",''' i, THE HAYTI HERALD AN UNTERRIF1ED DEMOCRATIC NEWSPAPER. VOL. 4. HAYTT, MISSOURI. THUKSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1012. NO. 47. m 1 'M 1j M if t3 1 $ 4 9B w '.' .Tfcw 'ffiK ? -fi? X ,'' t '5 b NEW FEDERAL LAW. dipt' .Republican: W. l 1 'helps a few weeks a-o stolen man's wife uiul live children lrum Ruaould, Ark., and tool: them to St. Louis, where he shortly afterwards abondoned them to poverty and sickness. The woman is Mrs. Sarah Summers, whose husband is a railroad laborer at Paratfould. The federal authorities were told by the woman that the man had started down the river in a house boat and the Cape officers and Deputy United States Mar shal Whit worth were notilied to look lor him. it appears that, the man arrived here during night ami lelt instructions lor mail to be forwarded to him at Stewart's, a small place in Pemiscot coun ty. Deputy Marshal WhiUvorth followed this clue and yesterday wont to Pemiscot, located his man, working in the timber, and brought him to this city and lodged him in jail to await furth er actions of the federal officers. The offense is quite a serious one under the new federal law, the minimum line being a thousand dollars. The prisoner seems to look at the olVonse- rath er slightly. The collector of Dunklin coun ty has started on the prelimi nary work ol bringing more than a thousand suits for the collec I lion of delinquent taxes. And why not? Every man is equally ; protected by the law. awry nrin should bear his burden of nee-j c 'ssary taxation. The more prop p jrty he owns, the more protec tion he has. So. every law-abiding citizen wishes Collector Doug liss and his attorney, Mr. Zim-' merman, success. Let no delin-' quent man escape. Kennett Democrat. ' S. J. Jeffress left Monday, on a business trip to Kewanee, Mo., to attend to legal matters and re turned Tuesday. ! : i E. D. .Johnson of the Maiden Marble Works, came down Mon-, day, to look alter his work here. NOT the prettiest store in town, but a dandy place to trade. Try us. AVERILLS STORE AN APE'S STOMACH. Paris, Sept. 2 J. -Trading his old and worn-out stomach for the new and healthier one of an anth ropoid ape. Peirro Laurent, alter resting a few days in the hospi tal, today tested his new diges tive apparatus by becoming in toxicated. The young farmer got himself 'as full as a goat," but the stomach stood the test, anil aside from a slightly wobbly gait. Laurent is as well as ever. The surgical operation per formed by Dr. Koulie.-, at the Hospital Agen is the sensation of Paris. The famous surgeon took the entire stomach from the young farmer, and when the or gan was lound to bo worn out it was replaced by the complete stomach of the anthropoid. Lau rent, who is a prosperous i"ar mer ol Agen, remained in the hospital twenty-live days, at the end of which he was eating the heaviest of foods with perfect ease. His stomach, which was from an ape '2 years old, titled so per fectly into the :27-. ear-old inter ior of the patient that it withstood the surcharge of liquor without a protest. A Hard Job. A man who was on trial for murder bribed an Irishman on the -jury, for SKX) to work for a verdict and so returned. At the first opportunity the prisoner thanked the juror and asked: "Well, Pat, did you lane a very hard time of it'r' "Shure an' Oi did thot."' re plied Pat, "the other 11 wanted to acquit yez." Exchange. Joe Foiiftt of Concord was in this city Thursday, and was talk ing to us about good roads. Mr. Foust is a good ro.uls enthusi ast, and has done considerable work and experimenting on roads, and gave us a new idea. He claims that if sand is worked placed on the roads while it is wet, it will pack hard and will not work out in holes. He says that lie has tried this, and linds it to make a good, solid road, that will not work up when either dry or wet. k m., 9sW yte m&mwflsmiu . oocoywocyxfvvfG - "..-Pr f 1 "v ttv9 AVJtCViTt yXrT3V Vj 1 IB 0 M I tfi'V'l I rnTfrwt wli will wu a M IISFOPULARI II W " "&&& THE Mrs. Theo. K'hnkhardt and Judge .7. S. Gossom and a few children left Saturday on a few friends of Caruthersville automo weeks visit to relatives and biled over to Hayti Tuesday eve friends at Mascoutah, 111., St. nig. Louis and Maplewood. Mo. j Miss Mildred Davis or Sikes i ton. who taught school here 1 ist I year, has been here several days, visiting her lriend, Miss lUitia McF.trland. LEFLERS DRUG STORE etcaM 'jrfemecUe& jjtft i .: . ' -.'"VWfiWV I. (Si& PEOPLE'S TURN N0W1 J. . Minolta in Journal. Portland. Oro. B. L. Guffyand 1. ICohn went o ir to Caruthersville Monday n'ht. to attend a republican speaking. C. S. York was here from Ca ruthersville Tuesday. "If You Are Not Our Everything from Everywhere For the School Room School Books, Pencils, Inks, Mucilages, Tablets, Fountain Pens, Erasers, Book Straps, Pencil Boxes, Book Satchels Crayons, Etc. HAYTI, FIRED DYNAMITE. C. i. Willis, representing the Dnpont Powder Company works of St. Ijou'is, in attempt, to (lis pense with about forty sticks of dynamite that had lain dormant in the warehouse of the Farmers Mercantile Company, at Charles ton, for some time, took it out to the rear ol the store the other day and set fire to the box in j which the dynamite was deposi-1 W the most terriflic explosion that has occured within that city in years took place. Within a radius of three blocks windows were shattered and various kinds of damage resulted. No loss so far as life and limb are con cerned occured, with the excep tion that Mr. Willis was thrown violently to the ground and is now under the care of a physican at the Kendrich Hotel. rrM... T,,i.i:,, -',., .... n,:.. .... , Kennett, October 1(5 to 19, prom ises to be one of the best ever held. This fair is known far and wide, for its many attractions, the large crowds, good displays, good racing, and for the hospi tality of the city, Kennett nev er does anything by halves, and the fact that the fair is held in that city is sufficient guarantee that the best foot will be put foremost. And, by the way, as usual, weare indebted to the man agement for the season ticket. Customer You Will Be." SUPPLIES MISSOURI THAT NEW DEPOT. Ordinarly, it would be pro sinned that the Railroad and Warehouse Commission was cre ated for the people, and that tin men elected to duties of that office should be elected to serve the people, but in this state, it seems, the only duties they have to perform is to take care of the interests of the railroads, as against the people. It will soon be two years since the Frisco's depot at this city was destroy ed by tire, and still no action has been taken, and as win ter is now at hand, there is hard ly any probability that anything will be done before .spring, and then if the railroad can still control matters, it may not be done then. Spencer A Stubbs, the hustling and up-to-date merchants, moved into their new quarters, in tin Fred Morgan brick, this week. From their small start in the the frame out-of-the-way building, their business entirely out-grew them and for some time their house has been so over-stocked that they have been seriously handicapped. Now, however, they can display their full line, and by means of an extra army of clerks, can attend to all the wants of the peonle promptly and pleasantly. It is a pleasure to see such success, and more in particular, that it comes as lib eral users of printers' ink. Hr H ffe4casl?etnedtstZ B