citizen (berea, ky.). (berea, ky) 1909-11-04 ... -...

1
T- 1 1 HESHJENT5 OFFICE I3EREA KY x BEREA PUBLISHING CO INCOnrOUATKI STANLEY FROST Manager Enttredal the lot opke at Jlerta Ay at second claN naUnatttr I Vol XI Five cents a copy BEREA MADISON 4 1800 One Dollar a year No 10 NEWS OF THE WEEK Food Supply Giving Out Prices Rise Another Football DeathCannon Professes on Water ways Thirty five Find Death at Sea JEFFIUES AND JOHNSON SIGN l Jack Johnson tho negro heavyweight champion of tho world and James J Jeffries the undefeated champion signed articles In Now York on Oct 30th binding them to fight a finish fight fortyfive rounds or more not Dialer than July 6 1910 before tho club offering the best Inducements the winner to take a Bide bet of 110000 and 70 per cent of the purso the los- S ¬ er to tako 25 per cent FOOTBALL KILLS Eugene A Byrne of Buffalo N Y a fourth year man at tho United States Military Academy died la the Cadet rsHospital at West Point Oct 31 from an Injury received In tho Harvard Army Game played the day before An Xray photograph taken utter his death revealed a dislocation between Uio first and second cervical verte brao FOOD SUPPLY SIIORTSocretary- James Wllcon says In a recent Inter- view ¬ regarding the statement of Jas J 11111 that thin nation Is facing a shortage In Its food supply that It Is a question that Is commanding tho attention of tho Department over which ho presides and that ho has set a number of Government scientists to work to Investigate tho conditions Ho assigns two causes for tho loan years One Is tho tendency of tho immigrant class to settle in tho cities but worst of all ho thinks Is tho tall ¬ ore of tho American farmer to get out of his at orago by conservation of soil and rotation of crops tho am- ount ¬ of ylsld he ahouiK CANNON FOR WATERWAYS Speaker Cannon aroused enthusiasm a Carlo 111 recently when ho said Im going to make a big speech In a sinn ¬ glo sentence You want to know what I think of tho waterways Read Ires Tafta speech at St Louis yesterday and you will know what I believe SUFFRAGETTES GET GAYMra- t Chapin a suffragette furnished an ear ¬ ly moraine thrill at tho Bcrmondscy byelection day when she smashed a bottle containing corrosive acid upon a ballot box Her Intention evidently was to destroy the ballots In tho box as a protest against tho exclusion of wonutn from the franchise Some of thin election officers wore painfully burned and the woman was arrested 35 PERISH IN SEArFho olx mon who were rescued from the rigging of the stranded steamer lies tla OcL 27 are thought tq bo the only survivors of the fortyone men and boys who were aboard tho Donald ¬ son linen when she struck Proprietor Ledge oft the Maine coast Several bodies drifted to tho shore later but have not been indentlflcd LABOR MEN GUILTY The dis ¬ trict court of appeals Monday affirm ¬ ed tho decree of the Supreme Court of tho Dlutrlct of Columbia adjudg ¬ ing President Samuel Gompore Sccy Frank Morrison and Vice President John Mitchell of tho American Feder ¬ ation of Labor guilty of contempt of court In tho Duck Stovo and Range earn Pending appeal tho three do fondanta were allowed to give bail for their appearance An attempt will be mast to appeal tho case to thoU S Supremo court FAMILY MURDEREDThe family of C W Hood Including his daugh¬ ter Emma aged 12 Carolina 40 and Roy 25 were murdered as they slept Sunday night and their homo burned to conceal tho crime Major C W Hood was an aged Union veteran and had alays been a peaceful citizen Tho authorities say suspicion points to a mar who has been paylnc attention to Carolina Hood for some time and who has disappeared from the com- munity ¬ An effort Is being made to locate him- KILLS WIFEDaniel Schoke a butcher of Pino Grove Pa cut oft tho heads of his wlfo and twelve year old daughter and then committed sul cldo by shooting himself Tho discov ¬ j ery was made Tuesday morning when found Schoko lying on tha first floor and tho bodies of his wife and child on a bed on tho second floor The girls head was entirely severed i It Is believed Schoko was Insane I MLIL10N FOR WORMS A gift of ono million dollars by John D Rocke feller to fight thehookwornr disease was announced at the office of the Standard OH Company In New York City A number of well known educa- tors ¬ and scientists from Institutions of learning In tho South were called I In conference with Mr representative at the RockeCellersI Company offices recently orgnnlzIed i THE CITIZEN t Devoted to the Interests of the Mounte ± ia People KENTUCKY NOVEMBER CADETCadet ELECTION RETURNS Tho election was quiet except for ono fight which was a hang over from a drunken quarrel last Saturday night Shortly otter noon Elbridgo White and Johu Walker got Into trouble In the Johnson Livery Stable and White cut Walker badly with a razor Tho cut reached from tho lobe of tho ear to under tho eye and was so tierce that pieces of steel wore picked out of tho bone- Elbridgo White was caught later at horn 3 by C E Holcomb and bond of f 100 before Judgo Gay was filed by E T Fish We give tho vote as declared by the judges v r THE VOTE IN BEREA For Circuit Judge J M Benton D78- For Commonwealths Attorney I R A Crutcher D74 For Circuit Court Clerk Roy n White D75 Vlrgel Weaver R145 For Representative L B l iUllgeI R157 D68 0 P Jackson D783 For County Court Clerk R B Terrlll DI07 I G D Moores R152t For Sheriff Devil A McCord D82 I Clayton Sanders RIS4 For Jailer B Jones DG8 IN F Johnson RIGI For Assessor Shelby Taylor DG6 I Younger Norris It151- For I School Superintendent IJohn Noland D81 For Coroner j Goo W Samuels D71 For Surveyor V- j J W Moore D69- For Magistrate Sixth District Thomas Hazel wood R164- Geo W Settle I0- For Constable Sixth District I J A Collins R156- I John E Anderson D90 For Mayor J L Gay R19G For Police Judget G D Holllday R133 J Brannaman C108 IJ Councilmen Andrew Isaacs It208- J j K Baker It199 John Fowler R195- J L Ambrose R193- E I C Scale R133 8 R Baker 0123- J W Dlnsmoro R122- A J Smith C99 IVOTE IN MADISON COUNTY For Circuit Judge J M< Benton D 3803 For Commonwealths Attorney R A Crutcher D2998 ClerkI For Representative j L B Herrlngton D 3024 For County Judge W R Shackleford D3038 I P F Adams Jr R2G56 For County Attorney O P Jackson D 3083 For County Court Clerk B Terrill D3032 In B Moores U2634 For Sheriff David A McCord D3022 Clayton Sanders R2635 For Jailer IN B Jones D2997 S F Johnson R2680 For Assessor IIShelby Taylor D2987 Norris R2650 For School Superintendent John Noland D3027 For Coroner Ceo W Samuels D2988 For Surveyor J W Moore D2634- Returns from Jackson County are still incomplete as we go to press but tho indications are stronglx for the elecUon of John M Moore of Drip Rock as County Judge and for the remainder of the regular ticket With two precincts still to hear from Lu ¬ ther Little was about three hundred ahead of his opponent Ed Rose while the indications were that Mr Moore would defeat Bishop Mulllns by about the same number BACK TO HARGISISM As nearly as could be ascertained the Democrats carried Breathitt County by about 400 majority and Judgo Redwlno is elected Circuit Judge There was Continued on fourth Page J Jill Tho other day a man refused to renew his subscription to The Citizen on tho ground that it had once printed something he didnot like IIo admitted the paper was one but he really didnt like that article We asked him how often he refused to eat dinner because there was one dish oil the table ho didnt like He saw the point and subscribed jlVt THE MAN OF TOIL All honor to the hardy man of loll Who does his duty in his chosen field Bo that to guide the humble plow to wield The hoe and win his sustenance from the soil Be that from no immense task to recoil To gain the treasures rich which lie concealed yieldDe All nonor to the man who runs the trill The press or who in letters or in art Creates a masterpiece who toils to know Now truths of science with will partLife M H FREDERICK Brightshade Kentucky MISSING THE BEST THINGS There is a peculiar kind of meanesa which grips some people and makes them unable to take pleasure in anything unless they have it all their owu or at most share it with a very few people They call themselves exclusive and as a matter of fact they exclude most of the real pleasure and happiness of life A wealthy woman In Ireland was sick once just like commrn people and the nurse brought her a poached egg for her breakfast She ate it with pleasure as any of us would and KB she sank back into her soft bed remaked lJow delicious an egg isl What a pity they are so cheap that every body can have them Isnt that a nice way to look at itl Wanted tho pleasure of eating eggs all to herselfIt is so wi ii many things Such people want fruit out of sea son when it coats horribly they want furniture built differently from other peoples and books that other people cant understand These people dont understand them either but think it makes them theydont and all because they feel that it would be common and cheap to like what every healthy man or woman likes Providence was very kind to liming matters so that that kind of people are always cheating themselves The commonest things arc the best anywhere there is no drink BO good as cold water and the next best is good milk Coffee the third cheapest comes third in oxclleuce It is so with foods eggs and cornbread and good pork taste as well in a cabin as any fancy dish ever did in a high priced resturant or a kings palace and tho potato baked in the ashes bet ¬ ter than any other The fresh airof a cool morning ill more satisfying to both soul and body than any stuffy ball room or palatial parlor can bo andno Ulan is rich enough to hung on his walls such a picture as the Almighty flings across the Heavens twice daily or as can be seen from the front door of any cabin home in all our mountains No sculptor ever made for his ii6b patrons a statue which had the beauty every boyish lover sees in the figure of some blushing girl No costly damaskcovered bed can bring so sweet a slumber as comes to the honestly weary worker on his humble couch > and no caterer can give to food the wonderful taste which the sauce of appetite uses to enrich tho meal of tho laborer And finally no bloodstained wealth can purchase such freedom its comes to every barefooted bare- headed boy a fishing along the creek nor the peaceful rest which greets at night tha man however poor who has that day workedwell for his home and family Riches Wealth Luxury What are they indeed that they should be purchased at tho cost of such joys ns these f And many are the rich men who would give their wealth riches and luxury for the power to enjoy the simple high delights with which every good homo is blest So sometimes the mountain fare is a little plain and tho mountain bed a little hard we can well afford to remember that within tile humble home is moro happiness that can be found under the broad and magnificent roof of any millionaires palace r FIRE THREATENS TOWN Forest Blaze Nearing Danger Marki When Stopped by Heavy Another Have Brought It to Limits of Town L One of the moot serious dangers which has threatened our town In a- long time was averted by the heavy rain storm last Monday night A sweepIIng wind was checked about a mile from the town line after having come five miles In coven hours Another hour or two would have brought tho flro to the edge of town and the fight to nt1least tho ridge would have been on In earn estThe fire started about two oclock from an engine at tho Boons Gap Tunnel A fierce south wind was blow las and driven by this the lino ct fire started swiftly northward It tray¬ eled nearly a mile an hour and by half past eight In splto of the ef- forts ¬ of about fifty men who were fighting It had reached the base of the ridge beyond the creek It it had once crossed that ridge it would have run Into long fields full of knee high grass and the last mllo town would have been covered in al few minutes I The fire was entirely beyond control Four flrellnes wero cut to stay its progress but It leaped each without pause or check So far as is known no houses wero burned back fires be ing started from each when tho fire neared Many men worked all tho afternoon and somo were enUrely exhausted when tho relief came InI the form of the first dash of rain from the thunden storm It is sel- dom ¬ thaltho town has had So narrow an eftape NED BLYTHE PASSES AWAY On Saturday evening Oct 30 1909 Mr Ned DIy the one of the oldest colored citizens of this vicinity died at his home on the Berea and Wall aceton Pike In his young days Mr Blythe was a- slave but when ha was set free by tho Emancipation Proclamation he came to tho mountains and bought land because it was much cheaper landI greatly Im ¬ It as he be came ablo to purchase until at last he owned ono hundred and fifty or more acre Ho was In the ninetyfourth year of his age when ho died and had been a citizen ot the community for over forty years Ho was highly respect ¬ ed by both whlto and black who knew account of tho unfaithfulness ot his followmen Mr Blytho in his oarly life learned to be very positive in dealing with hie follows But no ma ever attended more strictly to his own business than Mr Blythe Taken all In all ho was a worthy citizen and a Christian gentleman Equal to Any Two Women Ella Ewing tho Missouri giantess who Is nine feet six inches tall was a guest at the Hoxsey hotel In Mexico recently She was on the way to tho Bowling Green fair Two beds had to be put together so that she could sleep comfortably Kansas City Star BEREA OF TODAY An Old Graduates Impressions as He Returns After Years Doing a Doctor He Thinks the Hospital the Greatest Improvement How Oth- ers See Us To come back to Berea utter ten years absence Is like coming to a town made over so thoroughly that It is hardly recognizable The long lines of cement walks re ¬ placing tho old clay paths and cinder walks and the well painted and re ¬ paired houses of good modern style In place of the shacks that were co prevalent In the old days are a pleas ¬ ant sight to ouo who remembers Berea with an affection learned during yearn of the happiest period of his life spent hero and who acquired the best little woman In the world for his wife as a gift from the dear old town To see the campus filling up with fine largo buildings of beautiful design and good materials was an other thing to fill him with gladness A larao corps of well trained devot ¬ j ed Christian men and women who altha he was a personal stranger when they learned he was an alum nut made him feel that he was wel ¬ come and gave him every courtesy In ithelr power also made an old grad feel very good naIturally and Davis made me very welcome and greeted me as an old friends I hav- ing once practiced under Dr Cornelius whun an updergraduate and all in ¬ vited me with true Kentucky warmth slid courtesy to see and assist In such cases as they thought I would he interested in- Wandering down to the hospital I found Dr Cowley from whom I reced ed the same courteous treatment tho other physicians had accorded mo 1 j spent many profitable hours with him looking over the students who come there principally for eye ear nose and throat troubles In which diseases ho has specialized- I was glad to observe a good feel Ing prevailing among the physicians of the placo for sad to say that Is not always true among doctors in small j places especially All of them arei working hero for the greatest good of all the people- I feel like congratulating the people of this vicinity on the excellent hos ¬ pital the college has so generously thrownopen to the students and gen ¬ eral public All doctors are made to feel welcome In bringing their patients there the prlco charged being only nominal to the students and to all less than half the phrlco charged In large hospitals where one does not receive the personal care that one does In a hospital of this size Tho nurses are kind and good the head nurse Miss Click a girl of this neighborhood who has received an excellent training Is very skillful and is now devoting her life to training girls in her noble takingsick took her to the hospital as soon 03 a diagnosis of typhoid was made My dally vlslto gave me a good opportun ¬ ity to see the kind and skillful way in which the hospital staff of nurses carried out their duties During my stay several Important bytthe all of them successful In preserving puttingthem atlng room by the waY is one that a larger town might well be proud of It gives such a good placo to do an operation In with no bad results following The people ought never to consent to bo operated on at home If they can possibly get to tho hospital One can not afford to be operated on or bo sick at homo when he can EO cheaply and easily avail himself of th I cklllful care whero people are skilled In watching for troublo and where all materials and doctors are near at hand in caoo of an emergency Of all tho great many things Prea I Frost has obtained for Berea the hospital In my mind la one of greatest in its usefulness to the welI tare ot tho students and pqbllc as all are welcome be they students or citizens Dr Charles Webster Gould GEO SETTLE CONVICTED j George Settle was convicted for the second time last week on a charge preferred byi a girl under sixteen and was sentenced to ten years at hard labor His appeal for a rehearing was refused Over a year ago after his first conviction he scoured a new trial by raising a question as to the I girls ago and on promise of leaving the country but he came back and at tho trial was unable to support his contention as to the ago of the girl rrr I Knowledge is powerand the way to keep up with modern knowledge is to read a good newspaper COUNTY Conversion neighbors Herrington HourWould himOa profession IIH OUR OWN STATE Night Riders Not All Dead Yet Trouble In Breathitt County Be ¬ fore Election Taft Visits Ken ¬ tuckyOther News of Our Home StateRANKIN MAKES DENIAL M C Rankin Ccmmh loner of Agriculture has issued a statement In regard to the conduct of the County Farmers Institute la reply to the charge that the Republicans are making an effort to get control of the State Board of Agriculture In his statement Mr Rankin declares that the Republicans are not trying to make use of the Farmers Institute for political pur- poses THE NIGHTRIDERS The night rider situation in Mason County is etlll acute Farmers who have not pooled their tobacco are guarding their promises with loaded titles The offi ¬ torI troops but they do not think soldiers are needed SOLDIERS SENT TO BREATHITT Company C tho Lexington company x of tho Kentucky National Guard was ordered to Jackson last night by Ad jutant General Johnson following the receipt by acting Gov Wm H Cox Adlatus ¬ ¬ Tho troops left at midnight for tho scene of trouble on a special train over the Lexington and Eastern rail road and probably will not return un ¬ til the day after the election Tho trouble was brought on by the Red wino and Callahan followers making repeated attempts to get possession of tho ballots for the Election Nov 2 HICKMAN WELCOMES TAFT The welcome accorded President Taft at Hickman on Oat 27th was in true Kentucky form The town was n mass of decorations The flotilla was the grandest ever seen In those waters The people were lined up by the thousands artfar up town as could be seen On account of his voice President Taft was able only to talk but a few minutes lIe was tole WlUsonI and Ollie James At the end of the speeches COO school children sang My Old Kentucky Home d4the President was departing ho was pre Rented with a big Kentucky possum WALTER DAY PARDONEDAct- Ing ¬ Gov Cox announced Monday that he had pardoned Walter R Day under indictment In Perry and Breathitt counties on the charge of obtaining money under false pretense The pro ¬ secution of Day grew out of the tall ure of M B Day Co a lumber firm wasI couldI never be convicted on the testimony GEN 0 Or HOWARD DEAD Major General O O Howard US- A retired tho last of the prominent figures of the Civil War died last week Gen Howard was famous as the Christian Soldier and utter the war in which he reached the high rank of Corps Commander and won frequent cuccess he was appointed head of the Freedmans Bureau While he was In charge of that Bureau it made the contribution for Negro Edit cation from which Berea College built Howard Hall Gen Howard made a personal visit here In the Spring of 1897 speaking a couple of times and I jbelnp the central figure of a large gathering Many of our older real thatI occasion His death removes the last of tho men who in the Clvl War held high command ion the Federal side and w > believe on either side TOM MALONE ACQUITTED A case that created considerable Interest In circuit court last week was that of W T Malone on charge of killing of James Kenney at Berea jhiI of stealing chickens at tho horaoof Malone at tha time ho was shot and on this ground tho jury promptly dls missed tho defendantClimaxCOUNTY An usually large crowd was In town Monday but business was not as brisk as on October court day The mule market was far below that of tho preceding court as was also the horse market Aged mules sold from 150 to 200 Suckling mules brought from 45 to f CO Plug horses were not in demand and few sold brought HO to 70- The cattle market was more active the Madison stock Yards reporting 2600 cattle on tho market all of which wero sold heifers bringing from 2 to 350 per hundred and steers 350 to 460 per hundred

Upload: others

Post on 18-Jan-2021

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Citizen (Berea, Ky.). (Berea, KY) 1909-11-04 ... - nyx.uky.edunyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7t7659f04k/data/0356.pdf · T-1 1 HESHJENT5 OFFICE I3EREA KY x BEREA PUBLISHING CO INCOnrOUATKI STANLEY

T-1

1

HESHJENT5 OFFICEI3EREA KY

x

BEREA PUBLISHING COINCOnrOUATKI

STANLEY FROST Manager

Enttredal the lot opke at Jlerta Ay at secondclaN naUnatttr

I Vol XI Five cents a copy BEREA MADISON 4 1800 One Dollar a year No 10

NEWS OF THE WEEK

Food Supply Giving Out Prices RiseAnother Football DeathCannon

Professes on Waterways Thirty five Find Death atSea

JEFFIUES AND JOHNSON SIGNl Jack Johnson tho negro heavyweight

champion of tho world and James JJeffries the undefeated championsigned articles In Now York on Oct30th binding them to fight a finishfight fortyfive rounds or more not

Dialer than July 6 1910 before tho cluboffering the best Inducements thewinner to take a Bide bet of 110000and 70 per cent of the purso the los-

S

¬

er to tako 25 per centFOOTBALL KILLS

Eugene A Byrne of Buffalo N Y afourth year man at tho United StatesMilitary Academy died la the Cadet

rsHospital at West Point Oct 31 froman Injury received In tho HarvardArmy Game played the day before AnXray photograph taken utter hisdeath revealed a dislocation betweenUio first and second cervical vertebrao

FOOD SUPPLY SIIORTSocretary-James Wllcon says In a recent Inter-view

¬

regarding the statement of JasJ 11111 that thin nation Is facing ashortage In Its food supply that It Isa question that Is commanding thoattention of tho Department overwhich ho presides and that ho hasset a number of Government scientiststo work to Investigate tho conditionsHo assigns two causes for tho loanyears One Is tho tendency of thoimmigrant class to settle in tho citiesbut worst of all ho thinks Is tho tall ¬

ore of tho American farmer to getout of his atorago by conservation ofsoil and rotation of crops tho am-

ount¬

of ylsld he ahouiKCANNON FOR WATERWAYS

Speaker Cannon aroused enthusiasm aCarlo 111 recently when ho said Imgoing to make a big speech In a sinn ¬

glo sentence You want to know whatI think of tho waterways Read IresTafta speech at St Louis yesterdayand you will know what I believe

SUFFRAGETTES GET GAYMra-t Chapin a suffragette furnished an ear¬

ly moraine thrill at tho Bcrmondscybyelection day when she smashed abottle containing corrosive acid upona ballot box Her Intention evidentlywas to destroy the ballots In tho boxas a protest against tho exclusion ofwonutn from the franchise Some ofthin election officers wore painfullyburned and the woman was arrested

35 PERISH IN SEArFho olxmon who were rescued from therigging of the stranded steamer liestla OcL 27 are thought tq bo theonly survivors of the fortyone menand boys who were aboard tho Donald ¬

son linen when she struck ProprietorLedge oft the Maine coast Severalbodies drifted to tho shore later buthave not been indentlflcd

LABOR MEN GUILTY The dis ¬

trict court of appeals Monday affirm ¬

ed tho decree of the Supreme Courtof tho Dlutrlct of Columbia adjudg ¬

ing President Samuel Gompore SccyFrank Morrison and Vice PresidentJohn Mitchell of tho American Feder ¬

ation of Labor guilty of contempt ofcourt In tho Duck Stovo and Rangeearn Pending appeal tho three dofondanta were allowed to give bailfor their appearance An attempt willbe mast to appeal tho case to thoUS Supremo court

FAMILY MURDEREDThe familyof C W Hood Including his daugh¬

ter Emma aged 12 Carolina 40 andRoy 25 were murdered as they sleptSunday night and their homo burnedto conceal tho crime Major C WHood was an aged Union veteran andhad alays been a peaceful citizen Thoauthorities say suspicion points to amar who has been paylnc attention toCarolina Hood for some time andwho has disappeared from the com-

munity¬

An effort Is being made tolocate him-

KILLS WIFEDaniel Schoke abutcher of Pino Grove Pa cut ofttho heads of his wlfo and twelve yearold daughter and then committed sulcldo by shooting himself Tho discov ¬

j

ery was made Tuesday morning whenfound Schoko lying on tha

first floor and tho bodies of his wifeand child on a bed on tho second floorThe girls head was entirely severed

i

It Is believed Schoko was Insane I

MLIL10N FOR WORMS A gift ofono million dollars by John D Rockefeller to fight thehookwornr diseasewas announced at the office of theStandard OH Company In New YorkCity A number of well known educa-tors

¬

and scientists from Institutionsof learning In tho South were called I

In conference with Mrrepresentative at the RockeCellersICompany offices recently

orgnnlzIed

i

THE CITIZENt

Devoted to the Interests of the Mounte±ia PeopleKENTUCKY NOVEMBER

CADETCadet

ELECTION RETURNS

Tho election was quiet except for onofight which was a hang over from adrunken quarrel last Saturday nightShortly otter noon Elbridgo Whiteand Johu Walker got Into trouble Inthe Johnson Livery Stable and Whitecut Walker badly with a razor Thocut reached from tho lobe of tho earto under tho eye and was so tiercethat pieces of steel wore picked outof tho bone-

Elbridgo White was caught later athorn 3 by C E Holcomb and bond off 100 before Judgo Gay was filed by ET Fish

We give tho vote as declared bythe judges v

r

THE VOTE IN BEREA

For Circuit JudgeJ M Benton D78-

For Commonwealths AttorneyI R A Crutcher D74For Circuit Court Clerk

Roy n White D75Vlrgel Weaver R145

For RepresentativeL B liUllgeI R157

D68

0 P Jackson D783For County Court Clerk

R B Terrlll DI07I

G D Moores R152tFor Sheriff

Devil A McCord D82I Clayton Sanders RIS4For Jailer

B Jones DG8IN F Johnson RIGIFor Assessor

Shelby Taylor DG6I Younger Norris It151-For

I

School Superintendent

IJohn Noland D81For Coroner

j Goo W Samuels D71For Surveyor V-

j J W Moore D69-For Magistrate Sixth District

Thomas Hazelwood R164-Geo W Settle I0-

For Constable Sixth DistrictI J A Collins R156-I John E Anderson D90For Mayor

J L Gay R19GFor Police Judget

G D Holllday R133J Brannaman C108IJ Councilmen

Andrew Isaacs It208-Jj K Baker It199John Fowler R195-J L Ambrose R193-E

IC Scale R133

8 R Baker 0123-J W Dlnsmoro R122-A J Smith C99

IVOTE IN MADISON COUNTYFor Circuit Judge

J M < Benton D 3803For Commonwealths Attorney

R A Crutcher D2998

ClerkIFor Representative

j L B Herrlngton D 3024For County Judge

W R Shackleford D3038I P F Adams Jr R2G56For County Attorney

O P Jackson D 3083For County Court Clerk

B Terrill D3032In B Moores U2634For Sheriff

David A McCord D3022Clayton Sanders R2635

For JailerIN B Jones D2997

S F Johnson R2680For Assessor

IIShelby Taylor D2987Norris R2650

For School SuperintendentJohn Noland D3027

For CoronerCeo W Samuels D2988

For SurveyorJ W Moore D2634-

Returns from Jackson County arestill incomplete as we go to press buttho indications are stronglx for theelecUon of John M Moore of DripRock as County Judge and for theremainder of the regular ticket Withtwo precincts still to hear from Lu¬

ther Little was about three hundredahead of his opponent Ed Rose whilethe indications were that Mr Moorewould defeat Bishop Mulllns by aboutthe same number

BACK TO HARGISISM As nearlyas could be ascertained the Democratscarried Breathitt County by about400 majority and Judgo Redwlno iselected Circuit Judge There was

Continued on fourth Page

J

Jill Tho other day a man refused to renew his subscription to TheCitizen on tho ground that it had once printed something he didnotlike IIo admitted the paper was one but he really didntlike that article We asked him how often he refused to eat dinnerbecause there was one dish oil the table ho didnt like He saw thepoint and subscribed jlVt

THE MAN OF TOIL

All honor to the hardy man of lollWho does his duty in his chosen fieldBo that to guide the humble plow to wield

The hoe and win his sustenance from the soilBe that from no immense task to recoil

To gain the treasures rich which lie concealedyieldDeAll nonor to the man who runs the trill

The press or who in letters or in artCreates a masterpiece who toils to know

Now truths of science with willpartLifeM H FREDERICK

Brightshade Kentucky

MISSING THE BEST THINGS

There is a peculiar kind of meanesa which grips some peopleand makes them unable to take pleasure in anything unless they haveit all their owu or at most share it with a very few people Theycall themselves exclusive and as a matter of fact they excludemost of the real pleasure and happiness of life

A wealthy woman In Ireland was sick once just like commrnpeople and the nurse brought her a poached egg for her breakfastShe ate it with pleasure as any of us would and KB she sank backinto her soft bed remaked lJow delicious an egg isl What a pitythey are so cheap that every body can have them Isnt that anice way to look at itl Wanted tho pleasure of eating eggs all to

herselfItis so wi ii many things Such people want fruit out of sea

son when it coats horribly they want furniture built differentlyfrom other peoples and books that other people cant understandThese people dont understand them either but think it makes themtheydontand all because they feel that it would be common and cheap tolike what every healthy man or woman likes

Providence was very kind to liming matters so that that kind ofpeople are always cheating themselves The commonest things arc thebest anywhere there is no drink BO good as cold water and thenext best is good milk Coffee the third cheapest comes third inoxclleuce It is so with foods eggs and cornbread and good porktaste as well in a cabin as any fancy dish ever did in a high pricedresturant or a kings palace and tho potato baked in the ashes bet ¬ter than any other The fresh airof a cool morning ill more satisfyingto both soul and body than any stuffy ball room or palatial parlorcan bo andno Ulan is rich enough to hung on his walls such a pictureas the Almighty flings across the Heavens twice daily or as can beseen from the front door of any cabin home in all our mountainsNo sculptor ever made for his ii6b patrons a statue which had thebeauty every boyish lover sees in the figure of some blushing girlNo costly damaskcovered bed can bring so sweet a slumber as comesto the honestly weary worker on his humble couch > and no caterercan give to food the wonderful taste which the sauce of appetite usesto enrich tho meal of tho laborer And finally no bloodstainedwealth can purchase such freedom its comes to every barefooted bare-headed boy a fishing along the creek nor the peaceful rest whichgreets at night tha man however poor who has that day workedwellfor his home and family

Riches Wealth Luxury What are they indeed that they shouldbe purchased at tho cost of such joys ns these f And many are therich men who would give their wealth riches and luxury for thepower to enjoy the simple high delights with which every goodhomo is blest So sometimes the mountain fare is a little plainand tho mountain bed a little hard we can well afford to rememberthat within tile humble home is moro happiness that can be foundunder the broad and magnificent roof of any millionaires palace

r

FIRE THREATENS TOWN

Forest Blaze Nearing Danger MarkiWhen Stopped by HeavyAnother Have BroughtIt to Limits of Town

L One of the moot serious dangerswhich has threatened our town In a-

long time was averted by the heavyrain storm last Monday night A

sweepIIngwind was checked about a mile fromthe town line after having come fivemiles In coven hours Another houror two would have brought tho flroto the edge of town and the fight to

nt1leasttho ridge would have been on In earn

estThefire started about two oclock

from an engine at tho Boons GapTunnel A fierce south wind was blowlas and driven by this the lino ctfire started swiftly northward It tray¬

eled nearly a mile an hour and byhalf past eight In splto of the ef-

forts¬

of about fifty men who werefighting It had reached the base ofthe ridge beyond the creek It ithad once crossed that ridge it wouldhave run Into long fields full of kneehigh grass and the last mllotown would have been covered in alfew minutes I

The fire was entirely beyond controlFour flrellnes wero cut to stay itsprogress but It leaped each withoutpause or check So far as is knownno houses wero burned back fires being started from each when tho fireneared Many men worked all thoafternoon and somo were enUrelyexhausted when tho relief came InI

the form of the first dash of rainfrom the thunden storm It is sel-

dom¬

thaltho town has had So narrowan eftape

NED BLYTHE PASSES AWAY

On Saturday evening Oct 30 1909Mr Ned DIy the one of the oldestcolored citizens of this vicinity diedat his home on the Berea and Wallaceton Pike

In his young days Mr Blythe was a-

slave but when ha was set free bytho Emancipation Proclamation hecame to tho mountains and boughtland because it was much cheaper

landI greatly Im ¬

It as he became ablo to purchase until at last heowned ono hundred and fifty or moreacre

Ho was In the ninetyfourth yearof his age when ho died and had beena citizen ot the community for overforty years Ho was highly respect ¬

ed by both whlto and black who knew

account of tho unfaithfulness othis followmen Mr Blytho in his oarlylife learned to be very positive indealing with hie follows But no maever attended more strictly to hisown business than Mr Blythe

Taken all In all ho was a worthycitizen and a Christian gentleman

Equal to Any Two WomenElla Ewing tho Missouri giantess

who Is nine feet six inches tall wasa guest at the Hoxsey hotel In Mexicorecently She was on the way to thoBowling Green fair Two beds had tobe put together so that she couldsleep comfortably Kansas City Star

BEREA OF TODAY

An Old Graduates Impressions asHe Returns After Years Doing aDoctor He Thinks the Hospital theGreatest Improvement How Oth-ers See Us

To come back to Berea utter tenyears absence Is like coming to atown made over so thoroughly thatIt is hardly recognizable

The long lines of cement walks re¬

placing tho old clay paths and cinderwalks and the well painted and re¬

paired houses of good modern styleIn place of the shacks that were coprevalent In the old days are a pleas ¬

ant sight to ouo who remembersBerea with an affection learned duringyearn of the happiest period of hislife spent hero and who acquired thebest little woman In the world forhis wife as a gift from the dear oldtown To see the campus filling upwith fine largo buildings of beautifuldesign and good materials was another thing to fill him with gladness

A larao corps of well trained devot ¬j

ed Christian men and women whoaltha he was a personal strangerwhen they learned he was an alumnut made him feel that he was wel ¬

come and gave him every courtesy Inithelr power also made an old gradfeel very good

naIturallyand Davis made me very welcome andgreeted me as an old friends I hav-ing once practiced under Dr Corneliuswhun an updergraduate and all in ¬

vited me with true Kentucky warmthslid courtesy to see and assist Insuch cases as they thought I would heinterested in-

Wandering down to the hospital Ifound Dr Cowley from whom I receded the same courteous treatment thoother physicians had accorded mo 1

j

spent many profitable hours withhim looking over the students whocome there principally for eye earnose and throat troubles In whichdiseases ho has specialized-

I was glad to observe a good feelIng prevailing among the physiciansof the placo for sad to say that Is notalways true among doctors in small j

places especially All of them areiworking hero for the greatest goodof all the people-

I feel like congratulating the peopleof this vicinity on the excellent hos ¬

pital the college has so generouslythrownopen to the students and gen¬

eral public All doctors are made tofeel welcome In bringing their patientsthere the prlco charged being onlynominal to the students and to all lessthan half the phrlco charged In largehospitals where one does not receivethe personal care that one does In ahospital of this size

Tho nurses are kind and good thehead nurse Miss Click a girl of thisneighborhood who has received anexcellent training Is very skillful andis now devoting her life to traininggirls in her noble

takingsicktook her to the hospital as soon 03 adiagnosis of typhoid was made Mydally vlslto gave me a good opportun ¬

ity to see the kind and skillful wayin which the hospital staff of nursescarried out their duties

During my stay several Importantbyttheall of them successful In preserving

puttingthematlng room by the waY is one thata larger town might well be proudof It gives such a good placo to doan operation In with no bad resultsfollowing The people ought neverto consent to bo operated on at homeIf they can possibly get to tho hospitalOne can not afford to be operated onor bo sick at homo when he can EOcheaply and easily avail himself of th I

cklllful care whero people are skilledIn watching for troublo and where allmaterials and doctors are near at handin caoo of an emergency

Of all tho great many things PreaI Frost has obtained for Berea thehospital In my mind la one ofgreatest in its usefulness to the welItare ot tho students and pqbllc asall are welcome be they students orcitizens

Dr Charles Webster Gould

GEO SETTLE CONVICTEDj

George Settle was convicted for thesecond time last week on a chargepreferred byi a girl under sixteen andwas sentenced to ten years at hardlabor His appeal for a rehearing wasrefused Over a year ago after hisfirst conviction he scoured a newtrial by raising a question as to the I

girls ago and on promise of leavingthe country but he came back andat tho trial was unable to supporthis contention as to the ago of thegirl

rrr

I

Knowledge is powerand theway to keep up with modernknowledge is to read a goodnewspaper

COUNTY

Conversion

neighbors

Herrington

HourWould

himOa

profession

IIH OUR OWN STATE

Night Riders Not All Dead YetTrouble In Breathitt County Be ¬

fore Election Taft Visits Ken ¬

tuckyOther News of Our Home

StateRANKINMAKES DENIAL M C

Rankin Ccmmh loner of Agriculturehas issued a statement In regard tothe conduct of the County FarmersInstitute la reply to the charge thatthe Republicans are making an effortto get control of the State Board ofAgriculture In his statement MrRankin declares that the Republicansare not trying to make use of theFarmers Institute for political pur-poses

THE NIGHTRIDERS The nightrider situation in Mason County isetlll acute Farmers who have notpooled their tobacco are guarding theirpromises with loaded titles The offi ¬torItroops but they do not think soldiersare needed

SOLDIERS SENT TO BREATHITTCompany C tho Lexington company

x

of tho Kentucky National Guard wasordered to Jackson last night by Adjutant General Johnson following thereceipt by acting Gov Wm H Cox

Adlatus ¬

¬

Tho troops left at midnight for thoscene of trouble on a special trainover the Lexington and Eastern railroad and probably will not return un ¬

til the day after the election Thotrouble was brought on by the Redwino and Callahan followers makingrepeated attempts to get possessionof tho ballots for the Election Nov 2

HICKMAN WELCOMES TAFTThe welcome accorded President Taftat Hickman on Oat 27th was in trueKentucky form The town was nmass of decorations The flotilla wasthe grandest ever seen In thosewaters The people were lined up bythe thousands artfar up town ascould be seen On account of hisvoice President Taft was able onlyto talk but a few minutes lIe was toleWlUsonIand Ollie James At the end of thespeeches COO school children sang

My Old Kentucky Home d4thePresident was departing ho was preRented with a big Kentucky possum

WALTER DAY PARDONEDAct-Ing

¬

Gov Cox announced Monday thathe had pardoned Walter R Day underindictment In Perry and Breathittcounties on the charge of obtainingmoney under false pretense The pro ¬

secution of Day grew out of the tallure of M B Day Co a lumber firmwasIcouldInever be convicted on the testimony

GEN 0 Or HOWARD DEAD

Major General O O Howard US-A retired tho last of the prominentfigures of the Civil War died lastweek Gen Howard was famous asthe Christian Soldier and utter the

war in which he reached the highrank of Corps Commander and wonfrequent cuccess he was appointedhead of the Freedmans Bureau Whilehe was In charge of that Bureau itmade the contribution for Negro Editcation from which Berea College builtHoward Hall Gen Howard made apersonal visit here In the Spring of1897 speaking a couple of times and

I

jbelnp the central figure of a largegathering Many of our older realthatIoccasion His death removes the lastof tho men who in the Clvl War heldhigh command ion the Federal sideand w > believe on either side

TOM MALONE ACQUITTED

A case that created considerableInterest In circuit court last week wasthat of W T Malone on charge ofkilling of James Kenney at BereajhiIof stealing chickens at tho horaoofMalone at tha time ho was shot andon this ground tho jury promptly dlsmissed tho

defendantClimaxCOUNTY

An usually large crowd was In townMonday but business was not as briskas on October court day The mulemarket was far below that of thopreceding court as was also thehorse market Aged mules sold from

150 to 200 Suckling mules broughtfrom 45 to f CO Plug horses were notin demand and few sold brought HOto 70-

The cattle market was more activethe Madison stock Yards reporting2600 cattle on tho market all ofwhich wero sold heifers bringing from

2 to 350 per hundred and steers350 to 460 per hundred