1
I f I ,1 I , II I
JMBBSj'AIHHHHB.
technical J
1 WORLD ' I
ImagaziNei
fiS i ii i nmmmt i ir mmm mm
Plxsl
1 xl XV H
THINGS
Y 0 U
Kentuckian"
A vtrll'j. niwy.MW8pper wHh tKe Intercut of th entire conmunlty at heart. Isnut nf
told ui handlvil without f cat or favor. Yon Will find In this parxr an up-to-date denart
mnt for carh member of tha fjunlty. Cfcaa, honcit. Mrolnhtforward It la a papr your
Second
TeiBiiieal World Magazine
thcinot only entertains In n fasclnatlwr manner, but which nlao Instructs.
. - . I t . . 1 . I . HM l. MU ...
igr ua uuay uiiiiirB3 ftiiui, tut tiit iiviavii mm .tin Mraj -
i. nnrl lxi airreoabl' Informed at th lame tlm. It Is t)rofusIV illustrator:
m snrl intcrGstlr.it wn of tho discoveries of selentlits. tha achlovomcntj of
a of engineers and explorere, and tlio opening of cYcrynew fleM of human
l.'rts Ijm'.dhn. nut. "1 liayo just chanced uoon my first cony of TECHNICAL
IKE, Thoro Isn't nnythlnc liko it. I want ;iorc, and I cannot wait for Uitm
nninz yu herewith rticcK lor wnicn picaso enter my suicripixa ana eenu
last two yoirs dock numbers."
HOLDS )RT FOR FOURTEEN JRS DAILY
la tha ontfTTia
It Is. the
aumfeter's a
and tells in
Insvaturs',
atideavor.
WORLD
to com p. so
me knmedi:
Third
fmw
m
mm
MMM
HV
A Fine Atlas
' '1 1.1a cno Is jet of? tlio presses. This la tho year to obtain anew atlas, Tho 1310 Ccnasha
.out been .:om file tod. thia ntlas contains :
the official figures. 113 pases of 3 color
maps troughs tight down tadnto every
teap'givintr the ifcsul ts of tha moat rctent
; BHrveyz. All ailroads ere shown and
muheti 'and maps of all large cities nro
inclaiinl. Thcrr aro ?l double pastil maps
Bfepwintr In dcta'i portions of tha U. S.
and Canadi. I'irr.ension3 10J"xl3Ji
Bound in a'iTV n-Sllvr Leaf Title
pnntvd on i.n.- y plate paper. Sella
rciJ-rb for CJ.W. A aplendld trlfc
iALL THREE
Oill
My
$3.80
Special orransrmcnt with Technical
World Masazina and tho publishers of
this Atlas make this offer possible. But
it is very strictly limited. You must
act Immediately.
Send
or
Bring in Your .Order
Today
HAMMOND'S
MODERN ATLAS
OF
THEWORLD
NOW
IS BETTER THAN--
WHEN
GAS STOVES-
Sold now can be connected now.
But when bought in the rush season
we cannot tell just when we can get
to your particular order.
Kentucky Public Service Company
INCORPORATED
What do you think of a. Judge who
hold court from a. m. to 11 p. m.
day In and d7
out with Just
twenty minute
tor luncheon, nd
who Bonds1 fewer
persons to Jn.Il
than nny othor
Judge on tho
bench.
Well, (hat de
scribes Judge Jo
seph C. Uhllr of
of tho court of
do mod tic rela
tions, in Chicago,
who declared la
an Interview the othor day that tho
Judgo must be tho father of tho peo
ple as well as their Judgo.
In Judgo Uhllr's court seventy to
eighty casoa of domestic Infelicity aro
dealt with in ono way or another
overy day In tho week.
To tako caro of tho enormous mass
of troublo, tho Judgo rises at G:30
dally and seldom goes to. bed before
1 a. m. Speaking practically all the
languages and dialects of southern
Europe, Judgo Uhlir talks directly
from tho bench with wives and htis-'
bands who have quarreled, with chil
dren who haVo sinned, to officials who
have erred.
Hero is Judgo Uhllr's Judicial phil
osophy: Tho errant husband may' bo chided
into decency.
The wasteful wife may bo talked
Into thrift.
Tho delinquent child may bo saved
by kindness.
Divorce should be tho last resort of
tho unhappily married.
To make the SKIN of FACE and HANDS
VELVETY, SOFT and WHITE
USE ONLY THE GENUINE
CREME SIMON
made by J. SIMON & CO., Paris, France
Its effect is aided by the use of
POUDRE DE RIZ SIMON AND SOAP SIMON
FOR SALE EVERYWHERE
MAUKIOK LKVY, Solo V. S. A cent
15-17 Vest 38th Street New York
am
"HONEST GOODS AT HONEST PRICES."
FOR RELIABLE WATCHES AND JEWELRY.
TYou must go to a Reliable, Competent and Experienced Dealer.
W make a specialty of Fine and Reliable time-pieces for all pur
poeei. Quality Guaranteed Beet, prieee loweet,
JS, H. 8KARRY.
The'.PeopW Jeweler and Optician, Watch Inspector L. & N. R. R
If You Buy It From Skurry It' Good.
Job Printing at This Office.
False standards of living should 1m
denounced from tho bench,
Tho persistent evildoer should fee
swiftly and severely punished.
Tho judge On tho bench should fee
a father to his petitioners.
"The position of domestic court
Judgo is no sinecure, but It Is Intensely
interesting and profitable. It is tho
court of all tho people," said Judgo
Uhllr.
"I consider it a comploto vindica
tion of tho now court that wo are ablo
to reunite at least one-half of the
husbands and wives who como hero
Booking dlvorco or separation. This
is accomplished by reasoning with
tho people instead of applying the
strict rules of legal procedure."
"The lazy man is brought hero. Ho
refuses to work. Ho insists ho can
not get work. Now, the nrgumonts
placed before this man are fow but
convincing. Ho generally goos to
work and if ho doesn't ho goes to the
bridewell.
"This brings me to an idea 1 havo
that wo should establish big farms
whoro all lazy men, wlfo deserters, all
men who neglect their responsibilities
and refuso to hoed tho admonitions of
the court, may bo compelled;to work
and their wages go to tho families
they neglect when they aro froo.
"When a wlfo needs a scolding I
don't mlnco words with her. I tell
her Just where sho gets off, to uso a
colloquialism, and often sho gotis
homo in tears to bo a better woman.
"Oh, thoro Is no doubt that tho
court of domestic relations Is a per
manent Institution and that the prin
ciple upon which It is conducted will
become general within a fow years".
Announcements
ttdvertiefltentav
We are authorized to announce
geo,w. Mcknight
of Howell, as a Democratic candi
date for County Assessor, subject to
the action of the primary election
Aupust 2,1913.
We are authorized to announce
FRANK RIVES
as a candidate for the Democratic
nomination for County Attorney,
subject to the action of the primary
to De neia August z, l'Jia.
ONLY WOMAN BOSS OF A BIG BASEBALL TEAM
Sundry enthusiastic and emotional
citizens of tho Mound City who make
a practice of at
tending baseball
games may ob
serve during the
amenities between
a visiting club and
tho St, Louis Na
tionals a little
woman sitting in
tho distinguished
"region Just behind
the center of lo
calized hostilities,
or, to put it more
colloquially, in
line with the
plate. It will bo observed that she,
sits only an infinitesimal portion of
the time. Good or bad plays bring her
swiftly to her feet, and If they oper
ate to tho advantage of the St. Louis
team provoke shrill and unmistakable
expressions of approval. It is evident
that sho Is filled with extraordinary
interest. Moreover, sho knows tho
game.
This little woman is Mrs. Helen
Hathaway Roblson Britton, owner of
tho St. Louis team, sometimes known
as the Cardinals.
Mrs. Britton is not a suffragette. If
3he has added one more to tho ever
increasing number of fomlnlne inva
sions upon tho whilom domain of man
It is through accident rather than de
sign. Sho does think that a woman
can run a baseball team with mascu
line facility. Whether this Is true
remains to be seen. The Cardinals
never havo been particularly distin
guished for pennant winning procllv
itfes. If In this, their second year of
feminine ownership, they succeed In
landing anywhere near tho first dl
vision, tho avorago fan will be in
clined to consider Mrs. Britton a suc
cess.
Mrs. Britton Inherited the Cardi
nals. They belonged originally to her
father, Prank Do Haas Roblson, who
was also the one-time proprietor of
the Cleveland Spiders. On his death
the Cardinals passed into tho hands
of his brother, Stanley Roblson. The
latter's death in 1911 threw tho team
into the ownership of Mrs. Britton.
She was left 937 of tho 1,000 shares
nn inheritance, considering tho popu
larity of baseball In St. Louis, amount
Ing to a good deal more than a mil
lion dollars.
Mrs. Britton knows baseball from
top to bottom, and she is not afraid
to express her opinions when the oc
casion calls for it. True, she does not
express them so graphically as an un
hampered male, but she puts it plain
enough for. their tenor to reach sec
ond base. (Musicians, kindly take
note.) She Is only a littlo more than
Ave feet tall, but when she rises to
mako a remark It carries. And It Is
always straight to tho point. Mrs.
Britton says:
"As for the Cardinals, the happiest
day of my life will be when they bring
homo a pennant. Perhaps that won't
be this year, but It Is going to hap
pen some day. That will bo tho best
answer to the question of whether a
woman can be a good baseball proprietor.
We are atharisd
, T. H. JOlNEft
of LafajrttU, ai a RepDu
date for County Aaeeewx4,
the action of Um primary
August 2, 1913,
We are authorized to announce
J. WALTER KNIGHT
aa a Democratic candidate for coun
ty judge of Christian county, subject
to the action of the Drimarv Auor. 2.
1913.
VASSAR GIRL, SWEET 16, WINS COVETED "V"
At sixteen, to wear a rose colored
"V upon one's sweater!
That, Is some
thing In tho col
lego girls' world.
U means that
Vassar college has
a new idol, an idol
who is five feet
eight and one-half
Inches in height
and possessed of
clear brown eyes,
a bright, healthy
complexion and
thick brown hair,
which was long
enough to sit on
when Bha wore It in "pigtails" In hor
"prop" school days.
But It Isn't nny of those qualities
that havo won Miss Elizabeth Abigail
Hardin tho devotion of her college
mates. Infinitely moro Important than
these Is the rose colored "V" which
has fallen to her for making a collpgo
record, on May 4, at the field day meet,
when sho put the shot thirty-two feet
and three-fourths inch, distancing the
old record, made in 1909, of 31 feet 9&
Inches. Miss Hardin is the first girl
to havo established such a record In
her freshman year, and In addition to
her shot putting prowess sho broko
two Intercollegiate records at tho
same field day meet. Sho throw tho
baseball 205 feet and 7 Inches, as
against the old mark, made by Miss
Dorothy Smith, of tho class of 1914,
of 204 feet and 5 Inches. Tho other
now record established by Miss Har
din was a basketball throw of SO feet
and 1 inches, distancing the record
hold by Miss Milholland, 1909, of 77
feet 9 Inches.
Miss Hardin Is the daughter of Mr.
John R. Hardin, a lawyer, of Nowark,
N, J. All her girlish life has been
passed in Newark and boforo entering
Vassar hor education had been ob
tained entirely at the Townsend
school.
PRINCESS INDISA FLEES HER NATIVE INDIA
Princess IndUa, tho beautiful daugh
ter of the reigning Gaokwar of Baroda.
whose sensational
flight from Calcut
ta on tho ovo of
hor marriage to
Prlnco Jltendra of
Coooh Bohr a,
throw India so
ciety into an up
roar, la visiting lu
Frauco with her
parents.
Reasons ad
vanced for her ac
tion aro that a
strange mingling
of the advanced
Ideals of English and American wom
en with tho ancient traditions of India
have made, her entirely a "new
flfoman."
Betrotbala among the reigning faml-
lies of India aro seldom broken, but
it lias been Bald that tho princess con
fided her secret to trlonds that sho be
lloved $0 prlnco to be of an Inferior
casto.
Tho maharlna of Baroda, her moth
er, has very decided views on caste
and tho evolution of the latter day In
dlan woman from tho customs of their
ancestors.
The Gaekwarof Baroda rules over
8,000 miles of territory and has 2,000,
000 subjects. Ho Is ono of tho wealthi
est men, in India and is highly edu
cated. Statements havo followed state
ments since the episode. One version
Is that the prince made a formal pro
posal for1 the princosB, but that her
parents would not give tholr consent,
The prlnco, It Is Bald, then caused
preparations for the marriage to continue.
We are authorized to announce
S. G. BUCKNER
aa a candidate for City Councilman
in the Second ward, subject to the
action of the Democratic primary,
Aug. 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
A. E. MULLINS
aa a candidate for jailer, of Chris-
nan county, sunject to the action of
the Democratic party, in the official
primary election August z, iyia.
We are authorized to announce
IRA D. SMITH
as a-candidate for Conntv Atrnrnrv
for Christian county, suhject to the
action or tne Democratic voters at
the primary election, August 2, 1913.
We are authorize to announce
D. D. CAYCE
as a candidate for Citv Hnu noil man
in the sixth ward. Riihipct to the
action of the Democratic primary
August 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
R. T. STOWE
County Court Clerk, as a candidate
for renomination. subject to the ac
tton of the Democratic party in the
primary election of August 2, 1913.
we are authorized to announce
HUGH C. McGEHEE
of Gracey, as a candidate for County
Court Clerk, subject to the action of
the Republican party in the official
primary August 2, 1913.
we are auiMfjzeu to annowae
MACK J. DAVIS
as a republicanfcandfda'e for
nation for Sheriff of Christian
tv. subiect to the action of rnm
publican primary Aug. 2, 1913.
We are authorized to an no wee
TOM CUSHMAN
We are authorized to announce
TANDY D. McGEE
as a candidate for City Councilman
in the Sixn ward, subject to the ac
tion of the Democratic primary Au
gust 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
R. M. WOOLDRIDGE
as a candidate for City Councilman
in the Sixth ward, subject to the ac
tion of the Democratic primary Aug
ust 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
JEWELL W. SMITH
as a candidate for Sheriff of Chris
tian County, subject to the action of
the Democratic party in the official
primary August 2, 1913.
J We are authorized to announce
CHAS. W. MORRISON,
of Pembroke, as a candidate for the
Democratic nomination for Repre
sentative in the Legislature, subject
to the primary election August, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
LUCIANJTJ. HARRIS
as a Democratic candidate for County
Court Clerk, subject to the action of
the primary August 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
MISS JENNIE WEST
as a candidate for the Democratic
renomination for Superintendent of
Schools in Christian county, subject
to the Democratic primary, August
2nd, 1913.
We are; authorized to announce
PROF. L. E. FOSTER
as a candidate for the Democratic
nomination for Superintendent of
Schools in Christian county, subject
to tha Democratic primary, August
2d, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
H. C. MYERS
as a candidate for jailer, of Chris
tian county, subject to the action of
the Republican party, in the officnl
primary election August 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
C. L. DADE
as a Democratic candidate for re
election as magistrate in District
No. G, subject to the action of the
primary August 2.
We are authorized to announce
T. S. WINFREE
as a candidate for re-election to the
office of Constable in District Wn 9
subject to the action of the Demo
cratic voters in tne primary election.
Ausr. 2, 1913
as a Democratic candidate for Cow
ty Assessor, subject to the action e
the primary election August 2, IS
We are authorized to announce)
JAMES J. CLIBORNE
as a Republican canidate for norafe
tion for Sheriff of Christian coumt.
subject to the action oflctie Repav
can primary August 2. 913.
We are authorized toannounc.
JOHN M. RENSriAW
as a Republican candidate' for nomi
nation for Sheriff of Christian cow
ty, subject to the action of the Re
publican primary Aug. 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
MAT S. MAJOR
89 a candidate for Sheriff of Chxk
tian County, subject to the action ef
the Democratic party in the official
primary August 2, 1913.
We are hereby authorized to
nounce
E. C. MAJOR "3
who is now in the employ of Forbes
Mfg Co., as a candidate for sherMC
of Christian county, subject to tie
action of the Democratic primary
election August 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
JOHN W. ROGERS
as a candidate for the Republican
nomination for County Clerk, sub
ject to the action of the state pri
mary on August 2.
We are authorized to announce
HUGH SEARGENT
aa a Republican candidate for Conn
ty Assessor, subject to the action of
the primary election August 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
BAILEY RUSSELL
as a candidate for City Councilman
in the Seventh ward, subject to the
action of the Democratic primary,
Aug. 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
W. J. McGEE
as a Democratic candidate for the
nomination of County Assessor, sub
ject to the action of the Democratic
primary August 2. 1913.
We are authorized to an ounce
DR. J. A. SOUTHALL
as a candidate for Councilman in tha
Third Ward, subject to the Demo
cratic primary August 2, 1913.
Wi n ait'urizil to anoai:3
ESQ. T. F. CLARDY
as a candidate for renomination for
magistrate in the Mfth district, sub
ject to the action of the Democratic
party Aug. 2, 1913.
We are authorized to announce
MINOR G. ROGERS
of Lafayette, as a candidate for tho
Democratic nomination for Repre
sentative in the Legislature, subject
to the primary election August, 1913.
Unusual Offer To Our Readers.
For a limited time, and subject to
withdrawal after 30 days, the well
known publishing hous,e of the J. B.
Lippincott Company, Philadelphia,
founded in 1792. offers to the readers
of this paper a 12 months' subscrip
tion to "Lippincott's Magazine" and
a year's subscription to the Kentuck
ian, both for $3 00. This is the price
of a twelve months' subscription to
"Lippincott's" alone. Additional to
obtaining every issue of this paper
for a year, our readers will receive
in "Lippincott's," 12 great complete
novels by popular authors, 105 short
stories, crisp, entertaining, original;
45 timely articles from the penB of
masters, and each month some ex
cellent poems with the right senti
ment, and "Walnuta and Wine,"
the most popular humor section in
America. Toob:aln this extraordin
ary offer prompt action is necessary,
Remit to J. B. Lippincott Company,
Washington Square, Phila., Pa.
Jellyfish Defined.
"The Jollyfloh." ccordlng to tkm
definition given by the Star Boarder,
"la only a base with a Judicial temper
MumL"
'i