Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / May 17, 1904, edition 1 / Page 1
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A THE MONROE JOUR H A vi i n .1 YX A VOLUME XI. NO 16 MONROE, N. C, TUESDAY MAY 17 1904 One Dollar a Year Westeri)& Atlantic Railroad .Louis Rai MOW THE SOUTH MAY REGAIN part, baa iu our day swung into mas of nu n prnvi.hsl me pnM-ily AND Nashville, Chattanoo&a & S1 Iwav LEADCR5HIP IN INUISTHY AND POiJTICS. -TO St. Louis and all points West ami Northwest. Three Solid Trains Daily, with Pullman Palaec Sleeping Cars, Atlanta to St. Louis, WITHOUT CHANGE. Only Through Car Service Atlanta to Chicago, without change. Close con nection made at Atlanta with the Seaboard Air Line Railway, Central of Georgia Railway, and the Southern Railway trains. For map folders, or other information, write to THOS. R. JONES, T. P. A., No. 1 North Pryor Street, Atlanta, Qa. H. F. SMITH, Traffc Manager. CHAS. E. HARMAN, Qen. Pass. Agt. Sale of BANKRUPT STOCK The public has already been informed of the fact that we have bought the .1. Y. Dus ter bankrupt stock at a big discount, and we will sell accordingly. Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes and Hats to GO AT A LOW FIGURE. Shoes away down in price. If you want to be fitted with a line shoe at a low price come quick, for they arc going fast. Some splendid bargains in dry goods are here for you while the goods last. We did not buy this stock to keep. It is on the market now, but the prices are going to TAKE IT OFF QUICKLY. J. R. Eimlish & Co. Stieff Pianos. Look backward if you want to look into the future of the STIEFF PIANO. Ask people who possess a Stieff Piano what they thought of it 60 years ago, 40 years ago, 20 years ago, 10 years ago, 6 years ago and today. Its Past Is a Record of Progress, Its Future a Triumphal March The Stieffs from sire to sons have fathered the business from its birth in 1842. They have devoted a lifetime of study in bringing their instruments to the top note of perfection, giv ing to each piano a personal and careful exam ination and cross-examination before it leaves the factory. It is sold direct from factory to fireside. Pay by the month if you prefer. STIEPP, Manufacturer of the Piano with the Sweet Tone SOUTHERN WAKF.ROOMS: 211 21.1 X. Tryon St., Charlotte, X. C. Cor. Muiu and Plain Sts., Columbia, 8. C. 707 Hroad Ht., Augusta, Ga. The Training Not ol Leaders Only, but ol the rUs of fWn, Is All-Important-Chop, Unskilled Labor is We jx' ; '! with tlifin iu earnest we shall inl h-adersh i i of atiilal bier rhit than any of hct country, trained some nu n as leaders. Al It la a larger timc-a ith-r horijtou though it is easy to understand tin it y that i. g . only from a haidl) than American riti.ensf ver saw. What ban lieen the aren't of th;tt pmgrvw, ami w hut the cause of our elimination from its leadership! 'The turret of the nnrivahil advantage of training to an iudi vidual. we are just U-giniiiug Iiixt that it is mi-ON.il y also ! a com innnilx ih.it all nu n should l trained. Our grv.it task lie right iNtiiMMiiwnHmiHUMtiiuiimimMiNiiiiiiiiiiinniiiitaiiiirNtitiiiiiiniitittiiiiinin THE SAVINGS, LOAN I AND TRUST COMPANY S E a E 5 is now iu iU office in tlio Loan and Trust Build- ing and ia prepared to do business tijHin a large scale iu its various departments: g Keceive depcasits subjict to check, 5 issues time certincates hearing interest, k I Received deposits in its (ravings department, on which interest is paid, Lends money at all times on personal security or on property, . Will act as executor, administrator, guardian, trustee, receiver, ete. B Sells Life, Fire, Accident, Health, Date Glass and all other kinds of insurance. I Makes bonds of all kinds. Huts and sells real estate. I Acta as ageut iu any rapacity whatever. Cull to see ns in our new quarters. R. B. Redwine, Pres. F. H. Wolfe, Cashier. iiiwwuiwrasiBiMn"iiinBtrmimii)iniiiwiiBuiitnitnuiBHaiiiiiM Cur. to Any Com-' progec of the United States the here- Iu M-rsuado the coiumniiit) munilv FrwTr.inin..ii,l Vrr' Hie lfl lurwaril IllOVe Ilia' I! In ts'llllll to I lain f ft) el.l.il iiiciii in our limp mai inns un ore Opinion W ill iivc the South a Commanding Position in the Af fairs of the Nation and the World. I'Mw. .. lir. Walter H ..Ill.rf ..r thr Wt.rM W..rk. a, Off CttS-i,-!..-,. l..r i.ii,-a !! In I be HJ.H4llt, HlrtulttKttain, Ala., April "Mr. .'resident : There is a class of nieu in the Southern Stales who have a stronp-r hive of their enun try I hud almost said than any other lueu an) where feel. They are ImiiiiuI rluacly together liy au anient patriotism which is the Inheritance of every Southerner, esccially it his family run hark to the large minded ierid when Southern men built the spacious house of our lib erties. And every such man should give his work if he knew how he would give hia life, if uccd he to restore the thought, the character, and the inlliieiiee of the South to the commanding pi wit ion that they held a hundred years ago. "It is to the Southern men of this metal that I wish to cjieuk, and, it the other distinguished iersn iu 'his audience will pardon me, I shall seuk directly to them and to them only. "I uihlii'ss these, then, who an swer to this description of a South ern geiitleineu a man w ho is frank and fearless, and generous to his I -1 lows. The weaker the man is with whom he li;is to do, the more situ plilous is his justice; the Weaker the woman is w till whom he has to do, the more scrupulous his honor. The Unfulfilled Ambition ol South ern Men. "And I Henk to you in the inti mate intonations of our uul'iillilled ambition. For we have nu utifiil tilled uiubitioii that hits given a deep seriousness to our lives. Of course I do not speak of personal disappointments, 1'rrsnual ilisap poiniiueuts, if we have stillorcd them, are of ton little importance seriously to .all'ect the lives of men of our traditions or of our temper. lie in a small man indeed whose mere H-rsonul fortunes or luisfur- tunes change his relations to his Icllow mitn or to his country. We were born far too large for that. And I think we. were born lm large, also, for mere personal ambi tions. The desire to achieve some thing for one's own glory-that, too, is (lie mark of small men who do not feel sure of their station or of their relations to their Icllowmcn or to their country. We rliiiiu a larger ambition mid a higher pa triotism I hit n this. What I speak of is au unfultilled ambition for our country an ambition for these States and these people as a pin t ol t'.ie Union. The ambition that men felt in the time of Washington., ol Jefferson, of Marshall this is what 1 mean. They and their fellows, who weir our ancestors, wrought out their high wish. Our wish, eipially high, we li;ie not wrought out, and that is our sorrow. In I lu ll to, in the thought, iu the conduct of the republic, we Inn t not u share as large as they had. In our own father's house, we arc practically disinherited. "Why may we not liccome lead crs iu our country's progress! We do not Itclicvc that we are inciipii bit. We come of good stock. Nor have we lost our ambition. The Untrained Masses Hold I's Hack 'Now 1 shall try to go straight to the heart of this matter, which concerns us more than anything else iu the world, and I shall talk, man to man, in a mood that has no hesitation and no fear the iiuhkI of close kinship in a high hope. I,ct us see what ails us or what ails the time we live iu. We are men, and we can face facts as bravely as we have faced misloit tines. e are not afraid ol any truth. "Why are we disinherited, then! The republic, of which we are a Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and New Suspect it Bow To Fled Out. t ill txittlr or common rI.im with your water ami let it atautl twenty-four hours ; aMslimentorwt tlinKiniliratrsnu tuihralthy con dition of the kill ncyi; if it ataiim your linrn it ia evidence of kid ney trouble : too frequent desire to puna It or lam In the back i nlo convincing proof that tlie kidneys and bladder are out or orucr, Wttal To Do. There ia comfort in the knowledge so often rxpreswd, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Knot, the grrxl kidney remedy, fulfills every wish in raring rheumatism, pain in the lack, kidneys, liver, bladder and ewry part of the urinary assuage. It corrects inabilitr to bold waler ami (raiding paiu iu passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or lice r, and overcomes tliat unpleasant ne cessity of being cmnjielleU to go often during the dav, and to get up many time during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root ia aoon realized. It stands the highest for ita wiMtderful cures of the most dis tmaint; car. If yo need medicine I y.t should nave the Iwat. Sold by drug gists iu liltyent ana onc-uoimr mim. Von mar hare sample bottle and Wk that tells all atmut it, both sent free Mil, at fcwap-IM. by mail. AddreosPr. Kilmer it Co., King hamton. N. V. When writing mention this paper and don't make aj mistake, but remember the name, I. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, lUnglumtio, N. Y. celiiigsiM-ial Nihatic-meiit to shame is the training of the tiiaH of the ss.ple. Si toiuliioiipbice is this fart that many a man misses its profound meaning. Sometimes men miss it.s meaning Is ;iiim lin y use wnnls that confuse them. -Ivlni .t lion' is one such tstufusiiig word. To Hslucate' the people liieaus one thing to one Hiau and another to another. To most persons it smells i a) Usiks only. 1 hate several limes had the depressing misfortune to Is- caugbt at a real tslucalloiial meet ing ( and I dare say you have, Iin), and 1 have liccti n iniiuhsl by what I heard of blind little men scr im tiling in a log lor a path that was not there. Then I have hsikcd out doors and seen the rosea blooming and thought of the children that cannot bloom, b t us not use w inds, then, about which men deliver (lis scitatioiis. lid us call it plain 'training'; for tiaining is the thing that hits made the world a new world, that has vindicated demnc racy, that has on ncil the door for opportunities as fast as we can sei.e them ooit unities nut oul industrial and diplomatic, but in tellectiial and moral also. We Need No I'n.skillcd Laborers. "Looked at from the point of view of the individual, it is clear that it pays an individual to be trained, lint how is it, looked tit from tin point of view of the w hole column nilyT If I want a man to shovel dirt, perhaps, I do not want a trained luau - I want a man for To cents a day, md fur i J. ."id. Ifcmy ln ily in a - m in n u 1 1 y be trained, who will shovel dirt nod chop the wood and draw the water! lines not every community rcitiirc a large number of untrained, low priced men ! "No ! "That is the falal doctrine thai our fathers fell into and lost leader ship thereby. It is this doctrine that has cost the Southern States one hundred years of progress, I'm this is nothing but a seipiel of si a very. If every man iu thecominu ttity were trained, you could have your dirt shoveled more cheaply than now. A trained man would drive his si p to your dirt, ultncli it to au electric wire and shovel your dirt more accurately, mote Itiickly, more cheaply than any negro in Alabama can do it. That sort id' activity is happening all over the imltistiial world. .Men once pegged shoes by hand. The) ate pegged much more cheaply b) machinery. Whole tow ns are given to shoe making; and a man who in vented shoe-(icgging machinery lately died and left a great legacy to Harvard College, Men once shoveled iron ore by spades. On Lake Superior Ions of ore are now lilted from the earth by machinery, and it is not once moved by the muscle power of man till it Wcoii.ck steel rails ami they are laid on the road bed. It is precisely this kind of trained activity that has enabled the Toiled Slates to lake the h ud in the kmliislrial world. Here is the whole secret of it -training from the very bottom up. Cheap Labor In Farming. "LVonomicci vili.at ion moves for ward only as the whole mass of ac tivity Im-coiucs more clliciciit. Are you a lawyer! Your dirt shoveler will never pay you a large fee) but a trained man who works machin ery may. Are you a merchant! imr untrained dirt shoveler can never buy much from you w ith his seventy cents a day. Itnt a man who earns lour dollars a day is worth having as a customer. Are you a railroad! Your untrained man has little money to travel and nothing to haul. Are you a cotton mill ! i our untrained man or worn au can't buy much cloth on low wages. Whatever you are, you fare better if all men about vou are tiained, and you fare well in pro portion to the mimlicr that are trained. Our Ancient Economic Error. "This, then, is the central thought of the whole mailer. It pays hii in dividual to Is' trained. It also p;iys the community. It not only pays a community but it is absolutely necesKtry for a community that all the people lie trained. And this simple and obvious truth leads far. "It brings a new conception of society to us, A satisfactory soci ety iu our innili rn democracy can not Ih made up of 'educated' men and 'uneducated' men. So long as education is regarded as a privilege and not as a right and a universal necessity, the community will stand still in activity, in thought, in char acter. The proer standard tojudge men by is an economic, standard, not an academic one. This change the whole view of life, and makes our w hole system of social thought face another way. "Xow, it is tiiisccoiiomlcand not the privileged structure of society iu the United States aa far as it haa yet been worked out that has given our country ita great place in the world. And it ia this eco nomic and non-privileged structure of society that has given the North ern aud the Western States the lead of the Southern States. "Xow, the idea vbieh inheri ted km that it made no partirnlar for the coi.miiitiilj's II ;il.e. Universal Training at I'ublic Ex pense. 'jt u- go mi without ilinchii . aud ss- w lure this leads us. We run li"W squarely Into the iha triue of niiixci-i.il training at the column uily's eM-nse i eiuiipulxiiy if ini-d I Is-1, hic!i is ms-c-t-siiy in ad. in-1 ih i.ii v. There is mi i-m-.im- from il. I We may olwiuv the iUestiou as we please. We may Is ..g it with lu wonts. We limy drag it iutotioliti eal discussion. We may hatch big theories to cackle it down. We may smear it over with charity. We may imsivci ih the Stale Is-eatise we are afraid of paiipcrUiug men who arc already so lean that thev can't distinguish hunger from head ache. lint there it stands stalk economic fact tin-Stale must train every child at the public exH-use ; ami it must train him to usefulness. And au economic fad is also a moral fact. "And the right training of the people would come pretty near to ending all our trouble -to remov ing our dilhcultics. economic, pu litical and ethnological. Turin stance, you have seldom known a well trained white man and a well tiaiii-d negro iu Alabama iMh men ol economic north - to lave a dilliellltv ls-c.iuse one is while tiud the other is black, or for any othei reason; and you will seldom kimu such civs. Il.it one untrained. worthless white man or one uii trained, woi thicks negro in-iv c iiih trouble throughout a whole conn try. I'lii'this reus.. n it is iuipoitai.l to train tlici liild oil vi i I. Ill hilU. of oven politician, of every negie in Alali ima. In every ease it lai. eeoiioluii' reason, not a merely per sonal reason, not a race reason, not class reason. Iu an ideal eco nomic slate, if we were to construct it as ruthlessly ns I'lato cmisti ucted his ideal republic, wc should kill everv untrained man; lor lie is in the wav. lie is a burden aiul he brings down the level of the ceo mini ic ellieiclicy of the whole coin uiilliit v. An Untrained Mob Will Control Thought if the People lie Not Trained." "lint it is not enough to regard llie subject liom a bald economic view only. We have other reasons lor training all the people than tin sheer prolit of il, though that is reason enough. I'lici'c is one high reason that includes all others. It is necessary, lor our fi 'i d. mi that all the people lie trained. Il was for freedom ol opinion that our nnccslois built the wide arch ol the ranged I uioii. Then a tyranny of thought followed the great economic error. I'ublic opinion was not the thought of educated men iu Die colli iniinily, but the blind push of un trained men. And these thoughtful men were not free liecausc of the mass of unthinking men about them. Aluavs an iiiitiaiiicil mob w ill control thought if the people lie not tiaiued. Iu tin untrained democrat') low minds will lead, ami an organicd howl will lilt ilem.i goglles to power. "This is the reason why other parts of the republic have taken in tellectiial leadership from us. This is the reason that our kinsmen across the sea and our kinsmen across the Potomac regard us as a 'problem.' l-t us face this fact frankly and lliuch not. We hate siill'cicd too long because the a to freedom of opinion w us not clear, lint it is clear now. It is the veiy way that .Icll'crsoii himself iu his own free thought, pointed out - by the training of all the people. In this way the South w ill again come to its own, and public opinion here will gel the full service of our Is'st minds and most generous natures, The High Task to Which Southern Iten Are Called. "Everything here is rapidly changing occupations, methods. thought. Nothing is hxed. We have, in fact, a less developed laud and people than any other men of our race iu all iheir far Hung lines of settlement and industry. And a few strong men now may make their impress on the laud and on the people for all time to come. "For this reason we cannot, in spite of our disinheritance, regard ourselves as unfortunate. We are, iu fact, If we have the mettle for a pent task, the lined fortunate ot mei.. Those that sit in soft places and discuss academic propositions (and mistake self indulgence in criticism for the intellectual life) ate welcome to their ease. We would not swap birth rights with them. If we have a rough task, il is a high task. When il is done we shall leave the world Is tti rlliau we found it ; and, w hile we are doing it; wc shall have the joy of constructive activity. Wehsik for ward to a golden age that we may surely hasten, not back to one that never wo. The Nation' Coming Need ol South ern Leader. "Nor is this all. A time is com ing, men of the South, and it is coming before w e die, w lieu ol her and even graver economic prob lems w ill press on onr national life for solution. They press already. They are new problems and no gov won ictoiA. I In- men who lave piss, , 1 1, ,.,iiii- throughout-still,: gle for economic tinlh and five pinion will Inn- hid the best ti. lining loi ,.. e snuggle for tt h r e ..iiuini. truths and lor fm ..puna. A4.1111. fpiuhui is to U flttsl 110111 fill.. 1 IM.IIIIII-. Now .1 il M1 11 111 Us days of Itiai ;;!'. il-. It-ados liom lme who li iigglt d 1 1st. beii we iu this li.iliie Iicm', ot er tiuist hesaiul otel iiibtlitt'i! 1 11.. 1. the nation mat hate ms-d of ton. A New Declaration. "Li t us roils,, up. then, and pro tint tins iii cUr.iU'.n: When iu the course of human events it 1st times necessary for si general ion of men to dissolve the inti-l.t chi ll bal ds that have Coll ins toil thrui w itli an economic er ror ami to assume among I lie work ci of the wan Id an iinli H-iideiit .mil eipial station, to liieli the laws of 11.1t me and I heir economic capae ily entitle them, a decent resiset for the opinions of the laggard sug gists that the) should declare Un pin pose who h luis-ls tlieiu to this t'luaneipatioM. "We hold these truths to Is- self evident; that all in - ti should have ipi.ility of opportunity; that the) are endowed by our institutions with inalienable rights; and that among these are five training and fits- opinion. 'We. then fore, the descendant? of 1111 11 who 1111. mt to est.itilisli fiii tlioilglitl.il us w beii tlu-v laid tht OLDEST MAN IN AMERICA Saj: Terinu Das B -tn Xy Stand by Fop E-y Yaars." Children' Home Society. Mr. I'-sim of (irceiisliitro, a mod est b'.lleceliii;lv luten-stilig talk ing little woman, was iu Monroe S.ilinil.iy giv ing out circulars tcll ii.g. us follow s. of the la-ucficeut Woik which she lepn-scntcd: III I I' V III! li Til 'i A HtiMJ-. " 'Inasmuch as e have done it unto one ol the least of these, ... c I. ate done il Hutu me.' "Tin- Ninth Carolina ( hildivn's lb. me Ss-iety ( iucoiHirated) ia foniictl to itccive and provide for dot it ute, neglected, ill-treated, abandoned ami orphaned white (hiiibcn. Thewtnk: To seek out such homeless neglected aud desti tute children, and to become their fiiei.d ami protector; to find hoinea Mr.iaacRr..-k.ofM.-i..nnn.untv, '"' I,,,M' ale normal w ilh wor Tex,has atlain.d the prtat aKe ..f Mi "'. Sabbath keeping families to fears, hat inn Ix-cn U.rn in ITss. He il place tlu ni then-ill w ith the least u anleut friend lo l'. runa and speaks possible delay, and to visit thclU it it in the fallowing terms: fntpieiitly after placement. lr. Itartman's remedy, reruns, I "Thet.'llitv of the stsietv is :it the am1 r iounu iti ie uic wi,n mu uir uuiy 7l Ur. Isaac llna k. tlie )'M. t M.tn iu Ibe VniieU si..!. . Itenlsiw Hotel, (ireeuslMiro, N.C. "SnpiMiited solely by voluntary giflH. 'Mrs. Mary Ihiam, Gm-usboro, N. ('., collector. "Olliccrs President :(il. W. II. iOsIhu u, mayor, (ireeiisb mi; vice- fi.iiiulat ions of our hbertics. point ing to the Is lielils of In-o opinion imoi.g tin- English speaking men '. Iilollg'ioat the World, tin ill tl:. name an I f ;iio g.M.ii 1 the tlevclopmeut o! health I n some t I pie td these States. solemn!) 'publish and declare that fn-e training and tree opinion ol 1 iglit ought to be 1 1. t ils. "Ami for the support of this dee iar.it ion we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, 'intl our sacred honor." Tiralt Items. I ... r. .;. :.I, il. . I l.-.l' n.t! Til ill, Ma, It. 1 i. Kid rains fell here last Situiduy, which notlonh! mailt' the hearts of alt the fanners rejoice, as it was ci il.iiul) ncedid very badly. Tin- weather contiu lies cool, and the prospect for 11 good crop this year looks veiy glooui), luit we liu-t that all will cud well, (iod has alas prut id i d for his people and always will: so we mil) nrr. I to have i'.iilii, liust t toil anil go lorn ai d. Communion services were held at Til ah the past Sabbath, sort ices beginning on I'rid.i) before. I!ev. .1. II. Wilson of 11 iseoint ille, S. ('., was w ith us ami did the preaching. Eight Voting people coiiticclcd themselves with the chinch dining the meeting, anil we trust eight more souls have Im-oii added to the roll of Christ's church in heaven, w ho w ill all one day lie m-i inilted to walk the golden streets of the New .Icnisaltin. Mrs. W. P McNeely lell last Tuesday to visit her lather, Mr. W. N. (iaslon ami other relatives iu Chester county. Miss Kale Steele attended the eoinlncnct liienl exercise at iligate last week. Mt. W. M. hiinn. ptincipal of the AUicuiarle graded school, re tinned lininc the li'sl of last week. Mrs. W. II. Steele of ahaw is isiling at Capl. .1. .1. C. Steele's. Mrs. N. P. loibiiisou anil son. Mr. Arthur, visited at .Mr. I. M. Walk up's Saturday night. Mrs. I. M. Walkiip has been right sick for the past week, bill we are glad to hear that she is some lietlcr. Mrs. Will Weir of Waxhaw is very sick ill the h e of her father iu law, Mr. .1. IE Weir. U. Made Young Again. "One of Dr. King's New Life Pills each night for two weeks has put me in in) 'teens' again'' wrilesp.ll. Turner of leiupse)tow n, Pa. They are the licst in tlie worm mr liver, stomach ami bowels. Purely vege table. Never Krie. Only 2"'C at English I riig Co. 's. Stanly county folks are good. The Enterprise says the jail fees for the county amounted to only !T cents during the mouth of April. relial.lv n-medy for roughs, colds, ca larrh and diarrluea. 'Ptruna has been my stand-by lor many years, and I attribute my good health and my extreme age to this remedy. It exactly meets all my re- -I have com,, to rely upon it almost presidents: lion. 11. E. Dixon, State entirely for the many tittle things lor. ""ditor, Kaleigli; Dr. F. J'. Yen which I need 111e.l1.1ne. I Is-liev it to able, president Slate University, beespeclally valuable tu ulJ people." ;Chas-l Hill; Poller! D. Douglas, 1-aae llr.s-k. (ireciisltorii: seeretarv: 11 M. Arm- lield, banker. High Point; treas urer. - Capt. .1. W. Fry. president nsU.10 Loan anil Trust Co., (iieciisboro; linuncial secretary: F. C. I!.)les. teller (iiis'iislsiro Na tional Hank, (rccushnro; William ; I!. Stn-eter, State SuH'i'intendelit, ( ineiisboro, N. C.'' The .loiu ual is glad to say that Mis. Iloaui met with good success here iu the way of donations. Any persons ho know of htuiielcsschil- jdieu slmuM report the same to the olliecis of the association. Catarrh Is the greatest enemy ol old ; sue. A iHTsoiieiiuri ly Tree from eatarrli is sure lo lm- 1.1 a l.ale.'Oid hearty old at-e. A fr-f l...k ..Il ealirrh s. llt I.J The l'eruua Mulieuie t ..,1 . luai'.ii.-, U. Tricked the Women folks. mil- l..n. There is an mod citieti in this comuiiiiiit) w lm has I., en in I'eelile lb- i a man inc. and jii.l'iiiciil ami liillilns the I un n A l-'W tears ago he sliu.ulaiit for his women folks of i lu ll tin ;i 1 1 1 -.1 1 1 -I . . ill. . to oil.. ml t hem. but I line sense lin t i mi s hi side of life, kept a III I 'e health. The hollse express lie ilidu't lib he was taking the spirits under prescription and he didn't care to stop it then, lb- kept his jug iu the bugg) house and a pinttie.il plan suggested ilse! tn him. He removed the jug containing the remedy to aie tin I place nnd then tilled anotlier jug with water anil put it in the buggy house. The next time the women f. lks said un, thing to him :i;;::ii.s the list' of that kind of medicine, he got up prompt!) ami said: "Weli, I'll go ;i!id pour it out." Thi ll I. c Went 111 I lie Lug".) house. uiicoi ki d the jug a 'ul a towards the li.aisc w itli it it out. one of tlie women said : "I don't belli ve I'll tin that !" "( 111, Well, tu. I) be il w ill stop the racket." he replh d. Ami it tin), and saved his icuietly, too. When the Sap Rises v.e.ik Iiiiii;s should he careful. Coughs nail col ls ate duiii;e iiiis then. One Miiiiite (..nu ll Cure rules cdiiIis aud i . KU mid tives .stremtth to the lungs. Mis (. V.. I eiinei of Mali. m. Inil , says "1 hiilli led with a cnimh until 1 run .1 own iu weight In in 1 4 S to ijl Ilia. 1 tin 1 u u lit. iher uf leiiiedies tu no avail Mild I used One Minute timidi Cure. I .mi' . utiles of this woiiileiltil remedy .'iiitil un- entirely ol the courji, strengt hened in v Iiiiis and lestorrd me to my iu.iiii.iI mi ijil, hr.ilili and strength." s .1.1 by tnglish 1iiik Co, aud S. J. Welsh. A special 1 it mi Washington says: Mar.shall I.. Mott, who has Is-eu heie looking for a political job all if came i w inter, lias iieeu tiesiguuieti its ni ii.ni ii... ' to y for the Creek Indians in In dian Tcmttiry. It is supposed the position, which pays if,i,ltlO, was secured for Mott by Judge A da ins, or some of the North Carolinians in the territory. W hooping Cough. "In the M ing ot .oi m v cliil.lt en had whoopiui; futuli," savs Mrs. I) W. Cappsol Ciipiii, Al t "I tisi d Cham bet Iain's t iiiirii Kemedv iih the most satisfactory r- still .. I tloul- tins is the best leine.ly I l.n"e t r seen lot whooping ceil !i." I Iii n un dy kt 1 1 the t iilli.li be-''. ! . . i s the sexelilv .Hid (re.pieiiey of the e ....Jii:i and i oiiutei a. Is anv h n.l. ni y piieuiimui.t. I' . I : ale I y S. J and C. N Sinij s..e. jr. :s,ih ..W lid Welsh Hesitated mul Didn't L'-se. "Never was glad hn this impedi III' nt in III)' speech but once," salll the man liom Ihe loiintrv. "When was that."' "I'e fe fellow asked me li h how much I Would lake lor a a horse, ami while 1 I I was t Irving to tell him ild 1 lb-red me ." One of the greatest blessings a mod est man can wash (or is a goud.ieliabla set uf bowels. If you ai nut the hap py possessor of such an outfit you can illeatly improve til r t ill, ienry of those vii have bv the linliCKms use of Clianl i. .il. mi's Stomach and Liver Tablets. 1 In y lie pleasant to take and agree able in i fleet. I'ol sale by S. J. Welsh ami C. N. Simpson, Jr. An Asheville correspondent says a head -on collision betweeu two Imises all, n lied tu single buggies, occurtctl on a little bridge near Kill iiimii' Thursday afternoon aliout "i o'clock, and us a result two bug gies wen bntlly damaged, one horse so seriously injured that he hud to be killed and live people dumped into a ravine. The occupants of the vehicles were women and chil- Idrcii ami none of them w as serious ly hurt. The horses were Koing at English Drug Co. and 5. J. Welsh rt fast pace in opposite directions, do not h. -il.iti to i. winiiii n I K id., I ami they crashed together ou the Dyspepsia line to tl an frien Is ami .j,.. iH.flin, (he driven n-ali.t'd eitstniiieis. lalii;e.li,.ii causes in.'ii ill hctlth tli.iu aintlinii: else. It de ranges the stomal h and brings on all manner ol disease . Ki.il.,1 Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat, cures indi gestion, dyspepsia and all stomach disorders. Kojol is not only a pei let l digestant but a tissue building tonic as well. Kem e,l bealth. perfect strength and increased vitality tollnw its use. Writing in ihe Luiuls'i'tnii Kul e- soman, itev. r. li. i.nw says tne Rowland section ol liolioson coun ty is noted for the huge iiiiiuticr ol maids and bachelors. In one lam An Open letter. From the Ch.ipin.S C, News; Karl) in the spiiug my wile and I were taken with ili.uilioi'.i and so severe weie the pains thai we railed a physician who orifciibeil for ns. but iiis medicines ! failed to give any relief. A friend win bad a botue of Chamberlain Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemtdy on hand gave each of us a dose and we at Hire lelt Ihe ellei ls. I procured a hot tie and before Us ing the entire Cuiitenti we were entirely cured. Il is a wonder I ill remedy and should he Imiiid in everv hoiist hoi J This remeily is f,u sale b) S.J. Welsh and C.N.Suiipsou.Ji. Alex. YYhitaker, a negro iu Dur hani jail iniilcr a charge of larceny, sufVeii'tl a stroke of paralysis the other day and died from the effects of it. Cured His Mother of Rheumatism "My mother has been a stiffrret for many years with rheumatism," says W. II. Howard of Husband, I'a. "Al nines she was unable to move at all, while at all timei walking was painful. I presented her with a bottle of Cham berlain's Pain Balm and after a few applications she decided it was the most won, lei fill pain reliever she had ever ttied; in fact. she ia never without it now and is at all times able lo walk An Tcrasional application ot Pain Balm keep away the pain that she was for merly troubled wim. rortaie uy 3 j the danger. A Sure Thing. It is said that nothing is sure ex cept death and taxes, but that is not altogether true. Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption is a sure cure for all lung ami throat troub les. Thousands can testify to that. Mrs. C. It. YniiMetre of Shepherd town, W.Ya., says "I had a severe case of bronchitis aud for a year tried everything I heard of but got no relief. One Imttlc of Dr. King S Sew Discovery then cured me ah- ily of twelve children -two sons snlutelv." It's infallnble for croup, w hooping cough, grip, pneumonia and consumption. Try it. It's guar- ami ten daughters -none has mar l ied ami the youngest is now la. To encourage his sons to nun ry, i anieeil bv Enirlish Drug Co. Trial their father xc.irs ago gave them iH1i,..s fM.0. i;,.L, tfM mw, i , . , i i. . . i i ... i t i - laiul ami luiiu on ine lanu iiano some homes for each of them, bill this did not have the desired result. matter about- the trainlmr of the eruwent has yet met them. When' Welsh and C. N. Simnsoo.Jr, A Cure for Piles. "1 had a bail fa .e ol piles," said (i l". Caiterol Atlanta, da. ."and consulted a physician who ailvist d me to try a boa ul D Witt's .Vitch llael Salve. 1 pniehasrda hex and was entirely cured It ia splendid lor piles, giving relief in stantly, and I lie.n lily re. -on, men, I it lo all siitlerers." De Witfa Wilt h Hazel Salve is tnie,i,allcd for its healing ipiahties. Fcema and other skin dis eases, also sores, cut', burns and wounds of every kind are ipjickly cured by it. Sold by Lughfch Drug Co. and S. J. Welsh. Mr. Jus. Ashbinn, a one leg-god Confederate veteran, was found dead in Pilot creek, Surry county, a few days ago. Mr. Ashbiirn started from his home to go to Pilot Mountain, ami it is supposed that, as the path by the creek wan very narrow and the hillside very pre cipitous, he lost bis footing, fell into the creek and was drowned. Sick headache resells from a disor dered stomach aud ia quickly eared by Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tab lets. For tale by S.J. Welsh and C.N. Simpson, Jr. .1. W. Coble has instituted suit against Dr. N. M. Johnson, health ollicer of Durham county, and J. W. Allen, chairman of the board of commissioners of the same coun ty, for .i,(MMI damages. Coble al leges that Dr. Johnson sent him to the pest house, w here he was con lined with smallpox patients. He tlid not take the disease aud was) discharged, but laterdidtakesmall pox ami was again sent to the port house. He claims that he contract ed the disease by being forced to go tn the pest house and associate with the HinallHx patients, and for this reason he asks damages in the sum named. Quick Arrest. J. A. Gullodgeof Verliena, Ala., was twice iu the hospital from a se vere case of piles causing 24 tum ors. After doctors aud all remedies failed Puck lens AruiraSalve quick ly arrested furtherinflamniationsnd cured him. It conquers scbe and kills pain. 2te at English Drag Co. See onr handsome Furnitnre; get prices snd you will choekte over the bargain. Monroe Furniture Company.
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 17, 1904, edition 1
1
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