THE MONROE JOURNAL. VOLUME XIII. NO. 37 MONROE, N.O, TUESDAY OCTOBER 23. 1006. One Dollar a Year J Si n tot g Prk Cotton is 11 cents, but Henry SahadFs goods are the same low prices they have always been ' I have just returned from the Northern mar kets, where I nought goods from the manufact urers. I don't have to buy from wholesale houses or jobbers, but I buy direct from the ones that manufacture them, therefore I can sell you goods cheaper than the merchants can buy tnem. ANOTHER THING! I don't have clerks to hire, therefore I can sell cheaper. Call in and give me a trial and that trial win win you a regular customer for me. I handle everything in dry goods, notions. shoes, clothing, jewelry and other things too numerous to mention, watcnes, lames and men's suits, sweaters and ladies shawls, all kinds linen, caps, fancy work, in fact, every thing from pens to diamonds. Remember the place and the name. Thanking you one and all for your past trade and hoping to sell you more in tne future, i am Yours very truly, HENRY SAHADI. Cleanliness Always. 'Phone 149 and we will send one of our wagons promptly to your residence. While we make a specialty of laundering Siiikth, Ooi.I.akh aud Cl'FKH, we are prepared lo do Ci.kan inu, Tkkhhinu and Dying of all kiuds. :: :: :: :: :: :: Wi will wish tnd try your Clothe! at Three cents per pound, dry welflit; or wash, dry tod starch them at Four cents per pound. Please aeud your work, together with a lint of game, aft early as possible iu the week, and we win always have it done on time. If you do not aeud lint of articles, we cannot lie rcspon aible for count. :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: Monroe Steam Laundry, J. J. Lockhcvrt. Proprietor. Fall Goods at the Big Stores. Never before in the history of Southern Merchandising has there been assembled such a stock of fashionable Coat Suits, Wraps, Jackets, Furs, Dress Goods, Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing, Shoes, Gents' Furnishings, etc. Our counters are literally teeming with immense stocks of the very latest in Fall Wear and every piece was personally selected by our buyers from different departments. We are of the opinion that we have this fall the very best va riety and the greatest bargains in the Ready-To-Wear Department that has ever been offered in Charlotte. This is saying a great deal because our stocks in the past have not by any means been other than up-to-date. . Millinery Department. While our departments have been filled with everything that is strictly seasonable, there has been no pains or expense spared this department that is so extremely popular with all the ladies. If it is a hat that you want, we can supply you. Everything that is ar tistic, and salespeople that know to offer suggestions and see that you buy only that, which is becoming and suits the purchaser, pro vided you wish their advice. We Make a Specialty of Wedding Trousseatis. Transportation is paid to all parties coming to Charlotte, within a radius of 60 miles of Charlotte, upon purchasing from stores, members of the Retail Merchants' Association, goods to the amount of $40.00. THE LITTLE-LONG DEPARTMENT STORES CHARLOTTE, N. C. W. S. BLAKENBY, President. J. R. 5HUTE. Vice-President. -THE- W. C. STACK, Cashier. BANK of UNION MONROE; N. a This Bank has ton eperated la tba Intern of the people at tart as werl as Its stockholders. Its officer have dona their best to hnIM ap flonroa and the surrounding country. It pro vides ivory safeguard lor the depositor and Is always liberal to the borrower. No reasonable person could be dissatisfied with Its methods. Remember what It has done for the people thus far and let everybody know that It will meet aU legitimate competition In the future. Patronize It with your accounts and thus show your sympathy for a progreMlve and bilging Institution. It Is yenr friend and It Is hers to stay. the D: M com and U Death of Mrs. Jefferson Davie. I f rhtrtottr kw.l.-t..lr 17. I $ lout night at the Ibtlel Mijee tie in New York rilv the death 'angvl called to her reward Mrs. Jelferaon Yarina I lav in, widow ol the Sonth's lamented aud revered chieftain. Hince the first news of her fatal illness aa heralded abroad there weut ap from every true Southern heart a sileut and earnest prayer for her recovery, but now that she haw goue from among us there is feeling of sadness all over our land. Many an old soldier to day, totter mgoutbe verge or the grave, re membering the dauutless president of the "Lust Cause," his sorrows, hMecstariea, bta torture, hut mar' tvrdom, will panne to drop a si It-ut tear over the taking away of the leader a widow. It was she, who has just died, that walked lovingly by the aide of Mr. Davis through his sorrow fill, yet glorious career. Hho was with hiui when he, with un dauted courage, fought the Mouth's battles in the halls of eoiigre aud the natteu s senate. She was with him iu Mexico where he was we verely wounded la the service of his couutry. She watched his ca reer lenuerly wheu be Served as president of the Confederacy. Her heart pulsed with his as he steered the armies of the South. Hhe was with him, even nearer and dearer, when the tables of fortune changed and wheu sor row's hand was visited upon him relentlessly. Through the long tirade of abuse, malediction aud vitiieratou from newspapers and orators of the Jorth she stood proudly, queenly, by his side and comforted and cheered linn through it all. She saw her hus band falsely caricatured in wo man's attire, and with proud su- IN'riority rejoiced iu her husband who was made the victim of pen ny a liners' puuy puns and half li niiied artiste' weak ridicule she stood as a "rock in a weary and," ever faithful by his side. And then, cursed fate, when he cloud grew still more lower ng and the tragedy of poor Ia is, lifii waxed more intense, she irver forsook him, but stood un altering, constant. From center o circumference of the North she heard the choice of her heart rmed traitor, assassin, but ber ove for him mellowed in its in finite, tenderness. And then the crisis came and glorious, valiant, grand old avis was, by the order of Gen. ilea, shackled aud thrust Into prison at Fertress Monroe. The iiominy of a felon was cast base- upon him aud yet she loved and lorted him. 1 hough the long weary pass of one seemingly ndlesH year she was forcibly sep arated from him who was in prison. A nmi she she would hear vague re ts of how her husband was osiug his eyesight, growing eina- (I. sickening, slowly, by de grees, dying in prison and in it all she was not allowed to go to im. At last, after one year, she was permitted to remain with him Hie other year of confinement. What a vision was that she saw allter the absence or one year! Old "JelT" Davis, the patriot, was uow aged, weak ened from prison life and brutal reatmcnt, crushed but not hu miliated! In the frail tabernacle that harbored his spirit was a will unconquerable, a spirit brave to death. .She saw him through it all and admiuistered unto him, never losiug her love and respect for him. Much is the spirit that has just passed from our midst. We are proud of her and her memory will remain in every true South erner's heart fresh and crisp. Ia,1 some should not understand her motive Iu living in the North since the war, aud for fear some, ii iguorauce of the real truth, should deem her untrue to the land of her birth, we take the fol lowing paragraph from an inter view given while she was in New Orleans at the occasion of the pur chase of her old home place, Bon Voir, by the Bute of Mississippi: "I have couie lo stay as long as I possibly can. 1 shall stay until the hot weather drives me away. I would slay here always if I could. I only w ish that I could live here but I cannot stand the least heat. God only knows how I love my dear old country, this dear old cou ut i y, this dear South land, endeared by so many hal lowed memories. These are' my Mile and I love them as per linus they will never know. Their devotion, their love, their rever ence for the memories of my hus band and daughter touch my heart very deeply. I read with interest all the sweet and beauti ful things said about them. I watch the beautiful celcbratioua held. I note how much is done to honor the memory of my husband and teach their children to do it too. I can never forget all the homage that theae dear devoted people did my husband while be was living; bow the old veterans loved him. Yea, I love the South, my old land, I love my own peo ple and I would that I could stay with them always." Editor Green Philosophise oa $ Community Improvement. J Our Now. Keep the bowelt opea when you hive cold nj ate a cowl remedy towllay the inflammation o( the mucous nieov brtnet. The bett ii Kennedy'! Lata tive Honey and Ttr. It contain! no opitlet, moves the bowelt, drivel out the cold. It reliable and Uttet good. Sold by C. N. Simpton, Jr., tuJ Dr. ;S. J. Welsh. Good schools do more for the ad vanceuieiit of the intellectual aud financial condition of a roniuuuity than any other ageucy. Under the publie school law of North Caro lina it Is possible for any coniniu nity in the State to have a good school if such a school is wanted. The law now provides for a four mouths school in each district. The patrons or any district may vote an additional tax not exceed lug :t0 cents on the 1 100 worth of property to supplement the fund already apportioned and bring the schools op to a higher standard and longer term. In all the plans ever submitted for the improve meut of educational facilities Our Home lias never Heard or one that is more practical than the ipe rial tax feature. This plan simply opens up the door of opportunity to the people of any district who are willing to do ther part to se cure superior educational ad vantages to their children. V The great majority of the dis tricts in the Stat that have thus far submitted the question of local taxation to a vote of the patrons have carried the election in favor of local taxation to make the schools longer and better. In ev ery district where an unsuccessful attempt was maue lo carry an election in fav or of the local tax the effort was defeated by a com biuatou of selfishness and igno ranee that would almost make i first class hog ashamed of him self. Any publio-spirited pro gressive man will admit that if a four-mouths public school with a cueap teacuer is a goou tning, a six-months school with a compe tent and successful teacher is a better thing, and there is no bet ter or more economical way to get the longer term aud higher grade teachers than to vote the secial tax to supplement the amount already received from the public school fund. V Under the law without the spe cial tax, committeemen cannot pay a teacher over f .'10 a month, aud a man who is auy account will not teach at that price any longer than, ia necessary to fiud a position that pays more niouey, aud that will not be long. But with a special school tax a dis trict can employ ar0 teacher if it wants one. Therefore, by the special tax plan, the district not only gets longer terms but it gets choice of teachers because it has something to pay them with, and we can't get the best service un less we are willing to pay for it. V We said that the defeat of the special school tax iu any school district is the result of a combina tion of selfishness and ignorance, and we mean what we say. When iguorauce and sefishness get mixed up together it makes a mighty bl ndiug combination. Ig norance looks with fearful suspi cion upon every attempt to better human conditions, and then when you couple with it a sordid self ishness that is close akin to hog ishness you have a mixture that is hard to overcome, and the onward march of a progressive intellectual army is the ouly thing that will trample it iuto the dust of obliv ion. V tio to a selfish, ignorant man and put to him the proositiou that a tatter aud higher grade school in his district is the best fi nancial investment he can make to lift the community np in the estimation of the world ami thereby enhance the value of proerty iu the district, and he will tell you that be doesu't be lieve a word of it. Appeal to his better nature by telling him that if he didn't have the advantage of a practical education he ought to be willing to raise the average of intelligence in his commu nity us it is more pleasant to live CMS KK) MM O S par1 UU1 In England and France the Sale of Alum Baking Powder is pro hibited by law because of the in jurious effects that follow its use, The law in the District of Columbia also prohibits Alum in food. You may live where as yet you have no protection against Alum. The only surf protection against Alum in your Baking Powder is to Say plainly- mm, BAKING ROYAL is made from Absolutely pure Cream of Tartar, a pure Grape product Aids digestionadds to the healthfulness of food. Tor Vottr Protection we place tide Intirl on every pnckiiKe nt Heott'e EmuUlnn. 'i ll man with a flshon hit back It our trade-mark, aud It la a guainnti that Hrott'S Emul sion will do all that I cliUmed for It Nothing tx'tter tor lung, throat or bronchial trnublce la Infant or lulntt. Hcott'a Kmul stoh In one of the Tr stent I1eh-liiilliV-rt knewa to the medical world MVS' 4 rm scott & mwit, ";:' .Vi"" among intelligent people and be will look at you with contempt. Argue to him that every mau w ho helps to advance the intellectual condition of his neighborhood in comes a publie lieuefactor and he will laugh at you to scorn. V You had lietter give your chil dren a practical education and have their minds cultivated in such a way as that 1'iey can cope siiccessfullly with the average in the race of life than to miserly ac cumulate a littles tract of land or houses to leave to them as an in heritance. If you leave your Ikij-8 in ignorance they may be come "hewers of wood and draw ers of water" for sonieliody else. Leave them with a mind properly cultivated and you can depend upon it that they can and will win by personal ellbrt and they will never lie slaves for somebedy else. In fact, you owe your children nothing but proper mental train ing, but this much you do owe them. With minds properly de veloed they can make their owu way in the world. V It is cheaper to vote a social tax and have a school at home than it is to send the children oft' to a "high school" than it is to pay both board and tuition. Re sides when you send them olT you advertise the fact that your com munity is not progressive enough to ruu its own school a thing that any progressive citizen should be ashamed of and should try to remedy, especially wheu the remedy is so easily and cheaply supplied by that medi cine which we call "local taxa tion." If you are defeated in first election try again, and again until you win. THE TELEVLE. A Young Hot her at 70. "My mother has suddenly Wn made young at 70. Twenty years of intense suffering from dyspepsia had entirely disabled her, until six mouths ago, wheu shelicgun taking Klectric Hitters, which have com pletely cured her and restored the strength and activity she had in the prime of life," writes Mrs. AV. Ii. Oilpatrick of lhiuforth, Maine, (i rest est restorative medicine on the glolte, Bets stomach, liver and kidneys right, purifies the blood, aud cures malaria, biliousness and weaknesses. Wonderful nerve ton ic Trice 50a Guaranteed by all druggists. The snpreme court of the United States declines to grant a rehear ing of the rase against Senator Bur ton, of Kansas, who is under sen tence of fine and imprisonment for. grafting while in oflice. He will therefore go to jail where he ought to be. When t bone it overworked it lies down tod ia other wayt declare! itt Inability to no further, you would con tider it criminal to ote force. Many a mm ol humane Impultet who would oot willingly harm a kitten, it f uilty of cruelty where hit own itomach it concerned. Overdriven, overworked, when what it oeedt it lomething that will dif.-.t ht food eaten aod help the ttop--li iu r. -uperate. Something I" e odol For Dyrpia that it told ' C, N. Simpnoo, Jr., and Dr. S. J. V-'db, , Machine Invented to See Persons While Conversing With Them Over the Telephone. New York Time. To see by electrical means the persons with whom one is convers ing over tne telephone Is the pur pose of a device announced simul taneously by two different Ameri can inventors, Messrs. J. B. Fow ler and William II. Thompson, who are keeping the complete de tails of the operation of their re sjiective apprattises to themselves, H-ndiiig application for patents. Curiously enough, the name adopted by each for his inventiou is the "Tele v lie." Cassier's Magu.iiie for October gives some idea of the nature of the device, but notes that the sci entist Nisco of Belgium has de clared, after careful study of methods hitherto proposed for seeing at a distance electrically, that none of them fulfills the re quirements of successful opera tion. From a non technical de scription of the present invention it would apitcar that a person seated at a telephone, by giuiug into a projection similar to a hand tcieoscope at the side of the hand transmitter, may observe tho out line of the features in their natural colors of the sieakerat the distant end of the wire, or wires there will lie four of them, but eventu ally only two used to accomplish the whole operation. Iu most experiments for trans mitting sight the sulphurous sub stance selcui.im, whose electrical resistance varies with the iuteusity of the light thrown upon it, has lieen employed in divers ways. M Xisco suggests a method which he thinks may prove ultimately suc cessful. Itoughly, the plan is as follows: a sensitive metallic net or screen is prepared, into whose meshes are introduced copper wires with a coat of wet insulating varnish; the suface is then tiled smooth and covered with crystal lized selenium. The wires are led iuto a cylindrical chamlier, and brought in contact with a Steele blade moving at the rate of six hundred revolutions a minute, which records in a microphone by means of an electric circuit the slight variations of light cast upon the screen by the telephon 1st. 'these are transmitted by a spark process to the screen at the receiuing station, on which is cast the light of each spark in its vary ing intensity so as to produce the uiumtnntcd Image. While Cawier's Magazine be lieves the scheme to be ingenious rather than practicable, it pre diets that it will probably form the basis of effort by nnmeraus aspi rants after fame aud fortune in this field of invention. Tarboro's Sensible Plan. Oftttonla oaeui. It is a sad commentary upon the negro race that at a time wheu there is the greatest demand for lob of Women Storm School Building. Nt-W Yitrk IHiipntrli. Believing that the "murder doc tors." as thev called the Ixmrd nf labor at good prices, so many or health physicians, were cutting its members insist in idling, or the throats of their children in a breaking iuto jail, to consider the 'public school in the Williamsburg attitude of the negro into the m.(.,jn of Brooklyn, 1,500 women, hangman's noose. At Tarboro a mHrly air of them Italians, few nighta ago a large mass meet- stormed the school building in a nig of its white citizens was held ,lmd effort to reach the little to consider the attitude of the ,, to-dav. Ik-fore the riot hud negro population towards latior been duelled several policemen and crime. A niimla-r of negroes of the Is-tter class were also pres ent. The meeting resulted in the organization of a club of U." white men with authority to appoint a committee from the negro race to take hold of the situation with a strong hand. Their object is to eliminate, to get rid of the worst class, the loafers and idlers, get to work or get to walking. It is be lieved that good results will grow out of the club's activities. Nothing to Fear. Mother! need have no heaitancy In continuing to give Chamberlain'! Cough Remedy to their little unet, at it contttni abtolutely nothing injur! out, Tliit remedy it not ooly perfect ly tafe to give email children, but it a medicine of great worth and merit. It hat s world widn reputation for it! coret of cooghe, coldt end croop and can tlwtjrt be relied upon. For Bale by C.N. Simpton, Jr., and Dr. S.J. Welth. Can you win? You realize that to win in anythiug these dayt requires strength, with mind and body in tune. A man or woman with disordered di gestive organ! it not in -jhape for a day't work or a day't play. How can they expect to win? Kodol For Dyt pepsia contain! the digestive juices ot a healthy itomach and will put your stomach in snipe to perform itt im portant function of mpplying the body and brain with strength building blood. Digest! what vou eat, relieves indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stumnch, palpitation of the heart aud constipa tion. Sold by C. N. Simpson, h .. and Dr. S. J. Welsh. The merchants of Durham are now preparing to get in behind the Southern Express Comnanv. because its rates are extortionate and its service not as good as they want. 1 hey claim that the com pany is not living up to the new rate law and that it collects more than its printed rates. Shipments that are lost are settled with the greatest diltlculty. The people of the city are sore and purpose to see what the law will do w ith the com-PJ'- A Badly Burned Girl or boy, man or woman, is quickly out of pain if Bucklen's Arnica Salve is applied promptly. G. J. Welch of Tekonsha, Mich., says: "I use it in my family for ruts, sores and all skin injuries, and find it pprtect." Uulckest pile cure known. Best healing salve made. iiic at all druggists. A man named Lancaaster, a barber, who left Asheville and went to Colorado tome years ago, left a small debt in Asheville un paid. In Colorado he has been sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering his wife. While there, he plaited a home hair bridle, mounted it with silver and sent it to Asheville to be sold, and the proceeds applied to his debt Blood Poisoning results from chronic constipation, which is quickly cured by Dr. King's New Life Pills. They re move all poisonous germs from the system ud infuse new life and vigor; cure sour stomach, nansia, headache. dissineM and colic with out griping or discomfort, 25c. Guaranteed by all druggists. had In-en seriously injured by the infuriated women and one of tho rioters had ls-en arrest ed. A contagious affection of the eyes had spread from the homes of the Italians in the vicinity of the school, and the doctors were directed to make an investigation to learu the cause and to exter minate the disease. Many of the pupils upon going to their homes told their parents that the "mur der doctors" wanted to cut their throats and to-day the mothers de cided to make an investigation in a Issly and marched to the school building l,r(M) strong. Teachers who were warned of the ap proaching trouble, locked the doors and windows of the building ami sent a call for assistence to a uear-by police station. Before the police arrived the women rushed toward the main entrance of the school building, and finding the way barred against them. made frantic and determined ef forts to butter down the door. Due panel had liccn smashed when the vanguard of the police si n ad appeared upon the scene and sought to put a sudden end to the trouble. The women turned upon the jwl icemen, tore their clothes, scratched their faces and put them to rout before a detail of l.'ior more officers reached the scene. When the re-enforcements came, nearly one hour was re quired to drive the rioters from the square. Three other schools in the mime district also were stormed by women who had wrought them selves into frenzy upon hearing of the so-called "murder doctors," in one case it was found impossible to quiet the riotera until the pu pils were dismissed. A cold it much more easily enred hen the bowels are open. Kennedy'! Luative Honey and Tar open! the bowels and drives the cold out of the system in old or young. Sold by C. N. Simpson, Jr., and Dr. S. J. Welsh. The prisoners in jail at Snow Hill unintentionally set fire to the building and aroused the whole town. The jail birds had torn out a piece of sheet iron and built fire on it, so that they may have a light while trying to bore a bole In the wall. Tbeheat from the Are set the floor in a blaze beneath the sheet Iron. An Awful Cough Cured. "Two years ago our little girl had a touch of pneumonia, which left ber with au awful cough. She bad tpellt of coughing, jutt like one with the whooping cough, and tome thought ibe would not get well at all. We got a bottle of Chamberlain'! Cough Rem edy, which acted like a charm. She slopped coughing and got itoot aod fat," write Mrs. Ort Bustard. Ilroba ker, III. This rtmedx is for tale by C, N. Simpson, Jr., aud Dr. S. J. Welsh, - 1,