Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / Sept. 13, 1904, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
"HI THE MONROE JOURNAI VOLUME XI. NO 33 MONROE, N. C, TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 13 1904 One Dollar a Year Great Men Recalled. a i...n ia CharMi I iWnff 1 hail rare opimrtunities when I waai buy, for my father dtlighu-d in company and always had a h.use full of people, and I was thrown with I lie nxwl prominent men in tlx State judges, governors and other. ! ran see now what a (;reat opportunity it wan to me to be urrouiidid by such refined inllut'iicin in my early life. 1 funned a fondness for d ist innu!it'd HHn, and I have always loved to l with them and hoar them talk. After I became a man 1 visited the springs White Sulphur and Saratoga and met them from every section of tin country. I li.sU-ncd while they talked and learned much frum their conver sation. No young man can employ hi time better than by associating with intellectual men and hearing them talk. Jly father was reared on a farm and lived on one his whole life. He wan a man of limited educa tion, but having men of iiitellincnee around him he became a well in formed man and was at ea.se with a president, a fjivernor or a judge. He was like a sone: he alisorlcd knowledge from such men. I sup- ose I acquired this habit from him. have already written of the old judges who used to visit his house in my boyhood. I frequently meet the sons of these old judges and thev always refer to their fathers' visits in those davs. W hen a boy I had a great desire to hear political discussions. I had often heard county candidates, but the first speaker of any distinction that I heard was (V.I. Thomas Unllin, who was running for congress. I have already written about In in. He was not an orator. He was very ve lieiiicnt and loud in shaking, but made a strong, sensible ajiecvli. When at Wake Forest I walked six miles to Uolesville, in Wake county, to hear Mr. Iladger and Caston II Wilder, who were candidates for the convention that was proposed to be called to take steps in regard to secession, liadger was the Ciiion candidate and Wilder was the Seces sion candidate, liadger had beeu in early life a State judge, secretary of the navy under Harrison. Tinted Slates senator, and apiointcd by Kil more Supreme Court judge, but was not continued by the Senate, and was regarded by many as the greatest man of the State. I was anxious to hear him, as is proven by a lazy man like me walking six miles for that purpose. Badger opened the discus sion. He made a plain, sensible 8eech suited to a country audience. His language was simple and could be understood by the most ignorant. Ho sjioke in a conversational style and there was no effort at oratory or display. He seemed to be impressed with the gravity of the crisis then on the country, and he warned the peo ple of the dangers which threatened them. Hut the jteople were in no humor for conservative argument, but were swept off their feet by the whirlwind of revolution. Ilissiwch seemed to make no impression. They gave him a respectful hearing, but he did not elicit a cheer. There was nothing of the hurrah about him to excite or make the masses applaud. His speech was better adapted to the Senate than the hustings. Wilder replied. He had graduated at the University and had represent ed Wake county in the senate and was a good stump speaker. His style of scaking was well calculated to stir the blood and make men hurrah, lie was tall, well proportioned, and on the stage presented an inspiring apearnnce. He was a man of line action and walked the rostrum with the air of aconqueror. He was larger than liadger. lie spoke with impet uous, nervous energy, and soon had the boys shouting ami clapping their hands. School boy as I w as, 1 watched the effect produced by those men, and I was amazed that a plain old fanner from the country districts of Wake county, should got the ap plause over such a man as Badger, whose argument could convince a bench of judges and whose eloquence could charm a senate. My mind has often recurred to that scene, and I have often thought how little did those men who were shouting for revolution know of the direful conse o nonces which were to follow. I have seen the greatest men of this country dunng the last tifty years Douglas, Blaine, Conkling, Toombs, Stevens, Jefferson Davis and others but the greatest man for pure intellect that I ever saw was Kdward Graham Haywood. n hen a young man I went to his ofhee in Raleigh to hear him talk, and he was the finest conversationalist I ever heard. He was well read in history, polite literature and poetry, and during the conversation be could quote poetry or anr passage from history to illus trate what he was talking about. I heard him make ao argument before Chief Justice Chase in the Federal Court in a will case, in which he re ceived a foe of $20,000, and it was one of the most learned and profound legal arguments ever delivered be fore a court Chase paid strict at ti ntion to him and pronounced him the greatest lawyer ho ever heard at the bar. He spoke four Hours, ana I could have listened to him all day. His style of speaking was argumen tative, and he talked like a peal man. It seemed to be no trouble for him to speak. He waa like a big horse with a heavy load; he carried it with ease. He had a car-load of books in the bar and when he con- eluded be asked the Chief Justice if ' he would like to consult his authori ties, and he said yes. He said: "1 will send my txx ks to your room." He was a line look in man, large, com pactly built, light bair, tlorid coin ' plexion, large eyes, handsome fare. broad shoulders and a heavy chest. with a slow, digmthd. easy move ment, and when walking looked like a ponderous machine or a large giant He looked great and he was great. I used to sit and watch him as he moved aUuL U. F. Moore, who was then called "the m-stor of the North Carolina bar," was oposing counsel. He was inietuous, nervous and rest less and would interrupt Haywood, but it did not seem to bother him in the least, for he would resume his argument as if there had been no interruption. 1 heard him on the stump w hen he was a candidate for the legislature in Wake county in I had just entered ake ror est as a student, and he spoke near the college. He was then a young man. He spoke well, but he was not an elocutionist like Henry W. Miller, Duncan K. MeKaeanddeorgeliavia. The three last were the greatest ora tors 1 ever heard in North Carolina. The stvle of those three men as ora tors as entirely different. I have written of Miller and McRae. 1 heard (ieorge Davis in the campaign of l.iG. He spoke in (ioldsboro. 1 was desirous of hearing him, for he had tin- reputation then of being the finest orator in the State. I went to (ioldsboro just to hear him and I was not disappointed. He fully met the public expectation. He was then in the full vigor and prime of life had a fine tigure, handsome fare. graceful manners, melodious voice, stately bearing, a line vocabulary, and the action essential to a great orator. His speech abounded in bril liant imagery, in exulierant fancy, in elegant diction, mid in lofty llights of the sublimest eloquence. He had what the poet calls 'Hw,t,ii?iit rlift.irlr ( M-rufttllni eyi-.. 1 met Mr. Davis only a few times, and did not know him intimately. hut he seemed to me to be the great est and most amiable of men; he was ertainly one of the most accom plished ami cultured. His townsman, Col. Kobt. Strange, was cqiiallv as cultured and graceful in his manners, but he had a more stately dignity than any man I ever knew. He was always even, smooth and never became excited over any thing. I used to meet him at the White Sulphur Springs, and he was harming in the social circles. In deed, he seemed to be as near perfect as it was ossible for man to be. hen he iirst came to the bar he was employed to defend a murderer. His father, who had born a judge aim I'mted Stat senator, was the solici tor. He showed Ins son no quarter, but foughkhim with the same strength he would an older man. The young man won the case and the old man became very angry to think that a inure boy should triumph over lain. It is hard for a parent to realize that his bov ever becomes a man. Col. V A. McKoy of Clinton was a worthy companion oi these men. lie was affable, genuine and a very social man. He always had a smile on his face, and when ho greeted you he made you feel that he was glad to meet you. When he was nominated for judge I wrote him a letter of con gratulation, anl said to him if 1 could see him judge, (ieorge Davis I nited States senator, and Kobert Strange governor, my heart's desire would be accomplished. Mr. Davis had the culture, the grace, the dig nity and the learning to have made a great senator. Col. Strange would have made a model governor, equal to any the Stato ever had. These three men who have so richly adorned the history of their State, deserve to live in the memory of her people, as a precious example to the youth of the country- No State ever had three nobler sons, and mav God bless their immortal memory. The words of the poet may be applied to them: THE COTTON SITUATION. Manufacturer Needs, Not Low Prices, But Steady Prices. I hava araniiad tha wtlonn if llialr dally Htm lAtth all the IiiiIhki htiii mailer ui a fi. Anil millilng- iut-u nilna y- I'Ut deU of biuior. Deafness Cannot be Cured bv local application., ss they cannot rrach tha diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and that ia by constitutional remedies. Deafueaa la earned by an inflamed condition of the mucoua liuing o( the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling louud or imperfect hearing, and when it ia entirely cloaed deafneas is the re sult, and unlets the inflammation cau be taken out and thif tube reatored to ila normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine caaea out of ten are caused by catarrh, winch ia nothing but an inflamed couditioo of the mucoua aurlacea. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafneas (caused by catarrh)that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure Send lor circulats.lree F.J. CHENEY & CO. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by druggists, 75c Hall I family pills are the best Ida How did your Uncle Hiram enjoy the classical program! May Not at all. Why, I wore out a shoe prompting bim when to applaud. Chicago ewg. Sour Stomach. When the quantity of food taken ia loo large or me quality ioo ncn, aoui stomach la likely to follow, and espe cially sa if the digestion has been weakened by constipation. Eat slowly and not too freqnently of easily di- aaatail (nnd. Maalirala tha fond thor- w - . ougbly. Let ivt hours elapse between meals, ana woen you leei a tuiineas and araiaht In ttia ratiaa fif tha linn. sch after eating, take Chamberlain's Stomach sod Liver Tablets end the sour stomach may be avoided. For aala hy S. J. Welab and C. N. Simp son, Jr. Secretary Parker Retards Bonded Warehouse System as the Best Means of Obtaining Bigger and Steadier Prices A Word About the St. Louis Meeting-. T. M rartrf la I'lMcmaltt farairf. The cotton crop and the market lug of the same are now intei-enling topics alike to the farmer, the man ulacturrr, and the siiet-ulutor. It is very evident that for the last several mouths there has liet-n a determined and concerted effort to ''bear" the cottou market. All signs point to that as plainly as the finger hoard on a mile post does to the debilitation of the road. The cottou mill aieu of the South, generally, have beeu the natural enemies of high prices for cottou aud not, uuder former conditions, without Home degree of jiistilicav tion. Their capacity to uiunufiie ture was limited aud their products have uot been established iu many of the world's liettt markets. For tbem to have stocked their ware house with high-priced cottou and see the surplus go to their North em and foreign coiiiiietitoi-s at i reduced price, would have beeu courting disaster and ruin. The situutiou to them, especially for the pa.it year, has beeu exceedingly perplexing. Their capital was iu vested iu machinery, supplies, etc., aud to lie idle meant low. On the other hand, to buy exceptionally high-priced cotton, not being able to even guess at the size and price of next year a cottou crop, might mean still greater loss. So indeed they were in au uueuviable posi- tiou, aud the only thing in sight for them was to tight dowu high prices, which they have done futthliillr as any one could have wished for. Hut the conditions which first fared the farmers, a few years ago, and later the manu facturers, have put all blinds to think ing, and from their research will come a plan or method by which both pro ducers and consumers will le beu- lited. The cotton manufacturer dors uot uoed low priced cotton but he does ueed steady-priced cotton. W ith steady prices he has some thing to base a calculation on and knows just w hat he is doing. With steady prices the buyers of his pro duets will know what to do and w ill keep on band a stock suflirieut ly large to meet his demands. And the farmer, too, is much better off with a steady price, carrying with it a fair proht, thau to have the extremes iu prices that he has ex perienced within the last lew years. Hut these years of experience with the barometer in price mark ing very high and then very low, have been productive of a not un mixed evil. Thinking business men have been studying the situation and think they can see in the cot ton crop of the South even greater possibilities thau most of us have dreamed of. lint to bring out these possibilities there must be har mony between the producers and corsumers, or rather between the farmers and the cotton mill men. The most feasible plan, iu my opinion, for this that has yet lieen suggested is the bond ed warehouse system. Hy this plan the pro moters claim (and not without a show of jus tilicutiou) that prices of cottou cau be more steadily main tained by marketing the cottou crop only as the trade requires it, and withhold from the market any sur plus that may accrue until a short crop will cause a demand for it. This, it seems to me, would be an ideal condition. W hen we think of the crop iu 1808 of 11,270,00(1 bales selling for f:i2ri,000,000, and last year a crop of about 10,000,000 bales selling for twice as much, we can readily understand what a mill stone around the cotton farmer's neck is a surplus of a inilliou bales. If we cau eliminate that surplus or keep it oft' the market the ques tion that confronts and most con cerns the cotton farmer will be im mediately solved. This is just the thing the promoters of the ware house system propose to do. They propose to do it iu this way: The mau who must nave money to meet his obligations cau carry his cottou to one of these wan-houses, have the cotton weighed aud graded and get a recoipt for it upon which be cau get money at the bank to meet bis obligations without throwing bis cottou ou toe market. Of course, if prices) are all right and to bis liking, be need not take bis cotton to the warehouse at all, but sell it on the open market Aud also if he is io position to hold the cotton himself, he need not take it to one of these bonded warehouses, but store It on his own premises, if he so desires. By this system, it is claimed, the speculator will be largely elimi nated and the "bears" wbo have been pulling the prices of cotton down, will bare to seek cooler climes for their operations. Aa a matter of course, if tbe bet ter prices that cotton would bring under tbia system of Outlook for selling were to run Continued people cotton orasy, Oood Prices, and they were to per sist in making more cotton than the trade could con sume, there would of necessity be a drop In prices- That would be Inevitable, but it would Dot be spasmodic fluctuations that we now see, but a gradual deeliue until a reaction was brought about However, that is hardly probable ' for some time to come at least. Iu , '. our new ixewious, the Philippine Inlands, we have arquimt several j millions of inhabitants, the most of whom, according to the pictures . we have seen, show the ueed of a new suit of clothes without much,' .1..).... i ...i .... ...i.i. i mtiui, ami aui vur aanuif-ra w uw - have beeu there for the last few years civilizing them wore uni forms from cotton cloth, it is but natural that the citizens of those islands will also adopt cotton cloth for their clothing. Tbu islands alone should develop a great mar ket for Southern Cotton. And as civilization advances there aud elsewhere, tbe market for cotton goods will iucrease, in all proba bility, to the capacity of our pro duction. Kven here where the cot ton is grown, the demand for cot ton goods is iucreasing. There are more pounds of evttoo consumed per capita among our owu people uo w than there were twenty or thirty years ago, aud the consump tion increases annually. It will be so all over the world. As the peo ple advance in enlightenment the consumption of cottou will increase; therefoie with prudence, we need not look for any great surplus iu our cottou crop lor some time to come. And with the warehouse system a surplus could lie carried u all probability until a partial failure in the crop would create a demand for it There will be a Mouthern Cotton Farmers' Couventiou held at St Louis September 2iith, The at which farmers and St. Louis all others interested io ITeetlng. maintaining good price for cotton will discuss this and other plans for that pur pone. In a letter just received from Mr. Harvie Jordan, president of the Cottou tlrowers' Protective As sociation, he states that the attend ance at that convention will he large. Texas alone is expected to be represented by tiOO delegates, Georgia with '.'(HI, North Carolina and Alabama 200 each, and large delegations from the other cotton growing States. Much interest is mamlestcd, and it is thought by some that the present advance in cotton may tie due iu part to the tact that the cotton farmers are to meet at that time to try to get bet ter prices for the incoming crop thau the cotton buying world has been promising them. It will lie well for the readers of the Progressive Farmer, and in fart all cotton fanners to keep iu touch with this movement. It may mean much for them. Wakr (V.N.I!. The Young Farmer. 4' '- kurttrtt la lnrrwivf fmrmrt. i SITf ERED TERRIBLY WITH FEMALE WEAKNESS.' The Warehouse System Explained. Somewhat of a Hog. 'attwli t'iiuiil.v Ni-m. Mr. H. fi. Lee of route No. 4 called ut this office Monday, He sat aud conversed pleasantly for some moments on various subjects, and then branched oh" on hog. This is ust now an ngrecuble topic with Mr. IiCe. He has more of it in one bunch, he thinks and we think, than anylsidy else in Catawba couu ty. Hut he is modest about it, and only gives figures that other people give. Other folks say that his bog will, in a gross way, make the scales indicate that 400 pounds aie on the platform. Some others af- hriu that 500 is the nunilx-r. This monster is only L'i months of age. Me is live and one-half feet iu length. All who have seen him agree that he is the biggest hog iu the country. e believe it. Can anylssly let itt Mr. Ix-e is proud of his hog, but rash charms, too, and the right man with the correct amount can have him. Value of a Sunny Soul. SrlartriJ. This world is too full of sadness and sorrow, misery aud sickness; it needs more sunshine; it needs cheerful lives which radiate glad ness; it needs eneourngers who will lift aud uot bear down, who will encourage, not discourage. ho can estimate the value of a sunny soul who scutteis gladness aud good cheer wherever he goes, instead of gloom and sadnessl fcverybody is attracted to these cheerful faces and sunny lives, and repelled by the gloomy, the morose and the sad. We envy people who radiate cheer wherever they go and ning out gladness from every pore, Money, houses and lauds look con temptible beside such a disposition. What's In s Name ? Everthinc is in the name when it cornea to Witch Haxel Salve. E. C. DeWitt & Co.of Chicago discovered some yeara ago how to make a salve from Witch Haiel that ia a specific for piles. For blind, bleeding, itching and protrud ing piles, eczema, cuta, burns, bruises and all akin diseaaea, DeWitt's Salve has no equal. Tbia has given rise to numerous worthless counterfeita. Ask for DeWitt's the genuine. Sold by English Drug Co. and S. J. Welsh. There is something about push ing a lawn mower that makes one think that the mau who wears a ball and chain is lucky, but doesu't know h Prom 143 to 92 Pounds. One ol tbe moat remarkable caaet of s cold, deep tested oo tbe lunge, caua ing pneumonia, is that of Mrs. Ger trude E. Feoner, Marion, lad., who waa entirely cored by the use of One Minute Cough Cur. She ears: "Tbe coughing sod straining so weakened me that 1 ran down in weight from 148 to 91 pounds. I tried a number of remedies to 00 avail until I used One Minute Cough Cure. Four bottlea of this wonderful remedy cured me en tirely ol the cough, strengthened my lungs end reatored me to my normal weight, health aad strength." Sold by English Drug Co. and S. J. Welsh. - I am asked to write somethinn that directs itself to the young fanner. wish I knew just how to do that; how I could say something that would in spire the young fanner and till him with enthusiasm fur his work. It seems hi me this must lie a grow th. Love for fann life comes naturally to some of us; with others it has to lie directed. Hut I am sure with all that, when the farm is taken in a se rious way and studied and coaxed and confided in, it will rescind and become a good companion for every boy. 1. To the young farmer then. I would suggvst first, interest in the farm and the application of every aid that education and business princi ples bring. You can get this bv books. agricultural palters, schools and short courses in our agricultural colleges. ho strongly am I convinced of this I would go on record as advising ev ery young farmer to take at least the winter course in our agricultu ral college. You will never know until you have attended such a course the good it will mean to you, and the help it will bring to your work Nor can a young man sav that he can not do it because of age, lack of mon ey or previous training. The winter courses are always oen to all, and the small sum of thirty dollars for all expenses is within the means of every farmer voung or old. That lie- ginning cost (for 1 believe the young farmer and old one also w ill sav they b -gan farming w hen a real know ledge )I their work is obtained) will be many times covered the first year of i-eal agricultural endeavor. 2. 1 would ow n a farm; you mav now be a renter; but own a farm. l-and is not extensive. You can buy at least twenty-live acres, and I think that enough to start with. If you farm twenty-five acres intensively and intelligently it w ill profit you better than one hundred or two hundred in differently handled. Try it, my young friend. Own the land and know what you are doing. Aim to raise good crops and to make the land slill better. 3. I would plow deep. 1 would not have a one-horse plow on that lit tle farm. 1 would send the plow deep down in the soil as rapidly as I could and call for that rich plant food lying down below the four or live inches of top soil we have been playing w ith for so many years. 1 would plow deep and well and harrow so as to tine and mellow the soil; by so doing I am sure nature would re spond and you would be glad of the results. 4. 1 would sow leguminous crops on every acre each year. If in corn, let peas or clover go with the last cul tivation. If cotton, the same. The nitrogen will be brought from the air and add to the fat of the land. 5. I would rotate mv crops. I would do this so as to raise hay and corn, for I should not want to buy feed for the stock 011 the farm. This plan means quicker and better ways of improving the soil, for it places cowpeas and clover in the system of good farming. b. I would want to grow live stock. It may 1 hens or cows or mules or pigs or sheep, or some of them just to suit you. I would raise live stock for the money it brings to the farm; for the improvmcnt that comes to the soil; and for the fun it brings to me. Start it now, young farmer, if you really intend to be a farmer and to get good out of the farm; take up some line of live stock. Personally, I like cows and hogs, and our State needs ten thousand young farmers in these lines alone this coming year. 7. I would select all the seed I sow in all my fields. The cotton before it is picked; take seed only from the vigorous stalks that have many well filled bolls. The corn while it yet stands in the field, so as to get seed only from good stalks that are pro line and heavy yielders; and so with all crops. 8. I would at once deride to know my work as well as possible for me to do. I would visit other farms and see how work is done there; 1 would read the Experiment Station bulle tins; and, lastly, I would study my work and talk it, and believe in it. And then as my work develops and prospers, I would increase my acres and enlarge my plant Hss Sold a Pile of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy: I have eold Chamber- Iain's Cough Remedy for more than 30 years sod it baa given entire satisfac tion. I have sold a pile of it and can recommend it highly. Joe. McElhin ey, Linton, la. Vol will find this rem edy a good friend whea troubled with a cough or cold. It always affords quick relief and is pleasant to take. For sale by S.J.Welsh and C. N. Simpson, Jr. Boms meu are so mean about their mothers-in-law tbat they wou't even take their recipes. Emergency Medicines. It is a great convenience to have at hand reliable medicines for nee in caaea of accident and for alight inju ries and ailmtuts. A good liniment and one that is laat becoming a favorite if not a household necessity ia Chamber lain's Pain Balm. By applying It promptly to a cut, bruise or bora it allays tbe pais sud cauaee the injury to beal in about one-third the time usually required, and aa it is en anti septic it prevents any danger of Mood poisoning. When Pain Balm ia kept at hand a sprain may be treated before inflammation sets ia, which insures a quick recovery. For sale by S. J. Welsh and C. N. Simpson, Jr. l tsys Mr. tltt MIMr' 9U sus ismea a. M.inca. Mrs. Esther M. M liner, Dttlraff, Ohio, writes : was teniblt tut ttrtr frees It ma It wttknttM mm4 hmt (A keadacss continually. avaa mot sie 10 ao my Souacwor tor my mut Senaf airrf myielf. I wrota yom n4 sraamocv mycomcntom at memrattt si We. You rrcommendra vma. took four bott let and waa completely cured. think henna a wonderful men Ulna ao4 Kara ncommeaoeaj h to my tnendt wltabeu retultt ."Mrm. b. m. muoer. Dr. 8. B. Hartman, Preaidunt or The Hart man .Sanitarium, ha had over fifty years experience In the treatment ol fe male catarrhal dlet-aw. lie adviws women five of charge. If you are auf faring from any female derangement write him a description of your svmp to ma and he will give yon the benetlt of hla experience la the treatment of women's dleae. Mrs. Mamlo Groth, Plattevllle, Wis. writes: After suffering fur several years with frequent backache and head aches I am entirely without pain of any kind Bow, thanks to Peruna." Mtis Mamie Groth. If yon do not derive prompt and satis factory reaulu from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your caae, and he will be pleased to give you hla valuable ad vise gratia. Addreaa Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman tJaultarlum. Col umbo, Ohio. Professional Cracksmen In the State. Charllle (! rver. iV party of professional cracksmen has been oH'iating in this Stair for more than a year, and it is doubtful if they have been outside the State in that time. Periodically we read if a store, a postollice or other place being entered and the safe cracked and robbed, and it is scarcely to be doubted that it is done by the same rowd everv time. 1 he richest haul it has made in North Carolina was at Yadkinville, Tuesday night, when it robls'd the roiintv treasurer of $8,- tMMi or .10,(KK and the postollice of ?.!(H) or if KK. Ill every case the gang conducts its operations undis turbed and escaiies with its booty without dillicultv. Notwithstanding the lilsTal reward offered by the treasurer, there is not one chance in ten thousand that these robbers will be apprehended. Fearful Odds Against Him. Bedridden, alone and destitute. Such in brief was the condition of an old soldier by name of J. J. Ha vens, Versailles, O. For years he was troubled with kidney disease and neither doctors nor medicines gave him relief. At length he tried Kleetnc Hitters. It put him ou his feet in short order and now he tes- tilles: "I'm on the road to complete recovery." Jtest on earth for liver and kidney troubles and all forms of stomach and Istwel complaints. Only 50c. (iuaniiiteed by Fnglish Drug t o. It makes a happily married wo man very unhappy not to lie able to feel that some man never got over her uot marrying him. A Power for Oood. The pills that are potent in their ac- tiou aud pleasant io effect are UeWitl'a Little Early Risers. W. S. I'hilpot ol Albany, Ga., says: "During a bilious attack I took oue. Small aa it waa it did ma more good than calomel, blue mass or any other pill I ever took and at the same time the effect waa pleas ant. Little Early Risers are certainly an ideal pill." Sold by English Drug Co. and S. J. Welsh. An awful nice thing aUiut being fat is how long you ran stay in swimming without knowing the water is too cold. The Stomach is the Man. A weak stomach weakena the man, be cause it caunot transform the food he eata into nourishment. Health aud strength cannot be restored to any aick man or weak woman without first re storing health and strength to' the stomach. A weak atomach cannot di gest enough food to feed the tissues and revive the tired and run down limbs and organa of the body. Kodol Dyspepsia Cute digests what you eat. cleaoaea and strengthena the glands and membranes of the atomach, and curea indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Sold by English Drug Co. and S. J. Welsh. j Even s man that has more sense than to think he can makeagardeu pay will get au idea that he is cut out for public life. In Praise of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy: "Allow me to give yon a few words in praise oi Chamberlain's Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy," aays Mr. Joo. Hamlett of Eagle Paaa, Tea. "I suf fered one week with bowel trouble and took all kinds of medicine without get ting any relief, when my friend, Mr. C. Johnson, a merchant here, advised me to take tbia remedy. Alter taking one doe I felt greatly relieved sod when I had taken the third does was entirely cared. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for potting this great remedy in tbe hands of man kind." For sale by S. J. Welsh and C. N . Simpson, Jr. The Old Man (live Only $50,IKH1. ruaitaflaa.t, W.t.. Ii-j:rh. Ma A report romr from K'kini from a sourer" lirlieved to lie rt-liuMr that Seuator I hi vis. the I leniiM-ral ir uouiiiiee for vice prmideiit. and hi brother, Co!. Thomas It iKivis of Keyser, W. Ya.. who was the lem orralic candidate fur congrew. in the Hecoml district Mir yeara ago. have each i-oiitriluited "iO.ihmi to the IlemtM-ratie ramaigii fund foi all purMMr, aud that that will la the limit It has always Wti la-lieved l. liemms kuowiug thr htvi- that Mr. I lav is would lie a heavy inn trihutor to the campaign fund. It is said, however, that his (laugh ten, Mrs. Kl Li ns and Mrs. Arthur Lee, dislike the fart that their aged father has hrrii hardened w ith campaign responsibilities, aud art opposed to bis contributing lurge kiiius. Senator Ihuis's only son. JoliuT. liavia, now ill with typhoid fever, is also said to have suuilai oliieetiona. Four years ago John T. lavis s)ieut large sinus iu four cuiiulio. hoping to aid his uncle Tom in his race for congress, but Col. Davis was defeated. Mince then the Da vises have bad little faith in politi eians aud are very cautious uInuiI handing out money to them. t ol. laviH is now ill at his home ill Keyser, and while his condition is uot considered dangerous, his friends are apprehensive ou ac count of his age. A Boy's Wild Ride for Life. With family around exix-cting him to die, and a sou riding for life IS miles to get Dr. King's New Dis covery for ('oiisiiinptiou.coughsaiid eolds, V. II. Itrown of Ijeesville, liiu., endured death s agonies from asthma; but this wonderful medi cine gave instant relief and soon cured him. He writes: "I now sleep soundly every night." Like marvel ous cures of consumption, pueiimo ma, bronchitis, roughs, eolds and grip prove its matchless merit foi all throat and lung troubles, (luar aiiteed Uittles 50c aud 1. Trial I sit ties free at Knglish Drug (Vs. Jap 5oldicrs Qet 45 Cents a Month. 'harlot tr Otatervt-r. "The Japanese soldier," we read. 'gets for his service forty-five cents month and lias no prospect of s pension. 1 lgliting u)on this salary, this prospect and an empty stomach, it must 1 seen how game a citizen the little brow n man is, and every UmIy, considering his handicap, ought to wish him well in his effort, now in, to beat the troops of the ('treat WliiU) Czar to the place. Bucklen's Arnica Salve Has world-wide faute for marvel Ions cures. It surpasses any olhei salve, lotion, ointment or balm foi ruts, corns, burns, boils, sores, fel ons, ulcers, tetter, salt rheum, fevei sores, chaptx-d bauds, skin erup ions; infallible tor piles, ( lire it guaranteed. Only at Knglish Drug Co.'s. TllO show you I MM -S- a a MM our prcny $ lino of seasonable 1 Furniture I will be a ploas- 2 urc, not only to 3 us, but to YOU. N. S.OGBURN, la a MaeiMrate and ask a share of the urk in that line iu t'uiou county. " IRA M ULLIS. SURVEYOR." Land. Topographic and City Sur vcyinjr, leveling. Terracing;, Draw ing, Mapping, Ltc. Acruiary guaranteed. Finest and moat ardiidle ilitrinnrnl in the t-ountv. I'hone 44 Wintate, N.C. S A. STEYEN$7.T wcink:k. n. c Calls aimwRieJ in day from Publish Of uk Store; at iop;l.l fu.iu room over Kncliah IIiuk Store, plii.iieyS. Office vrr post ottic-e; phone 9S. F. F. GRIFFIN, " Atiomcu and Counselor at law, Will piartice iu the State ami KeJrral Ccititts. M-n!tti enn It, the r,,IU-ll.m .4 i-laim. aii.l l. Km m.ii.ur-.jiiii ainl wtil, uii-nt "t -lal f,.r yuarliai,. alititil-l 'alttr. ati.l t---u..r I tt.9r It ami tl III Ihr Liialt ami l'rui Huil.lt.i:? JOHN P.MONROE, M. D., S3NHGE.N.C. Day rails answered from llotirtnn'a Iriig atore aud office, 'phone 2 19. Night from C'-tinercial Motel, 'phone jjo. " " W. B. HOUSTON, SURGEON DENTIST, )llice up stairs, Fitzgerald Kuildiiif;, Northwest of Courthouse, Monroe, N. C. jNo.i.ML,!nr. MONKOl-., N. C, Solicit the patronage of the people of Monroe aud siirroutidini; community, .alia answered iu day from HiiKliah t)ru Store; al night from residence in Church atieet. I'hone No 4S. Henry D. Stewar', 1 "., son mm. k. c. Services rendered pro-i:i n-J louently. Day calls froie S i- . Jrutt store, 'photic 35; or r: c n. 1 ., jf Cordon ot ThoinpMiii't i ? 1 ffice, 'phone 1, Nighto.' f oni deuce 'phone, 141. (Jlfc 111 n 'o ti, a, in. HOItr. L. STEVENS J. C ISka. IK STEVENS & SIEES, Attorneys and Counselors-n- Monkok, N, C. I'rontpt attention riven to ao 'era placed in our hands. Management ot estates tot guud ana, administrators and exerutot a tpeciulty. Charges reasonable. OrhreJ in Loan and Trust Hiittdtne;, 3. B. NANCE, M. D Residence I'hone, No 374, ilavit.g located in Monroe otters his ervices to the town and surroundiui; country. Diseases of the stomach and owels a specialty. Oihce over the English Drug Cn.'s drug store. Calls inswered iu the day from the English irug store or residence, at night from residence. f. D. N. Wliitleu. M. D. having located at Union ville, N. C, offers his professional services to that place and surround ing country. Unionville phone 8; Sincerity 4. DR.B.C.REDFEARN,t DENTIST. Charges reasonable, Satisfaction guaranteed. Office over Kttdge'a Hook Store. MONROE, N. C. Will he at Marshville, N. C, on first ind third Mondays of each month, and tt Matthews ou second and fourth Mondays. I'hone 231 t.H. Kedwitie. A. M. Stack. BED WINE & STACE. AUorney$-al- Law, MONROE, N. C. Practice in all the State and Feder il Courts, Will manage estates for Executors, Administrators and Guar liana for reasonable pay; and will oreclose mortgagee and negotiate osm, without expense to Mortgagees ind Money t.etiders,when practicable. Omres in I-o-n r. Trust Ittiilding. 18 Then you might Kj 8 c c something Kjj that would just SUIT you. OfS course you need some new pieces. Respectfully, T. P. DILLON. HHHHHHHHHHH8- Hie Wingate School Offers exceptional advantages to girls and boys preparing for col lege or for tbe higher duties of life. Kxellent equipment. Good moral surroundings. Excellent mimical facilities. Kates of hoard sod tuition ex eeptionslly low. Enrollment last session 202. Boarding students 110 from 1ft counties. Fall Term begins August 22nd. Write at once for Dew catalogue or for other Information. M. B. DRY. Principal. WINUATK, X. C HENKY H, AI1AMS. THOMAS I. IKKOMK. t-'RANK AKM1 IK1.D. Adams, Jerome & Armfield, HTT0RNEY8-HT LW, MONROE, N.O. Practice in all the Courts, State and Federal The management of estates .or esecut-irs.admiuistratora a special- y. Careful and diligent attention iven to the foreclosure of mortgages ind collection ol claims. Money loaned without expense to lender. All litigation given prompt ane careiul attention. Offices Iu Loan and Tiust Huikling. (. C, WILLIAMS I. w, LF.MUOND WILLIAMS & LEMM0ND, Attorneys-at-Law, MONKOE, N. C. Practice in all the State and Unite) States Courts, Prompt attention given to coller lions and general law practice. ataTPersous interested in the settle n.nt of estates, administrators, exe cutors, and guardiana are especial!) iuvited to call on them. Continued and painstaking attention rill be given, at a reasonable price, to all legal business. Offices in Loan and Trust Building. M. L. FLOW, Commissioner (f Deeds fir South Ctrollnt, li Mortl CtroUt: list 1 Justin of tbe foot for Unloa Coatitj, ud Notify hbllt to RorU CtrollBt. :-: :: Special attention given to tikinf Af fldavits, Acknowledgment or Proof of Deeds, Mortgatee, Cootracta, bills of Sale, Powers of Attorney, Kenoocia tiona of Dower and Inheritance, Dep. ositions, Writing and Probating Deeds, Mortgages and all other papers, issuing State Warrants, Claim snd Delivery and Attachment papers, Civil Sum mons and the Collection of Claims. Office at M. L. Flow Co. s Store east of conrtboste, Monroe, N. C
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1904, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75