDER HOUSE IIN THE SOUTH Por a half a century we have served ex cluilvely the Southern trade Write today tor our tree illustrated catalogue Address JJ- G P Barnes Co pox 2 6 Louisville Ky Every Axtlclo Guaranteed i Gillespief Bros I W H J F GIllESPIE P ROPRIETORS BUCKSMITHING And Repairw la t HorseshoeingA wy HARTFORD K- Y03tSubscribe for The Herald q tt- o 1 crt WEDNESDAY JfOS Jtf PAGE FOrIL TIE HARTFORD HERALD J The Hartjord Heraldl1 HEBEE JftATTHEWS FRA K LFEUI EOITORC fR4NK L FEUX Pskaid Prn Entered at the Hartford poe omce to mall matter of the second claw Good morning How does the F election news teJt you anyhow They are having Iulte a critical tine over U Turkey Jut cow J irbtefe rewinds us that the turkey here ta this country are searing aII crick Ila their exbteJlCe j nrOi Is lots of trutb aK a lit tit Ml of poetry to the following The thoBtand tines that you were right wont pain you any song bat theyll reaiemfcer day and sight the owe time you were wrong t Indteatioaf sow point to a war rae for U s Senator ia this State stnsi year The new Kl1l1twckr Pri nary Uw Eowerer will govern ibet scatter add this will probably deprive It of tie odium of former j yaara j I Oes l S Gnats picture willI V atoni the new time of tralbou realansy want u ae a llkesets of the aener i al better bunt up sa old picture as thoffc aw ones will hardly be plemtlfttl beroibocu The mayors of several cities bne taM d docreea knocking out tax days aid oth rs will probably fol low oath this custom tg abolished It stay sees hard on some cherchec HWlettet and other orgaalzatioai that adopt this meaas to collect aMHiay but the great public will ban tilLs movement with dellshlJj Tbe tjj fad bat gotten to be a aBUaati ag no one eacapos j tttta ine Mknt botheration who lromII visits a city wber It is in porK ne Haw v111 Clarion gives anj aeeonnt of tta first silo ever con urvcted In Hancock county IIf there to ole in Ohio county we have sot beard of it Tb y are a splen j dd convenience almost a neced i q for any large farm and will pay for the cost of construction In the iysonst of green forage saved In a Tw yearn These are times henII l the farm increases bU chances for order to succeed and every new atillty aad convenience added to the farm iacreases the chances for 1 breeetn Sensational evangelism Is being denounced at almost every rellg lour gathering nowadays It Is a good move in the right direction There IIII nothing about religion toI call for questionable methods for its propagation True religion and undefiled vaunts not Itself nor doesi It seek to arouse curiosity and ex dtement among people In order to properly establish itself When ou Saviour performed a wonderful cure He generally told the healed party to go and tell no one His followers should be like Him In simple appeal There been w autumns beautlIrulI the present one liasklng in the glint of a fast approaching winters sun shine the woods are resplendent in their colors of red and brown and geld and the haze gf a dying Ins uMaril summer lends its enchanting II spell to the beautiful scene The leaves are fast releasing their hold on the mother branch and their wealth of foliage glory will soon sink into old earth to give suste nance to a new generation of like kind which will come when the dreary winter IB past and the birds announce the arrival of spring I lNCOMK TAX KATIFIKI- HV THIHTVTWO SfT Washington Nov 4 Thirtytwo States have notified Secretary Knox of their ratification of the proposed Income tax amendment to the Fed eral Constitution and four have notified the State Department o their rejection To become effec tine thirtysix States threefourths of those In the Unionmust ratify Those which have not notified the Department of ratification of rejection are Delaware Florida Louisiana Massachusetts New Jer sey New Mexico Ohio Pennsylvan ia Vermont Virginia West Virgin ia and Wyoming Connecticut New Hampshire Rhode Island and Utah have notifi ed of rejection The last favorable report was received from Minnesota on Juno 12 HEVKVVKAU ENLISTMENT HAS BECOME EFFECTIVE The act of Congress providing for a sevenyear term of enlistment Instead of a threeyear term in the t United States army went into ef feet last 1IffK AH persons deslr Xi1nglaeoliitwill be compelled to- 5TYeseven7ears that U they I eJJ supposed to enlist for seven years j r y r but tour however are spent in ae tnal service and the other three are j I spent on a furlough and the sol I II 1any1I j IThis would only be done In theji j case of war when a large number j IIof j I j men would be needed and in i ji that case private citizens could I I called also thus making in realltrlI tonlr owe more year of retries thln I jj formerly This will not make any material difference In the number jj f of men enlisting as those really d tJroof of catering the service wllljj i not object to the extra year The object of the three years on the 111 serve force is for the purpose ofiii having a reserve which has had1 military training FINED FOR XOT SENDING HIS CHILUKEN TO SCHOOL I 1After dee trial a man wa8 finedIIi five dollars load costs in Judge i Boggs court OB Monday last for failts and refvsiag to send hisji children to the public school AijI toil account of the ease Is in ei school department of the sews this j j week So far as can be learned j this te the first ease of the kind tpi be tried IB the county this season and it is sincerely hoped there 1 j willIIII sever be another Illiteracy In I State Is to be ashamed of and theII people should use every possible eDdeaTor1hgI costs parents nothing to send their f J children to the public schools bra tiJj I j ignorance costs the people much j School officials are seriously In earnest in the matter of compelling j attendance and those who persist In t peraaltting their children to run at j large like so many animals or to j remain In Ignorance at home would i better take GeedBig Sand I sews For Sale j I IFlftr acres of land adjolnln ij Beaver Dam al9J fourroom cot tage and half acre lend with good i Improvements Terms vry reas onable Call on v address J D i HOCKER Beaver Dam Ky Box 2C2 43tf jIjII FORGIVENESS EXPECTED j IJV SCIIKANK FROM TEIIII Milwaukee Wig Nov J lieving that Theodore 4Be1Jdoes not bear malice John Schrank wouldbe slayer of the Colonel expects to escape with I a light sentence Schrank confided these expecta tlons to Bernard H Gottscbalk who occupies a cell near that of the notorious prisoner Gottschalk I8 aE former resident of New York Theodore Roosevelt Is only human after all Schrank saidac I cording to Gottschalk He was shot and has recovered Now thatI it Is all over and he has had time trhas concluded that I should be pit I Ied and not condemned When McKinley was shot he showed forsheII nestThe entire case rests wlthRoose welt I know If he will come here and speak for me and adopt a broad view of the matter I will get a light sentence His word wjJIt settle the whole matter I should think he would come here when thetI case Is tried L II AND ST L IWtIS ORDERING NEW CARS The Owensboro Messenger says A few lays ago it Wltll amiounro3 I that the L H and St L Railroad Company had purchased threenew locomotives for use of the road and now the announcement Is madet that the company has placed an ort der with a car building concern forII 300 new standard hirtyslx foot carsII carsyThe order for the box cars Is theE first that the company has placed 1 for a long number of years and I the cars will be the first thirtysix foot cars that the company has ever I owned It Is stated that the cars will be built as soon as possi 1nfneed of them I Notice to File J1IdHII The Board of Trustees of HartII ford white graded common school district No 1 will receive bids for the construction of the newII brick school building for sold dlsII trlct at the law offices of Barnes 3 Smith Hartford Ky at one oclock p m on Tuesday November 12I Building to be completed on or be fore August 1 1913 A copy of the 1 plans and specifications Is on tileII subject to Inspection at the office of the Secretary also with Honf John J McHenry omce with BarI bee Castleman Louisville Kyt James Stewart Construction Co StI Louis Mo and C C E A Web ber architects Cincinnati O E B PENDLETON Prest tWH4412 Advertisement I fJraldCfiy 1 yr QUEER FATE mEMED VICE PRESIDENTS i i IDUn T J I 1 Four Have Died in November ii f Total Seven With Death i eof Sherman i ti Washington Nor fJames S Shaman Is the seventh VjcePresl iiiei deaths already on recordfour ac curred in November The first was George Clinton a- New York who died April 20 1S12 when 73 years old The others were Elbrldge Gerry of Massachu setts November 23 1814 at the age of 76 William R King of AJ abama April IS 1SS3 at the age of C7 Henry Wilson of Massaehu- setts November 22 1876 at the I age of 63 Thomas A Hendrickeii of Indiana November 23 1SS5 at the age of 66 and Garrett A Ho- j hart of New Jersey Novesber 21 1699 at the age of 55 William R King took the oath o r oSce in Cuba where he had gone on account of ill health He never presided over the Senate Clinton WashingIburied in the Congressional cemetery King was buried in Dallas couni ty Alabama Hendricks In Indian j I spoils and Hobart in Patterson N j a i I Only four Vice Presidents of theII United States were afterward elect ied to the Presidency They were Ij I John Adams Thomas JtretEonl I Martin Van Buren and Theodore jj Roosevelt Five have succeeded toI the Presidency through the death r of the Chief Executive These ii j i FilmorejAndrewii lAn I RooseveltiKATHKlt JOIN RUSSELL XOTEI CIIAKACTEH BEAD i i iDetroit Nov 4Father John Russell founder of the Prohibition i i party and the oldest Methodist jr preacher in the Detroit conference i is dead at the home of his daugh I ter in this city He was born in j Livingston county N Y In 1822 I Russell cooperated j j i 1Father of the leading prohibl j lIfeiIIIUChat the head of the Order of Good J j Templars of the World and presided at the first session of the order held In England He wrote the first articles and made the first public speeches in j favor of the organization of an in dependent political party on the is of prohibition He wrote the I call for the first National Conven jI nOloIzed j Presidency in 1872 For years he was the recognized leader of the Prohibition forces of the country S IarrledIj Rockport Ky Nov 5 1912 On last Sunday at 10 oclock at the beautiful home of Mr and Mrs Estill Wilcox near Echols Ky only daughter Miss Beulah Wilcox was united In matrimony presIcnceI J atives and friends The marriage ceremony was performed I by Rev Birch Shields of Rockport Ky in his own pleasant way Both of these young people professed religion under the mlnlsIj I try of Rev Shields and were bap ized i I by him into the fellowship of I I Pond Run Missionary Baptist j church near Echols May the blessII Ings of an allwlse God rest upon I of them as they journey I through llfe is the wish of their pastor and numerous friendsII BIRCH SHIELDS FIIAXT1C SCREAMS TELL OK A DOVIJLE TRAGEDY Masontown Penn Nov 4 J i lIveryIman1 I nent in this part of the State sleptIi at his home this morning his Wife crept to the bed and sent a bullet I from a revolver through his head killing him Instantly Her nine year old son aroused by the sound of the shot leaped from his bed and ran toward his mother who still stood over the form of her hue band with the smoking revolver In her band When the child screamed Mrs I Sharpnack reached out took him In I arms kissed him several times lJ then with the little fellow still In one arm and while seated on the bed beside the body of her dead husband she turned the re volver on herself and pulled the triggerShe I fell back on the beddeadIbullet tnher bulls TIe can zanII creaming rmt e roomrjftpT tell other members of the faintlywho 0 x L had heard the shots of the tragedy JCo cane for the womans act can ibe gives by the family Itra Sharpnack was prominent in social circles Before retiring Saturday night she seemed to be ia the best of spirits The couple alt wars had tees happily together it Is said Mr Flrcers Honse Craned air B F Flener of Borahs Fer ry this county lost his residence by firean last Saturday evening about 7 oclock The fire Is sup posed to have caught from a match ignited by a mouse Ml the faro fly except Mr and Mrs Flener had gone to prayer meeting The old folks were in the sitting room ana scented the smoke entering from the kitchen andran In and the fire Lad caught from the flames from a sugar box setting under the foot j of a bed When the feather bed Was lifted the flames spread very rapidly and came near suffocating both Mr and Mrs Flener before they could get out of the room Mr Fleners hair was considerably scorched However the alarm off fire soon brought in the near neigh bors and most of the household goods were saved Loss about II 500 Insurance 1500 Mrs R B Martin and sister and B H Crabtree Beaver Dam went out to see their parents Suniir oar i MINISTER CHARGED WITH j LURING GIRL FROM HO3IEJi Evansville Ind Nov 4ThRev William F Dunn of Granite City 111 is under arrest here charged with luring Essell Mickellji I118 to this city jI1ss Mickell sang In the choir of j the Rev Mr Dunns church He tI paid her much attention and three I I i weeks ago they disappeared from home according to Mrs Dunn who traced them here The minister begged the offlcers to let him return I home to his wife and baby The girl avowed her love for the minis Countyiauthorities say the Rev Mr Dunn may be turned over to the Federal authorities on a white slave charge ooooooooooooooooo 0 MARRIAGE LICENSE C- joooooooooooooooj Terry A Crate Butler to Anna V Barnard Hartford Route 3 Lutus V A Ashley Owensboro to Annie Lee Leach Horse Branch W Brown Beaver Dam toIiGeo Willoughby Little Bend Alvin Ward Hartford Route 7 to Dixie Moseley Hartford Routel Virgil Brown Echols to Beulah Wilcox Echols JamejH Frank Fordsville to Della M Durry Fordsvllle Jack Walker Narrows to Mamie Powers Narrows IJohn Wallace Rockport to Han nab Sanderfur Beaver Dam For Sale About 35 tons of hay Address X care of Herald tf r F MENNETTSjangel visited the home of Mr Frank Maples and took from him his dear wife She leaves a husband one child and a host of friends to mourn her loss We only regret that we cannot call belltIap pointment Chapel day Miss Edna Black East Hartford visited her sister Mrs Alfred Wallace from Thursday until Sunday Mr Walter Campbell wife and slater of Hartford attended ohurch at this place Sunday Sire Tom Wallace who has been very 111 at the residence of her daughter Mrs Davis Royal of Fordsvllle was reported no better at the last account I I THEONE nSTIIUF- OF LIFES VICISSITUDES Nothing In the awful mystery of life and death Is moreInexplicable than the widening contrasts of hu oneibrought world to wealth dignity and honor and another child to squalor penury of crime Can these disparities of condition be mended through the political fabric If we hould place a man In the Presidency for life Invested with all the Powers needful to a wise and benevolent absolution could he change to any appreciable degree the existing or dert Could he remotely reach the disease of sin arid sloth of greed and graft of poverty and wealth so as to give the halt the lame and the blind some chance against the healthy the energetic and gifted Louisville CourlerJournal I The public drinking was TeaIseJs1 TeaI I ListenVeVgot i i the Goods j It will be a pleasure to you to Inspect i the bolt have ingoods we brought thIsII Fall have such ofwe a variety pleasIngII colors and elegant weaves We have the newest and finest materials for housedresses afternoon and evenIngI gowns While our goods are glassing to lookat we have demanded also the very best quality When you buy your dress goods from us you get three things value beauty use You will get the right price CARSON a coINCORPORATED Hartford Kentucky ttr t Patriotismi and Lowe of eiiouatC- an scarcely be expected of children reared by homeless parents with no more serious thought than the present Just as the twig is bent the trees in t dined and as more recent writers have said The tit 4 home is the backbone of our nation it behooves all lovers of life liberty and happiness and particularly those directing the footsteps of the youth of our country to set a good example To do this it is not necessary to build a palace and go in debt for life Wood construction will just meet your requirements With it you can plan a home of any size you may ul timately desire and then start with a few rooms and build on as your demands require We have helped many people solve their building problems and would like to help you Come in and lets talk it over or write for price- sTheres t no Place Like Home Fordsville Planing Mill Coii INCORPORATED iiordsville Kentucky TOBACCO BUYERS ARE NOWAHGING PLANS For Inspection of Samples MeetingTo Be Held Wednes day Morning The Owensboro Messenger of Sunday says There will be a meeting of the sales committee of the Equity Home Warehouse company at the headquarters on Third street on Wednesday morning at which time the samples wl be inspected end It Is expected that prices will be fixed on them The samples for the Green River Tobacco Growers Association have been made up and have been on kxn hlbltlon at the association held quartcrs for the past fen dare where they have been Inspected uby a number of the buyer from the dry and the dlstrlcLNb prices have been fixed on the crop and it Is understood that no offers have 1Asf any committee In effecting a sale with any of the buyers will have to be ratified by the growers In their meetings before the deal Is finally closed It Is stated by the tl1atthey following the election pad they are also of the opinion that liberal prices will be obtained for the weedThomas Gallagher of Ireland arrived In Owonsboro Friday night and will make the place his head quarters for the next month dtp rtug whIch time he will look Oyrrrt the operations of his plants here end at Henderson and will make a cropconditiosyearq A leJral t 1it1 I11 lisle 1 atntaAll pleat from tw M 6 9pOOo are wCn pleOet yoUD +vt a trioltttoI buy iaaptI A q TJcjsEiufcco I t advtimHerttordKr 1i 1Tflr I WEDNESDAY NOV 01012 I THE HARTFORD HERALD PAGE FIVE 1 1Iole roof tiosienj FOR MEN WOMEN i AND CHILDREN We want to call your attention to our varied Hosiery stock We carry nothing but representative lines hose that you can thisIlist our HoleProof Hose six pairs guaran I teed to wear you six months or new ones I in their place So dont mend the end but end the mend This you will do if you wear our famous HoleProof Hosiery We have also the celebrated Black Cat stockings for children at 1 15c and 25c per pair Buy your hose from us andre member that IT PAYS TO TRADE WITH A HOUSE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY Gq j I 0000000000000000 LOCAL NEWS AND O- OJ PERSONAL POINTS 0 0000000000000000Irvington 4H Moore 8 Sons Meat Market ti Just neweel Jumbo 4 Pickled t W H MOOUE SQL Sour Kraut and nIce net pack 1 1 Mackerel at W H Moore Sons Meat Market 4Mr Klnchen Martin and so Crit Martin Beaver Dam were call i laVera at The Herald office yesterday t Miss Mary Rowe left recently fo Lafayette La to spend the winter with her nephews the boys Mr Douglas D Felix who came last Saturday will return to State JfUnIversity Lexington tide after I j noon Mr Ben Taylor has arrived Track In Hartford from Owensboro andI taken his old position in his broths era barber shop Misses Lula Midklff and Esther J Cambroh bf Adaburg gave The Herald a pleasant call while In Hartford f Mr SaturdayIhaa typhpld fever is getting along as well as could be expected He has aBerH6uB case Mr p G Wedding traveling salesman for the Axton Fisher Tobacco Co Loulsvillo la the guest of his father here for a few days iMr7and Mrs OneI Owen left s Thursday for Central City wher- i they will make their future home Mr Oweqhas a ppsltion in Banks barber shop Dr Et W Patterson Dawson Springs Mesarsi Thomas U Baker I R nd rhndJ AWesterfleld pun i dee were1 among The Heralds call ers Wednesday III 4 UsspdeMoseley route 2 and itMr Alvin Ward route 7 were mar- I Fled at the brides home Wednesday afternoon at 4 oclock Rev Tf Vl Joiner officiating Meisrs 0 B Likens Assistant i State Auditor Frankfort and Jas- Pi Thonias slerk to Surveyor of the Pprt Custom House1 Louisville 1 h came down Monday to Vote return 4 y SBhoine jfietfay Mrs Thomas 9 wa4 fcwyy yhis little l 4 + dauBhtejr Mlra vCaoyn Louise Thomas I rr Just opened a barrel of tha good pure New Orleans Molasses the kind that everybody likes Get 0a gallon today HARTFORD GROCERY CO The City Restaurant is the place to do your eating Meals served at all houru on short notice Prompt service and politest attention guar anteed by W Ai Wilkerson Messrs Harvy Tlchenor Beaver Dam John T Jackson and J Brown Rockport Alex Bennett anThe Herald office Friday Anything In the eating line serv Resrl taurant Your patronage solicited guars anteed by W A Wilkerson Messrs L B Grant Equality W P Maxwell Shreve ON Rock Hartford Route 2 H B Taylor and D H Crabtree Beaver Dam were callers at The Herald office Monday Messrs J P Tlchenor Matan zas John Keith Horse Branch Vincent Goff Hartford Route 4 and A A Brown Beaver Dam were among The Heralds callers Saturday When In Hartford go to the City Restaurant for a good square meal1 or anything In the fruit or confec tlonery line teals served at alII hours W WILKERSON MgrI Mr Henry Carson 1s In Corbin Ky having been called there sev eral days ago by the serious illness sI of his brother Dr E A Carson severee3 form of paralysis I Mrs Inez Griffin who had bee I I spending the summer with herslsII ter Mrs R H Gillespie and tamllyJJ and other friends here has return ed to her daughters Mrs A D Buskills of Houston TexaSII Miss Essie King has accepted position as telephone girl in the exchange of the Farmers Mutual Tel ephone Co who have about all their conaeetionoup here in Hart ford and wJH soon be ready for full operation J- lIfrA A Brown Beaver Dam1 representing the Security Life and j United rotates Life Old Line amfvf the Midland Casualty Co accident Chicago was in Hartford yesterdayI writing business ifor his companies- who I j are to tbe congratulated in i- curing his services e1J i Mr A 8 Bennett Secretary the State Republican Execult Committee passed through Hart ford yesterday en route to Lout 1 ville having come homo to vote Mr McHenry Holbrook who had been spending a few days with his parents Mr and Mrs Rowan Holbrook k returned to State Universi ty Lexington yesterday afternoonI Mr Wayne S Rock Hartford Route 2 left for Mattoon 111 last Monday where he went to seek em ployment as a clerk In a grocery es tablishment Wayne has relative- in Mattoon and Chicago Mr W T Rolph formerly of Louisville who was well known 1 In Hartford some years ago and whose son married Miss Isabel McHenry died at ids residence In Philadel= phla last Wednesday after a brief Illness His remains were Interred in Cave Hill Cemetery Louisville Miss Violet Barnard daughter of Mr and Mrs Monnio Barnard route 3 and Mr Perry Crane of Butler Ky son of Rev Crane who was formerly pastor of the Nocreek church were married at the bride home Thursday morning at 9I oclock Rev Ell Wesley offltiatlng Attorney General James Garnett spoke at the court house here last Friday afternoon to a large and appreciative audience His speech was well received and much ap plauded and was one of the best de livered here In recent years Mr Garnett Is an orator of much abili ty and there can be no doubt that his speech here established his par ty men In the faith and won many votes for the Democratic ticket IHon Ed Morrow nephew of ex Gov Bradley and one of the best Republican orators 6n the stump tIn Kentucky spoke at the court lions here Saturday to a good sized aud ience He handed it to the Bull Moose crowd all right and alsoas was expectedto the Democrats His speech vas of the regular stere otyped order but It was said much applauded and It was said that he won a number of votes for the Taft ticket by his persuasive eloquence Atf account in the Breckenrldge News last week says that Mr Ernest Haswell who recently visited his aunt Mrs Jennie T McHenry here has arrived safely In Brussels t France and has matriculated In tile Royalo Acadamlede de Beaux Arts of Brussels He Is the only Ameri can besides young Cole son of Tim othy Cole the engineer to enter- t the institution Young Haswell tIs a splendid sculptor and will no doubt make his mark In Ills chose- profession His home Is in Ha dlnsburg The Dellharz Entertainers held forth at Dr Beans Opera House last Saturday night under the ans pices of the Hartford College Ly ceum Course A largecrowd greeted just about the best entertain BellharLz Is a whole show In himself and Ills Astan Impersonator of different char acters It would be hard to Imagine Ills equal Mrs Blelharz has a sweet and highly cultured voice and her singing was splendid The two are possessed of various accom plishments which transform the into entertainers of the highest class 4Xew Meat Shop I have opened up a meat shop In the Riley stand In connection With the Commercial Hotel and win be pleased to have you call on Mr rke Sanderfur for your meats lard and anything usually kept In a first class meatshop Prices right Your patronage solicited 4Btf J P JASPER j A Novel Wager 1M H Combs and Geo W Hickey RooaevelIt is electedCombs Is to go Into a hole under Hickeys store and stay one day If Wilson Is elected Hickey Iis to go into the hole and stay one day On the other hand It Taft Is elected they are both to go into the hole and stay one day The hole was prepared and the wager made some days since Messrs Combs flvne miles northeast of Hartford on the M H E R R- Birthday r Dinner On Sunday November 3d a sur prise birthday dinner was given at daRobertson in honor of their father Mr Thomas Williams it being hisI t eightieth birthday Those present t were Mr and Mrs A J Williams and eon Douglas Mr and ifta L M Hatcher and fatally frand frs T P Williams and family I I Mr and Mrs tit C Wailadeand I famHy jf M1 present report a good tlme SaleI6hoaa iWIllII I WlllSe11J I ot00000000000000 o iOlllWlUT COlIlT XOTIW 0 jOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOo Annie Rowe Hill executed bondIas committee for Ethel Rowe Corath vs Andrew King et al same vs Josle Ward same vs Hus I chel Kitchens Commonwealths Attorney in the three fqegolnu prosecutions filed statement and oii his motion they were dismissed Comth vs Austin Bowling et al Walter Pattersons bond of 50 awardeds9against M S Patterson on forfeited bond Bench warrant awarded against Walter Patterson EHsha Peyton committee for An nie Peyton executed bond Comth vs Fege Morris verdict of the Jury guilty judgment sen fencing him to penitentiary for not less than one nor more than five yearsComth vs Neely Burden ver diet of Jury guilty and Judgment entered sentencing him to the pen itentiary for not less than 10 nor more than 20 years sConith vs Oliver Daugherty verdict of Jury guilty and judgment entered sentencing him to the penitentiary for not less than 10 nor more than 20 years Motion for new trial made and case con timed on said motion Comth vs Willis Allen Jury tolled to agree stood S to 4 for ac qulttal Bond reduced to 10 which was executed with Frank AI len as surety and defendant released from custody Comth vs Fcge Morris et al Joe Crahan released from custody and allowed to go on Ma own re cognizanceComth vs Tom Crahan con timed The grand Jury before adjourn ment returned 15 additional indict ments classified as follows Dls turbing public worship running horse on public highway 1 die turbing public pence 2 crime of rape 1 false swearing 2 seduction under promise to marry 1 nuisance 1 removing timber trop another persons land 1 shooting and wounding with Intent to kill 1 Ordinary Docket Kd Bowers vs L X R R Co verdict of Jury 500 for plaintiff Motion for new trial Non Oil Well The Rough River Oil Gas Co composed of local people through its president AL L Heavrin closed a deal with Messrs Henderson Snyder of Lawrencevllle 111 to put down a well on the S J Welier land the oil right to which Is own OilnCorThe Rough River Oil Gas Cos stock Is owned solely by local pco pie and Is distributed largely among the farmers whose lands IIt leasedWork on the well will begin a once FORMER HAUTKOHI MEN SEEM TO GET IX HAD The Louisville Post of Saturday contains the following the Forman men mentioned being the same who formerly were In the boat business between here and Evansville Accusations of Illegal practice of twentymIndictments returned by the grand1 Jury against XW Wittman George W Forman W M Forman and Miss Frances Hoist who were ta ken in custody Friday afternoon by Special Detectives Frank Carroll1 and Marvin Hart at offices on the seventh floor of the Realty build ing Judge Gregory fixed the bond atlI 500 for each and was informer that surety could be given In eleven Indictments the Ad vain ed Medical Institute alias the Advanced Medical Science Institution alias the Advanced Medical Company Is named as well as the four individuals Nine indictments name the Individuals and the De TlshEtts Manufacturing Company Among the accusations in the In- dIctments are those to the effect that the persons and concerns named are not licensed and the con terns had not been Incorporated Died Suddenly Mrs Frank Maples who lived be tween Hartford and Horton diet very suddenly Wednesday night She awakened her husband in the night and was suffering agonies He was unable to give any nssist ance and Mrs Maples died In a fen minutes She leaves a child be sides the husband Mrs Aiaale was a daughter of E Ah Milter A Deplorable Affair llvItngBurch a young man ofi the eatpe neighborhood while ata young pea pled meeting jst Pleasant Grove church vast Saturday night It seems from the best Information we could get that Tuttle had an old pistol which he thought was not I t r uHARTFORD COLLEGESofa x Pennants j and HatsII ON DISPLAY ATII OUR STORE II ROSENBLATTS t In Connection with P Rosenblatt IIavcsvillcKy HARTFORD KENTUCKY 1- IL I re loaded and after the meeting he with some young ladles and other young men were on the church grounds and Tuttle thinking the pistol not loaded snapped It In the face of a young lady and next In the face of young Burch and to his surprise the weapon fired the bul let taking effect In nurchs facet Just below the left eye ranging back and lodging In the skull Dr D H Godsey was called and probed for the ball but failed to lo cate It When last heard from young Burch was In a precarious condition Tuttle It Is said Is fran tic with grist over the sad affair Last Call For Taxes Before extra cost Is added Depu ty Sheriff S O Keown will be at the following places on day named to collect your taxes Mcllenry Saturday Nov 9 1Dundee Monday Nov 11 Deanfield Tuesday Nov 12 Herbert Wednesday Nov 13 Trlsler Thursday Nov 14 tore noon Shreve Thursday Nov 14 afternoon Fordsvllle Friday and Saturday Nov 151C Centertown Tuesday Nov 19 Matanzas Wednesday Nov 20 Equality Thursday Nov 21 Ceralvo Friday Nov 22 Rockport Saturday Nov 23 Wysox Tuesday Nov 26 Prentls Wednesday Nov 27 Cromwell Friday Nov 29 T H BLACK Sheriff Dont waste ours money buying strengthening plasters Chamber lains Liniment IB cheaper and bet ter Dampen a piece of flannel with It and bind It over the affected parts and It will relieve the pain and soreness For sale by all dealt m- Olt JineUnited States Life ChicagoaSecurity Life Chicago AccldenMidland Casualty Co- Chicago 500 fort 2000Per Year1000 for 5000 f A A BROWN Agent I IDEAVER DAM KY 1 s The Wrong Glass If yourjprcscnt Glasses fail to jriveSyoul ease nnd roni fort theres something wrong Is it your Glasses or your Eyes QuestionWith Either is bad enough andfiir should bring you to us at once Wo like to discover unusual Eye defects the kind that puzzle the AVERAGE Optician Glasses Right Good Sight J B TAPPAN The Reliable Jeweler and Optiei- snHARTFORD K- YSPECIALS We have the cele= brated Henderson Road Wagons for sale Let us show you their good points Also our usual line select Family Groceries and supplies at the low est cash prices Give us a callor phone No 83 LIKENS ACTON Hartford Kentucky Sflteribs for The Ml411 a fur r i77fCY The Hartford HcIald i Illinois Central Itnllrond Time Ta bio at Weaver Dam Ky i North Bound South Bound No 132405 am No 121 1135 pm No 1221228 pm No 101248 pm No 102248 pm No 131 865 pm AgtrLEFT A RECIPE fOR LONG LIFE tif fWhich Would Be Rather I rr Hard to Follow S II I MAN COULD JJVE 400 YEARS Under His Treatment Says This Savant a Noted Paris Physician PLAN IMXAMS ttlrliUS1lalA- mong r the many philosophers who have given to the world secrets by which human life might be prolonged was Arnold de Vlllen euve a noted physician of Paris who was connected with the university of that City After gaining fame In France he went to Italy where he passed 20 important years of his life and where he devoted himself to the study of astrology and alchemy According to the stories of his day he made vast quantities of gold out of lend and copper And t just escaped being arrested and put to death ns a sorcerer His fame as i a physician gave Importance to nil that Villeneuve did and said but when he predicted the end of the world upon a certain date and nothii ing happened there was somewhat ofa plinngeIn his popularity Ills recipes for prolonging life I were most curious and one hat been preserved and is as follows The person wishing to keep alive for 300 or 400 years must thor oughly rub his body three times a l week with the juice of cassia When he retires to bed each night IIO he must put over his heart a pins ter made of saffron red rose leaves sandal wood aloes and amber tpon this mixture there must be poured some oil of roses and melted wax the whole then spread as a plaster In the morning this must all be carefully removed put In a box of lead and kept for use the 11t next night I J The roodof tho man must lie looked after In this wise If he has a temperament that leads him to look on the bright side of thingsa he must keep 1C chickens in a yard wherethere is absolutely pure air one dullandI must keep 25 chickens In his yard I IIf he is of melancholy cast of mind and looks on the dark side of life tho number of birds must be exactly 30 but in any event one a day must be eaten The chickens are SO treated that their flesh gains the qualities that will prolong the life of him whoa eats them They are to be kept without food till In a famishing condition and then fed upon broth that Is to be made of serpents cooke ed In vinegar and thickened with bran For two months they eat this and are then fit for the table The drink allowed in this diet is either white wine or a simple claretttony following this rule strictly for two months after the passing of every seven years a man may betcome the rival of Methuselah him self FlnKgtil Train With Shirt Tearing his shirt from his backtan Ohio man flagged a train and saved it from a wreck but H T Al ston Raleigh N C once prevented a wreck with Electric Bitters I was In a terrible plight when I be gan to use them he writes my stomach head back and kidneys were all badly affected and my liv er was in bad condition but four bottles of Electric Bitters made me k feel like a new man A trial will convince you of their matchless r merit for any stomach liver or kid ney trouble Price GO cents at t JamesH Williams m I FAIIIjK FOR ADVERTISERS A GOOSES 1IIILOSOPJIY I Simeon Ford the noted humor ist said In praise of newspaper advertising at a banquet in New YorkThere is a fable that all adver tlsers should have by heart runs like this ItII Asa storekeeper dozed his I u hisuhop the gray cobwebs across rt i DROP INr I f i And see us about those HEADI I IWork Perfect Price Right door were rent apart and n goose enteredThe shopkeeper arose with a glad smile he thought he had a customer but when he saw the goose he muttered on oath What do you want here he said This Is no place for geese Isnt It said the goose Quack quack And it regarded the shop keeper derisively then went on Ive come my dear sir be cause I saw your advertisement on the fence that incloses our barnyard I knew that you must be a gooseor else a donkey because otherwise you would place your ad vertlsement In a newspaper where it would be read by human beings and not upon an Isolated fence I donkeyslandzens So 1 VnB lonely today Icc thought Id make R fraternal call- A t couple of donks will probably drop In later Quack quack 000000000000000XO GOD O- 39POOOOOOOQOOOOOO I We think too Hglitly that Is I those of us who think What a I shocking and terrible Incident it f was that occurred within a few days of Lawrence Mass A clamorous I i mob proclaiming themselves to be the guardians of the peoples Interests marched through the I streets bearing a banner Inscribed Arise slaves of the world No God no master One for all anda for onoltNo God This IB a land of liber ty and Godgiven happiness This at a time when the toll of our har vests Is the greatest that we havet ever had reaching such colossal figures that all the world stands InE awe and envy 0 No God This is a lland whero wages are the highest and the work the most plentiful education the freest oust opportunity for advance mont the grandest In alLthe world f This is a land where the million ires of today were the poor boys of a few years ago where the humblest citizen can aspire to the highest office and where life IIbtrty and the pursuit of happiness I are the common heritage of allff Shall strong men and women ofII this nation not arise and stem thist restless title of discontent Shall he churches not awaken to unite in overcoming the frenzied forces oftanarchy that drip with blood Have he business men nothing to think of but business If so they will suffer n rude awakening Have that great mass of toilers on the farm in the shop and fac tory those who would protect their homes who love their chlldII ren who trust their God nothing I to do but look on while the mighty forces of evilknife revolver and torch In handcontinue their dreadful warfare against the established Institutions of the country against constituted authority against judicial supremacy and against the religion of Almighty GodOur Fathers God to Thee Author of liberty To Thee we sing Long may our land bo brightIWith freedoms holy light Protect us by Thy might Great God our King Leslies Weekly The boys appetite Is often the source of amazement If you woul- have such an appetite take Cham onlyIstrengthen the stomach and enable it to do Its work naturally Pop sale by all dealersmll GOOD nrMADE m o A FEW ACRES OF AND What An Ohio Farmer is Get ting Out of a Twenty Five Acre Tract Following Is an extract from an article in the current issue of Farm and Fireside descriptive of a wise i Ohio farmer who is doing well al though his farm is small One of the most interesting farms In Ohio is a twenty tlveacre tract of land near Arcanum iInI Darke county that Is owned by Mr thoIdoctrine of the little farm well tilled has been widely preached but rarely practiced This practical farm which is worked by Mr Geer is one of tho few exceptions where the possibility has been matured into a profitable actuality by the in tensive pursuit of modern methods and uptodate management The farm Is divided into fiveacre plots on which a fouryear rotation Is cropsSthat are raised The land is of a rolling nature while the soil is a rich black loam which is never sur feited with water due to six hun dred and fifty rods of tile laid at a maximum depth of thirty Inches which furnish adequate means for thorough underdraining In the five years which he has owned his twentyfiveacre farm he has distributed five hundred tons of manure over the fields A large portion of this fertilizer he secured In the neighboring towns for the hauling of It while the rest of the manure cost him from ten to fifteen cents R load To show that his efforts in replenishing the fertility of his soil have not been in vain it Is only necessary to mention that last year this progressive countryman har vested four hundred and fifty bush els of corn of fine quality from his fiveacre cornfield whllo for past three years his wheat has theIIII er gone below thirtynine to the acre His most profitable cash crop tins been tobacco hisI 1911 return from four and three quarters acres amounted toJ70740 His tobacco usually averages around 1350 pounds to the acre And the best part of the proposition ls that the Geer place Is a regular Klondike nugget In Its abil ity to draw money During the last five years Its owner In addition to gaining an ample livelihood for himself and his family from the farm has annually disposed of 1 lions than 119b0 worth of produce that was raised on this little tract I 1 A Mitchell a general merchant Bagdad Ky writes us I Foley Kidney Pills one of the I greatest kidney medicines there is I I My daughter was in terrible shape with kidney touble and I got her take it She Is completely cured I now I think It one of the greatJ medicines made All dealtt I ersmI r rA IJoXXSrINANIA MAN I COUGHS UP LUNG STONE ItHenryi I I farmer living near here coughed up a 14ounce lung stone yesterday while being attacked with a par oxysm of coughing Sample declares the stone had troubled him for many years and I he now feels none of the ill effects from which he suffered and which the physician says were caused by the stone When asked If he had ever seen any case of lung stone In his practice a well known specialist in this city said yesterday that he had but never where such n weighty mass was coughed up by a patient This case added tho specialist is certainly most extraordinary What the patient coughed up was really mucus that had formulated into a mass on the bronchial tubes as the result of limestone in the bloodThere is a technical name for tho Btonellke substance It Is known as a broncholith and not a lung stone When asked If thebroncholith would have caused death fIt had not been ejected the doctor said it probably would have had no fatal effect Charlerol Penn Cor- N w York Tribune 1 It Is a pleasure to tell you that Chamberlains Cough Remedy is th best cough medicine I haveovo used writes Mrs Hugh Campbell of Lavonla Qa I havo used it with all my children and the results have been highly satisfacto dealersd m crn cry for KETflfErs C A sT 4 RtlAI Ir p I i r Subscribe for The Hertford Herald 0- WhyMastic Paint FIRSTIts rawmaJeriaIobtainable of correct straight iTHIRD to contain no adulteration formula KINU appears on can Guaranteed to satisfactionTHAT LASTS FOURTHBeing fullbodied machine ground MASTIC is to paint a given surface any other of paint oil A SAVING MANY DOLLARS TO THE OWNER THE BUILDING FIFTH In to come when painting is again desirable a surface previously coated MASTICremains perfect condition for repainting Specify MASTIC for your homo and secure a beautiful hard enamellike finish that will resist best the mokei gates of the city the hot sun and severe weather MASTIC Gloss is the very made MASTIC Paint does not discolor and go flat like keg lead ia nor peal and crack like Manufactured by PeaslccGsulberi Co LOUISVILLE KYIIncorporated BEAVER PLANING CO INCORPORATED Beaver Dam Kentuckyt I l THIRD OF WEALTH IN THE HANDS OF TWO MEN Interlocking Directorate Gives MorganRocke feller Interest Control Washington Nov 2The spec ial employed by House committee on banking and currency I to ascertain to what extent the of the commercial and 31 interests of this country have concentrated through te interlocking of the directorate corporations have submitted 10f to Representative Louisiana the chairman of the committee on banking and currency According to these ex pertstwo men between them more than onethird or 3C per cent of the elective and resources of These two men are J Pierpont Mor gan and John D Rockefeller The experts to the committee on banking and currency the names of interlocking directors in great financial interests The financial control J Pierpont Morgan and John D Rockefeller exercise over the Industrial affairs of the States has been built up the experts of the Pujo committee by the establishment and extension of the interlocking of directorates Furthermore according to the reports submitted to the committee are no great rivals the big Interests but on the interests on good and the general of working together This is contrary to the popular assumption but their conclusions tho banking and currency ee investigators say borne out by study of the directorates of all the Important corporations in every part of tho land No news Is good news but the same rule to luck not keeps out but conservesbodywarmthbodyfat it enables us to unsettled elements and as the source of bodyheat Greater bodywarmth richer blood more fat not obesity but fat which the body consumes for warmth vitality resistancepower afurnace consumes for heat Scotts Emulsion this A teaspoonful each mealmakes bodywftnnth bloodeandrmakes all good do good It out andINspa out colds ji by raising endiirancepower and creating strength RJctf taltHtvtfifor SCOTTS SCOTT a jsiopc Oeid If J U J r l4 4 c- ro i YKIDNEY1JJIJ t tUA KIDNIYSANDrL Dole i t Iw l BECAUSE pure atom of itpaint manufactured from the finest SECOND It is matlo wliito leadreinforced zinc oxide in the proportion and pure linseedoil outwear two to one any or handmixed paint Warranted The ZHt every givq and less required than kind or lend and OF OF time with in PAINT 1sad exposure Outside White whitest house paint oil the cheap ready mixed paint DAM MILL IS Sys tem experts the control nanclal become report Pujo House control wealth natural the United States report the the which United assert system there among contra those are terms follow policy commit are their doesnt apply only cold resist serves great our means coal does after food drka Bowiri KaCIfE every real pure with Will lead fJ At Small Cost FORCE WATER INTO Your House orBuildings w By Air Pressuref 110 FairbanksMorse Pneumatic Tank Water Systems- are I doing it everywhere Operated by Hand Gasoline Engine or Electric Motor Send for Catalog No we 1217 Fairbanks Morse Co 517 W Main St Louisville Ky 3 AUTOMOBILE TRANSFER 3 From Hartford to Beaver Dam nod Return Splendid car meets all trains A fast and easy ride Telephone or call at our stable when you t want to leave or have relatives coming 1 3 COOPER Jl CO 4- Vf HARTFORD KENTUCKY i JIlR lISJNml Every kind of business needs advertising nowadays to make it succeed There are two kinds of advertising the good and the bad the kind that brings results and the kind twhich does no good Of course you want the first men tioned in order to be sure of the result WB lifi8BOlillTo serve you In the right way Advertising in a good live paper with large circulation like THE HERALD brings sure results Tell us what you want and let us figure you an estimate The figuring is free and the advertising wont cost you much It will help you Try It THE HERALD Hartford Ky I I 4l t + 4f + + 44 44 PEOPLE WRITING For THE HERALD will please 4 get their articles to us prompt 4 ly Matters Intended for pub 4 leaden in our regular issue 4 Wednesday must be in bur 4 bands onMonday without fall 4 4o are to Insure publication 4 44 4 4o + t I J 14444 i44 NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS 4 Opposite your name on the 4 4 paper or wrapper you will find 4 6 the date your subscription ex r 4 nlres If you find your sub A e scrlptlon has expired please 4 4 send us one dollar We will ap 4 4 predate a prompt remittance 4 l 44444 + 4- w I rr l f t0 Ii 1 1 ff 11t t I 1 1J DNISDAYiO 0 loinTHEHARTFORD HERALD PAGE SEVEN I IFREEf SEED TESTING IS GRANTED TO IFARMERSS r PrepareISamples and Amount Re quired Of Each It may not be generally known to farmers and others In Kentucky that the Kentucky Agricultural Ex periment Station is well equipped to test samples that may be submit ted with a view of learning their quAlty either as to purity or germ ination A new laboratory for this work has been planned and is now nearing completion When the in cubators and other appliances are established it will be one of the most complete in this country The Station has already won a reputation for work of this sort not only In this country but ini Europe and those sending sample- can be assured that they will be tested well and as promptly as the facilities will permit Samples willI be examined In the order In whic they are received To get fair tests it Is necessary th the samples be taken from a- bu jot after a thorough mixing of th eeds Samples of Kentuck bl ass and ryegrass should co uln two ounces each Samples of red clover sapling clover alslke clover alfalfa orchard grass Eng lish bluegrass and ryegrass should contain two ounces each Sample- of Kentucky bluegrass Canada bluegrass red top and timothy should weigh one ounce each The samples should be put in a stout paper envelope not in ordinary cor i respondence envelopes becaus- the o are easily broken in the post ofllce and let the seeds escape Putl your complete address plainly writ ten on each envelope sent us andI rward to the Division of Entomol gy and Botany Kentucky Agricul f tj Loxingj ways state whether both purity and germination tests are wanted- H GARMAN iEntomologyiI ment Station Lexington Ky 1 I IImXlCCliY SYNOD h HAD LARGE ATTENDANC- Greenville Ky Oct 30The eightyfourth session of the Ken lucky Synod of the Cumberland l Presbyterian Church which convened here yesterday afternoon iis being largely attended At the meeting last evening the welcom- on behalf of the churches of Greenville was extended by the Rev Dr W R Henderson and on behalf ot theIty by Judge W A WIckliffe The addresses were responded to- by the Rev J L Price of Provi dence M- In the organization of the ses sion the Rev B R Henderson o the Cumberland Presbytery was elected moderator this being an unusual distinction because Mr Henderson was the only delegate present from the Cumberland Pres ytery which comprises the moun tain counties of Eastern Kentucky- he retiring moderator theRev R H More eet of Caneyville did hot aijflve yesterday and the open ng sermon was preached by the toy J B Eshman of Hopklnsvllle Members of the general assembly oards from a distance who are resent are the Rev J L Good Ight of Lincoln Ill the Rev J V Duvall president of the Board- f Missions of Missouri and the Rev T Ashburn of Knoxville resident of the Young Peoples board There could be no better medl ne than Chamberlains Cough remedy My children were all sick ilth whooping cough One of them Pas I1 bed had a high fever andI as coughing up blood Our docI r them Chamberlains Cough IIemedyj I iem and three bottles cured aem says Mrs R A Donaldson I if Lexington Miss For sale by I ft dealers m I FNTERS MUST RAVE I j LICENSE WITH THEM P- In I compliance with request fromI umber of local hunters who are 1 thusiastlc over the new games 1 and who are anxious that the I I v be enforced In this county andI thorns are some who do not unI welbIlsI J h to hunt I lie Idea prevails that when h j1 tat obtains a license that Its 1 I I him the authority to hunt i I n the lands of any farmer withII ji his permission This is anII j iglous mistake A license does j permit a sportsman to hunt ri the premises of another with x obtaining his consent and to 3thereon without consent 11i K h r4 kk OdeSrI Business I I SSome papers advertise it WE DONT e4Wa1We know it would hurt the home trade We would rather have the merchantsYFETCH THEM IN I LET US DO YOUR PRINTING- s I a violation of the law A personI may hunt upon his own land andI land he hAS rented without taking loutlicense Members of a family and tenants on the place may also IIe cense but before hunting upon the lands of another a license must beI obtained as well as the consent oft the owner of the lands on which he hunts A hunter must carry his li cense with him when in the Held LESSON IN POLITENESS HOW CASEY LEARNED IT They tell me the following as a story that the late J T Harahan former president of the Central Railroad was fond of tell ing on himself Mr Harahan was sitting In hisI ofEthe road when a burly Irishman entered the office Me names Casey said he 01 want a pass to St Louis Olfl i worruk in th yarrds That Is no way to ask for a pass said Mr Harahan YouI politee ly Come back In an hour and try againt end of the hour back came the Irishman Doffing his hat he inquired Arre yez Mr Harahan I am Me name Is Patrick Casey thfyarrds Glad to know you Mr Casey What can I do for you Yez can all go to hell Otve got a Job an R pass on th Wa bashEverybodys Magazine tThe chill microbe meets its fate In HERBINE There are thousands of these germs in the air you breathe and any derangement of the liver stomach or bowels gives them the opportunity they seek A dose of HERBINE destroy them at once clears them out completely and promotes a fine feeling of strength and buoyancy Price 50c Sold by Hartford Drug Co Hart ford Ky Donovan Co Beaver Dam Ky 44t2 S I COMPULSORY SCHOOL LAM IS PROVING GOOD The new compulsory school law which requires all children between the ages of seven and twelve years to attend school upon a penalty having a most beneficial effect IsII the dally attendance In the schools The new law partly bas the salary of teachers upon t bavI1ngIIng eII using their best efforts to increase their enrollments In fact the two new laws that went Into effect this year are having a most direct and II satisfactory effect Under the lawI the attendance In the county has been Increased at least 10 per cent I last year The framers of thelover I law are to be congratulated I over the good repultlng from the passing of the measures Chilblains frosted feet or hands can be cured with one or two appll I III cations qf BALLARDS SNOW LIN j IMENT It quickly relieves Itching 1- I pr tenderness of the flesh Price I I26C BOc and = 100 per bottle lipid 1 by Hartford Drug Co Hartford KyDonovaaIYr Co Beaver Dam Kr1 4t2 I Thq fellow who Is always look IIT1 I adeptiI I I 1 SAYS TROUBLE IS NOt ALWAYS WITH THE LAND But With Farmers in Failing To Adopt the Proper Crop Rotation Judson C Welliver Washington I correspondent of Farm and Fire side writes In the current Issue of that periodical an Interesting ac count of the United States Bureau of Soils Ho says In part Dr Milton Whitney chief of th soils bureau Insists that proper cultivation and rotation will make rundown soils produce again as well as ever The trouble Is no with the land but with the people farming it and their methods stoutly declares Dr Whitney The Bureau of Soils Is trying to find out all about the changes 1 in soils that are wrought as a result o r cultivation It declares that the mineral and metal basis changes very very little The products oft vegetable and animal growth on the other hand change greatly and modify soil qualities very much One will bo useful and benevolent another vicious and harmful- A certain soil once producing excellent crops of wheat had be come exhausted Cowpeas ground very fine were applied and thIe soil it good 1 succesIIII Its first condition of non productivity Why did the cowpeas have that effect The Bureau took like pro portions of potash phosphoric acid1 and nitratesthe plantfood ele ments of cowpeas and put them into the soil and It didnt produc the effect of restoring Its fertility The point seemed to be that these various elements mixed together and applied tq the ground didnt have the genuine cowpea effect Doctor Whitney In a recent ad dress gave this explanation of the operation within the soil of various agents Introduced through rotate-s I of crops He seems to have a con t siderable backing of authority andI experience In favor of his theory that fertilization Is at least much less necessary If scientific rotation Is followed His bureaus problem is to develop the correct scientific rotation for various soils and cll mates ooooooooooooooo0 HOP YEAST 1IRKAD O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO rTakeHops one fourth ounce one handful pared potatoes four pounds salt one half pint sugar one half pint ginger one tablespoonful water four quarts yeast homebrewed one half pint Boll the potatoes In three quarts of water and pass them with the water through the col lander boil the hops ten minutes iin one quart of water strain the wa ter on the potatoes add the su gar salt and ginger The whole should measure five quarts if 1 It lacks add tepid water When lukewarm add the yeast mix well and leave In a warm place till light this will be indicated by bubbles on the surface it does not Increase In bulk like thicker yeast Keep It in n covered crock and In using stir It from the bottom A gill Is sufficient for one quart qf milk orI water and the bread will require little If any additional salt In a dry cool place this yeast will keep for mouths Not On Exhibition Jlmmle had been a naughty boy we presume but there is a note of pathos with the humor of tho con lIt1tleI his sixth birthday says the Cleve land Plain Dealer jt Show me what you got for yourI birthday Jimmie begged the lit tle girlI I do It said Jimmie Oh please Aint I nice to you Yep Yourre all right Then show me what you got- I darsenthonest Marg ret I darsentInvestigation revealed that the poor kid had received ntthing but a spanking SOMETHING ABOUT TilE- MANAGEMENT OF HOGS A pig Ila nothing more nor less than a machine whose function Is to convert farm products into sala ble meat products Very often he Insrated as a scavenger rod only because he squeals and is looked upon merely as a convenient urcl of disposing of refuse products herA Is no animal that responds feeding and decent treatment promptly than the pig and he a dependable source of profit If given average care and fair treat f ment- N It must be remembered that the most economical gains are made When the animal is young 1 e under 9 months of age and that gains are costly after full growth and maturity are reached Pigs gain most economically when from 4 months to 10 months of age and generally speaking It costs more to put on the last 100 pounds of weight or n 300pound hog than It does to produce the first 200 pounds of body weight A feeder that does not secure an average gain of one pound per say from birth with his pigs either has inferior specimens or does not feed and care for them in the most uptodate manner Thee most profitable time to market a fat hog Is when he weighs from 225 to 250 pounds live weight and he should tip the scales at these fig turea when S months old Larger gains are common with our best feeders The pig that will develop Into the heaviest quality hog In the shortest length of time and make the best gains from a given amounto- f of feed fed Is the Ideal porkmak ing unitNew Jersey Live Stock Commission JOOOOOOOOOOOOOU o Inn McMKK SAYS 0 I6OOOOOOOOCOOOOO Men are not all Ingrates Ten years ago a Montana woman refused to marry a man and last week he left her 5250000 Love may be blind but It can always tell when there IB a dime missing from the pay envelope on nlglrtyOnce upon a time a man Invented a commonsense skirt for women It was roomy and gave the wearer perfect freedom It did not lit tight across tlu hips and had crease In the rear It did not noII trp shape of the limbs and couldnt fee through It It was warm and comfortable The poor sucker starved to death A woman gets tired of cooking for her husband But how she does enjoy cooking for an outsider who praises her efforts A man who bragged that he cussed smoked played poker and shot craps was married by a woman I who wanted to reform him Now nhe has added booze drinking and tobacco chewing to his other ac complishments One good way to start trouble Is to clip a paragraph out of a news paper ad then bring the paper home Your wlf0 will be sure to see the hole In the paper and she will worry herself sick trying to Imagine what It was that you didnt want her to see Nowadays If a man thuds that the girl he has married has her own hair her own hips and her own bust he should overlook a little thing like n bad temper and con sider himself lucky Married While You Work A Kansas Judge established a precedent last week by marrying a couple Ina broomcorn field The couple had eloped and found the Judge at work In his field as he was short of hands He married them upon condition that they would work out the charges In that field which they did Children Cry FOR FLETC- HERSCASTORIA O O O OOOOOOCOOOOOC O FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 0 O W II YrJclit Pastor O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Preaching ovevy jToutth 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 Senator Heyburn whose chief claim to distinction was his bitter hatred of the South and who was a continual waver of the bloody shirt died a few days ago He was a Republican and represented the State of Idaho What oil Is to machinery polite ness Is to everyday life A FACT ABOUT THE BLUES What It known as the Blues Is seldom occasioned by actual exist Ing external conditions but In the great majority of cases by a disordered LIVER THIS IS A PACT which may be demonstrated by trying a course of MsPillsTh yifcey ferlBihopeaadbouyancy to the taeVThey bring health aid elastic Ky to tile MilrTAKE NO SUBSTITUTE r CASTORIA For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the- signature of In- Use For Over Thirty Year- sGASTORIAI TMt OKHTAU COMPANY NEW 101111 iT MOLES HND WHRTSO Removed with MOIKSOKK without pair or danger no matter how 0 O large of how far raised above the surface of the skin Anil they 0 O will never return and no trace or scar will 1m left MOLESOFF O O is applied directly to tIll MOLK or VAIIT which entirely dlsap 0 O pears in about six days killing the germ sad leaving the skin 0 O smooth amid natural 0 O MOLESOFF is put up only In One Dollar bottles 0 0 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 tains enough remedy to remove eight or ten ordinary MOLES or 0 O WARTS We sell MOLESOFF under a positive GUARANTEE If 0 O it falls to remove your MOLE or WART we will promptly refund 0 O the dollar Letters from personages we all know together with 0 O much valuable Information will be mailed tree upon request O Guaranteed by the Florida Distributing Co under the Food O and Drugs Act June 30 1906 Serial No 45633 3 Please mention this paper Florida Distributing Company O when answering Pensnrola Klnrliln 0 0000000000000000000000000000000 XELei V 1iriiYLight and Power Company INCOIirOHATKD I IE G BARRASS MGR HartfordJKyWill ttwre your house at cost Electric Lights ere clean healthy and safe No home or business house should be without them when within reach = 0 JOB PRINTING The kind that makes you look good in the eyes of the whole sale dealer and the city merchant Ihat makes your neighbors proud of you Increases respect and sets you right in the minds of all people this kind Is NEATLY DONE And promply delivered by the HARTFORD HERALD Every body in any kind of business needs Printed Stationery Noie Heads Cards Envelopes Statements Etcnowadays Prices the lowest work the best Call or write us Abe HERALD Hertford Ky HARTFORD HERALDS Clubbing RatesFO- RYEAR SUBSCRIPTIONS Time Herald and Weekly CourierJournal 150 Weekly Louisville Herald 133 Louisville Dally Evening Post 350 u u Farmers Hone Journal 150 14 Dally Owensboro Messenger 350 4 4 Ii Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer 135 4 6 4 Twice a week Owensboro Messenger 175 o u Dally OwcnHboro Inquirer 325 4 4 II Twlceaweck Owensboro Inquirer 175 4 II I Kentucky Farmer Louisville 123 u- u Rryans Commoner lBO Thrice a week New York orble 105 n U McCalls Magazine Fashions 4 130 Norman E Macks National Magazine 115 u 1 Llpplncotts Magazine 270 Address THE HERALD Hartford Ky r v crQr p V1 r e s Yi M 7 s Fc 4- M otw 1 I 1t tlr 4- t I w- iF v yr r PAGE EIGHT THE HFRALDWEDNESDA1 NOV OJ012 The Hartjord Herald im ItV H E RAILROAD TIME T 1 j OUR AT HARTFORD KY The following L N TimeCard t fa effective from Monday Aug Ist j North foundj No 112 due at Hartford 719 a mI No 114 due at Hartford 340 p mi BoundI1No 115 due at Hartford S4G a m No 113 due at Hartford 146 p m II E MISCHKE Agt BRIDE COULDNT STAND FOR GROOMS WHISKERSJ And Refused to Marry Him Un x tit a Compromise Was Effected i Httsburg Penn Nov 21Just couldnt stand for Raymonds horrid whiskers said pretty Mich i allnn Peconskl today But I love hIm so much oh so much and when he agreed to cut them off fo me 1 felt sorry and said he ought beep just a little bit of the horrid tdr 3 on his chin A goatee Ray mond called It With a naive shrug of her should vn after speaking the pretty Polish girl turned to her big strong and handsome lover Raymond Zo land and holding out her hands saidMy Raymond with a goatee 3 never1Itayrnond I married today by Justice of the i I I Pears Daniel Carsley of West cl1urtshlP1wolicense to wed Mlchallna and they vcTf about to take the nuptial step when the pretty little bride to bc demanded that her finance be shorn 1 1at hIs abundant crop of which made his facial whiskersII matter of guess work Raymond demurred at the lossI of Ms beloved hirsute adornment I lint Mlchallna N was firm and the j III wedding was off Mere whiskers however though they were of exI traordinary texture and growth could not beat Cupid In his own I game and through the intervention forIbearanceI mond and Mlchallna today finally settled the question IMtENTISS I Not 2Rev Alex Royster iIsI conducting a protracted meeting at East Providence I I Miss Lauru Shultz Is visiting rel atives In Owensboro j Mr C Rally is building a new dwelling house on his farm near here frI Mrs Mlnda Patterson went to Rockport last Thursday I Mrs Agnes Patterson pf McHen ry who has been visiting relatives near here returned home recently I III Mr F R Casebier who has been In Herrin 11 the past few months I I III was called home last Sunday to theII 11Saturdayj I Slaty Creek Monday He was accompanied home Wednesday by hisI wife I Miss Rattle Wood returned home last Thursday after an extended IIICerahoI l III Ky Rev and Mrs John T Casebier of Rockport were here last Mon dayMr and Mrs P L Wood of Ce Talvo visited Mr and Mrs A Pat terson recently Mr James Ferguson is building a new dwelling house Mr and Mrs Jake Condit and daughter Miss Bertie of Center town vjslted Mr and Mrs Terry TIchenor last Saturday night Mr and Mrs Robert Swain of Rockport are visiting his parents here Huntsville Ala ETAOIN W C Pollard a well known cit I izen of Huntsville Ala says I have used Foleys Honey Tar i Compound and found it a most ex cellent preparation In fact 1 it suits my case better than any coughI I ajyrup I have ever used and I have ueda good many for I am now I over seventy years old Sold by I JILHTI all dealers mIIII JIUX OVER III COAL 11AGO i i Lander Hill the sixyear old son or Mr and Mrs A Hill of tho For I aha neighborhood suffered n very I injury on Friday afternoon I1 1serlom I that will probably result In the amputation of his right leg Young 4 Will was standing on tire rear I i wheel ota coal wagon with onefj loot sticking between the apokea When the drlyfr not knowing that lie was on till wagon staged the j team he was thrown yfolently to j Vhul r s 44 the ground In such a poaltlra that the wagon passed over his right thigh He was taken to his home near Sorgho but on account of the seriousness of his Injury ho was taken to the city hosptal at Owens boro Saturday afternoon The phy slclans made an examination of the Injury and found that the thigh was badly mashed but did not know whether or not an amputa tion would be necessary EASTVIEW Nov 4Mr Ves Taylor Is erect Ing a dwelling house Mr B J French transacted bus- Iness at Owensboro Monday Mr Claude Duke made abusiness trip to Owensboro Tuesday Mr and Mrs Dill Smith visited relatives at Jingo recently Mr Elijah Duke is nl of lagrlppe Mrs Flossie Daniel and Veoria Duke spent Saturday night and Sunday with relatives at Green BriarMr L D French transacted bus FridayIMr family have moved to Taylorfleld to make that their future home There Is quite an epidemic of whooping cough In the Bells Run- r neighborhood fFIFIUSSEST HOOKWORM IN THE EASTERN HOSPITAL Experts Report Presence Also of PellagraThree Patients Have Died iLexington Ky Nov 2The hookworm and pellagra Investlga flan which is being conducted at the Eastern Kentucky Hospital for the Insane by Misses James and Fenwick experts under the direc tion of the Kentucky Board of Health has brought out much In teresting information which they embrace in the report they will make when their work la completI exaroinled I they have found about flay IIfar of hookworm and also a number of cases of pellagra The In vestlgatlon of pellagra however will be resumed next summer as the symptoms of this disease are much more pronounced In theII warm season An interesting fact developed Is that pellagra patients are nearly always sufferers from hookworm though the treatments for the two diseases are entirely different Su perintendent J A Goodson of the hospital is hopeful that the inves whetherIhookworm and pellagra Dr Good- r son states that hookworm can usu ally be cured requiring ordinarily 4 GoodIstrictImake it practically Impossible to bring the disease Into the hospital again Not only will the patients but all of the attendants be examined ll- as several cases of hookworm have been found among the attend ants during this investigation Three patients have died from hookworm since the Investigation was begun at the hospital and a postmortem examination of the body of one of them revealed the presence of more than 3000 of the parasites CENTERTOWX Nov 4Mr J L Brown of near Rockport visited relatives here Saturday and Sunday Rev Royster failed to fill his ap pointment here Sunday on account of being engaged in a series of meetings at Providence Several from here attended the speaking at Hartford Saturday Work is progressing nicely n the new tobacco factory at this placeMr S W Rowe who met with a very serious accident several days ago is Improving ADAIIUKG Nov 1Mr Tom Miller pun dee spent Thursday night here the guest of his brother and sister Mr and Mrs C L Patton Mr C L Patton wife and daughter Elda C visited relatives Hancock county the first of the IIIn Mr John Rayirion was in Owens oVn business Mr C M Patton and daughter Ina were in Hartford Monday Mr Clarence Patton wife and daughter of Taffy spent Wednes day with his father Mr CM Pat ton here IA bronze tablet In memory of the- seven heroic musicians who went down with the Titanic playing Nearer My God to Thee waa un relied In New York Sunday lorhSir J 4 J1 r d J You Have Voted for Somebody tfor Presidenf Of these United States You cast your ballot according your convictions as to whats best for the country Your convictions werebased on a thorough in vestigation of the principles involved Now when you anticipate the purchase of your winter Suit or Overcoat care should be exercised in determining what make to buy Investigate thtmeritsof the HART SCHAFFNER RfARX CLOTHES IIf you decide on wearing these clothes this winter you cant make a mistake You will be in the smartest style the best quality and tailoring the best fit Suits 18 and up Overcoats 1650 and up i Dont forget our own special make of clothes at 750 1 000 and 1 5QOf Our special make of Overcoats at 5 750 1000and1 15001 I Our Underwear Shirts Hats Shoes and Neckwear are the best makes in the v i I country J t- j t t 1 a You are sure of the best of everything ifyou come here for your outfit rf I E P BARNES BHO Beaver Dam Kentucky I This Store is the Home of Hart Schaffner Marx Clothes i OLATON Nov 4Mrs A J Wilson and little daughter of Fordsvllle were hero several days recently the guests of Mrs Wilsons parents Mr and Mrs C B D Felix Miss Garnett Evalyn Felix spent Tuesday at Fordsville Mr C N McDaniel was here from Rosine Saturday on business Mrs Fred Faught returned Thursday from Deaver Dam where she visited her mother Mrs Halite McDanielMr F Allen was in Hart ford on business Saturday Mr Estill W Moxley clerk in L A Moxley Cog store spent Sat urday night and Sunday visiting near Trlsler Mr Tom D Graves has returned home to Logansport after a short stay here as the guest of J F Al len Fred Faught and Ayilbort Eo HallMrs Dr Jesse S Dean returned Friday from a visit to Dr L B Bean at Hartford Dr Chas W Felix is at home after a several weeks sojourn IIn Mississippi and Tennessee engaged as traveling drug salesman Mr John Ft Alton contemplates removing soon to Paris Tenn from which point he will be engaged M traveling timber dealer HOfE1V3gfiGd Nov 3Mr pick Coloman thouse burned last yfcdnetoif morning It caught from a itjgkJK t Si4J xr= or flue and before Mrs Coleman could get out It was under head waY4They saved the most or their beds and what wag on them and llln the two front rooms The girls lost most all of their wearing apparel but the boys got nearly all of theirs out being on thelower floor There was some Insurance He moved to what Is known as the Fox Brown house on the Stum farmMr Billy Johnson attended the Democratic speaking at Hartford last Friday Several of the neighbors went to Taylortown to meeting last Sunday Mr Ed Stum is home on a short visit from Evansvllle Miss Margaret Taylor Is attend- Ing the protracted meeting at Tay lortown as organist Mr John Miles is hauling wheat to Braver Dam and hay to Mc Henry Messrs Shull and Jack Taylor are hauling logs for Graves Her A Great Building Falls Wljen Its foundation is undermined and If the foundation of health good digestionIs attacked quickl collapse follows On the first signs of indigestion Dr Kings New Life Pills should be taken to tone the the stomaCh and regulate liver kidr easyaiW18lamq Zn- Iil McriWferThe Bersld 91 a year rbr tfl- V fa OftS nJt f r Y i1Mf 000000000000000O IN lIE IOJUAlI O- OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Death hag visited the Clear Run Baptist Church and claimed as his own Bro A T Handley Bro Handley was born March 8 1862 was married to Miss Liza Hoover and professed a hope In Christ in 1905 and lived a true Christian until de thOct 24 1912 aged 60 years 7 months and 16 days The funeral services were conducted by Tlcnenoran4Broat Clear Run Church Bro Handley was ofan amiable disposition Ho was loved and hon ored by all who knew him Liberal with hiemeans hIs great heartbeat in loving sympathy with Christ and man and countless kindnesses are I to his credit In the llfc he lived and the world Ia better for his life and heaven has gained its own onephavethe church LI B TICHENOR C Tr FUNKCommittee GOSHEN Nov 4The meting that was In progress at this place closed re Gently Drc Crowe the assistant visited In this community until last Friday Miss Vera Cal WelI wh has If 1 been visiting friends nar lI1rlooII and SturgIs ky for the last year hag returned home Mr and Mrs Fred Miller and family spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs Sam Rowan at Central GroveiiMiss Vera Caldwell fell day and severely sprained her an kbt4tt crutches y Mrs Harriet Miller and d ughterrtpent Saturday night and Sunday I with Mr and Mrs Chester Stewart at Central Grove irMr and Mrs B F Thomasson pf near Morganfleld Ky Mrs D I L Miller and children of Beaver Dam visited Mr and Mrs J A Caldwell last week Those on the sick list are Ma Luther Miller Mrs Worth Tlche nor ands Mrs Allen Caldwell IMr and Mrs Will Blair and son I spent Monday IIn Hartford Present For Wilson Trenton N J Nov 4A pair rd of brass candlesticks which held the candles by whose light Thomas Jefferson read the election returnsYin 1801 have been given to Governor WllMn by Wllllg D Clark of Schuyler Va Sick Headache + Thli distressing disease results from a disordered condition othertalcIng sampleat Si r t i