hopkinsville kentuckian. (hopkinsville, ky) 1905-01-12 [p...

1
i V JG4t t k l < J4w w i < t1l t w t 01 r tI oiJt 1l1 t > fJj Jf i I c jjj 6 > 1 i 1 w < f1 Zf KENTUQ Y THURSDAY JAI fUARY12t905U N r AIM r f k Ji u 614 r v l n 1 47 i = r VVJ v t i it + i fr ii fR < 10- v > 1fi4 tr p t r u wn nil i > I t V r t it > r t i A ri a I t r f + I It fj i Itf ii > 11 I i F Jt I f 1 r r i ji 1 fJ Jf f rww ran ter jV J r Weoff p pick of ofentire stock Ladies Cloaks worth 15 to 30 Nothing held back f with them go four very fine broad tailvelvet cloaksworth 25 to i I w 30 QorneYearly riQg ttHepick ir 0 < < W Y J fe t Jfi Anderson i a Compan L La r 1 De Ready I t ir j V A WI c r < Not thing in our immense stock nas es Japed the general markdown Hundreds b f artjexes not idvefj tised haveals been makebargains out the plan of giving the people who attend our sale even more and better than they an ¬ ticipated We opened iWednesday moriiin g < w TWallScCa e A- rIIT s 1 lING REDt I p > GROFTONo r LT rWal t Bowling and > Wm JcExchange Sever a1 Shots 1ty4t tc 21t v t I OUT j ovj t CROPSC It t 1 > onelcaiies il ere Bullet s I siFipn Bowlings j t Pistol f j t r i Wm Jones a cropper oxi the farm of Walter Bowlm near ftonwas shot and slightly wounded Tuesday by Bowling Bad feeling had been engendered in a dispute over the corn crop and in a suit in the inagi- strates rt at CroftdTi Monday the paint in disputewas decided in favor of Bowling a dim attachment on the coniwas dismissed The next day Bowling want to the crib to get the corn and Jones was on hand and opened fire shooting twice at him Bowling returned the shots with a pistol there shots taking effect in Jones forehead hand and shoulder The wounds were slight and Jones rode to Crofton to have them red Bowling gave himself up- anvill plead self defens- eSTOCKHOLDERS MEET J31d Directory of Tobacco I Company Reelected I The stockholders of the R T Mar ¬ tin Greenville Tobacco Manufactur ¬ ing Company held their annual meet ¬ ing at the office of the company here Mondayafternoon Tbe old directory was reelected for the year 1905 and the reprft of the Secretary and Treasurer was read and approved The officers of the company will be chosen at a meeting to be held next week The President reported a healthy condition of affairs and a prosperous year just closed The companys business extends over a dozen or more states and they aretaxed to their full capacity in filling orclers NUMEROUS RELATIVES i > Here Had John Handle who Died in Tennessee John D JJaridle sol1of T N StationTenn Eand W F Randle and Mr Eugene Wood gill of this city died last Thursday night Hewas 30 years old and a member of the Baptist church His illness started from a bone felon which had lanced poisoning tot in1Jiiitthenhud succeeded Tn combatting this disease and he had nearly recovered when he had nervous prostration Paralysis of thebrain which caused his death followed the latter spell LEFT CHILDLESS By a Double Affliction in One Day i t Mr and Alii John Mmnptonof Trenton lst little girls their only children Tuesday of whooping cough and pneumonia Katherinf ogedtwaanda half years died at 830 and Minnie LeeI aged one year died at 5 p m Both were buried together yesterday at Bembroke The bereaved parents have the sympathies ofmany friends mtheiivdouhlenfiiictlcnr r- T Cusedii Death fc t Gilbert Alien a boy tend lyeiiirs old hurt bia dwitha toy I pls1ol Jan 2 and le rOn day tlilpt week from lockjaw Resulting from the wound KENTUCKY 1r nIOROUGHIE 8 IN KENTUCKY r Ie II delbert Stud Writtex p By- a f Bluegrass6aperffifeh Illustrations 1f I fdWIBLIAMS D 4 ifcv t m c t I iHistory of the Riseand De I velopment of the Race- Horse d Industry f It 1Dust be conceded that in the immediate Vicinity of Lexington are clustered the most famous lot of stock farms to be found in anyone section of the co from this fact the impre U5hJs frequently gotton that the re ding of thor ¬ oughbreds is U attempted else ¬ where in the Sfatj As a general rule this is trlieJltit to it there is at least one exception which must be madethe Adelpert Stud of Messrs Williams Radford al HopkinsvSlle says the Kentucky Farmer and Breeder illustrated Hvriteup from which the salient points are repre- sented ¬ 1ic Christian county has proved and is proVP x thatjt can r produce th- OUgh r comparable with the best Thefmratry there is comparatively- new C ctr flaw after several years of remajkable success by the men v iisoneers in it it has en- listed but Jew results Gradually howcv lit is growing and the pros peas aio that the next tenyem3 will witness a number of breeding establishments of greater or less magnitude which will do their part towards making Southern Kentucky as well as Central Kentucky a factor to be reckoned with in the thorough ¬ bred world Pioneer in the Industry frt 1890 Dr W W Williams who had been a successful practicing dentist in Hopkinsville for a number of years began the acquisition of a few select thoroughbred mares These he bred to the stallions of v- arious ¬ establishments in Tennessee and conducted small business suc ¬ cessfully until 1895 That year he formed a partnership with Maj C S JRadford of the United States Navy and the two bought the stal ¬ lion imp Albert The spring of 1895 Albert served about a half dozen mares among them the after ¬ wardsfamous Hoodoo who to the cover of Albert produced the fol ¬ lowing sprng the good stake mare Jinks At the fall sales of 1895 Messrs Williams Radford who in the meantime had acquired a farm of some hundred and sixty acres on the edge of Hopkinsville were liberal purchasers of mares Amon othe- rstvugii Hypocrite from the t Castleton Stud of Mr James n Keene She was in foal to Kings ¬ ton Their first public sale of year- lings ¬ was held at Cincinnati the spring of 1897 At that sale the filly by Kingston out of Hypocrite was offered and that filly proved to bathe sensational Admiration She was bought by Mr T C McDowell for 800 with the understanding that Messrs Williams Radford would buy her back at the purchase price whenever Mr McDowell chose to return helliin order to use here springI showed remarkable speed but sli developed a bad case of lheumatism- andwns therefore unable to stat Ai the inaugural sale of Messrg5 Wilimms Radford the first filly fey Albertout of Hoodoo was also 4f fcrqdjsrSiio 3vas bought by Mrr i WV hud May who named Jinks Latelas a twoyearold hi wassold Zeiglern In M Mifall j3r0y cl a goodstake > winner aka I Continued on fourth page t- rr We ri u fantee rfj 1 To sell goods ass GHHlP as you lj dhtf I can get them a pricek sales and we hoe a large and < v fsQloaks and Gentlemens Underwear j < Call and get our prices before i you buy elsewhere < A 11 IS T Mo JONES Main Street E 8 LONG Prest W T TANDY Cashier THE CITY BANI1 CAPITAL 60000 Surplus and Undivided Profits 70000 The surplus of this bank every dollar of which has earned is larger than that of all other Banks in Christian county Com and in proportion to capital ranks among the very first whole beeI of Kentucky MRS HARRIET JOHNSON Passes Away at Her Home Near Kelly Mrs Harriet Johnson widow of James Johnson died at her home near Kelly Wednesday She was about 75 years old and had been an invalid for several years Deceased was the daughter of the late Rev Joab Clark a sister of Hon H B Clark of Gracey and mother of Messrs W W and Joseph Johnson of this city She was also an aunt GeorgeandCliflrClark man held in the highest esteem by all who knew her and she had been a member of the Universalist church for many years Funeral services were held at her Jate residence yes- terday morning at 10 oclock by Rev H C Becket and the interment tool place in the Clark burying ground near Crofton SLEEPING CAR SERVICE Inaugurated on T C With New York Traffic Manager E H Hlnton of the Tennessee Central Railroad an- nounces ¬ I that a daily sleeping car service has been inaugurated be ¬ tween Nashville and Knoxville in connection with the Southern road Sleepers leave Nashville 1115 p m and reach Knoxville 815 a m and leaving Knoxville 930 p m arrive at Nashville at 700 a m SKULL FRACTURED Man Hit by Train Still in J Critical Condition Trenton Ky Jan nPark Hig clop who was struck by a train on the night of the third inst is still in a critical condition Higdons skull was fractured one leg was broken and he also sustained internal inju ¬ ries Should he survive it is likely I xvill hpve td be amjiu lnter p J M M r i PrideBennett r Cbhriy Pr < and Miss Meredith Bennett willih6 marriedjat the home- of th9 brideear Red Hill tonight Rev W F Crick wiiloftiiciate wrww JAS A YOUNG Jr I Asst Cashier m = h 0 Bickers SHOE STORE CLOS1N- i Shoes BelOw Er 8 Those pre t shoes going at a scriiieaJ Come and get them while they last All K styles Mens Wo ¬ mens Boys Girls for a mere trifle Now is the TimeS You Need Shoes rte COST PRICESt Bargains Bargains DickerS Cut Price Shoe Store 9th treerAt V rz +c rpr v

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Page 1: Hopkinsville Kentuckian. (Hopkinsville, KY) 1905-01-12 [p ].nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7gxd0qsn50/data/0027.pdf · the coniwas dismissed The next day Bowling want to the crib to get the corn

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r tIoiJt 1l1 t > fJj Jfi I c jjj 6> 1 i1

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Weoffp pick of ofentirestock Ladies Cloaks worth 15

to 30 Nothing held backf

withthem go four very fine broadtailvelvet cloaksworth 25 to

i Iw

30 QorneYearly riQg ttHepickir

0

< <

WY

J

fe

t

Jfi Andersoni

a Compan

L La r1

DeReady I

tir

jV

A WIc r

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Not thing in ourimmense stock nas esJaped the generalmarkdown Hundredsbf artjexes not idvefjtised haveals beenmakebargainsout the plan of givingthe people who attendour sale even more andbetter than they an ¬

ticipated We openediWednesday moriiin g

<

w TWallScCae

A-

rIIT

s1 lING REDt

I p>

GROFTONo

rLTrWal t Bowling and> Wm

JcExchange Severa1 Shots

1ty4t tc 21t

v

tI

OUTj

ovjtCROPSCIt

t 1>

onelcaiies il ere Bullets

I siFipn Bowlings j

t Pistol fj t

r iWm Jones a cropper oxi the farm

of Walter Bowlm near ftonwasshot and slightly wounded Tuesdayby Bowling Bad feeling had beenengendered in a dispute over thecorn crop and in a suit in the inagi-strates rt at CroftdTi Monday thepaint in disputewas decided in favorof Bowling a dim attachment onthe coniwas dismissed The nextday Bowling want to the crib to getthe corn and Jones was on hand andopened fire shooting twice at himBowling returned the shots with apistol there shots taking effect inJones forehead hand and shoulderThe wounds were slight and Jonesrode to Crofton to have themred Bowling gave himself up-

anvill plead self defens-

eSTOCKHOLDERS MEET

J31d Directory of TobaccoI Company ReelectedI

The stockholders of the R T Mar¬

tin Greenville Tobacco Manufactur ¬

ing Company held their annual meet ¬

ing at the office of the company hereMondayafternoon Tbe old directorywas reelected for the year 1905 andthe reprft of the Secretary andTreasurer was read and approvedThe officers of the company will bechosen at a meeting to be held nextweek The President reported ahealthy condition of affairs anda prosperous year just closedThe companys business extendsover a dozen or more states andthey aretaxed to their full capacityin filling orclers

NUMEROUS RELATIVESi >

Here Had John Handle whoDied in Tennessee

John D JJaridle sol1of T N

StationTennEand W F Randle and MrEugene Wood gill of this city diedlast Thursday night Hewas 30years old and a member of theBaptist church

His illness started from a bonefelon which had lancedpoisoning tot in1Jiiitthenhudsucceeded Tn combatting thisdisease and he had nearly recoveredwhen he had nervous prostrationParalysis of thebrain which causedhis death followed the latter spell

LEFT CHILDLESS

By a Double Affliction in One

Dayi

t

Mr and Alii John MmnptonofTrenton lst little girlstheir only children Tuesday ofwhooping cough and pneumoniaKatherinf ogedtwaanda halfyears died at 830 and Minnie LeeIaged one year died at 5 p m Bothwere buried together yesterday atBembroke The bereaved parentshave the sympathies ofmany friendsmtheiivdouhlenfiiictlcnr r-

T

Cusedii Death fc

t Gilbert Alien a boy tendlyeiiirs old hurt bia dwitha toy I

pls1ol Jan 2 and le rOn day tlilptweek from lockjaw Resulting fromthe wound

KENTUCKY 1rnIOROUGHIE 8

IN KENTUCKYr Ie

IIdelbert Stud Writtex p By-

af Bluegrass6aperffifehIllustrations 1f

I

fdWIBLIAMS D

4ifcv t m

c

t IiHistory of the Riseand De

Ivelopment of the Race-

Horsed

Industry f

It 1Dust be conceded that in theimmediate Vicinity of Lexington areclustered the most famous lot ofstock farms to be found in anyonesection of the co from thisfact the impre U5hJs frequentlygotton that the re ding of thor¬

oughbreds is U attempted else ¬

where in the Sfatj As a generalrule this is trlieJltit to it there is atleast one exception which must bemadethe Adelpert Stud of MessrsWilliams Radford al HopkinsvSllesays the Kentucky Farmer andBreeder illustrated Hvriteup fromwhich the salient points are repre-sented

¬

1icChristian county has proved andis proVP

xthatjt canr produce th-

OUghr

comparable with the bestThefmratry there is comparatively-new C ctr flaw after several yearsof remajkable success by the menv iisoneers in it it has en-

listed but Jew results Graduallyhowcv lit is growing and the prospeas aio that the next tenyem3will witness a number of breedingestablishments of greater or lessmagnitude which will do their parttowards making Southern Kentuckyas well as Central Kentucky a factorto be reckoned with in the thorough ¬

bred world

Pioneer in the Industryfrt 1890 Dr W W Williams who

had been a successful practicingdentist in Hopkinsville for a numberof years began the acquisition of afew select thoroughbred maresThese he bred to the stallions of v-

arious

¬

establishments in Tennesseeand conducted small business suc ¬

cessfully until 1895 That year heformed a partnership with Maj C

S JRadford of the United StatesNavy and the two bought the stal ¬

lion imp Albert The spring of1895 Albert served about a halfdozen mares among them the after¬

wardsfamous Hoodoo who to thecover of Albert produced the fol¬

lowing sprng the good stake mareJinks

At the fall sales of 1895 MessrsWilliams Radford who in themeantime had acquired a farm ofsome hundred and sixty acres on theedge of Hopkinsville were liberalpurchasers of mares Amon othe-rstvugii Hypocrite from the tCastleton Stud of Mr James nKeene She was in foal to Kings¬

ton Their first public sale of year-lings

¬

was held at Cincinnati thespring of 1897 At that sale thefilly by Kingston out of Hypocritewas offered and that filly proved tobathe sensational Admiration Shewas bought by Mr T C McDowellfor 800 with the understandingthat Messrs Williams Radfordwould buy her back at the purchaseprice whenever Mr McDowell choseto return helliin order to use herespringI

showed remarkable speed but slideveloped a bad case of lheumatism-andwns therefore unable to stat

Ai the inaugural sale of Messrg5

Wilimms Radford the first filly fey

Albertout of Hoodoo was also 4ffcrqdjsrSiio 3vas bought by MrriWV hud May who namedJinks Latelas a twoyearold hi

wassold Zeiglern In MMifallj3r0y cl a goodstake > winner aka I

Continued on fourth page

t-

rr

We riu fanteerfj 1

To sell goods ass GHHlP as youlj dhtf I

can get them apriceksales and we hoe a large and

< v

fsQloaksand Gentlemens Underwear

j<

Call and get our prices beforei

you buy elsewhere<

A

11

IST Mo JONES Main Street

E 8 LONG

PrestW T TANDY

Cashier

THE CITYBANI1CAPITAL 60000Surplus and Undivided Profits 70000

The surplus of this bank every dollar of which hasearned is larger than that of all other Banks in Christian county Comand in proportion to capital ranks among the very first whole beeIof Kentucky

MRS HARRIET JOHNSON

Passes Away at Her HomeNear Kelly

Mrs Harriet Johnson widow ofJames Johnson died at her homenear Kelly Wednesday She wasabout 75 years old and had been aninvalid for several years Deceasedwas the daughter of the late RevJoab Clark a sister of Hon H BClark of Gracey and mother ofMessrs W W and Joseph Johnsonof this city She was also an aunt

GeorgeandCliflrClarkman held in the highest esteem byall who knew her and she had beena member of the Universalist churchfor many years Funeral serviceswere held at her Jate residence yes-terday morning at 10 oclock by RevH C Becket and the interment toolplace in the Clark burying groundnear Crofton

SLEEPING CAR SERVICE

Inaugurated on T C WithNew York

Traffic Manager E H Hlnton ofthe Tennessee Central Railroad an-

nounces¬

I that a daily sleeping carservice has been inaugurated be¬

tween Nashville and Knoxville inconnection with the Southern roadSleepers leave Nashville 1115 p mand reach Knoxville 815 a m andleaving Knoxville 930 p m arriveat Nashville at 700 a m

SKULL FRACTURED

Man Hit by Train Still inJCritical Condition

Trenton Ky Jan nPark Higclop who was struck by a train onthe night of the third inst is still ina critical condition Higdons skullwas fractured one leg was brokenand he also sustained internal inju ¬

ries Should he survive it is likelyI xvill hpve td be amjiulnterp J M M

ri

PrideBennettr Cbhriy Pr < and Miss MeredithBennett willih6 marriedjat the home-of th9 brideear Red Hill tonightRev W F Crick wiiloftiiciate

wrwwJAS A YOUNG Jr I

Asst Cashier

m

= h 0

BickersSHOE STORE CLOS1N-

iShoes BelOw Er

8Those pre t shoes

going at a scriiieaJCome and get themwhile they last All K

styles Mens Wo ¬

mens Boys Girlsfor a mere trifle

Now is the TimeSYou Need Shoes

rte COST

PRICESt

Bargains Bargains

DickerSCut Price Shoe Store

9th treerAtV rz

+crpr

v