I MIssI I1n theIupi
Transcript of I MIssI I1n theIupi
lw J
i
I
<
bbt piupmDEyOTED uUttf
i i
IHVLUEY l LL
SPIMFIELD KY WEDNESDAY J uAlYn i liii UMIEI S ITOBACCO
ORGANIZATION
ttloJnded atleKrngton The 1911
rlrop Will Probably Be
CutOut
Thanot er column of th1s paper therEis a call issued for a meeting of the to-
bacco grow sol the county to be heldat the CourtHouse Saturday January14 atlp m This can is made pup suant to the meeting of tobaccQ menI
c4wr h was held ip LeXington las weekto devise ways and means to increasetJil rice of tobacco The Lexingtonmeeting was attended by tobacco rowera from a1lpaltsof Kentuckr as wellas from Oho and Indrnna and was adignified and harmontous gathering ofeifarmperfected tOe fncor orated under thename of TtieBurley Tobacco UnionJune WGare 1spresidentof the corporatrnn ai Hon T Scott Mayes ofthis county one of the xe utive committee The meeting went on recordas being in favor of cutting out the 19111
crop ut of cutting out with hoes andnot with switches The officers electedare to hold only sixty days as the eptinty conventions to be held in the meantime will elect membel of the adVJaOryboard who In turn will elect the of-
ficers No county wu better repre48ented than Washington county at L x-
1ngton asKr Mays and Hqn WMcThord were amo < the thot conspicuous men of any present becauseof their able talks and sngKtions andsplendid work
Tobacco MarketT-
here has been but little change in
4r the tobacco market this week tbeIpres ging about as they did faStIweek The market today was strongTowever one house The Planters reporting the best sale that they have hadthIS season The of SWI
andconslStlingCfarkayeriged 1630 per hundred Theentire offering of 1OOO pounds todasold fot 1O15 The amount sold durmgtheweek at this house ws 81000poundsIThe Springfield Jlo se sold the croppf qrundy Crume of1120 pounds atI
15 1ORtr Colvin at 1412 CrurmSmith at 1240 Durham Edeler
1347 RIchard Carey 1345 This t
house has sold a large quantity ot to-bacco and generally at good prices J
The sales at the Washington CountvHouse and the Farmers House were
and the aside from ester
th1houstSwedks sales
arelastI
DARK RED BURLEYTrash gr or mixed S 3 5 00Trash lsbutld 6 850Common Lugs 7 OO 8 00
501COmedium Leaf 10 <i 11
tood Leaf 11 50 16 OFine andseleeted 13 00t 18 50
BRiGHT RED BURLEYTrash gr or mixed 5 00i 6 OTrash sound S 00i1 9 60Common Lugs 9 50qj 11 50IMedium Legsi 11 OO 12 00IGood 12 oo j 13Commfn L ar short 7 50v 9 00Common Leaf 11OJ 12 00Medium Leaf 12 00I 13 50Good Leaf 13 510 l04Fine and olected 150j 19 00
iffects of Burns FetalT
A distressing accident occurred c
High Street last week when Mary LRiley a little negro girl the aauJthterIof Ed Riley received burns from wlllch
i she died the following day The childwhich was only a year anda half oldhad been left Cora few minutes whileIts mother went to a neighbor igher absence the childs clothes becameIigrnted and the screams of this chiIand her sister brought the
the scene She found tne child inflames
and her body terribly burned Ticchild was a terriole sufferer until thefollowing day when she diedInds Winters Troukies
trauIblechapped hands and lips chilblains col d
sores red and rough sluns prove thlsBut such troubles fly before4 Arnica Salve A trial convinces Great-est healer of Burn Boils Piles SorErBruises Eczpma rind Sprain525e at Haydon Robertson
MEDAL FOR
BRAVERY
G 1si Soldier of fortune And lostIs round by forner W shS
rngton County Girl
anI1ngirl figures and inwhlch her pictureMIssId1Ughtel of James Mclntire a granddaughter of the late Judge Mclntireand a cousin of John F Greene Sometime agolhe young lady found sn theEstreets of Louisville am3edalbraveryati
ownerutnavailinglyread in the Times df a meeting betweenEdwin Cleary and Robt Manterl thehimjiandm one of themostnoted cosmo
1pohte and 5 diersof fortune in theworld Mr Clary is known everywherea nd the meda restored to hIm is but t
one of many wh have btn presentedforbraveryBCCUTTING
COST Of LIVING
A iaiiforriia Scheme to Reducethe high Cost of LivingA
Los Angeles Mans Device
A big grocer in Los Angeles has de-
ded toreduce the cost ot living per
GovernIItrustIhis is how he does it Sells ony
Cash basIs thus saving tht annual onaIpease ot 30000 for collecting andketpin
Customers whl want to rnintain a1runnmg account deposit cash and are
3 per centmt rest on the 110used balances
He abolishes all free deliveries chari ng5percentonahl goodasent Latheustomers house As he formerly figu red 20 per cent as the cost of deliverythe customer IS Hheadto toe tune pi 15
per centQHe slashed 30 per cent from the price
u1 all gooth on the day that this systemwas pUt into practice
A saving of oneti4h ot of the gro-
cery bills of the nation would add matonally to the comfort o life in millions
homesIf the plan works in Los Angeles
why isnt It working anywhere elseAnyhow you dont have to wait for
Congress to act before you can try thiscwayottincinnati Post
1tlARDINS C1IAPLIr4lI85tS Nellie and Mary Thompson
of California were tile guests of MissHattie Logsdon tsst week
H S Litsey and daughter JennieSpent Sunday with Mrs lam Hundley
Stanley Fenwick spent Sunday withhis parents Mr and Mrs G W Fenwick
Miss Rnodc Beglej spent Saturd3with MISS Hattie Logedon
iM S8 Margaret Hiatt is spending thisweek at Mackville
Mrs JAM Brener and son Frank L
spent unday with Mrs Tom HundleyMrs G W Fenwick spent MOndaV
afternoon with Mrs Nelhe LOirsdonMiss Celestia Noe has returned home
itfur a weeks stay with rfatiyes at-
this placeMr and Mrs Itoy Fenwick and
tdaughter ElOise has returned to theirhome at Livingston aftera weeks IItaYiwith th family of G W FenWlck
Mr and Mrs James Anderson spentSunawith Mr and Mrs Loyd Penwick
Arthur Fawth spent Sunday wiLl h
Hartford LogsdonThose who dined with Mr and Mrs
Bud Coffee Sunday were Mr and MrsM Brewer and son Frank Mr and
Mrs Logan Anderson cmd sonMiss Tulle Thompson of Lebaniinp
spent a few days last oeek with MIssHatite Logsdon
Mrs Bettie Can ry spent Sundayaft rnooh withMrandMrs Bud Cotfeeo
i
DOUBLE VOTEJANUARY 11 TO 18
peterson Spalding Haydn Willettan4 The Sun Offr Double Vote
For One WeekDouble vote Iorone week Januarv
1 to 18inclusiveis what is being off red to the contestants in our big piano
contest Girls ycu cannot afford to
miss this opportunity as the girl whoworks the hardest is the one who willstand at the head of the lit Are yougOUlg to tasr behind not get busy
get votes while tnel count double-very piEce of Jewelry sold counts you000 votes evary dollar paid on old
accounts counts you pOO votes every
althougblITlie YOt It Pitrson SpaldlnsIName Votes
Bessie Cocanougher462400l-laE Whitehouse449 550
M ne Arnold362 950Myrtle Cocanougher342200
Cocanougher338 200ertha Hayes 301150jassey Wright201000Iucy Claybreoke199150au-lineP Hagan188 250
Hattie Logsdon130250ris-tineC Kimbesliri1198-00IB Lawrence112loo88950ijattie Lynch 67400
Ella Pope58 200Stella May Ilegley 21000
IF p
LCA NDtD ATE
7
1111T MARKETSIReported b Bourbon Stock rosrna1
IBonrhonStock
Louisville Jan 10attlPruJleexport steers 5 506 heavy 5hippilJ-
steers S255 50 light shipping steers5525 beef steerS 375525 fat
heifcrs 35085 fat cows 325475utters 250d4325 canners L50250Hbulls 250tlj440 feedersstockers 275ai4 85 choice mulch cows35uj45 cemmon to fhirly good cows
35
CalvesThe market rdied steadywith the best J86c medium 6618c-
ommon 2Ari6-cHogsThe market opened steady
withielected ho sall weights I815otsghs out at 7 55 down The
were well cle red and the marketed about
Sh and LambsThe market d1-
steady with the best fat sheep 2l0cmedium and common 12C Butchcr-
11arnbs 56i5 medium and culls 3iv5c-
tWRKATYo red ud lonlllrr new Ilj-No J red aiitl I4ugisrrv new
R6juctotl = iti oil ltcet l Ie-
sCRNNowitlW
o iiileti = Jwhite 16w lb
o iMlxe1nev1sOATS i
IliLI> 0 white hNo 2znixeilRye tlOinliml O
Tue for wheat arethe Jlura by ilealerr the Ii1IUtJtlQfl for corn ntgtoatbig liT >
State of OhIO utToledoLucas CountyS
Frank J Cheney lliakes oath that beIS senior partner of the firm of FCheriev Co doing business intheIcity of Toledo County and Statesaid and thnt said firm will pay thosum of one hundred dollars for eachand every case of Catarrh that canno t
be cureo by the use of Halls CatarriCure Frank J Chenev-
Sworn to before me tOrt siiteribci-in my presence this 6th day of Decem-
ber A U 1886W Gleason
Notary PublicHalls Catarrh istilkcn infernal
Iyand acts directly on the blooi andmucous surfaces of the system Sendfor testimonials free
F J Co Toledo O
Sold by all Druggists 7fcTake Halls Family Pills for onstipa
Lion
dolltrs worth of goods bought from thetwo merchants c uits you500 votes-e ery dollar paid on old subscriptionsto The Sun 1000 votes andeveryddllar paid in advance or ont new subscribers to The Sun count you 2000-
Dont you think this worthworking for Yes and the girl whodoes not work hard during the nextseven days is liable to find that theother eandidates are way ahead of herWorkand work hard girls as thesevotes are the ones that count
TtiYof at Haydfn Williti-sI Name Votes
My Cutry201150Mae Mayes204950ILilly141000ji98200MaryMary B Masters 94 300Maymle lardieuL 87000Sadie Fenwick m 15200Bessie Settles 651QO
Nelson59500LjlIIeWillie Ruby 45600Mabel Williams 42291Sarah 21000
Shirley20500NaomiRts8ie Kays 11200
GOOD FOR 50 VOTESEDlJYJANUARY4 191t i
4 ohQ Springfield Sun
l
jlsq
closIsteadYj
>
hrtJJI
SEALACure
Cheney
count
votes
ReedJ
IHave you a weak throat if so youIic be too careful You cannotgin treatment too early Eath coldmakes you more liable to another andthe last is always the harder tp cureIf you will take Chamberlains Cou1iRemedy at the outset you will be savedmuch trouble Sold by Haydon ROb
tson
MilLIONS OF LIVES
An Awiul TOO Collected By Confsumption Many Unneces
sary DeathsIi
If people could only understand thatsystemic catarrh is an internal diseasethat external applications cannot curethey would not lleed to be warned sooften about this malady which whenneglected paves the way oftentimesfor consumption at the cost of millionsof lives every year Yet catarrh
niavShe cured if the right treatmentjoloYf
The only Way to successfully treatcatarrh is by employing a medicmewhich is absorbed and carried by theIblood to nil parts of the vstem go thatthe mucous membrane ot internal lininuof the body is toned up and made cupable of resisting the infection of con-
sum tisnandother diseasesWe huvea remedy prepared from the
prescription of a physician who for thir-ty years studied and misdo caarrh aspecialty anti whose record was a4Cfprescribed That remedy isRtxll MucuTone We ale sopositive that it willcompletely overcome cattarrh in all itsyarioua forms whether neuteor chronicthat we uromi to return Qvert pennpAid us for the medicinein eVery cne-tvhore it fails or for any reason doenot satisfy th user
Vit want you to try Rtsxall MucuTune on our recounnietulation undo guarantee We are right here where you
obHgajlionTone on our guarnnteE We have Rexan lJurn Tone in two Miiel 60 cent0Sandone 50 tmt b t1e j suuiflicient to makea marked impression Uplift the case Ofcourse in chronic casES a longer treatment is necessary The average in suchinstances is three si 00 bottles Rcmember you can obtain Rexall Rem dies mSpringficldOI at our s orThe Rexall Store Hayfon Willett
COLD WEATHER
I JANUARY
A Month of Sleet And Snow Pre
dked by Weather Man
Is On Its Way
On 12th changes to colder willprevail1From the 14th to the 19t1fa
storm wavewil be in transit in the different sections ot the country till itsforce is exhausted in the east reachingthe Atlantic The storm wa denotes
ia paroxysm ofstorms following eachother during the period Rain and spowwill prevail in the ditterent sections according to the temperature A muchintensified cold wave will follow thetheIupiweather reaching to the nd9fthe month A storm wave of muchvigor will formulate in the southwestabOut the 24th or 25th or t e month andbe on transit to tlfe 30th This stormdenotes the most intense ttorms of anyof the month or the most destructive
leet1drivenwest equal to a blizzard will prevailTelegraph asid telephone WIres ahdp61es-in many planes will suffer much fromthisstorm ad also timber and sh rub-bery will be cove ed with ice in manyplaces The cold wave following thestorm on or touching the jet of Februarywill reach far into the south
Call For Meting ofTobacco Growers
tThe Burley Tobacco Growers Conven
tion which rnet atLexirlgton Ky onJanuarY5 1911 declared almost unanimously in fayoF of cutting out the cropof 1911 They also formed the BurleyTobacco Union embracing the BurleyDistrjct ot KQntucky Ohio andand in view of the fact that IndlanaInow an Immense overBurley Tobacco a mass convention ofall tobacco growers of Washingtoncounty is called to meet at the CourtHouse m Springfield Ky on SaturdayJanuary 14 at 1 oclock p rn to discuss the situation and take such stepsasmay seem to be for the best interestofthis great industry An tobaccogrowers are most cordially invited tlJepresent i
DEEP tREEIl
Mr rind Mrs Martin Matherly spentlast Friday with Mr 14apoleon Gabert-ni Boyle tounty
Miss 5usie Elliott returned home lastSunday after spending severalweeksWith her sister Mrs Corda Wilkersonner Texas
Mr Anderson Holderman was in
fsdav11Mrguests ot Mri Francis Arnold in Bovleicounty Sunday last
Mr and MrS Martin Coyle and MrsMollie Coyle were the guests of Mrapd Mrs J S Coyle lustSaturday
lr Pattie Staton of Thornpsonville-aised through here moving to Boyli
county to Mr Nelson DUng moresvacated by Mr Mat Mayesrec houseI
Mr Woodsie Eliiott spent last weekwith his brother D Elliott
atIiSlmlito n
Mrs LuCiuJa Blacketer and Mr andMrt Adie White spent lust Sundaywithvlr 0111 Mrs Ben Coy Ie
Mr Beniie Carpenter has moved in
cocainouJhermalIriedfield We wish him much happinesand prosperity in his undertukintA and
fromValJyHill0Escaped With His Life
Twenty one years ago I faced anawful death writes H BEMartin
11hadmy cough and was underthe treatmentof the best doctor ip Georgetown S Cfor l year hut could get no relic AKingsNewpJetely cured I feel Athat r owerncureYItscolds and aU bronchial affections SOc
HaydoiRobertsons a
POSTAL SAVINGS
BANK SYSTEM
Inaugurated In lvery State Of
tThe UnionMkklleboroGets Kentucky s r
On Tuesday the United States GovSavlingsfacUpIearnings Tne establihment of postalsavings banks regard as the mostimportant and far reaching step ab-y the Government sincethutdrizai-onit of national panksand tfir6iQr1tertIover the w Jd
IThe new system is inaugurated a1k8Ias a and Mida lesboio has been selected for th Stateof Kentucky II thos fortyeight officea thorough testof the new system willbe made It was decided to make the
becauseIable to put it into general operationbut alSo because the ptan of operatioadiffers entirely from that of any postalcwIofIoffGeneral the Secretary the 1reasuryjand<omtqiJtee Meets
The Chairman of the DernoiiCounty Committee ot Marion Washington and courttiesm t at lebagonlast Thursday for the seofdterrmininnominating a Democratic condidate forthe State Senate in this Senatorigfdis-trict According to custo = it is Tay5lor countys time to furnish the Dentocrattc nominee Hon Joe Wade Bd-DrH G Sanders the two candidatesfor Senator appeared before the Com-
mittee and said they favored a unwaryelection The Committee after somediscussion of the matter decided to cana primary In Taylor county aloneand-etl the people of that county say who
ssiall be the nominee The utmost barmony prevailed and aU present prehcted Dmocraticsu cessat the cornihg November election
MciNTIRE
IrT E Ballard who accompanie1Mr Logan kcilto Stithton Ky tassist him in invoicing and starting hisnew store at that place has returnethome
Sr Ceslaus McIntireof CharlestownMass after spending the hoIidys withrelatives here has returned home
Mr and Mrs WiIlTboD1psodof Lui-svil1e visited relatives at this pl cfalast week
Miss Mary Bell Flanagan accom-panied by Misses Alice cambron andMary Blanford of Lorettowereguestaqf Misses Lucy and LizzIe B andforctJlaqt week
Miss Ruth Keene has entered SicnooL
at St CathermesThe euchre given by Mr and Mis
Badgett on last Friday night in-
ofoB
their guest Miss RegenaRudci wasmuch enjoyed by all presentfMror e recently from some unknOicause
The dance given by Mr and IrsWalter Witlett on last Friday niltwas largelynttendE
Mr Vat Wheatl lies critially illathis home here with consumption i
Mr Cnllp Ballrrd of Holy Crosswas the guest of relatives here1asP5week <
Miss Lydia Smith of Forest VieweJMfgMiss Lassie Fields has returned borneafter n few dave visIt to her sister-Mm Hubert MaUirlgly
Miss Sallie Thompson of SpringIeldwas a recent guest of relatives lere
Mrs Sat Johnston and children spesstlast week with relatives atForesrView
Mr Frank Willett wife and chltdreAof FredericlLovn visited friends herlast week
Miss Nettie 0 Bryan was theg btesL-
of J R Wheatly and famsty one daylast week LJ1ATile< j i t5
fI
r f I yw
f t F
a
1ie Springfield SunH L MTH Editor and Publisher
sIRlN6FIELD KENTUCKY-
There IsWI a place for the horseJa Ws autolIying age
Progressive farmers are now plow-
ing by gasoline thus having morehay fo sell
Will the international school ofwoe organize a football team and
eMIt after the championship
A Wln ted CUm farmer h-ast a rooster to ride a bicycl-eyMII somethingto crow about
A Swias doctor sayS that drunkardsiiye longer than total abstainerslull evea this is no excuse for bein-
geIIt is planned to unionize the hoboes
Jlxc4HJent bd then stop them fromWOrkiBg other people after uniontiers
Woteeegro is a kingdom now inkid of a mere principality Over In
IGsteaegro there are people broba-Wy who think we care
The man who introduced movingRieties into this country Is dead butwHtJMr ke died remorseful or unre-geataat the dispatches do pot say
That New York professor who defares college women havE not madeIl804l cannot successfully maintainthat they have not made good fudge
A hobble skirt in which disguisedhrgIar tried to escape assistedPMtJy in his capture Thus we seethat even the hobble likirt hath its
ssweMeatprices have come down sa-
eordinf to market reports but somet the local dealers evidently dontMeal the papers Somebody ought towiem
whiie it is true that one makes as-aAintaaces with queer people us-
saes vacation it is not always netear7to go on a vacatIon to achievethat end
The latest thing at Newport is arag time bear dinner A bull and beardance Would look pretty lively onlyIt would be unpleasantly suggestiveof shop
A motorcycle ran against the rearend of an Indiana mule the other dayaa l It is reported that two or threeplecee of the machine were afterwardtorrid almost Intact
One of the Harvard professors pertheUcaUy declarer that Yankee bloodis dying out We suspect that thetrouble with him Is that he hasnt beenaway from a big town lately
A man in New York bet six monthsIn jail on the election and lost Now
plte his efforts he cant break IntojaU to pay the debt A worse hardluck tale could scarcely be told
A banknote that had been washedand ironed by a fastidious woman waspronounced a counterfeit The publicevidently is familiar only with filthylucre
That Long Island judge who ruledthat 8000 a year is enough for theeducation of a sixteenyearold girldoubtless had in his crude masculinemind only the useful things Otherkinds cost more
A Chicago woman In suing for dlyorce declares that her husbandsstenographer looked at him longing-ly lovingly sweetl rand invitinglyThat stenographer certainly musthave been a good looker
A Mississippi man who put a stickof dynamite In his pocket and then fell
with it will recover from his injuries A man so favored by pure
dumb luck as this ought to be inj steady demand as a mascot
The story from New York thatloans to the aggregate of 50000000have been negotiated abroad indicatesthat American credit Is excellent andalso that the money Is likely to beput where it will do the most good Inpromoting American enterprises In-cidentally it Is proof that the moneymarket is by no means as hard sahad been supposed
California Is one of the westernstates which shows rapid growth Thecensus figures just announced give-
California a population of 2377649 aThisyso anyi state from which the final census
returns have yet been received andshows that the glorious climate ofCalifornia and other allurements areattracting settlers quite as numerous-ly as did the gold fever ot 49 andlater
If shoveling in coal and carryingout the ashes were all there Is to runnlng a furnace it would be excellentexercise But many a man becomesdangerously fatigued when It comes towriting out checks for the coal merchant
An Indiana than died recently afterhaving lived for ninety years withoutever having had his face shaved OJhis hair cut so he claimed but thestory seems incredible Surely hismother must have cut his hair whoa
kJlas top young to put up a nptt
HARRY SOMMERS ADDRESS
ADVOCATING GOOD ROADS
Delivered to the Members of the Kentucky GoodRoads Congress In LOuisville
One of the prIncipal addresses atthe congress of the Kentucky GoodRoads association held In Louisvillelast week was made by Harry A Sommers of ofEltzabethtown Ky Mr Sommere has given this subject muchstudy and ls an authority His addressinfavorof the good roads momentwas as follows
1tis evIdent that in Kentucky wehate done those things which yreought not to have done and left undone those things which we shouldhave done Between our politicalfeuds our blood feuds iIi the moun-tains and our tobacco feuds In Centraland Western Kentucky we lave re-pelled both capital nnd immigrationfrom our borders
We have neglected the educationof our children until illiteracy Is are9roach to the state We have leftcomparatively untouched the great
HARRY SOMMERSGpod Roads Advocate
wealth whIch the Creator stored Inthe bowels of our mountains Wehave shipped out our splendid Umberto be in other states Instead of manufacturing it at homeWe have legislated against the ranroads those great pioneers Qf progress and Instead ot encouraging them to extend their linesAs a result ot aU thIs the census figures show that only three states Inthe Union have a smaller percentageof growth than Kentucky Is it nottime to turn over a new leaf just be-
fore the Nw Year and uSe to the fullot extent the great advantages whichnature has laid at our feet and whichopportunity has brought to our door
In my humble opinion the first andgreatest step for the material development of Kentucky was taken last fallat the good roads meeting when thiscongress was called and a committeeappoInted to draft a state aid blll forpublic highways to be submitted to itIt Is not my purpose to discuss at thistime in detail the value or goodOJ the cost of bad ones I merely wishto emphasize that bad roads are aheavier tax upon the people titan any
reasonable which may be leviedto secure roads The bad roadsof cost the people more an-
nually than all the state tax the stateschool tax and the county taxes combined A government statisticIan hasestimated that the bad roads in theUnited States cost 1250 per capita a
If they only cost half that muchin Kentucky the people are paying an-
nually 12o00000 to pull through themud
Bad Roads a Perpetual Tax
The cost of bad roads Is a perpetual tax which can only be stopped bythe building of good roads Goodreads not only stop the tax of badroads but they increase the value orthe land more than the roads costThey are great moral factors and likethe railroads are great clvillzers
Tile measure framed for your con-
sideration was drafted by a committeeconsisting of Senator Joe S Bo worthof the mountains JUdge James PGregory of Louisville Mr George FPIckett of the Bluegrass and thespeaker from Southern Kentucky Itwas rramed without regard to any par-ticular section ot the state but uponthe broad plan of hcIping every partof Kentucky and the commonwealth
S2
as a whole The committee endeavor-ed to make It so plain and simple In asynopsis form that it could be susceptible or but one construction theone the framers intpnded It shouldhave
Kentucky iBa unit Outside thestate a citizen Is known only as a KenItucklan whether he hails fommountains the Bluegrass or WesternKentucky No man can rise to dlsUnction in any part or this commonwealth that the luster Qf his name Isnot shed upon the whole state Nogreat crime can be committed In themost remote section that the shame ofIt does not fall upon Kentucky Weneed to give force and effect to themotto of our state United We StandDivided We Fall and everywherefrom the Big Sandy to the Mississippithere should be a united and Concerted effort to put Kentucky where sheproperly belongs at the forefront ofthe Statesa
Editor Elizabethtown Kentucky News and
manufactured
development
roads
Kentucky
Stat Aid Not NewThe questlbn of state aid is no new
thing Over sixty millions have boonappropriated by the various states Inthe unIon to aid in the construction ofmetal highways Thirtytwo tatesare aiding In various ways In the construction Of roads I have the last report of the federal highways depart-ment at Washington City which showswhat the various states are doing InthIs direction Maryland has approprIated for this year 350000 Massachusetts 500000 Now Jersey hasspent 2859735 and has appropriatedfor 1910 300400 In this connection I
would say that New Jersey is theltoneer state in granting aid and as aresult It shows double the increase otpopulation of any state on the Atlantic seaboard New YorR has appropriated 14000000 and has set asidefor this year 2500000 PennsylvanIathe second state in growth In the easthas appropriated 82210O0 and forthe year 1910 1000000 Washingtonwhich outgrew any of the Pacificstates has appropriated 620000 forthis yearand so on through a longlist of states
therunlonevery state which has granted
aid has made material progress Stateaid is an absolute necesslt to securegOod roads We will never have themIn Kentucky without it It means In
roadswUlbthe case In Kentucky save with rareexce tIons It will not only stop thewaste from Incompetency but it willalso stop the graft which has beenhinted atas existing In some counties
Kentucky of all states In the unionshould provIde state aid for the reason thqt no state has such a greatdifference In the wealth and povertyot our people We have one countywhose assessable wealth is over 200000000 and u dczen where the as-
sessment is less than 1000000 ThePrinciple of estate aid has been reeognized In Icentuckr throughout its en-
tire history Our public school systemiests upon It and without It half thecounties could not maintain publicschools The state insteadof thecounties under our laws pays all the-jary claims witness claims Pauper-Idiot claims circuit judges and com
monwealth attorneys salaries andmany other things It Is so embodiedIn our laws that the state Is the unitthat It Is almost fundamental
Compared With School Tax-
I do not believe that there Is anintelligent man within the sound ofmy voice who wild openly oppdse thestate school tax of22 cents on the100 because his county paid Into thestate treasury more than It drew outNo man has ever advocated the repealof tljat law Any candidate for the °ulslature who would make the raceupon the platform of the repeal of thEschdol tax because his county did notget back as much as it paid In wouldbe overwhelmingly defeated WhyBecause it Is recognled as an absolute necessity for the rich countiesof Kentucky to help to educate thechildren of the poor counties In ordergystemIare as helpless to build good roadswithout state aid as they would he tomaintain public schools without state
Realizing the value which stateaid has been to other states iu ontcan object to it in Kentucky exceptpayingtreasury than they can draw out andI do not believe that Kentucky is go-Ing to be governed by that narrowspirit Those few people who are cryIngout against the small tax of 6 centson the 100 from selfishness are cryIng out before even their pocketbookslire hurt We believe that the statesupervision In the construction ofroads would save In the rich countiesinthethe pauper coUnties qy the buildingof good roads would soon take manyof them out of the pauper list andthat In ten years the state would bepaid back a large interest on themoney Invested in roads by an Increased valuation of property
Two Per Cent ProvisionThere Is a section ot the synopsis
of the bill to be discussed whIch is asection that has been overlooked bymany It Is the section which provides that no county shall receive anyyear more than 2 per cent or the statelund This state fund will be Pproximately 500000 and 2 per cent otIt will be 10000 Any county receiv-ing this maximum amount will bedrawing Qut of the state treasury morethan It pays In unless the assessedvaluation of the county Is 20000000or more In Kentucky we have lessthan ten counties where the propertyis valued at 20000000 or more andthese would be the only ones whichwould of necessity contribute more tothe road fund than they could drawfrom ilL All of these rich countieshave large clUes In them These citieshave been bunt up by the country and
Itls nothing more than right and justthat In turn they should help to build-up the country for the reason that inIn the end they would become belie
ficiarIesAllowme to refer to our public
school system again Under the provisons or the law a tax of 22i1 centsis levied on all the property or the
and paid Into the state treasurystale disbursed according to the num-ber of children in each county and thecOunty does not have to raIse a singlecent to get the benefit or this fundThe state aid to roads is on a muchfairer proposition than this It provides that not a dollar of the statemoney shall go to any county whichdoes not cover It with eltherl or 2
of Its own money to be used In theconstruction of the roads accordingto its ability to pay In other wordsIf the state puts up 500000 a year toaid In road building the counties willhave to put up from 5500000Ito 1vOO000 This rileans that In ten years
there will he from 10000 to 1201miles or goOd roads built in Kentuckyaccording to the direction of a com-
petent civil engineer and after themost approved methods of road buildIng This will do moro to developKentucky and to enrich it than thesame amount of money pcntln any
other way
Devouring His BQok-aIwr said Mrs Lapsltng Johnny
e getting along splendidly at schooLHe has almost finished alimentary
arithmetic
Honey In SwitzerlandThough but a small nation Switzer
land makes 100000000 pounds ofhoney a year so well is Its floraadapted to bee culturei
InterestedlWhat did the rhinoceros do when
you fired at him 1 asked the eagerlistener He just stood still andwatches me run
OUght to Be ThankfulSome people grumble because the
rose has thorns They ought to be
tbanful that thorns have roses
Did Not Strike Responsive ChordThe man who sat on the woodpile
and told funny stories expecting thewood would split evidently did notstrike a responsive chord
Look AheadMy son remember this marrylna-
on a salary has been the salvation ofmanyy a young man I know dadbut suppose my wile should lose nez-
sala yr
Keep It to YourselfBorrow trouble for yourself U
thats your nature but dont lend iito your nelghborsReward awe
Fairies by Rudyard Kipt1rg
elmn1Ialtl1imilmti1IalJU IIInll1I11 IIClllllflIVV1GIIlgd111VWfit
ii
i L arid N Railroad time Table11
S1Py only Daily Dailyincomingr Trains No 91 No 43 No41
I Arrivs at Springfield 835 p m1140 a m 65E p m-
I Arrives at Bxdstown 740 1005a m 606u= Arrives at Bardstown Junctn 655u 855 6x12 U
= Leaves Louisville 610U 810 430HDailySIf
l
II Leaves Springfield 600 a m 715 am 130 p m= Leaves Bardstown 645U 758U 300mII e p In
io I1111I11lllillVlll4NVIIEl l9FIaliiarlrl IlipIlllllliWIlllipl ma1
EVERY BUSINESS MANRecognizes the importance of conducting an business details by tele-phone both local and long distance It is economy in saving of timt and money Unexcelled telephone service can be had over the line
of the Cumberland Telephone and Telegraph Comnany Long distance connections to all impootant points in the Iimted State rate
reasonable service the best-
CUMBERLAND TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH COMPANYlnco orated
DrW r F TrustyPractical
DentistSPRINGFIELD KENTUCKY
DentalworkatreaSQnable prices AUwork guaranteedOnce over liavdon Barber
S a D a LAKEInsurance Agent
SPRINGFIELD KENTUCKY
Lifer fire and Accident
JOnNY MAYESFuneral Director
And
Licensed EmbalmerSPRINGFIELD KENTUCKY-
Best AttentionEvery curtsey Ehown
handsome Line of Caskets and Burial RobesTelephone Day 19Night 74
DR M 1V HYATT
OFFICE OVER
THE RED CROSS DRUG STORE
SPRINGfELD KENTUCKY
OFFICE HOURS
1030 to 12 m 4 to 5 p m
Dr J C MuddOPRINGFIELD KENTUCKY
OFFICE OyEf J HATDONS STORS
Office Hours 8 to 9 A M l to 2 P
J H LAMPTON M D
SPRlNGFIEIn KY
Office in Opera fI ouse
Office phone1o 5 Residence No881
Thl Sun and Times X450h Post 350I ff Herald 325
Th Su and CourietJournal IUI
A tonic that invigorates both oiEiand young For weak nervou
men EverybottieIt TODAY
DRn0AGS-
r
HAYDON ROBERTSON
B DYet THE
CELLS AND TISSUESTIEIITI PINT
MI 1551 F55
I10 UI 59955 s
ARAHTEED TO IYE SArISFACTION OR MONEY REFUNDED
SOLD BY-
HAYDON ROBERTSON
T SCOTT MAYES
ATTYATLAWSpringfield Ky
wn practice in the courts of Washing
CourtofApjeaJeandw DoCLAYBROOK
AmArtLAWSpringfield Ky
will practice In t e courts of WahlnKtOaand adjoining cpunties and in the courts ofApeal
MARSHALL DUNCAN
LAWYER
Springfield KyOffice in Robertson Building
in the courtS of Washlngtosand adjoining counties and in of Appeal
S 11 CAMPBE-
LLAUCTIONEERSpringfield KyltWillable Phone 84
N M BBUSSE-
LIAUGTIONEERLebanon Ky Rt3
Crying of public sales specialty Cancry anywhere cheaper than thecheapest Phone 1 long 1 short LebancaExchange
When you want niceEngravedVISITING CARDS
WEDDING INVITATIONS
MONOGRAM PAPER
Etc call on
the Springfield Sunfirstlass Work-
Reasonable Prices
TsPrize Offers fromLeading Manufacturersrook on patentS Hints to inventors Inventions needed
Why some inventors fail Send rouh sketdh or model forsearch of Patent Office records Our Mr Greeley was formerlyActirig Commissioner of Patents and as such hadJuU cbargeofUte U S patent Office
GREELEY MCINTIREPATENT ATTORNEYS
yA WASHINGTON D Cp
Jt
I l
TAX SYSTEM
NEEDS REVISION
tiAddress of A1Y Ford to the
f Members of Kentucky
Press Association
IPRESENT MODE COSTS HEAVILY
Jax Revision Doe Not Mean Exemp
rl n But Fair Apportionment on
All Kinds of PropertyItMeans Uniformity
iLQulsviUeoThe folIowlngls the address of Mr A Y Ford before theKentucky Press association at themidwinter gathering in Louisville
The tax system of a state deservescareful consIderation because thepower to tax Is the power to destroy
nd a tax unwisely laid may easilydrain life ota community or killZn industry Approximately 20000
00a year are taken from the pockets1jf tJ1e people of Kentucky for the suppott of the state county and munlclrpa governments It Is Incomprehen43lble that a thing which Deans somuch In dollars and cents to the peoPIe of thee state should generallY havereceived such scant consldetation
There has been no considerablO extravagance In the expenditure of ourpublic Tunds It is therefore time thatwe now stop to consider carefullywhether these large sums are raisedby the best possible methods whetherthey are raised in a way that distrib-utes the burden fairly as between theowners of yarlous kinds of propertywhether the tax laws Impose the leastburden consistent with the demandfor revenUe arid whether they so dietribute the burden as to otter the leastpossible hindrance to the developmentof the state Where there Is competltion between communities such asnecessarily exists under modern conditions an unwise system may insharp competition for new populationDew fndustriesand new capital easilyprove destructive of prosperity13vlsIQn Does Not Mean xemption
The movement for n revl ton ot the taxstem oJ Kentucky Is not n movement
in favor of exemption of any kind Qfproperty from tCatono I knoW It Ni Jbeen charactetized In som quarters re-entIy us an appaI for an exemntlon
apLtaI< from taxatton There has re-cently appeared In the preFs of the stateGn article from a gentleman for whonhave the greatest respect which reveasa tptnl rnisunderstandLng of the spiritand purpose of this movement In thisarticle ILls declared that the attempt to
0revise the system ot taxation In KenIs a part of a geneLnl comblmtUon
of capital to sevure exemption from taxatlcn I state deliberately and with funconsideration and having abundantportunity to know whereof I speak thatno advocate of the proposed revision of0the tax system of Kentucky has everuggested that any class of property
should be exempted from taxationThe purpose ot the movement for tax
revision Is not to ilecure exemption foran Class ot property On the contraryIt Is for the purpose of removing onsti-tuiona1 restrictions so that the legisla-ture have power so to vary thernethodandthe rate that millions ot do-llars ot property that now escape taCa-tlo may be made to yIthl a revenue andthus r lIce the on real estateOur present system has utterly tailed Inthis respect After nineteen years oftrial we find It has practically brokendown so far as concerns the rtisIng ofrevenue frdm stocks and bonds and otherproperty of that Intangible kind whichcan be hidden
Shall we merely keep on with the oldsystem that has failed or shan we makeourselves free to try methods that havesucceeded elSewhere In deriving large-r venue from this kind of property whichesCapes IIi our state no appealfor the tax dodger I faVor no exemptionef any kind of property I advocatesystEm that will make every kind oproperty hear a fair share of the burden
r rated according to Its capacIty and col
le too by a method fitted to its characterFacts and Not Theories
Theoretically under our present lawTin property Is exempt Practically under our prevent law millions upon roilMos escape Only about 5750000 ofbonds for Instance were taxed In Kentuck this years That Is manifest absurdity Let us address ourselves to thefacts Let us face the conditions as theyare the laws ot economics and of humanrature as they areand not as we thinkthey should be
The system of taxation we have Inntucky Is what is known asthe Gensystemyetrs ago when property existed In sim-
ple form when most a man hadwould be In shape of lands and housesand live stock or a stock of goods orother things visible to the eye and easilyassOSsedo In that day It served Its purpo well but that day has beenlong otitgToWI1 and the system vhich sutfeed then Is now being generally abanImpossibleproperty which have come Into existencewIth the tremendous Industrl and com-mercial development of recent years Weliave now manifold forms of propertythat were not even dreamed of at thetIme the general property tax camE intofavor The development of the corpora
propertyfollowingtTlbution of securities has entirelychanged the complexion of affairs
A system of taxation which could deriVe revenue from lands ahd houses andother kinds of visible property whichare fixed nailed down and unable toescape is by no means fitted to derive arevenUe from bonds and stocks andmoneys and other forms of Intangibleperonal property like bonds and stocksand money and notes which can hideand will hide whenever the tax ratebecomes high enough to take what theowner of the property regards as toolarge a proportion Qt the Income tromthat property
The Gap Widens
corporatedevelopmentbid as It Is today Year by year however bonds and stocks and notes andother troms ot Intangible personal prop-erty represent a larger and larger percentage of the total property of the com-munity Year by year at the same time6the demtnds for revenue for public purposes such as good roads good schoolsetc become heavier and the tax rategoes higher and higher At the sametime the yIeld from bonds and stocks hasgrown smaller and smaller In earlierdays railroads thought nothing for Instance of Issuing 7 per cent bonds To-day any standard railroad would conelder Itself In the matter ofcredit if It could not float Its bonds atper ccnt or less The Inevitable resultot these changing condltlons1th thetax rategoing higher and the yield fromthis class ot property going lowerhasbeen that the owners of this kind ofproperty will not list It for taxation whenthe tax rate takes anywhere from 40 to75 percent of the Income yielded by thatproperty Therefore more and more otthis kInd ot property has gone Into bidlog and though such property forms ev-e year a larger part ot our total
j
0
proportiongovernmentfallsestate and other forms of property thatcan not be hiddenInjustlceandtheKentuckyThetheUniontern No state has ever succeeded In devIsing a system of penalties and assess-ments or equalization that could compelstandnndtheincomeHow It Works In KentuckyinKentuckyquiteastheroUndertax must be put the county taxwhich taking the state over will average not tar from 50 cents This gives usa tax rate ot too high for many kindsof property and the process ot hiding
wayNor On top or thisstate tax of cents and the county taxlocaltax185 and sometimes higher and withevery 5 or 10 cents added to the ratebyhidingtax rate In cities and towns of first sec-ond third fourth and fifth classes InKentucky Is about 222 This amountsto about 55 per cent of the return fromamountstofrom any per cent Investment and Ityou apply lit to a 3 per cent investmentnearlvthe wildest extremest would propose anIncome tax of 45 to 75 Per cent Yet thatIs what we try to collect from someclasses ot property It Is too much toexpect of weak human na ureoIt Is astupid defiance of economic lass as wellAS Pt the law ot human nature WhenanY tax takes more than per cent ofthe Income from any class ot propertybeginThetaken by a tax the greater incentive toevasion undervaluation and perjury Inorder to escape the burden until youiach a point where to pile further taxeson a tax rate already high does notyield a proportonate Increase ot reve-nue
We Have Tried 11 Nineteen YearsWe fixed this system In the new con
stltutlop nineteen yearsago Our Intenwere goodoVe acted with the best
Unfortunatelyhoweversystem was being abandoned elsewhereIt Is not yielding sutlicient revenue for aprogressive state It hampers IndustriesIt bUrdens the poor m2n It drives capI-tal out or the state or into forms of Investment that do not promote buslnelsactivity and do not furnish employmentto labor and do not develop the resourcesof the stateoIIt Isrich man only or chiefly who has acause of complaint against the presenttax The rich man can take careof himself and does take care of himeif He understands the tax laws or
does hot uqderrtand them himself heis able to employ the best legal counselto tell him how to so arrange his investments as to be In a sate position whenthe assessment time rolls around If allelse fails he can moe out of the stateHe Is smart enough to put the greaterpart of his estate In forms of properthat he can easily conceal from the as-sessor The poor man can not do thesethlngsoIf he has been fortunate andthrifty enough to save anything at all-jenerally It first takes the form of nsavings account and then of a homeHe knows little or nothing ot stocks andbondsoIf ehas n saYings account hemust conceal It from thE assessor or giveup practically the whole ot Its yelld IntaxesoIt he has not saver enough for ahome he still pays a tax on real estatefor every man who lives under a roofhangetora rent recr lpt from the landlord ThereIs no escaping It And if the poor manIn Kentucky has tried to bu a home andhas made a partial pnYJT1ent on It hIfinds that the notes representing his de-ferred payments arE aish taxed and thelender may be trusted to arrange matterszo that the owner of the property wiistand the burdEn of the tax on thoenotes practically making him pay doubletax to the extent ot hlsunpald purchasemoney
Ve Need Outside CapItalIt has not been long since I henr the
very startling statement made by aspeaker at a public gathering that we-do not need foreign capital In KentuCkyI un quite sure no editor of a Kentucky newspaper will agree to thisPractlcaU allot the development ofbastakeneign capitaL It must haVe been1Ve did not have the capital ourselvesIf We do not get It from the outsideWe wpuid not haVe It at aU The de-velopment now going on In EasternKentucky II almOst whpUy by meatlOf oubiide capital We need this outslda capital We want It to come WeWont it to stand for Its fair shire ofthe burden of our expenses It Is notproposed to exempt Jt from taxation Inorder to get It but It Is Proposed to ad-just the taxes upen every form of capital that comes with a reasOnable viewto the profit It expects to yield Its owners and also with art eye out for thecompetition between one State and an-other In the advantages offered tar suchInvestments
Some Absurd ResultsLet me point out a few of the aburdl
ties practice In enforcing the general-property tax tit Kentucky Let us suppOle a man with t thousand dollars na savings account In LouisVille At theprlvalllng rate ot Interest three perthirtydol1nrs2G65 of thlf 3000 In taxes I do natknow what the tax rate now Is In Padumb Several years ago It was 110on the 10000 If this man had his thousand dollars deposited In a Paducah banknt three per cent Interest he wouldhave reall edJOO a year from his nvestment bud he would have paid 3100In tnxe paying n penalty for beingthrifty In view o this it Is no wondel that out ot more than ofsavings the United States there are
InKcntuckYnmadethat little corner of our country thegreat reservoir of savings funds thehoarded doiItrz ot people of small meanswhich In the aggregate make such anenormous sum that every great dnter-prise with a dcst rvlng bond Issue to floatlooks first to the Now England market
Banks Protect ThemselveIt Is often stated by people who have
not Investigated this movement for nrevision ot the tax systCm that It origrates largely in the desire of banks toescape from taxation Let no One concern himself about the banks tn thisstoptheredence of taxation which In commparlance merely means shouldering theoanltlthatborrowerIt back from his cutomer It the bor-rower Is the owner of real estate vho IsitbackmenoIn the end the tax will be borneThebankIts stdckholdersataxeffect The Unfavorable effect of It Isupon the community however os nnloadtheir capital and surplus as many ofthem have done In Kentucky Under thelaW of this State the amount that canbe loaned by a bank to any one Indlvhlual or firm or corporation Is limited toa fixed percentage ot the capital andthereforeof banks Is to reduce the amount ofcredit that can be given and to restrictthe banking facilities o our large mer
tf
establlshmontsStatetodaybanks a sutflclettt line ot credit to carryon Its enterprIse Nor Is there In Kenheavytaxposits a single Institution or any groupof Institutions strong enough to float areally bIg financial enterprise
A Farsical ResultContrast with this the tact that forotKentuckyamount of only S5i7337G out of a total
assessment ot 8282i5022or less thantobondsthan1QtolessIs absurd but it Is true No man willpresume to say that this Is more thanactuallytheystandJetfersonCounbTheof this kind of property You can notknowthatIthinkmlUlondoUarspeopleandrepresentsbands and fathers who thought In thistheirfamiliesanythingstandardbondson the investment and yet the very lawwhich says the trust funds must be Invusted In this class ot securities In thesame breath says that ot the 5 per centyield on the Investment the state CQunmorethanHow It Could Be Btter Done
revenuefromsystemdepositfiyieldingmethod and nt the same rate that we usepropertywhichfive per cent and whIch Is fixed and vlsiIsthrtEnglandtorortyhank and the bank adjusts It with theStateiscontent to take a reasonable percentagedepositandIt Is not forced to attempt to find this
individualtolderthebondsmakingtheto conceal this class ot property and thestate t Pennsylvania derives from suchproperty more than 6OOOI of revenuea year Of course Pennsylvania Is finenormously wealthy state But It hnllgotten weolIhy partly because of its en-couraging all forms ot industry by wisetax laws In natural resources it has noadvantage over the state ot Kentucky
Can Be Brought OutIt may be urged that lowerIng the ratenotbringStatesInmuch the same everywhere Most men
would rather be honest about their asessments If they can be so without sni-
ffering confiscation The change of ratemultipliedtheState of Maryland within recent yearsand made possible the reduction of timState tax rate to 16 cents
Our Remedy In IntuckyBut we are not at liberty In the State
of Kentucky to adopt any ot the methods that have afforded relief to otherStates because of the restriction rniupon our LegislAture by the constitutionof the State We are tied hand and foottosystemIproposing a remedy ItIs not proposedthat there should be any sudden antisystemitnrnediateiyproposed amendment to the Constitutionor tile State It the Legislature proposesthe utendment to the cOnstitution anlJthe snpie ratify it at the polls the resuit up o tijat point will be merely thatthe Leg1la4re Is put In a pltion-where Jt enr begin the work of revisingout tux system The amendment doesItItslowly The government must go onRevenue must be had RevisIon mustbe cautious It should preferably be as-sisted by a tax commission gathering Information for the Legislature to actUpon It should be along a consistentline designed to end In a system underwhich the jources ot revenUe shall bclassified certaIn property being taxedfor State purposes and for State pur-poses only other property for Municipalpurposes and for Municipal purposesonly stlll other property for Countypurposes and for County purposes onlynil property being taxed at some tate forsome purpose and for one purpose qnlythat rate being as fairly 01 possible ad-justed to the normal income from prop-erty of that class and collected by themethod that will yield the largest returns
That Is the proposition In a nutshellIt Is not theory It la being successfullydone Fourteen tates have now soshaped their constitutions that they maydo It And at tvery Step of the progressfrom the old method to the newwork would be In the hands of thchosen representatives of the people
The Goal To Be ReachedThe ormulatlng or the new system
and the working out of its details shoube done most cauUousb but alwayswith a view to finally reaching a pointwhere the State would raise ItS entirerev nts from one Class of prpertythe Countles from another class ofpropertY anti the Cities from ftln api
other Under such n system when com-pletely In effect farming lands wouldhe taxed only for local purposES Theynhould not pitY cent ot t xrflr 5fjpurposes NQ kind of property taxed CorSUite purposes shoulll he taxed for localpurposes and none taxed for County orCity purposes should be taxed for Statepurposes
Dy this slpnrnt1ort of soufcesof revenuewe avoid that piling up of ono tax rateon another which makes the burden soheavy inKentucky anti by this classifyins of property according to Its capacityfor standing a tax proportionate to tineIncome It yields we remove the incen-tive which our present system furnishesto undervaluation end evasion and perjury
m not poInting out an Ideal Qr un-
trIed system This system has been fol-lowed and is beIng followed succossfulhelsewhere There IS no reason why ItshoUld iiot prove equally successfulcentucky It holds out the hope of re-
liefI tl11Rt I have made It plain that tax
revision does not meaf exemption forIt moons merely a fall appor
tlonmnt or the burden as to kInds orproperty It means an abandonment ofa system that promises Ideal unlformltIn thoory but In practice has resultedIn the grossest unfairness to aU visibleforms of property ahd the practical cx-ompIon of mlllionso It means puttingIn tHe handTsof the LgIs1ature the powerto varytho rate and the method at niltimes to suit changed and changingforms ot property so thatif propertywill not stand to be taxed by one methodwe may reach It by another and so thtif one rate Is round too high for a classot property having reference to the Income that property yields a dlrr rentrate may be tried In the Interest oflarger revenue ate well as of fairness Sothat In short we may be free to dentwith a question of such Importance atnil times as any business man woutdeal with the constantly recurring prob-lems In his business iite changing hismethods to take advantage Qf hie ownxperl nce and the experience ot others
and of an of the Inormatlon he can geton the subject
1o
FAMOUS OLD HOUSE
Crosby Hall Fine Example of
15th Century Architecture
Antlquated Building In London WhereShakespeare Queen Elizabeth and
Other Distinguished PersonsWere Entertained
Londonone of the most Interestlag houses in London renowned forIts historic associations Is CrosbyHall in Blshopsgate It has the dis-
tinction ot being not only the homeof great men and the scene wherekings and queens ambassadors andnobles disported but also of beingthe most beautiful specimen of fitteenth century domestic architectureIn London Shakesphare dined at itsfestive board and mentions It in hisplay of Richard IlL
CrosbY Hall was erected by SirJohn Crosby who was an alderman ofLondon In 1468 It was the highestbuilding In the city and Its greathall the scene of many historicevents was 54 feet long 27 feetbroad and 40 feet high The Dukeof Gloucester afterwards King Richard III who was the last Plantagenetking of England and who fell fightlag for his crown and life on bloodyBosworth field lived in it atone timeand there concoctedhls plans for themurder of his nephew Edward Vand the seizure of the throne Otherroyal murders are laid at his door
FQr many years Sir Thomas MoreFlnglands great chancellor and theauthor of the everfamous Utopiadwelt in peace and dignity within thegreat mansion It was from CrosbyHall that he was sent to the Towerpreparatory to his farcical trial at
1
Crosby Hall London
WestmInster and his subsequent decapitation after which his head wasplaced In LOndon bridge as a proofof the fickleness of royal favor
Other owners of the hall were An-
tonio Bonvlsl an Italian and an inti-
mate friend of Sir Thomas More andAId Bond after whom It passed intothe possession of Sir John SpencerDuring his occupancy of it CrosbyHall WIS the scene of laylsh enter-tainment In It the ambassador offlonry IV ot Franco who was senton a grave politrcn mission to EngJand was received and feasted and at-
virious times Queen Elizabeth andRaleigh Bacon and Shakespeare andother groat luminaries In the life otEngland dined and danced made laeand hated plotted and counterplotthdan l paradeg their virtues and theirfollies wIthin Its wallsICrosby Hall aPresbyterian meeting house lund laterstill a wareboule In 1831 the ancienthouse was restored and Is today oneot Englands most Interesting structures Th usands ot American tour-Ists visit It annually
BorneQueer LawsI
lawsIwhichpersonal rights and liberties ThisIs a pQint concerning which there canb no dispute For Instanco In montcantons men and women may be pun-
Ished not only for vhat they haveactually done In the past but also forwhat may possibly result In the futune from what they have done Suppose n mania spending week by weekall that ii earns Then the local au-
thorities acting in conjunction withthe pollco may send him to apenalworkhouse on thdpretext that hisconduct Is such that ho may later be-
come destitute and therefore a butstlef on tho ommunlty
The Hippos MouthCapo Town AfrlcaThe hlppopotn
mus is a sort of floating Island whichInhabits the African rivers jEo seaono rise out of the water andSo aways ab disconcerting to the tciurlst as
It would be to see a sand bar get outot the Missouri river and chas a sow
The hlppolifo Is too short to writehis full nameIs a big brother of thepig Ho weighs five tons and a gargoJtlo Is cute and pretty beside him H-
is fat and flabby covered with a red-
dish skin adorned with bristles andhas a broad flat head as wide as a
dinner table The mouth ot the hlppcIs another ot natures African extrav-agances Ho has mouth enough to dithe eating fora boys bogrdlng school
Ii
MUNYONSEMINENT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE
We sweep away all doctors charges We put the best medical talentwithin everybodys reache encourage everyone who ails or thinkshe ails tp find out exactly what his state of health is You can get ourremedies here at your drug store or not at allas you prefer there ispositively no charge for examination Professor Munyon has preparedspecifics for nearly every disease which are sent prepaid on receipt ofprice and sold by all druggists
Send today for a copy of our medical examination blank and Guidet Health which we will mail you promptly and if you willansWer allthe questions returning blank to u our doctors will carefully diagnoseyour case and advise you fully without a penny charge
Address runyona Doctors Munyons Laboratories 53d Jeflcrn-
trets Philadelphia Pa
TOUGH LUCK FORt BOHI
I
2Kind Old GentlemanWbychlldren whats the matter
The Twins In chorusBQohooEverybody sez I looks jest like him
GOT HIS SOBRIQUET EARLY
Honest John Kelly Proved HIs Rightto the Title Long Before
Manhood
There lave been many stories aboutthe manner in which Honest JohnKelly the exupire first got his nicknamle Mr Kelly himself accordingto a New York letter holds that Itcame to him naturallY for even as asmall boy the purity of his soul shonethrough his face J think the firsttime I was ever called Honest Johnwas when I was quite a youngstersaid Kelly A man engaged as anambulatory salesman or tinware ob-served the ingenuous crmntenance IpreSented to the world arid hailed meYou look honest boy said he What
might your nanip be John saf l Itquite simply j hnjust like thatThen hold my horse wnlle I go in
the saloon and get a drl k said heAnd so I held his horse while he wentIn the saloon and got a drink Butthis was on lower Ninth avenue in ahay wien the avenues honors wOntto the man who could Clean the mastcops In a given time By and by thegang came along and beheld thatwagon full of tinware The peddlerwas detained wit1inby a sore thirstthentheyions or the wagon Eventually becoming darlns they unhitched thewagon and took It away True to mytrust I stood th re holding the horseAnd by and by the peddler came outof the saloon and sized up the situation Vell said he warmly youreHonest John all right You saved thehorse
The Patient TownsmenSo you got to W rk itt spite ot the
snow driftsYes But I dont see why the city
folks should not follow the example otcountry people and put up a strongkick for good roads
4GOT IT
Got 80methlng Else Too
I liked my coffee strong and Idrank it strong says a Pennsylvaniawoman telling a good story and al-though I had headaches nearly everyday I just would not believe therewas any connection between the twoI had weak and heavy spells and pal-
pitation ot the heart too and aI-
th ugh husband told me he thought it-
w1s the coffee that made me so poor-ly and did not drink it himself for liesaid it did not agree with him yet Iloved my coffee and thought I justcouldnt do without it
One day a friend called at myhomethat was n year ago I spokeabout how well she was looking andshe said
Ycs and I feel well too Its be-cause I ann drinking Postum In placeof ordinary coffee
I said What Is Posturn lThen she told me how It was
fooddrlnk and how much betti shefelt since using it in place of coffee ortea so I sent to the store anbbpght-a package and when It was mtiIe aecording to directions it was to goodI have never bought a pound of coffeesince I began to Improve immediateJy
I cannot begin to tell YOU howmuch better I feel since using Postumand leaving coffee alone My healthIs better than it has been fOr yearsand I cannot say enough in paise ofthis delicious food drink
Take away the destroyer and puta rebuilder to work and Nature willdo the rest Thats what you do whenPostum takes coffees place in yourdiet Therea n Reason
Read the little book liThe Road toWellvilleln pkge
Ever reael the above letter A ew-ene appears froM tIme to tIe Theyare geHBiae true aRd full et bullatereat
t
t
Blue MondayDo you know why we call this day
Blue MondayMaybe its because so much blue
i gIs usedJddge
THEAPPLICATION OF KNOWL
IEDGEFor the Relief of Suffering Is a cr-
dl ai of PhilanthropytBefore the discovery of Reelnol
thousands ot persons were living Ureaof torture and afflictIon who are noWwell and happy and are doing whatthey Can by telling others of theirwonderful and complete cure wIth theuse of this great remedy Tker expe-rience and other data show that Reinol has cured numerous cases thatwere Thought incurable No matterwhat may be the flature or conditionof the skin trouble whether EczemaPsoriasis Herpes Common Pimples-or any eruption a few applicationswill show Improvement Itching andIrritation will ease immediately harta complete cure follow The reliefthis remedy has given to sufferersfrom Itching Piles has caused thou
Isands to write that they consIder itworth its weight in gold It gives re-
1If Instantly and cures permanentlyin a very short time
n your face is casily irritated byshaving use Reslnol Medicated ShavIng SUck Its healing lather wlUbeyour greatest comfort
These preparations arer recommended and sold by druggists everywhere In all countries ReshidJChemIcal Co Baltimore Md
The test ot piety comes not In thepews but In the press of dallyUfe
Splendid CropsIn Saskatchewu WIstlrnCillla
800 Bushels from 20 acrestbreshersImlnater farm in theI season of lUo Kany
fields in that as well asother districts yield
edfrorn23toi5bu5iiAlURGE PROFITSare thus dertveJfrom the FREE
HOMESTEAD LANDSof Western CeEadaprc tcoil muses
to d inines-shouhidonblelntwo years timefarmingInK are all profItable FreeHomesteads 180 acres arebestrlIn certainareas Sehools andchurches lu settlemeottllmate unexcelledaoll the rlchetit wood waterand building matrlallocatioslowpamphletLastformaUoDtwflteto Bnptot lJ1mi
Canada OJ tocanadian Government Agent
GIiBMSff
GiriaqtJi1C55t you
The Wretchednessof ConstipationCans qwclly be overcome
CARTERS LITTLELIVER PILLS
Pirely yeetahie
IRWIoQ1 Ya Curs ITYLt
IVERLiaad Indeioe 11aeyIIir
Prlee1Genuine
4
YMORE EGGSa peat stet
lisna lay SIfailure Impossible
I piove it by sending my successful method osFREE TRIAL you dont have to pay Wlyour hens lay Send for tt TO DAY toMrs L Alley DettI W Madrid Me
VALUABLE BOOKWhy resort to Surgical OperationsWonderful results of Electricityproperly applied Mailed free uponrequest Address
Tile ELfCTROMEDICXL INSTITUTE2911 VIR Street ClaclaH 5ganlog AtttLtIYe proSts certain SsIgIeirrlsaUescossc-
isft5llCtcdWRhThmp Ey t-
sc EMEM-WpIMDM1
o
1Y-o THE SPRINGFIELD SUN WEDNESDAY JANUARY Ii 1911
I PRIN6PIELD SUNlsUliyD EVERY WEDNESDAY
fSU3SCRIPTION ONE DOLLAR
t In Advance
If L SMITH Editor IlK Publisher
catered at the postoffice Spnngfieldfor transmission through the
ails as secondclass matter
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
w
Oae year f10Uix Months 50
t Tree MonthA t 25
Leg Broken
t Robert Tate McElroy the son of Mrs
Robert Hardin McElroy was the victimot a painful and serrtogs accident lastweek He in company wmh a number-of young people was coasting on Wednesday night In some manner hIS legbecame entangled in the runnners ofsleigh and before he could disengage itthe leg had been broken at the ankleThe young mans wounds were im-
mediately dressed and he was latertaken to toulsville to have the injuredmember examined and IS now doingwelly
New Law in Effect
Under the new yitaILstahstics lawpassed by the last Legislature whichbecame effectIve January 1 registrarsof bIrths and deaths must be appointed-in every city and county in the State
The parents of a newborn child orthe physician or mIdwife must makereport of such bIrth to the registrar inin their dIstrict and pay a fee of 25cents for having the birth registered orbe fined for failing to do so All deathsmust also be reported to the egistr r
fore a permIt will be iss ed forbunaL The permit costs 25 ce Noundertaker is allowed to bury anyonewithout such a permIt and no one canbeburied in a private burymg 1f oundwithout a permit Anyone failing tocomply with the law will be fined
Chamberlains Cough Remedy is not
mixturesItcomplicationsthroat chest or lungs Sold by Haydon
Robertson IML4SIC
t
I Win be in teaching music at
JanuaryThoseabroad to study music will bebetter prepared by takinf3course un ermy instructionsPupils in the kindergarten classwill receieve special attention
1Piano tuning ands repairinr aspecialty O tar ShirleY
Chamberlains Cough Remedy is avery valuable medicine fotthroat andlung troubles quickly relieves andcures painful breathing and a danger-ously sounding cough which Indicatescongested lungs Sold by HaydonRobertson rI
TheAcme
Meat
Market
fOr GUT BurtonRESIDENT DENTIST
Teeth Extracted V ithout Painr
SPECIALTYA11class Springfield K-
yf ce in Baron Block up staIrs
local News Notes
Bornto the wife of Mr J H Wheatley FrIday Jan 6 1911 a boy
Cook WantedApply to Mrs Win Burns in care ofMatting Moore Distilery o Bardstown Ry white preferred
L A Burns City has for sae 400bushels Orchard Grass seed 160 Perbushel Call at once
NOTICEThe firm of ONeal and
busiInesswill find the Books in the hands of JR O Neal and must come and settleat onCj ith out further notice
ONeal WrIght
Abouta00 bushels of JllilcDcoal for sale J L AItnlIhHouse
NOTIcEParties are hereby notifiedthat I strictly forbid Hunting or trespassmgofany sort on iny place Alloffenders will be prosecuted to the ful-
lest extent of the lav No favorsshown J M Russell Rt 41
FOR SALE Four elegant buildinglots facing on Main street and fovinszton Ave Pavements and street alreadymane For further particules call onW K Robertson
Fox RENTThe store room occupiedby Miss Willie Knott as millinery storefor the year 1911 S M Campbell
Jim Hill wholives near Chaplin losta valuable mare yester jaY morningMr Hill had brought tobacco here andhad his horse hitched In the shed at thewarehouse Monday night In somemanner the horse got loose during thenight and Was on the railroadotrack thenext morning before daylightwhen themorninN tram left The mare was
struck by ih engine and immediatelyIkilled Mr Hill estimates
200
Mrs Milford D nelly dIed at the homeot her husband in the Texas neighborhood last Thursday and was buried atBethlehem church on the day followingRev R L Purdom conducting the servlcis Mrs Donelly was adaugnter ofthe late Jas Murphy and besides herhusband leaves many r latiye andfrIends to mourn her untimely death
The La ies of the Catholic churchwill serve court dinnerin February
Sell your hIdes and far to Grinsteadhe payS highest prices at the PoultryHouse
For firstclass Gleaning and presSingLadies and Gents Garments can onSPRINGFIELD CLEANING AND PRESSING
CLUB GEO G GOWDY Prop
Is the place to buy the best of everythin to eat
To My Friends and CustomersiI wish to thank you for your liberal patronage during the
past year and earnestly solicit a continuance of same durlnit theensuing year
It has been a source of great to me to serve theIhousekeepers of Springfield andWashiagton county with FrRSTICLASS FOOD PRODUCTS during my short sta at t hland during the next 12 months I will make special efforts to supP1Y You with the best ofall kinds of meats at all times I alsohave a full line of Groceries and inyite vourattention tomyprices
I earnestly solicit your liberal patr-onageJAS1MORANJr1
Bring me your beet hIdes and all Country Produce Will pay highestmarket prices If you have an extra good beef for sale phone me
Bring or send your Laun Jryfirstclass work Gaaranteed1
r
i
WARNING TO ALL PARENTS
The Tendency of some Mothers andFathers toShowPff Their Chi-
ldren Usually Ruins Them
When parents are the proud posS
sessoraof a very bright and cleverchild there le always the risk thatthey may make ot their offspring aseltconscous and priggish little person It Is natural enough that Tommyor Katie as the Case may be shouldbe Inclined to show off when theirattainments are made the subject ofconversation It is extremely bad forchildren converting them into selfconscious little men and women Instead ot just natural rough and tumble boys and girls with a healthyliking for marbles or dolls says Womans Ute Many a child has been utterly ruined In disposition by a parents openly shown pride and the tendency to bring children forward unduty and tomake them the center ofattraction before visitors is all toosadly on the increase It is of coursevery hard for the mother and father ofa 1right child to realize that the smallgenius is bound to be less Interestingto other peoples than to themselvesthat friends do not visit them for thesole pleasure of hearing Katie reciteor Tommy sing the latest popular songIn his shrill treble It may be amusingfor a while but show off childrenare apt later on to show scant likingfor the more solid attainments withthe result that their slower dullerbrothers and sisters leave them be-
hind on the ladder of fame Cultivatea chUds talents by all means but donot parade them 1Ii public before himIt may mean the roin of a possiblyfine career
WOULD ABOLISH PUBLIC ZOO
Restlessness or Sullen Melancholy ofWild Animal Caged Hu Gloomy
Impressiveness
The chafing restlessness or sullenot wild caged has
a lmpressirenesewhich workspowertuUrcB the sympaThy of sensi-tive persons A rich New Yorkwoman Mrs George WFacklerwants to abolish an the zoos In thecountry The sentiment whichprompts her commands admirationwithout conviction som ethbe conceded to science to ingmu8tIto popular curiosity whichconcerned in exhibitions ofzens of Jungle and forest Then IIMrs Fckler euro she would reallybenefit the animal creation by herplan Frey WJd iteaat4 suffer Ii worsefate than imprisoned ones The warof tribe against tribe furred featheredor l1nnrII an endlesd and frightfulconflict with no quarter given Allbunters can tell hocking stories ofanimals mutilated by each other orinjured by accident and condemnedto drag out a lingering agony moredreadful than death We read of
med medical attendance for
Ilk lions and bears in zoos elIonly hope ot awounded or sickbultTo Lengthen Life
A former United States surgeonsays that human life may be length-ened It people are taught more aboutthe subject of ventilation how tobreathe how to dress In addition hewould have food supplied by municipalkitchens where the cooks shall be re-
quired to pass an examination and notObe engaged tfnlcaq they possess theproper certificate ot qualification Hemight have gone further and saidthat In case we have municipal kitch
mulnicfpalto see that the kitchens provide purefood Perhaps there would have tobe a kitchen committee above them tosee that the conimislsoners were not-
influenced by graft But many ahousekeeper will cling to her kitchen
readtD1Ia familieshut most families like their food
whichINot Medical Men
INurses are not niedlcal men Onthe contrary the nurses are th re and-
solely there to carry out the ordersinicourseot cleunilness fresh air diet etc Thewhole organization or discipline to
must betheeInurses to arty out intelligently andfaithfully wcn orders and such dutiesas constitute the whole practise otnursing They are in no sense medl1withtraining understand how best to carry out medicaland surgical orders JnClutUqg as
cleanUnes8IwhY waY andnot that wayA Forgotten LetterCenturyI
An Architectural incidentThe West Philadelphia man picked-
up his morning paper and read theheadlines Man Hit by BotFromCleat Sky
For a moment be was puzzledThen he read farther on and foundthat the lean had been standt deara skyscraper in course of ere tlonSlid that a workman had dropped thebolt which lad alighted on the utlfor-iunate mans dome of thoughli
t
4II OFLOWERPR1CEsrHANwEHAVEIt for Cash We Will Sell at Cost
Womens Tailored Suits and CloaksMisses arid Childrens CloaksMens and Boys Suits and OvercoatsBed Blankets and ComfortsCarpets Wall Paper and Lace Curtains
I Cunningham DuncanMSpSiS SSS SiSS S SLIS IIII1 LZ
MAUDIAs I have been a correspoundent for
this paper eVEr since the second issueI will try and wrIte down a few itemsfor the New Year Wishing the editorreaders arid aU the correspondents eprosperous year Let us hear from aU
the writers do your best to have anewsy paper this year
Moving is the order of the dayaroundour town
Tot Wakefield and family left Monday for their new home in Oldhamcounty We regret to lose them buwish them success
Mrs Ora Crume and Miss MattieAndrews spent Sunday afternoon withMiss Josie Shehan
Henry Royalty of Springfield seenSunday afternoon m our town
Narris Montgomery and Roy liar lmwere In Bloomfield Saturday
Andre w KIrsch and familY spent Sun-
dae wIth Sam Moore and familyJ M Montgomery returned home
Saturday night from a trip t Oldhamcounty and Louisville
Neal BodinE and wife dined With MrsSallie Bodine and daughter last Friday
M Wakefield and wife of near Stringtown spent Sunday with FrankWakefjeld and family
Mr and Mrs Ike Wright and daugh-ter f Bloomfield and Mrs KitShewmaker spent Friday with thefamily ofM L Troutman
Mr and Mrs Cheatham and childrenof near Willisburg visited their sIsterMrs R tl Arnold Friday night andSaturday
Misses Ifallie Hustbn and Nellie Andrews were in Bloomfield SaturdayshoppIng
Mr and Mrs Richard Boblitt of-
Springfield are visiting relatives inNelson County
Chas Lewis and wife of Bloomfieldspent Friday wIth Mrs Mary Shehan
Roy Moss dined wIth E E Wakefield and family Sunday
We are sorry to know Mrs WallaceStay IS still on the sick list hope shewIll soon be able to be out again
Free SampleIFor Babys Ills
Something can and must be donefor the puny crying baby for thechild that refuses to eat and is rest-less in its sleep And since the basisof aU health is the proper workingof the digestive organs look first tothe condition of the stomach andbowels
A child should have two full and treeThisIlightnesstoknowindigestionand other purgatives are not only toostrong but the child refuses them beevertrieda liquid tonic that families have beenusing for n Quarter ora century It IseffectivetobetotakeuseditthiswayIgetono dollar a bottle just as thousands ototMrSWalnutthat way and now write that It Is theirItsettItconsUpatioDundfree sample ot this rpmedvpleasedtotothetree of charge Explain your cue in aetalLForsame and address ona postal card erto1sa4drewill bul1dt Meatlellee Ill
J
w
5r>
Discount For CASH I
mosttpAces giving 5 per test t firCash in all ADeis testisg frIIIJIWAGON BREECHING425 5 6 650 and 750clothtWAGON LINES all made 16 feet tong sewed and riyited
1 inch Lines 240118 inch Lines 275
WORK BRIDLES per pair 1190240 265These BrIdles all have good large blindsand heavy reins cutfrom a No 1 leather i p
BELLY BANDS17-a inch wide per pair 85If inch wide per paIr 952 Inches wide per Pair105BAC-K BANDS with snaps good and heavy 2 for6GOOD SLID 1 INCH NAME STRAPS 2 for2
lam offering my chain or era en harness tell lets fara big barIais
2 Bridles 1902 Par Haines with straps llo2 PaIr Trace Chains extra heavy 1402 Collars 11 5004252BellY a
1Palr LInes 16 fet bag 240 r
Total 41690-Discount for each 90
loal iiEl41 pair rassels 35
4 Snaps extra 20ota i655
Will make the complete outfit for lG 00Now is your opportunity to save money It this set doesnt
suit you we have them heavier with prices in proportion
BUGGY HARNESS per set 9o andll50We have many other stylesgive tree with each set of andII snapstor btlcking straps and linosp
HARNESS OIL the best thewhile tt lasts for onlyCinWashington
Can Save you Money on Roofing
Ceo J BegemannShop in Old Baptist Church
fAIR VIEW
There has been a good deal of moving-in the past week Mr Reynolds hasmoved to Kelly Shop Jean Wn6hburDhas moved in the house vacated by MrReynolds nd John Carey has moved-
to his farm purchased from Mr Ed-
BoblittMr Sam Scott wIfe and baby and
Cheatham and family spentSunday wIth Mr L B Carney
Mr and Mrs Hayesand son ElmoSunday with Mr and Mrs J N
OliverWalter Carney spent Saturday and
Sunday WIth his parents near WillisburscMr Hallie BobUtt has returned home
after tt weeks visit with friends In Loulsville
Mr Ed Yocum and family spent Satwith Mtatid Mrs Oliver
Willie Chesser spent Saturday nightand Sunday t rtZh his uncle LDCarney
Myrtle and Julia Mae Carney spent
i
Friday afternoon with Miss Eva Cheatham
SLJISCRIIEi FREE COLIII
R L Brady Rt 3 has for sale X15or20 tons of timqth hay
Lopes A Walker Rt 1 has for sat4 mule foot male H
ISam G Tucker Rt 1 has for saltpore bred Rhode Island red cockerels
100 eachMrs Emmett Settle fit 1 has for
said pure Silver WyandoU cockerelsL00 each
4bushelsper bushel Can at once
thuithatdotheaid These tablets change weak
eeeglaomlhesa tIfNaViitakenltobertiion
rTHE SPRINGFIELD SUN WEDNESDAY JANUARY II 19U 1
H + + ++ + + iJ1J + + tWt ++++ i+++ I1I t 1
ReduciniSaleflffJr I
intend making this the Biggest Sale of Dry Goods Mens and Boystla Clothing Ladies Suits and Cloaks Shoes for all lens andies Underwear etc ever held irI Central Kentucky We will endeavor to reduce our enormous stocks by offering every item at1 CUT PRICES for 30 DA YS i4 So as to give everyone a chance for some of these Great Bargains Tose
s
t thinks so dont d who come first naturally thelay Space wiU not permit get choicestour naming4 + prices on items butmanyyou Can save give YOU below idea ofmoney during is sale On many items we some howt worth of goodsfor 100 Read the prices belowpropose making a dollar do double duty thattjs 5200 r
ttDressGoodsDepartment
r+gamsiin this department Read the prIcesand be convinced+ Reg Price Sale Price+t 50c5Oc125 Dress Goods10075cL50 Broad Cloths floo
S f Extra SpecialFew pieces WOOLEN QRSS GOODS
In black and colors at 12 P ricefor85etLot of Colored Silks Less than Cost
lttit Many other Bargains in this department
++ White Goods15c grade India Linens forc12c12c grade India Linens r 9Ci 25dt 15d
W Fine for waistingsOur stock of White Goods is complete AU go atCut Prices
LinensZ and Linn
t At Cut Prices
j
+ tt
w V STALLARD D D SKY 72
3
uDone in this office is first
Over 1
b OOOOQo oeD
0Jn Out of D
Up ofr News0 e
rat Ik ot
is gin New
W and T Sthe at
lasti A L and
e
G T
Mrs andof herMrs t T
I P C spen t
Table Linens afld
Towels a tCu1 Prices
65c all for 45c75c all Linen for 55e
100 all for 75c125 all150 aU Linen for
35c
All go at Cutper d ozen50c t0 10
Our lOc go for each fcOur 15c lio for each l0eOur 25c go foreath20cNic line up tq 100 each it price
t Domestics
AT
and get we will save you good
Laces EmbroideriesAt and
One lot 10c Lace per yarfor only 4c
CorsetsOne lot 100 go in
for only c
ofIfve
=
shat t t s1r +++ + ++ t3t ++ tT it ++++
PHONE
WITHOUT
Palm Dln
Grocery
Visitors andRound the Weeks
Personalh
Mattie visionHaven
Mayestobacco Lex
week
Ms Jenkins
Jarviscounty spent night
Robert Graham childrenguests of
Bodine
1r and Mrs Weaver
Linen DamaskDamask
Linen DamaskLinen Damask
Damask 115
Big Stock NapkinsPrices
Regularregular Towelsregular Towels
Towels reduced
cutcall prices money
Lessregular Torchon
grade Corsets thts-
sale 50
to
Velaria spent lastweek Noe
Mrs Allen ot Elizabethtownthe guest of her son L 151
IMrs R H and son spenl-in Louisvlllet
LT C who thethe of W O thisand who has of forthe month is able to b outand has to hiswork
Mr C whoquite attack st nilch trouhIe last Week and is able hO
BankVbe at his at the FIrst
Leo was in yes
andthe week end with Mrs Alice
Miller in New Hope
= Dr E has r turnedhome after a to Dr and
The new occupieshalf o my my s
to on the A fehats at less cost Also
coat
Mrs Williams
MILL
JI spent the latter partof last week withrelatives in
Kay Piles visited hisMrs S E Piles at this place
Mr T A Tatum i andfell from the door of his meat housewhich in the ofoff hIS rIbs
E Goatl1yand wife visited at theof M W Seay of near Maud
lastN M ran away Sat
urday from oneand several thing from the tug
no great was
R O and Tatum vialted W R Moran at Elm Hill
Misses M ttie of Scienc eHall Pearl and Mud d
atwereguests of
Cedar View TueodavlastMrs SE Pile is no better at the s
fl H Tatum is cattle to makea
Mrs Hugh visIted at theIhome of Mr and Mrs Ed sday last
res
theirbaccoT Brown and A B Wa
I
andSilk and S tinePetti
coats and Tailored Waists
at Cut
Ladies 35 SUIts for 250030 200025 1500
15 1000
Lot of Children at Haif
65 Black Sat ne for 45P5150f 100
4 00 Silk for 300600 Silk 450
Big Cut in of ChildrensSweaters
Rugs a n PaperI
an d Lace Curtains ReducedSpecial Bargains in Curtains as
we are very Overstocked
BlanketsRobes Horse Covers
at Special Prices
4
J
J
Mr of Lousville in this sectionlast week
Mr and Mrs E J Brown ofvisited at the home of Mrs S E
Piles andMr and James Moran visIted
at they home of Mr W F Moran atIElm Hill last week 3
F M who has tothis place will the
the yearMiss Foster of is
the of Miss Tatum
P F purchased a young from Ned Eleryfor 200
Mr has moved toBooker on the r cent
E S atthe home of Mrs Hugh
Glin
such a heaps
USE DR
I and SLitTi ILQO poi yKr
s andN
fer
Few Pricer
Shoes Shoes IFor Men W ome
WThis
Full line of FELT OVERand at CUT +
Boys FurnishingsSuch Shirtsand Sweaters at Gut Prices W
Lot of at
For of The +We carry an extra large stock Qf
and will offer all at Cut Prices this sale
is the opportunity ever afforded ohQ people this ha to save foodswactually We onto call at 2iha STOREandmoney wIll we convince you that wets on you bUYing of uS
prices gedTh Robertson Claybrooket mmaAs + + 2t+ itt + + t + tSt kti3stas7a i7 aSa2 LSsysSstatssaldsdaAaZs
SPRINGFIELD
ElTB-
EXTRACTED
Ir
andInstasShaders
Personal Notesaj-
r TownA
oooo oooobliss Thompson
attended meetintington
daughterhorniSenator ofTaylorFrIday here
Louisville are siste
spents
Napkins
for90c20cimd4cOneGinghams
PRICES
and
Sunday Lebanon
Miss Goodletwith Miss Margaret
AlleneklIMcElroyThursday
NelhgonLodge Wat place
beenU1 pneumoniapast
returned here finish
McElroy sufferedserious of
isbetterdesk National
Noonan Louisvilleterday
MrsWF Trusty
McKayvisit Trusty
family
Noticesbank onlystore bushes
lust samegoon thanSkirts and suits
VALLEY
Spring-fieldsecIdunngVthepast
ecently slipped
resulted breaking two
JhomeTuesday
horseASIde breaking staft
loosinggy damage done
Vivian BradleyTuesday
SpringfielnClarkston
GoatleyMiss Goatlev
writingbuying
shipment SaturdayGoatley
Belly
thewfarmersjlotlMessrsW
Ladies SuitsCloaks
Muslin Underwear
Prices
20uCloaks Price
PETTICOATSPetticoats
125coPetticoatsPetticoats fori
Price Ladies and
Carpets w
Extra
much
and Comforts
Low
cani
ttit
Weeklys
Imosene
tjhusesIIMiss
Henry Goatley andwifevisited relatives
aaHSaturday Sunday
Mrs
Strange removedrun blacksmith shop
duringVirginia Louisville
guest
purchasedacowdRev Hennessy recently
horse
Will Bradshawplace he ybqught
family vIsItedGoatley
POII1lA
AllisonIauThepre necessitybeIfKINGSHaykIoniBUD Cotuler JournaL
13prinjtk14ius
Men Boys tSuits OvercoatsmoneyWe
Extra Special inducements
Lots at HalfeatShoe
land ChildrentShoeqCut PrICes During SaleRUBBERS BOOTS
GAITORS LEGGINS PRICES
Mens and
asHats Collars Neckwear Gloves
Hats Half Price
Warm Underwear and HosieryEach Member Family
Underwearduring
This positively best of part Statethey need cordially invite you BIG bid moneyyou then NOT Insist cant
t1tO COll
McElroy
QOOOO
friends
CMcChord
Towels
Cost
origanizI4e
again
James
childre-sPent
Miller
rwill
Derringer
grandmother
MattIe
Lace
Lap
Science
preceding
Louise
Goatleyand
Parsons
Chamberlains Cougn Remedy neverdisapaoints those who use It for obstin-
ate coughs colds nd IrriatJonsof ther
throae and lungs It stands unrivalled
as a remedy for all throat artd lungdiseases Sold by Haydon Robertson
I
PASTRIESWe bake every day and always have a fresh line
Of pastries Telephone 69 and your orders will be de
livered promptly
Light read Cream read-
All kinds of Fancy Cakes
Pies Rolls Buns Eta
tysters and CelerYrresh Fruits and Candies
Fitzgerald tiert-lenJTJT 1
lf I 11 11111 It
j ROUND ABOUT
STATEJMOST IMPORTANT NEWS
GATHERED FROM ALL
+ PARTS OF KENTUCKY
i 11111111 + + 11 + + + + 11
BANKERS DONT LIKE IT
New Blank Forms Ask for Informa-tlon They Want to Keep
FrankfortBecause the new formsfor bank statements called for iriformatibn concerning loans and resourcesthere is some complaint by bankersthroughout the state against furnish-ing the information to the secretary-of state and the superIntendent ofbanks Nearly half of the banks however gave the information while others have asked for legal advIce beforefurnishing It
RRISTOWTO JUDGESHIP
appointedxof Georgetown judge of Scott county to fill tilevacancy occasioned by the death ofJudge J J Yates The governor leftfor Louisvllle to confer regardIng theappointment of a successor to JudgeShackleford Miller of the cIrcuitcourt bench-
GOVERNQR AND WIFE INVITED
Frankfortoov Willson and MrsWilson ree teed an invitation fromPresident and Mrs Taft to attend a-
reception at the white house January10 Gqr WInson also recelvedan i l-
itatIonto attend a meeting of thePerlodii Publishing association onJanuary 6
HELD AFTER SHOOTING
FrankfortSherman True was ar-
rested on the charge of being a membero the crowd that raided a Greekrestaurant here a week ago durIngwhich Steve Theophanis was shot
Frankfort William Crantz of Roanoke Va a contractor was shotthrough the J ft leg and seriouslywounaer Crantzl claims that he letthe volverdrop from his hInd poc-ket C CNeale who was with Crantzat the time was arrested
KENTUCKIAN THE PRESIbENT-or
FrankfortImportant and instructine addresses were delivered beforethe Southern Educational associationat Chattanooga Election of officer sresulted President M A CassidYof Kentucky first vIce president HL Whitfield pf llUsslssippi secondvice president M L Brittian of Georgia treasurer E P Burns ot Georgia Tile selection of the place ofsleeting and the election of a secre-tary were referred to the ioard of directors
RECEIVER APPOINTED
Hardinsburgon motion otcounselforthe First state bank at Eckronwhich closed its doors Judge Chelf
x appointed M H Beard of Hardinsbur br
receiver for the institutloli liMercer on behalf of the bank ennounced that the depositors probablyreYcauses of the suspensIon were slowcollections and overloans
SPECIAL VENIRE SUMMONED
irarikIln =The term of the SimpsoncIrcuit court whlch adjourned for theholidays met to cases of Jo-seph McElwain charged wIth the kUling of wm Weir and of Lum Vancecharged with being an accessory
The panel summoned was exhaus ted without obtaining a jury and She riff Gossett was ordered tli summon aspecial venIre of forty men fromyen county
SHOOTS SELr WHILE HUNTiNG
Whitesburg Noah Sowards 60 a celdentaIly shot hImself whIle out hunting in the mountains The en irecharge took effect in his left thigh
BANDS DOORS CLOSED
LoulsvllleThe Kentucky and In-
dIana bank located at West Point ha sBey nL Bruner secretary of state whocharges a the bank has overlo nedand tha r v Of the notes held by itare absoutely worthless AccordIngto Mrti3 i r the bankrill propablybe able topay its depositors In full
HOSPITAL TRUSTEES NAMED
Louisville Mayo >r
W O Head reappointed nine members of the boardot trustees of the tuberculosIs hospital
as follows L J DUtmsr Dr G SCoon Rev J S Lyons Dr SldneyMeyer Tholnna B Morton Chtres-Bobmer
HDr 1Y Johnson A T Ma c
donald and E WWetstefn Tile tent-memberof
hthe board was Temple
Ilodley fait he resigned and his placeQab not bfn tilled His successor wI-
beI
appointed sOon
t
PE CHsEEd MONEYS
Convict Carved Enough In PrlsontcProvide Him a Home
FrankfortL D MorrIson of Cynthiana lllown to his fellow convIctsas the monkeyman left the penttentiary haying been pardoned byGov Vlllson He saved enoughmoney whIle a convict from thesale-of monkeys carved from peach seedsto buy a farm in Harrison countyywhere he wlll go to spend the rent ofhis life
FIRE AT ELKTON
ElktonFlre unknown origin destrOYe4 the store ot Page Fox andalso the annex to the Elkton hotelThe l ss wIll reach 2500 with only
1000 insurance The lire workershad a hard time to prevent the burnills of a number of valuable buildingswhich adjoIned the burned property
throughActingL Jett that hs services as ompRvrof Confederate records would be riftpenned with Jettwho is a Confedcrate soldIer was appointed aboutthree years ago It Is not knownwhether the office will be dlsccm-tinued It pay 1200 a year
TAX VALUATIONS
Property Assessments Raised andMore Taxes Will Be Collected
FrankfortThe copyIng of thecounty assessors books °for thIs yearsassessment of property In the city Qt
Frankfort has been completed b7 Circult Clerk Ben Marshall for CountyClerk Crawford Lee The total assessed value of city property by thecounty assessor shows a substantialincrease over last years assessmentThe total assessed value of city property tact year was 4198961 Thisyear the total Is 4443777 on increase ot 244816 whIch will producetaxes to the county of over 3000 Inexcess of last year
The city assessment of this property is considerably larger reachingto nearly five mlllion and a halfTPAYIFranttforlAbout 4000 must bepaid either by the state of the citi-zens of Louisville who were partiesto the injunction suit restrainIng thesheriff of Jefferson county from collectIng taxes on the twelvepercentincrease In the valuation of propertyIn that county State Auditor FrankPt James sent letter to Atty GenBreathitt asking who should pay forthe 45000 postal cards and 90 newtax bdoks required-
STOLE FOR HIS MOTHER
Frankfort Because of the modestyof GOY Willson he faIled to give outfor publication a pardon he grantedon Christmas eve as a Christmas prossilt to Harry Smith of Louisville sontenced to the penitentiary for two
ears for obtaining money under falsepretenses Smith explained to GOY
Willson that hebJld obtained themoneyto pay for a surgical operatio-en
nhis mother
QUARREL ENDED FATALLY
FrankfortSteven Theophapis aGreek restaurant keeper was shotand fatally wounded and Landcatcher of the Cleveland Americasleague team Pat Bohannon formerlywith the Louisville team are amongthe ten men arrested in connectionwith the shooting which followed aquarrel in a restaurant
Frankfort When the governmentstocks a stream with fish it asks thatsome effort be made to protect thefish untIl they can propagate andhatch George L Payne and severalother sportsmen have been interestIng themselves in shaving Elkhorn re-stocked He received assurances thata supply would be sent next slimmer
FOUR MEN SURRENDER
rMt Sterltng Millard Martin ChaSMartin Floyd McCalll and Nelse Abnerwho took part In the shooting and cuttlng affray at Jeffers nvIllersurrerideyed to SherIff Crooke They weretaken before County Judge McCo-rmirk and their examining trIal set torJanuarY 7 One man ymoughby Isdead as a result ot the general tight
r THREE HILDRENBURNE
WisdomThree children of RobertBoles a farmer were burned to deathandthethe children In the house When shereturned the house was burned to theground and the charred bones of thethree little ones whose ages were 3
and 1 year were found In one cornerorth spot where the house stood
LexlngtonOut of all the athletesmale and female in the state a younggirlstill in her teens Miss Mary AnnaBean of Lexington was chosen chairman of the Department oJ PhysicalEducatIon of the Kentucky Eduoational assocIation at the meeting of thtexecutive committee
ChapezeReuben Mock blacksmithIwas found frozen to death ne rhIIIhome He had probably lain where newas found all right as his body wasEWfwh r found No reason is knownfor 6uapFC 1nQsoul playoeauzcida
35O RECIPE CU ES-
WEAKKIDlEYS FREE
RELIEVES URINARY AND KIDNEYTROUBLES BACKACHE STRAIN
ING SWELLING ETC
Stops Pain In the Bladder Kidneysand Back
Wouldnt it be nice within a week ofsoto egin toItrequentthe backotthehead aches the stitchesand pains In the back the growing muscle weakness spots before the eyes yel
wolleneyeUdsshort breath sleeplessness and the des-pondency
I have a recipe for these troubles thatyoU can depend on and It you want tooughttodoctor would charge you 350 just forwriting this prescription but I have Itandwill be glad to send It to you entire-ly tree Just drop me a line like this
BuildingDetroitwillscroonly pure harmless remedies but It hasgreat healing and painconquering power
It will quickly show Its power once youuso ftso I think you had better see whatIt Is ithout delaY I will send you acopy freeyou can use It and cure yourself at home
tREALLY OPENED THEIR EYES
Parishioners Remark However LeftYoung Minister Somewhat In
the Dark
Rev Henry R Rose In the NewarkStar tells the story of a young min-ister who lstai recently taken chargeof a small yarish In Vermont Helargefieldtion would travel beyond tIle lImits otthe village to WhIch he had been senthe threw into hIs sermons all theforce and eloquence at hIs command
totallyunllreparedformen but which was put tJ hIm insuch away that It left hIm in doubtas to the real impression he had madeOne Sunday mornIng after an especIally brilliant effort lie was greetedby an old lady who was one of themost faithful attendants at all servIces Approaching the young minIstershe saId Ah sir we do enjoy yoursernious so much they are sostrucUve Do you believee It we neverknew what sin was until you came tQthe parish
His Ruling PassionThe young man waited for the mil-
lionaires replyI dont blame ydu for wanting to
marry my daughter saId the latterAnd now how much do you supposeyou and she cnnwor long on
The youth brightenedII think he cheerfully stam
mered that 200000 well Investedwould produce a sufficient Income
T1e millionaire turned back to hIs
papersVerywell he said I will gIve
you iooooo provIdIng you raise asimilar amount
Arid the young man went away sorrowing
A Discouraging ViewWo must Investigate this affair
said the rural officIaLWhats the use responded Farm
er CorntosseL I never saw an Inves-
tIgaUoIi that changed anybodys personal likes and dislikes
We cannot choose our life but wecan choose the way we shall live ILEmerson
Jc mii TRE Y FtotheBESTU e
PUTNAM FADELESS DYESCtler 1MrtI1H1th1er asd kMer eeM this Ose 1Oeukase iiiMtsIWM Mf1WtttatriHl aNr6 Wrlk ter tree Heldtar + DHtIiJtIICfitrs MOMROw
GOT THE BEST OF THE ELDER
Apt Quotations of Brer Reuben SavedHis Mule and at the Same Time
Rebuked Sin
Elder HarrIs was making anotherattempt to Induce one of the membersof hIs flock to trade horses with him
Dat pony o youn Brer Reubenhe said Is jes what I want an mybig bay hos Is jest what yo want Ikin git over de grotm faster wId depony an you kin haul a Igger loadwid de hose Hitdbe a good trade furbofeen us ceptlnldat Itd be a leetlemeYouches nut sorl
De pony uits me well nough elder averred Brother Reuben for thetwentieth time 1 don keer t makeno swap
But I jes natcheUy got t have datpony Brer Reuben
Elder spoke the otherperiod of profound thought I been
timeWellwhat Is itsaysboutaInt we still livin undah de ten com
manments 1
IBrer en solemnly averredElder Harris we aIr
Well one o dem commanmeItssays we mustnt covet nytlng wtbongs t our neighbors anyourecovetIn dat lil chestnut sorl pony omIne Rrer Harris
Then the elder gave it up Clearlytho tenth commandment was againsthmChlcago Tribune
Left Both SatisfiedIt aU happened on one of those few
carsOh saidtIre brunette You paid comingdown
No I shall pay declared Gladyswith equal firmness What if I didthatlastLet me settle the quarrel ladlessuggested the diplomatic conductor
Why not use the denatured form ofDutch treat
Whats thatWell you each pay the others
tare<t that was the way they solved
ILClevel nd Leader
HardHearted JudgeThe Sympathetic Par Wotcher
Blll Youlooks bad been laid upBillYes sort of Avent been
outer doors for three munfsThe Sympathetic PalWOt was the
matter wlvyerBillNuffin only the judge wouldnt
believe itThe Sketch
The wealth of a man Is the numberof things whIch ho loves and blesseswhich he Is loved and blessed byCarlyle
When the Weekly Which sued us for libelbecause we publicly denounced them for an
editorial attack on ours claims was searchingsome weak they thought best to
send a N Y Atty to Battle Creek summoned25 of our Workmen and took their sworn statements before a Commissioner
Did wel object No On the contrary wohelped all We could for tho opportunity wastoo good to be lost
Gee HaInes testified he inspected the wheatand barley also floors and every part of thefactories to know thIngs were kept cleanWhat every 30 mInutes a sample of the products was taken and Inspected to Keep thefood up to standard und keep out ally impufsties also that it is the duty of every manthe factories to see that anythIng not InIis immediately reported Has boon wIthCo 10 years-
Edward Young testified hail been with Co15 years Inspector ho and his men exam-ined every sack and car or wheat and barleyto see they were up to standard and rejectedmany cars
H E Burt Supt testified has been withCo over 13 years Bought only the bestgrain obtainable That the Co kept n corpsor men who do nothing but keep thIngs cleanbright and polished
Testified that no Ingredient went Into GrapeNuts and Postum except those printed In theadvertising No possIbilIty of dny foreignthings getting into the foods as most of themachInery Is kept dosed Asked if the factOry Is open to the public said yes and ittook from two to throo guides constantly toshow visitors through the works SaId noneof the processes Were carried on behind closeddoors
At this point attys for the Weekly triedto show the water used was from some britside sonrce Testified the water came fromCos own artesian wells and was pure
I
NOWA AY8I
UrII IjIIl y
JenkIns humorouslY Well do yoor your wife rule In the household
Benedict serlouslyNelther We
governmenby t
ControversyOntheist church In Bath Me there Is awooden figure of an angel It is noa remarkably fine specImen of arthas always been somewhat laughedabout e ecially because of Its highheeled sMes The Bath Enquirer re-calls the story tHat a former pastor ofthe North congregational church oncewiththeever see an angel with highheeledshoes on its feet Why no an-
swered Mr Raymond I cant say thatI ever did but did you ever see onewithout themj
A Young PhilosopherTime is arelative quantity Some
minutes seem like hours and somehours seem like minutes How to control this flight is beyond any personbut the little boy mentioned belowseems to have progressed pretty wellfora youngster
The teacher was surprised to sethat he remained perfectly Idle allthrough recess and accordingly askedhim Y11y he did not play
Cause he said slowly It makesrecess too quick If r play and I wantIt laaast Youths Companion
Same ThingJoakleyYoure right most people
worry over what they havent gotbut I know certain people who worrybecause of what they have
CoakleyThat so What nave theyToakley Nothing The Catholic
Standard and Times
the KindI think that 1mutreur had great
nerve to make love to Ills employer sdaughter
So he hadmotor nerve
clan to be sure they were all In proper phys-Ical condition also testified that state reportsshowed that Co pays better wages than the
ho thought hIgher than any Inthe state
water Anything else No sir Postummade of Wheat Wheat Bran and New OrleansMolasses Statements made on his experionce of about 10years with Co
Testified bakers are required to wear freshwhite suits changed every other day Saidhad never known any ALthe products beingsent out that were below the high standardot inspection Asked if any ono connectedwIth the Postum Co had instructed hIm howto testify laid No sir
Horace Brown testified has been with Co 9years Worked In GrnpCNuts bake shopTestified the whole of the flour Is compoSed ofWheat and Barley Attys tried to contusehim but he Insisted that any casual vIsitorcould see that Nothing else went Into the flour
ly lawyers hoping to find at least one whowould say that some undergrade grain wasput In or some unclean condition was foundsomewhere
But It was no useEach and every man testified to the purity
and cleanlinessAia sample take the testimony ot Luther
W Mayo
1ngGrapeNuts Testified that the ovens andfloors are kept Clean and the raw products asthey go in are kept clean Also that thewearIng apparel of the employes has to bechanged three times n week
People who borrow trouble alwaysgive more than they get
Mrs Winelowe 8oothts 8yrspieduce18ammaUonallaye
The whIrlwind of passion scattersmany of the needs of sIn
manyserious iDr Plerces PleasanLPellets The favor-ite family laxative
Marcus Aurelius
Some people would drown with a lifepreserver at hand They are the kindthat suffer from RheUmatism and NeuralWizardil
The CacheKnlckerWe are told to dot our
shoppIng ehrlyaluready concealed a tiein the top bureau drawer
tt
Quick as WinkburningAll druggists or Howard BrosBuffaloNYiHis SpecialtytWhat has become of young Mt
successOh yes indeed Hes got all the
work he can do nowMagaZine or audio workHe draws the maltese cross shoW
Ing where the body was found in theevening papersCleveland Leader
On the DogA small West PhiladelphIa boy may
be an author some day He has justfinished his first essay It Is on a do-
A dOg Is an anImal with four legsa tale and pants btu he never changesthorn He wags his tale when he Isglad and sits on it when he Is sorry Adog Is a us flit lanimule because he blteseofe<l
Young Age Pensions 7
Young age pensIons Why not Ttties honors riches pensIons and mostother good things are as a rule postpolled to a period of life when the caparity for enjoying them has beenblunted Australia was one of thefirst countries to adopt oldage penslows and now a Labor member of thecommonwealth parliament proposes acomplementary scheme ot young agepensIons He would start by pensioning the fourth child at birth The factthat three had previously been bornshowed that the parents Were doingtheir duty and deserving well ofthstate The young age pensIon would
reward industry and encourage thebirth rateLondon Chronicle
Now About Clean Fo odAnother Splen id Opportunity to
Brink Out Factsfirstclasshighnverageund
GrapeNuts
cleanSo
yearsNow
yyour
oftalent
anhe
Q Do you usePostum orGrapeNutsYui1self at all
A Yes I use them at homeQ If from your knowledge of the factory
which YOU have gained in your ten years atthe factory you believed that they were dIrtyorthemACompanyhadmanner Stated No
All these sworn deposItions were carefullyexcluded from the testimony at the trial forthey wouldnt sound well for the Weekly
Think of the fact thatevery man swore toAttyforcourt that the food was pure and goodWhat a disappointment for the WeeklyBut the testimony ShowedAll of the grain used in GrapeNuts Postum
and Post foastles 1stb e highest stnndardpossible to obtain
All parts of the factory are kept scrupulous-ly clean
None of the workmen had been told how totesty
Most ot them have been from 10to15 yearsWIth the Co nnd use the products on theIr 4tables at homeWhydo their families use the products cGrapcNutSPostum and Post ToasUes that fthey themselves make 7
Theres a Reason
Postum Cereal Co LtdBattle Crelt Mich
I
fylrrrrn
1SSYNOPSIS
Lawrence nake1ey lawyer goes toPtttsburg with the forged notes in theBronson case to get the deposition ofJohn Gilmore millionaire In the latterstome be Is attracted by a picture of ayoung girl whom the millionaire explains
requestsBlakeleyrives her lower eleven and retains lower
He finds a drunken man In lowerlea and retires In lower nine He awstens In lower seven and finds his clotheslad bag missing The man In lower ten
found murdered Circumstantial ev-lInee points to both Blakeley and theUnknown man who had exchanged clothesinteraBlake ley is rescued from the burning car1r the girl In blue His arm Is brokenThey go to the Carter for breakrut The girl be Alison West
Partners sweetheart Her pecuUardons mystify the lawyer She drops
Mr gold bag and Blakeloy puts It In his
Jrtock t returnu home He findshe Is under survelllance Moving
Mct1re ot the train taken just before theWve k reveal to a man leapinggriplakeley
VI1 leaped from the nearsprained his ankle He stued some
Ed at the Carter place Wh makingat Carters Blakeley fines AllJ and kisses her Mrs Conway the
woman for whom Blakeley bought theP1Illman ticket tries to make a bargainnotnowg
CHAPTER XXI
McKntghte TheoryJ1 confess I was staggered Thepeople at the surrounding tables afterglancing curiously in my directionlooked away again
I got my hat and went out in a veryuncomfortable frame of mind Thathe would inform the police at once
it ht fthe knew I never doubted unlees Possibly she would give a day ortwos grace in the hope that I wouldchange my mind
I revIewed the sltuatlonas I waitedfar a car Two passed me going inthe opposite direction and on tJ e firstone I saw Bronson his hat over hiseyes his arms folded looking moodilyahead Was it imagination orr was
the small man huddled in the corneref the rear seat HotchkissmyselfGnIliing The man wasaU the world like a terrier ever on theKent and scouring about in every di-
rectionI found McKnIght at the Incubator
with his coat off working wIth enth4-Ium nd a manicure file cver the
horn of his autoIts the worst horn I ever ran
across he groaned without lookingup as I came InuThe blanketblank thing wont blow
He punched it savagely finally ellcSting a faint throaty croak
Sounds like croup i suggestedMy sisterinlaw uses camphor and
goose grease for it or how about aspice poultice
But McKnight never sees any jokesbut his own He flung the horn chattering Into a corner and collapsedsulkily into a chair
Now I said if youre throughmanicuring that horn Ill tell you
about my talk with the lady In blackWhats wrong asked McKnight
languidly Police watching her tooNot exactly The fact is Rich
theres the mIschief to payStogie came ln bringing a few addl
Lions to our comfort When he wentout I told my story
You must remember I salduthatI had seen this woman before themorning of the wreck She was buyIng her Pullman ticket when I didThen the next morning when the murder was discovered she grew hyster-ical and I gave her some whisky Thethird and last time I saw her Untiltonight was when she crouched beaide the road after the wreck
McKnight slid down in his chair un-
til his weight rested on the small othIs back and put his fqt on the bigreading tableij Its rather a facer lie said Itsreally too good a situation for a cornmonplace lawyer It ought to bedramatized You cant agree ofcourse and by refusing you run thechance of jail at least and of havingAlIson brought Into publicity which Isout ot the question You say she was
Oat the Pullman window when youwere 1
Yes I bought her ticket for herGave her lower eleven
And you took tenLower ten-
McKnight straightened up andlooked at meaThen she thought you were Inlower ten
I suppOse she did if she thoughtat all
But listen man McKnight wasgrowing excited What do you figureout ot this The Conway Womanknows you have taken the notes toPitts burg The prQbablUUes are thatshe follows you there on the chanceof an opportunity to get them eitherfor Bronson or herself
Nothing doing durIng the trip overor during the day in Pittsburg butshe learns the number or your berthas you buy it at the Pullman ticketoffice in PlttSburg and she thinks she
her chalice ho one could havethat that drunken fellow4sees have crawled into your berth
I figure It out thIs way Shewanted those notes desperatelydoeSstilinnt torBronson but to hold over
r
The irb-1OWfRT
I ROBE TSSSILLIITRATII15COfIYRIC3rHT t1yDOC SMC22cci OMPANY
his hOad for some purpose In thenight when everything is quiet sheIslips behind the curtains of lowerwhere ttie mans breathin8 shows heIs aJleep DIdnt you say he snored
He did 1 affirmed But I tellyou
SheCrepesness finally discovering the wall t un-
der the pillow Cant you see It yourself
He was leaning forward excitedlyand I could almost see the grewsometragedy he was depicting
She draws out the wallet Thenperhaps she remembers the alligatorbag and oon the possibility that thenotes are there instead of tn thepocketbook she gropes around for ItSUddenly the man itw9kes and clutches at the nearest object perhaps herneck chain which breaks
It Is all in silence the man Is stillstupidly drunk But he holds her ina tight grip Then the tragedy Shemust get away in a the carwill be aroused Such a woman onsuch an errand does not go withoutsome sort ot a weapon in this case
isnoiselessWith a quick thrusts ies a bigwoman and a bold oneshe strikesPossibly Hotchklssls right about thelefthand blow Harrington may haveheld her right hand oro perhaps sheheld the dirk is her left hand as shegroped with her right Then as theman falls back and his grasp relaxesshe straightens and attempts to getaway The swaying of the car throwsher almost into your berth and trembling with terror she crouches behindthe curtains of lower ten until everything Is still Then she goes noiselessly back to her berth
I noddedIt seems to fit partly at least I
said In the morning when she foundthat the crime had been not only fruitless but that she lad searched thewrong berth and killed the wrongman when she saw me emerge unhurt just as she was bracing herselffor the discovery of my dead bodythen she went Into hysterics You re-member I gave her some whisky
It really seems a tenable theoryBut like the Sullivan theory there areone or two things that dont agreewith the rest For one thing how didthe remainder ot that chain get IntoAlison Westspossesslon
She may have picked it upon thefloor
Well admit tat I said and Imsure I hope so Then how did the mur-dered mans pocketbook get into thesealskin bag And the dirk how ac-
count for that and the blood stainsNow whats the use asked Mc
Knight aggrievedliof my buildingup beautiful trts for you to pulldown Well take It to HotchklssMaybe he can tell trom the bloodstaIns If the murderers finger nailswere square or pointed
Hotchkiss no fool I saId warmly Under all his theorIes theres agood hard layer of common senseAnd we must remember Rich thatneither of our theories includes thewoman at Doctor Van Kirks hospitalthat the charming picture you havejust drawn does not account for AUson Wests connection with the caseor for the bits of telegram in the Sulliven fellows pajamas pocket Youare like the man who put the clock to-gether youve got half of the worksleftover
Oh go home said McKnIght dis-
gustedly Im no Edgar Al1n PoeWhats the um ot coming here and
asking me things if youre so partJcufar
With one of his quick changes ofmood he picked up his guitar
Listen to saIdoIt Is aHawaiian song about a fat lady ohignorant one and how she tell oft hermule
But for all the lightness or thewords the voice that followed medown the staIrs was anything butcheeryThere wsa a Kanaka In Balu did dwellWho had for bls daughter a monstrous
fat girlhe sang In a clear tenor I panned onthe lower floor and listened He hadstopped singing as as he hadbegun rCHAPTER XXII
At the Boarding HouseI had not been home for 36 hours
since the morning of the pr lngday Johnson was not In sight d Ilet myself In quietly with my latch-key It was almost midnight and Ihad hardly settled myself In thelibrary when the ben rang and Irassurprised to find Hotchkiss mttof breath In the vestibule
Why come In Mr Hotchkiss Isaid I thought you were going hometo go to bed
So r was so I was He droppedinto a chair beside my readIng lampand mopped his face And here It Isalmost midnight and Im wider awakethan ever Ive seen Sullivan MrBlakeleyI
You haveI have he said Impressively
atYou were following Bronsoneight oclock Was that when It hap-pened
Something of the sort When I leftyou at the door Of the restaurant Iturned and almost ran Into a plain-clothesman from the central officeI know him pretty well once or twicehe has taken me with him on interestlug bits of work He knows my hobby
You know him too probably Itwas the man Arnold the detectivewhom the states attorney has hadwatching Bronson
Johnson being otherwise occupiedI had asked for Arnold myself
I noddedWenhe stopped me at once said
hed been on the fellows tracks sinceearly morning and had had no timefor luncheon Bronson It seems isnteating much these days I at oncejotted down the fact because It argued that he was being bothetedbythe man with the notes
It might point to other things Isuggested Indigestion you know
Hotchkiss Ignored me Well Ar-
nold bad some reaSon for thiakinthat Dronson would try to give himthe slip that night so he asked me tostay around the private entrance therewhile he ran across the street andget something to eat It seemed a fairpresumption that as he had gonethere with lJ lady they would dine leisurely and Arnold would have plentyof time to get back
What about your own dinner Iasked curiously
Sir he said pompously I havegiven you a wrong estimate ot WilsonBudd Hotchkiss If you think thatquestlonor dinner would even obtrudeItself on his mind at such a time asthis
He waS a frail little man and to-night he looked pale with heat andoverexertion
Bid you have any luncheon Iasked
fObjectei
He was somewhat embarrassed atthat
Ireally Mr Blakeley the eventsof the day were so engrossing
Well I raid Im not goIng to seeyou drop on they floor from exhauJlo-tlon Just watt a minute
I went baCk to the pantry only tobe confronted with rows of locked
DqWJistalrsInfound twO unattractive looking coldcbops some dry bread and a piece ofcake wrapped in a napkin and fromits surreptitious and generally hangdog appearance destined for the coachman in the stable at the rear Traysthere were noneeverythlng but thechairs and tables seemed under lacknapkinknife
The luncheon was not attractive Inappearance but Hotchkiss ate his coldchops and gnawed at his crusts asthough he had been famished whilelie told his story
I had been there only a few thinutes he said with a chop Inonehand and the cake In the other whenBronson rushed out and cut across thestreet Hes tall man Mr Blakeley and I had hard work keepingclose It was a relief when he jumpedon a passing car although being wellbehind it was a hard run for me tocatch him He lad left the lady
once on the car we simply rodefrom one end of the line to the otherand back again I suppose he waspassing the time for he looked athie watch now and then and when Idid once get a look at his face tt mademeeruncomtortabl He couldhave crushed me like a fly sir
I had brought Mr Hotchkiss a glassof wine and he was lookIng betterHe stopped to finIsh It declining witha wave of hIs hand to have It remledand continued
About nine oclock or a little ater
Wasltingtonresidence streets there turned to hisleft a sqUare or two and rang a bellHe had been admitted when I gottherp but I guessed from the appearalice of the place that it was a boardIng house
I waited a few minutes and rangthe bell When a maid answered itI asked for Mr Sullivan or coursethere was no Mr Sullivan there
I said I was sorry that the man J
was looking for was a new boatderrShe was sure there was no suckboarder in the house the only new ar-rival was a man on the third floorshe thought his name was Stuartiliaggq up Sond see
She wanted to show me up but I
said It was unnecessary So after tellIng melt was the bedroom and Hittingroom on the third floor front I wenttip
I met a couple of men on thestairs but neither of them paid eil y
attention iii me A boarding house isthe lest place In the world to en-
tereyre not always 80 easy ip
leave I put In to his evident irritItion
When I got to the third story ltook out a bunch of keys and postedmyself by a door near the ones tiltgirl had IndIcated I could hear voicesIn one ot the front rooms but couldnot understand what they said
There was no violent dispute butn steady hum Then Bronson jerkedthe door open If he had stepped intollttlo8Iihe spoke before he came out
Youre acting like a maniac hlsaid You know I can get tbreqthings some way Im not goingthreaten you It Isnt necessary Toknow ale
It would be no use thA other mMsaid r tell you I hnent seen hinotes for ten days
But you will Bronson said Jor-ngely Youre standTg In yor otrQway thats all If youte holding outexpecting me to rnJse iny figure yo1i re-
making a mistake Us my last offerI couldnt take It It It was far r
million said the man instde the roomId do It I expect fC3coul fhe
best of us have our pric e
Bronson slammed the door thenand flung past me down the hall
After a couple ot minutes I
knocked ilt the door and n tall mwabout your size Mr Blakeley openedit He was very blond with a smoothface and blue eyeswhat I think youwould call a handsome man
I beg your pardon for dlsturWnayou I saId Can you tell me whichIs Mr Johnsons room Mr FrancliJohnson
I cannot say he answered ctvlily Ive only been here a few days
I thanked him and left but I hashad a good look at hIm and I tblk-ld know him readily any place
TO llE Y NTYNUED
1 High JumperHoncban7You dont mean to nj
you came oU nt that bit ot efence
Recumbent Frlend7811C8T GreatScott man no I caqW S ta talegraph wires TitBata
Seats of the MightyHave you Investigated those
charges against Blggun yet askedthe intimiite friend
Not yet answered the distin-guished statesman Who was a memober ot the investigating committee
All we have done Is to hold an informal meeting and decIde that heIsnt guilty
What HappenedFateDId you callOpporlunJty Yes butshe sent Word
by her servant she wasnt InHarpers Bazar
0Ir
tQ LCOHOL3 PER CENTA getabjePreparalionforA3simi1atiog1he FoodandRe uls
4 ling Stoma hs and Bowels or
Promotes DiG stionCheerrul
l nessandRestContainsneitherOpiumMo
i NOTN RCOTICfShWA7GiSREr
oAKUr sz
t rali aaGJ
tJrt1t Fiver
po Re fr nsl1l lion Sour StornachDlarrh
WonnsConwlsionsFeverish11Q
JoKSimiJe signature oj-t j
Vm CENTAUR COMPAN
NEW YORK
uaranteed under the Fooda IJ Cow or Wrappw
They Both KnewThe fool saId one day In the kings
presence I am the king And theking laughed for he knew that his foolwas wrong a
A week later the king was angry because ot an error lie had commltteedand exclaImed I am a tool And thetool laughed for he knew that hisking was rightSrnart Set
BABY S HAIR ALL CAME OUT
When my first baby was sixmonths old he broke out on hIs headwith little bumps They would dryup and leave a scale Then it wouldbreak out again and it spread all overhis head All the hair came out andhis head was scaly all over Then hisface broke out all over In red bumpsand it kept spreadIng until it was onhis hands and arms I bought severalboxes of ointment gave him bloodmedicine and had two doctors to treathim but he got worse all the time Hehad It about six months when a friendtold me about CuUcurn I sent andgot a bottle ot CutIcura Resolvent acake ot CutIcura Soap and a box ofCuticura Ointment In three daysafter using them he began to ImproveHe began to take long naps and tostop scratching his head After takingtwo bottles ot ResQlvent two boxes ofOintment and three cakes ot Soap hewas sound and well and never had
ny breaking out ot any kind Hispair came out in little curls all overhis head I dont think anything elseVould have cured him except CuUc
I have bought Cuticura taIiand Soap several times since tofor cuts and sres and have neverputthemremedy and would advIse anyone touSe it CutIcura Soap Is the best thatI have ever used for toilet purposes
Signed Mrs F E Harmon R F D2 Atoka Tenn Sept 10 1910
Lifes Varied InterestsThe weathers rather bad isnt it
asked the young womanYes replIed the nonchalant youth
Lucky thlnglt Is Helps conversationIt would be n deadlybore to go on forever saying its a pleasant day
To add a library to a house Is togive that house lJ soulCicero
Are You Sick a
Hoods Sr8 pitor5b5- rllla has genuineuraUve powers peculiarly adapted to
restore health and strength in just-such a condition as you are up agalnit tIt has been doing this for more that tleglonsotI t
stored sufferings ended are foundeveryWhere Give it a chance to helpiYou out by getting a bottle today
CASTORIA2or Infant and ChilareD
The Kind You Mere
Always Bought
Bearstho1stT1
In
I UseFor Over
Thirty Years
CASIORIAdTter
in your mouth removed whileYOU waitthats true A Cucaret taken when the tongue Isthick coated with the nastysqueamish feeling in stomachbrings relief ifsaay naturalway to help nature help you
CASCARETSoc boxweeks treatmente Allta Biggest sellerIn the world Million boxes a aesth-
SALIAMClewAK
l 1Hair to its T tnrarAra ealLdleaek lJ
IN-
tell loniowt sadpy beet martt Ptleafm nfenneMan-
dweklrptfeUetA6sEl SONZ
wol ieeeAlWe118ia
1The men whose tIme is worthmoat use the
I KNOWN THE WORLD OVER I
OLD SOLDIERSand E Spanish War Soldiers or theirwidows you are entitled to i6o acres oftGovernment land in Colorado or otherWestern States for your services in the
PowerelAttoraeyA W i1FFIN Laed locator Wichita Kama-
MIKE MORE MONEYThan you ever dreamed possible decoratingchina burntwOod metal pillowotbps etcin colors from photographs Men successfulas women Learned at once no talent
everywlereSendCMvALL CECOMPAElkkartIaLDEFIANCE STARCH tea wt
= = = =w N U CINCINNATI NO 11911
Honored hy WomenWhen a woman speaks of hersilentsecret suffering shetrusts you Millions have be-it wed thIs mark ofconfideuce on Dr R V Pierce
EveryriUcsva Wi Pierces Favorite PrescriptionJwl ch saves the suffering sex tsuccessfullyL7JAneases and stubborn ills
STRONGmarSICK WOMEN WELLC zE leNo womans appeal wu ever misdtrectea or lac sea
J misplaced whcu she wrote for advise teaIl DrR t
Dr Plerces PIU3IU1t MId ladaca irilld safrrixl Rowel afovrreal a Ty
r > r
i
i
TtE SPRINGFIELD SUN WEDNESDAY JArUARY rr ttt 11
PUBLICkOF
FINE STOCK and CROPEARM Stok CropT 1se ut ur patnership business1Newilllon e premises on
TUESDA y JAN 171911iS lt to the high sj bidder our farm situated 6 miles Southeast of Bardstown t rni e Soufh of Botland N lson Co
Containing About 236 AcresThe exact number of cres by sUrVey will be stated on day or sale This farm will be sold lirst asa whole and then in 2 tractsor about 118 acres in each tract and whichever way produces the most money accepted This IS an IDEAL STOCK FARM andFine Corn Tobacc nil Wheat Farm Has been used as a Stock Farm for last ten years About 50 acres of this farm is inFIne Timber fines ID Nelson County All the balance In grass except about 40 acres ofw ch 25 acres are In wheat LaveWater in every field 2story 10 room house well and cistern at door Stable with 14 box stalls water in stable large tobaccoor stock barn good tenant house all necessary outbuildings in fine state of improvement Telephone and rural route Pikerunning to farm Farm can be seen at any time before day or sale r
i
PERSONAL PROPERTY FARMING IMPLEMENTS4Perso-nal consists or head orhrsesI yeaiold workhorse I to tearold farm and Good 4horse wagon hay frame binder corn harvester mopser hay rake wheat drilL 2 corn planplowbroodpower engine 2 2 obridfbt sPSmarkblind Work horse Iovearsqld I oyearOl extra good work mule 4 mUch cows 2 now milking I w ill bushels corn too bushels oats 8 stacks has 200 shocks of corn fodder 3 bu sapling clover seed
be fresh Feb Ist 410ng v arlmg steer e tragod5eanhng calves good ones 25 head ofextra 180Q
OUSEHOLD KITCHIfIINgood young sheep 35 head hogs ranting from Ioo to 25o
TERMS PERSONAL PROPETY All sums undc 10 cashh oer that amount six months with interest from day of sale bankable noteREAL ESTATE One half cash balance in I and 2 years equal payments with interest from date due and collectible annually with lien retained on land to secure the et
fired payments Further terms made known of day of sale Possession of real estate given on day of sale as soon as deed is executed in conformity wlth above terms
Sa le vill begin promptly a t9 oIoc l- m If weather is bad sale will be held under shelter
DICK RSON BROTHERSs M CAMPBILL Auctioneer BARDSTOWNKY9Rt FD NO3nnunn
flNE PARMIAnd Personal Proper-
tySALEWe will sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder on
S TURDA Y JAN s 14 S 1911A farm of 18714 acres more or less well watered good house barn etc
comparatively new 60 acres of creek bottom some good tImber the farm isI
Sltuned l miles from New Hgpe between L N R R and County road running
from New Hope to New Haven close to schools churches etcTerms of sale 180009 cash balance in 1 and 3 years with tntehest from
date T
The following personal property l0 head of mules different agef 4 work-
n aresal good work horse milk cow 1 cow and calf vearling bull 2 yoke of
cattle 2 sows and 7 shoats 6 hogs and any other property that anyone may J
wish to offer
Sale will commence at 10 a m lunch served on the groundTerms on personal prop erty made known on day of sale
6 W Morris and RMast rsoni
OBITUARY
On the evening of Dec 25 1910 Mrs
Laura Uamden Kpassed away at thehome of Mr John Key over on DeepCreek
For many month she had been apatient sufferfr rom that dreadful disease consumption which she bornewith christian courage and fortItudethus proving the power and consolation
ofivine grace and the ability andmIof I will never ae or orsakethee A short time before dying shesat up and rank In the sweet tv antsayingihigh tribute to ones character Thefuneral services were conductednextday at Deep Creek church Mercerscounty by her ptstor Rv HP Hatchett where m thatt beautiful cemetery
sorrowing relativt and frIends layedthe body away to await the resurec ionof thee righteous Mrs Rev was thedaughter of William and Mary A Camden she was born in Washington cointyJuly 7 1883 Pr fessed religionand joined Deer Creels Baptist churchin 1901 Was married to Mr Davo
Key March 3 1907 to this union wasborn one chIld
The wiy regret she had of dying wasleaving her little boy whom she desiredto rear to manhood LJttt who willneverknow a mothers love or remembr thetouch oJ her gentle hand She leavesan aged mother seven brotlH rFithrf esisters and a host of friepdsoehindIMay the blessings of heaven bendoverthe bereaved onesMD L C
Little Maggie M Reynolds daughterof Woodson and Fannie Reynolds ofJensonton Ky d parted this life onthe evening of Dec 29 1910 Formonths she bravely struggled againstbut daily secumedto consumption thatgreat foe to humanity she was so uncomplaining and hopeful showing pat-
ience that we might expect only fromthose of maturer years but alas howdeceitful death often le for it was onlyduring the last few days of her sicness that she realized she could notget well when she saw her inevitablefate she expressed her readiness andeven at one tIme a desire to go home
And at last when at deaths doorand unable to speak above a whIspershe called her parent brothers andaround her belfto look upon them for
thE last time It was during thesehours that Bro Johnnie Key lastIas only he can pray invoking ttesings of God upon the departing spIritwhen It seemed heaven came very near
IMagtie was born June 4 1896 pro-
fessed religion and joined the PleasantHiH Baptist church under the ministryof Rev H P Hatchett in 1907
The funeral services were held atBeech GrQve chdreb by Bro HatchetttlfaRussell grave yard when the littlecold form wts laid to r st to awake cnsome bright day May the Holy Spirtcomfort tilt bereaved ortesUncleMarquis
Kill More Than Wild B stsIyearlybyNQlifein air water dint even food Butgr nd protectIOn ld afforded by ElectricthesetThuts whti chills fever and ague aUmalarial and many blod Jiseases yieldpromptly to thIs wonderful purifierhealthtat Huydon Rubertsons
The Suu and CourlHJournal L t-
iIJiitIi I
ICZEWFl-IiEUMATISMFor twtntrfive rears BntantcBloo l
Balm JI B BI hlu ten cthousands of sntrers front PrimarySecondary or Tertiary Mood Poisona all f r a of and SkinDeast t Reumatism aid Gzema
We SflJtJt tnIm t obstinatecase btcuue n B E curesw ere nit else fads If u haTeaches and pains lu Boed BackurJoints Jlncuelatches in m 1th 8nreColoredspotsVEsebrows Illllln ont ltehine Wateryblirtera or Onrn lIuwors Rtatnzs orlrnples of Lczem Bd3 8wrtltnEUnlf Snrr takt 14 B B It kU s thepulson makee the blood tu e and rich
chanrin the entire bodyhealinglpains cworst caf oI Blood Pul unL Rheumtlln or EMtma
BOTANIC JIOOD B trat UDI Is pieasant and sa t t UlO com iposed of pure Botanic ingredients It-prifPA and a riches the 1tnndtDFUGittiTB
Ifl PER BOTTLE
Uh dfCctnnjforhII1 Sampieiree-u urUul tttOn t rU ana
p1HAYD-
ON eWILLETT
41st SIS t Sl S b SS SS S SSi
j-0WA sti I NOi ON JITLoose Leaf Tobacco Sales Daily
Good Light and Largest Sales Floor
JL4111F 4ll4IhI4Plenty of Shed and Stalls FREEBRING YOUR TOBACCO TO US and WE WILL GET THE HIGHEST PRICEWrite or Phone No i55 RORTI T BOHANNAN Mgr and Auctioneer
11 II II 18 8 81l81I 818 88 18 181 8881811< > ><Iff
0
y