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The Hartford herald. [volume] (Hartford, Ky.) 1875-1926, June 25, 1913, Image 2

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84037890/1913-06-25/ed-1/seq-2/

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VKlNKSDAVf JUXK S3, 1813.
THE HARTFORD HERALD
PACK TWO
Going! Going! Almost Gone!
vH L
tm m M
BiiiS
LEFT
COMM
ENC1NG SATURDAY, JUNE 21st,
Your Last Opportunity.
Through some error in our lease, ve were of the impression that our get-away day was June 1 1 th, but we
are informed by Mr. Carson, owner of the house, that according to contract we must pay rent until July 30th.
So don't miss this last opportunity, for we are going to sell goods for less than ever before.
:0"3ES,
SOISES "T&SrTLcIL CSSLiOSiES I!3i?2S 330CME2S OTTTXr SrSlhr
si7-3C"3rt33.ix3.gr :m:"o.ss- 33 sold
I 6XLY THIRTY- BiY Blfpi "WM &!
gfefik
i.mj -w
ROSENBLATTS.
yrr?r,'-T-TT'-"T-t'-;'-t " ' "- t,rMVTxx-r:rm7zrrrKSi2XTx
FIERCE BATTLE
Or nrTTVPDiinp i tht- f the
rbtlliDDUilbcVuwr
M soul reaches out to yours my lines of suns were taken and no
ptajers ' .support came. . .
"No tie smoke of guns lifts' "'All, If I had only had ri oth-'
like a grat curtain, and dlbdoses er two brigades, a different story'
hole Army of would have been flashed to the
IN BEHALF OF THE
bllmt-at specta-j world.
. . Seen of m Col
onels were killed and one was mor-.
"And how pitifully cruel it was! 'tally wounded. Nine of my Lieut-,
new
ASSOCIATION
Occurred Fiftv Years Afro TU(" ,on;; gray Ilne hSMl to cover aHenait-CoIO',e,s were wounded and : Tobacco Groyers Recent-
most a nine 01 open ground ueiore.tnree uieutenani-toioneis were kiii-,
Next Tuesday.
GRAPHIC ACCOUNT OF FIGHT
.the Final Outcome of
the War.
ed. Only one field officer of ray I
whole command,
was unhurt, and
Colonel Cabell,
the loss of my
It could use Its suns, but it was
within the range of the replenished
I'nion batteries from the start.
'"The I'nion gunnors began on it company officers was In proportion.'
with frolld bliot: as the silent line! "As the tumult and the shouting
draw nearer, they change to burst-Idle, the eye turns away from Plck
WhlCll Indirectly Determined Ins thell and shrapnel. The Vlr-ett and the bloody field and seeks
glulans fall like sheaves before the the Chieftain who has lost. From
, lckl, but the ranks silently close, i an eminence overlooking the heroic
About midway the line .Is halted 1 battlegroundi the son of 'Light
and dressed under fire. Then it' Horse Harry Lee has seen the
I moves slowly forward In the face hopes of the Southland perish. With
ly Organized
TO TIKE ill OTHER SOCIETIES
the members of ti.e associations de- tlon. I hope every member can at
sWng to consolidate. itend this meeting In bis district and
There were present and partlcl-! will go on record in favor of get
patlng in that meeting about 300'tlng together. Please bear in mind
representative farmers, members of this fact unless as many as two
the Stemming District Tobacco as-j thirds ote in favor of consollda- '
soclatlon, the Green River, the Dark ! tlon. the Stemming District Asso
Tohacco Protective and quite a ciatlon will remain as It Is now.
number of the Equity and Farmers No change will be made.
Union associations. From these I hope the officials of every asso
were selected about twenty as a elation or pool in Kentucky will act
i committee whose report represents promptly and put the matter before
.the best methods as learned by their members and should any offl
study and experience In co-opera-' clal bo careless or Indifferent t hopa
tlve work among tobacco growers Influential farmers will take the
uvi: i.Krrri: kici'kko in it
Thinks Consolidation Of Aim
and Effort the Great
Desideratum.
during the last eight years.
matter up and insist that tobacco
It opens the way for tobacco j growers bo given an opportunity to"
growers to get together. It guar-1 say whether or not we will get to-
intees protection by the laws of gether.
It provides a system of
tobacco along well es-
A failure to get n majority of the
dark tobacco growers together this
It will be fifty years on July 1
(next Tu'la tlnco the Hattle of
Gettysburg began, and " the anni
versary Is celebrated in the July j
American Mxtfalne with an extra
ordinary
of a storm of canister that literally uncovered head he rides forward to
mows great sections to the ground, mf-et Pickett, who comes slowly up
Hut the shattered brigades preserve the slope with the pitiful remnants I
itieir alignment, ounque to me leu. ' 01 - ins Kronen legion, tne tears
DISTINCT .MKKTIXGS JL'I.V
.
and
from
Illustrated
?ar
Sweep against the stone wall
which now come the cruel ,
volleys of the Infantry.
"The high-water mark of the
story of the 'charge was reached by Armlhtead's
washing the grime of battle from
his cheeks. Lee's face is calm and
gives no hint of the emotions with
in his breast. 'It was all my fault,'
he says. 'Now help me to save that
hg which remains.'
utruggle by Edgar Allen Forbes. ' brigade of Virginians. With
The battle lasted three days and, ? , ' upon the point of his sword to, "At midnight a cavalry officer in
1 ....i.i,. 1. 1,. ..w.n ill,. . nni.n,.t . flirt n't ff tlir rmitrh wninnc thnt
Navarro, he pressed far beyond the were galherlng up the mangled
everybody will recall, General Plck
:tt made his famous charge toward
the end of the third day. This
charge concluded the battle and In
directly determined the outcome of
the war. The following extract
from the article, which Is herewlta
Teprinted through the courtesy of
the American Magazine, g'ves a
ilramatlc picture of Pickett's
charge, anil of the final events lead
ing up to the great ratattrophe that
overtook the Confederacy. At this
A prominent farmer of Webster
cdnnly, writing, to Mr. J. N. Banks,
editor of the Tobacco Association
department of the Henderson Glea
ner, says:
Kditor Hanks: I hear some ob
jection to the constitution and by
laws indorsed at the Madisonville
meeting and recommended to to
bacco growers of Kentucky as the
basis upon which It Is expected to
consolidate the numerous tobacco
associations. Of course there will
be objections because of some
things that are not In It. No one
fence, rushed the batteries, and fell men waited at fie General's tent,
dying beside the guns that he bad At last the gray outline of 'Trav
taken. So desperate was the fight-' eler appeared In the dim moon
ing here that twenty Confederate light, and Lee wearily dismounted.
flats were captured within a space, "Thai has been a sad day, General!' expected It possible to formulate
not a hundred yards square. he said, and th'en leaned against plans and rules that would suit ev-
"Plckett's division lost 2,888 this horse In utter exhaustion, seem- ery one.
men killed and wounded, of whomllngly unmindful of the other's pres- No society. State or nation has
1,191 wore from Armlslead's brl- "ce. ever adopted a code of laws that
gade alone. The death which spar-' "'You are much fatigued, Gen- were entirely satisfactory to all.
ed not his three brigadiers passed "'' bal1' the cavalry officer. iThe plan of salvation as devised by
over the conspicuous leader with
! Kentucky
marketing
tablished business lines. It pro- year will mean a loss of from one
tects members from possible fraud j t0 two dollars per hundred pounds
by requiring officials to give suffl- on nil dark" tobacco grown In Ken
clent bond. It adopts the initiative tucky this vyear. which will amount
and referendum and provides for ' to not less t'inn, thrpu "million, dol
recall. It Insures democratic rulel'ars- We' can not nfford to be care
by a mnjorlty vote. Jt guards the . ,ess or Indifferent.
right of every member, giving him! LOUIS HANCOCK,
a voice In transaction of all busl- Providence, Ky.
ness through his magisterial dis-' -
trict cnmmiffPAmnn. ti iimiia Mm! Kae age of our lives has Its lovs,
amount of expenses within reason- 01d 'el)le should be happy, and
able bounds. It provides an ensy)they w"1 bo lf Chamberlain's Tab-
way to alter or amend our laws. It r "'" la"e" lo Birongtnen the di
gestion and keop the bowels reg
ular. These tablets are mild and
gentle In their action and Mno.s
Insures n prorata distribution of
proceeds of all sales of tobacco.
giving to every member his Just
share whether his Individual cropi,al'y 8ul'nule for people of middle
Is sold or not. and takes care of all ! aee aml older. For sale by all
unsold tobacco until such time as
It can be sold at a fair price. In
short. It enables us to protect each
other.
It Is
every
dealers.
(Advertisement.)
ni
A.
S. of K. Notice.
The Ohio Countv itntnn t ., a
s now up ,o the officials of s. of K. will convene at the court
tobacco association or pool In house , artford j ,. 19U
"'Oh. It's too bad! It's too bad!' the divine Father and revealed In Kentucky to nut the ,i0 f.r.v .,."!.?. ".Brt0' '
Pickett Is. his long black hair, and tho voice he exclaimed. Then ho gave theHho life and teachings of the Lordanrt sauarely before their mnitin ...... represented, as
. i..i . ...' ... . . r - - -- . . ik inn r ma in iaik
tlon for hnni'llnt. (Ii into ...i
to say whether we will get togothor cron nn.i n.. ,?... . ' . iu"t
Th rnncHtllnti unit l.v.liw. nt In nno .o,lv nlh na ..lll., I i . ""' liuporiaill UUS-
e I'nlted States under which we. and secure a fair nrlcn for r .. B8 "' CTe beforo 'f16 hoiy
und Longstreet that has Just come ward. Grant and Pemberton were kBt cause.
to light ufter fifty years. It hu- standing together under a tree, ar- "The officer went to his harrow-
inanlzes the hero of that daring ranging tho details of the surrender 's asK ani traveler was leu 0f tno world does not suit all our by enabling the buyer to get our
charge to know that he was much of Vlcksburg. away ' a orderly. Then the Cap- ,,eople In every detail, and repre- tobacco at less than cost of produc-'
In love. As Pickett turned to go. "Of all the descriptions of Pick- tain of the Confederacy, wlftj his natives met every two years to tlon. Kverybody agrees that wo
lie placed In Lougstreet's hands a ett'fl great chargo, that of the great- """i 'lu'8 sorrow iui, ore change and amend the laws of Ken- should get together and I ask to.
letter addressed to a brown-eyed est human Interest Is the latest t""-" the flaps of his tent and'en- tcky. It seems folly to suppose bacco growers to spot every man ,8 there such a thing as n' m
"Virginia girl who yet lives. And his letter to the Virginian girl who """d ' valley oi his i.ethsemane (,at we tobacco growers should be who opposes consolidation and as. trust?"
point In the narrative
just leaving Longstreet to go into that had sent tne men across tne i"i "iiu oi me uay auu uuesus unrisi uoes not meet tne ap- an(j jt a up (0 U8 tobacco growers
.Jiattle, ' field of blood now gave the com- runcennMi me wouuueu men wno provai or ail mankind. i(
"There was one touih of human- mand to fall back. And Just at had fought In vain and whose The Constitution and by-laws of I
Ity In tho parting between Pickett that hour, far away to the south- moans were tlie .Miserere of thethe L'ntted States under which we. and secure a fair nrlco for our tn-
i .. !.. i .. . - . i .. . -. I nol iifrn . I . .
f 'have become one amoni the most bacco, or remain In separate asso-
U.' !.. . '.. ... .. i
inieiugeni anu prosperous nations clatlons nghtlng each other, there
en oi vicKsourg. " . hwii u.o uar people In every detail, and repre- tobai
;o. "Of all the descriptions of Pick- tain of the Confederacy, wlftj his K0itatlves met every two years to tlon.
a ett's great chargo. that of the great- "oul exceeding sorrowful. ' drew ci,ang0 and amona the laws of Ken- shou
L. D. TICHENOR. Prea.
HENRY M, PinTLE, Sec'y.
Wife's Suggestion.
"John, dear. It's too bad tht w
have o punch and save and econo.
nilze on everything w0 buy. Is
this u-.in tlin iiftntHorliit which he later became his wife: alone.
had written In the brief Interval be- " 'You never saw anything like " 'And he went forward a
tween cannonade and tho charge: It. They moved across that field of nl fell on bis face . ,
"'Now, my darling, I go; but re- death as n battalion marches for- - .
member always that I love you with ward In line of battle upon drill,
all my heart and soul, with every each commander In front of his
liber of my being; that now and command, leading and cheering on
forever I am yours yours, my be-, his men. Two lines of the enemy's
little,
M
CHIIlrn Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
loved. It Is almost three o'clock.; Infantry were driven back; two
CASTOR. A
(Advertisement.)
ntlln in nralinru n rnta i na,f.i r.,t.ln wlif,!,.. i .m. I... ..ii..
that no one can 'find objections. desires to promote the Interests of
It was tho purpose of the Madl- tobacco growers. '
somllle meeting to formulate n The executive committee of the
oonstlti t'ii and by-laws Kjtrrn Stemming District Association has
i new ivsocii-tioM and iiibmlt It to set the first Saturday In July as the
tho tobaco growers .if Kentucky day to hold magisterial district
, for their approval o becoBie effec- meetings to determine whether or
j tire when ratified by two-third of sot we are In favor of consolida
tes, love; I think there Is."
U'ause.)
"John, dear, why don't you Join
It?"
Otirn cry
FIR FLETCHER'S
(AdverftetT R A
(
A
.. ,
m .. ,. - r . , fj.ia t ijl
tmJMiMjH

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