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JL H MONROE JOURNA j VOLUME XIV. NO. 13 MONROE, N.C TUESDAY MAY 14, 1007. One Dollar a Year A Too-Cautious Reporter. "My boy," said the editor of the lSills tile liugle to the new report er, arrorumgto miner s I nt, "you must learo not to slate thiug an facta autil they are proved facts otherwise they are very apt to pet as into libt-l suit. Do not nay, the cashier Hole the funds; any the cashier who in alleged to have stol en the fund That's all now, and ah turn in a stickful about that Second Ward Social lust night." Owiug to au in II in of visitors it was late in the afternoon before the genial editor of the liugle caught a glimpse of the great family daily- Half ay down the social roluiuu bis eyes lit on the followiug can tious paragraph: "It is rumored that a card party was given last evening to a number of reputed la dies of the Second anL Mr. Smith, gossip says, was the host ess, and the festivities are reported to have continued until 10:.'M iu the eveniug. It is alleged that the affair was a social function given to the ladies of the Second Ward Cinch Club, aud that with the ex ception of Mrs. James Bilwiligcr, who says she comes from Leavits Junction, noue but members were present. The reputed hostess in sists that coffee aud wafers aloue were served as refreshments. "The Smith wouinu cUims to be the wife of John Smith, the so called 'Honest Shot- Mau' of 315 East State street." Shortly afterward a whirling mass, claiming to be a rejiorter on the Hugle, tlew fifteen feet into the street and lauded with what by standers assert was a dull, sicken ing thud. (If (11 III frulll llirrr r In the land. That jrrtiw mi I'Unli iir trvt; 1 wi.ulil lv. nit th. fliotn.i4t (nr litr Holltttvr Hock.v Mountain Ti. Kn.!lih lrujt runiiwiij. Free Trip to Jamestown Exposition. For the next sixty days we oiler to every purchaser of a sack of our (lour (any brand, viz.: Invincible, Maker's Choice, Golden Rod, or Vic tor) a chance at a Free Round Trip Ticket to the Jamestown reposition. Every sack of flour sent out from our mills for the next sixty days will contain a ticket giving the holder a chance at said trip, liuy a sack of our Hour, sign your name on ticket, giving postotlice address, and return same to your grocery man ami ho will see that you gut a fair chance at said trip. Remember that every sack of our Hour is guaranteed to give satisfac tion or money refunded. Henderson Roller Mills Co. riany Items of New from Buford. CurmpoaMflMM TH. Journal. Mrs. W. T. Lauey and three children are visitiug relatives iu Duskliu county, Campbell City, Mo. They will reinaiu about three months. When they return Mr. Lauev will move to Monroe to to live. Mr. 8. It. F.ulwnks will also move to Monroe about the first of Juue. Mr. Itrae Howie has been a great Birds as Seed Carriers Washington Star. Rev. Mr. SUcey Recovers Hooey Stolen by Sale Crackers- W..if.tru Mraraiferl.t.likfratr. During the month of April, 1901, the store of M. II. Lowry & Co., at Morven was broken into and their safe cracked aud robbed of a con tieorw to one of the Government bureaus j MILsworth and J. C. Travor board at Washington, birds evince a sor- ed a southbound Seaboard traiu at . : . ..-:...: . . i I i ArroruiiiKioasi-ieuiiNaiiacuru :)k b, aum of nioner. prising iuclinatiou to act as seed agreai . .wrriani in 1-urt.iiid iiuur(..n tt the sufferer for the nast few months with a complication of diseases, aud is still very ill. Sometime ago the little sou ot Mr. T. C. Eubanks, Jr., fell and cut an ugly gash in his forehand. Dr. J. It. Kulwnks sewed np the wound and he is doing very well. Sowe weeks ago Mr. R. K. Dees had a narrow escape from a serious accidcut. He and bis little son weut to Mo u roe after a load of gu ano aud on going down the bill m frout of Mrs. 1. A. Covington's one of the breast cbaius came loose aud the wagon ran on the horses aud turned completely over dowu au embankment. bruising Mr. Dees very badly and spraining bis ankle so that he could not walk Tor sev eral days The loy was found un der the seat aud guano, nut was not hurt Friends came np aud assisted him home. There hits been a draw on our young people for quite a while and it coutinues. Some are moving, others are going to towns and cit ies. M iss Fauuie Unhide bus gone to Charlotte to study us trained nurse in the hospital; Miss Mable Cribble is iu Monroe with llelk Bros; Miss Veluier ('hears is in San- ford with her brother, Mr. W. F. Cheitrs, clerking for him. Mr. W. T. Laney is running his saw null on lull lime two nines northeast of Allan on the Medlin land. Mr. Luther Laney has returned home from Florida, w here he ami Mr. Hubert lielk has been working for the last eight mouths. Miss Cora Laney s school closes at riains, S. C, next i nday. She will then return home for a season. Small graiu is looking very well. There are a few plums that sur vived the cold snap. Farming is progressing nicely. Dr. W. II. Uribblo says Unit lie must go to town once a week or the people w ill think be is dead. I have 100 young chickens, ,vz turkeys, 50 goslings and 11 IuiiiIm). Do any of your wives whistle! My wile is a Hue whistler, and goes uhout her household work whist- iiig all day as unconcerned as if veiything was just to her notion. I am resigned. May it continue all through life. She has kept it up for years, ami that is as long as I have been in close relationship with her. J. C. L. When your hack aches it is almost invariably an indication that some thing is wrung with your kidneys. Weak, diseased kidneys frequently cause a breakdown of the entire sys tem. DeWilt's Kidney and lilaililer Tills alford prompt relief for weak kidneys, backache, inflammation of the bladder and all urinary troubles Sold by S. J. Welsh and C. N. Simp son, Jr. W. S. BI.AKKNKY, President. J. ( Sikhs, Vice-l'resideiit Ct. B. Cai.dwei.i., Sec. snd Treas. The Monroe Insurance and Investment Company. Incorporated Agency for all Kinds of Insurance, Monroe, North Carolina. We buy and tell anything in real estate, or will handle aame on commission. We lend money and make loans for other people without cost to the lender. Will guarantee the payment of interest promptly. Will rent property and collect rent for owner. Will set as Executor, Administrator or Guardian and do general trust business. Offices in The Bank ot Union building. G. B. CALDWKIX, Sec. and Treas. Direetors:-W. 8. Blskeney. J. C. Sikes, E. P. Wharton, G. B. Caldwell, W. E. Csaon, Dr. J. W. Neal, J. R. Shute, J. E. Stack, G. M. Boasley. Don't Experiment with Paints-It don't pay ' When you use paint, use Best Prepared Paint The Best Paint that it is Possible to Make Tne Heath Mi II I (fan Beat Prepared Paint will look better and pro tect your bona Ion gar than than say other paint, because It is made with a thorough knowledge ot the requirements ol a paint. Get a ample card today. , C. N. Simpson, Jr., Druggist J world Two centuries ago the hutch de- stroyed every nutmeg tree iu the Moluccas iu order to enjoy a won. opoly of the business, having plaut ed the trees in their own posses sions. Iu spite of their most earn- est efforts, however, the islands were constantly being restocked. tor a long time the thing was a mystery, but at length it was solved. The doves of that quarter of the glolw are of large size, and readily swallow the seeds of the nutmeg. They traverse wide stretches of sea and laud iu a few hours, and de posit the seeds not only uninjured but better lilted for germinal ion by the heat aud moisture of the birds system, liy a similar process thou sands of acres of laud have been covered with trees of difl'crcut kinds, the birds acting as Nature's agents iu the dissemination of plants. Dai w in found iu six grains of earth adhering to the feet of a plover three different kinds of seeds, and in mud sticking to the feet of ducks and geese shot in England he found the seeds of plants peculiar to the Victoria Xy anza iu Central Africa, thus prov ing not only the extent of migra tion, but also the possibility ol plants appearing iu strange locali ties through the agencies of these birds. Iu the mud on the feet of a Tex as steer the seeds of five dillcreiit kinds of weedsutul grasses com moil in Texas were found by a micro scopist after (he arrival of the ani mal in New York. None of the great inventions of man can compare iu rapidity of travel with that of some birds. That solitary cruiser of the deep, the frigate bird, can cross the At lantic Ocean, a distance of two thousand miles, iu a single night. The wonderful bird must travel at the average speed of at least one Lund red and fifty miles an hour, a feat far surpassing any automobile or locomotive that has yet liecn built. Fast express trains often reach nud maintain the speed of ninety miles an hour for short dis tances, but the velocity of these greyhounds of the rail is eclipsed by the common chimney swallow which sometimes for hours main tains au average sced of from ninety to one hundred miles an hour. THE I'ASTIXT I.IVIXIi TMIXli. Probably the swiftest of all liv ing things is the black swift, a small bird which has been known to travel two hundred and seventy six miles in mi hour, or over twice as fast as the automobile would have gane could it have maintained for an hour the speed of its record run of about two miles a minute at Ormoud IScach. The rapidity of the flight of birds is very deceptive, and the average person usually under estimates their sieed. I once asked ton per sons how fast they thought crows Hew, and six of them said about ten miles au hour, and the remain ing four ulHtiit five. Iu reality the crow travels from twenty-five to thirty miles au hour, or us fast us the average local passenger traiu. Ducks are among the swiftest Hying birds. The mallard and pin tail members of this family fly from forty to sixty miles an hour, and the teal with a favorable wind of teu reaches the astonishing veloci ty of ninety to a hundred miles an hour. Heveral years ago, when go ing from New York to Chicago, on the engine of one of the fastest trains, we were spinning along the edge of a long marshy lake at about forty miles an hour, when four ducks which had been sitting in the water near the track took flight just before the traiu came ubreust of them, and started off iu the same direction. "Here's a chance for a race!" the engineer shouted as he drew out the throttle. The ducks, frightened by the roar of the en gine, slowly gained on us. 'How fast are we going!" I shouted in the engineer's ear. Ho held up five fingers, ami I knew we were going along at fifty miles an hour. The traiu' s speed had increased to sixty five miles an hour before we began to overhaul the ducks: nut they reached the end of the lake liefore we were even with them, and then veered off and vanished as we shot by. Observation has shown that a passenger pigeon can travel one thousand miles a day, and the tur tle doves which the poople who live iu the country often see in their barnyards fly at the amazing rate of fifty miles au hour. Carrier pigeons in calm weather often trav el from thirty to fifty miles an hour. i A Narrow Escape. O. V. Cloyd, a merchant of Plunk, Mo., bad a narrow escape four years ago when he ran i jlmson bur into bis thumb. He says: "The doctors wanted to amputate it but I would not conseut. I bought a bottle of Bucklen'a Arnica Halve and that enred the dangerous wound." 25c. English Drug Co.'s. Lilesville the uigbt following the robbery and were arrested the same uight on the train by a posse at Marshville. In due time the men were tried for the crime, convicted and seuteuced by Judge Walter Neal to terms of ten years each in the penitentiary. Not a great while after euteriug the peuitentiary Travor effected bis escape; last year Ellsworth did likewise and ueither of them has been recapt ured. When the men were arrested and searched 216 in money, a com plete set of burglar's tools and two large pistols were found on them. The greater part of the money w hich was stolen by them had been placed in the safe by ltev. L. K. Slaeey, then pastor of Morven cir cuit, and the late Geo. W. Itatliff for safe keeping. The above resume of the case of the Morven safe crackers is of in terest as being introductory to the last chapter in this celebrated case. The disposition of the money taken from l.llswoith and Travor has been more or less in controversy ever since the men were tried, aud for that reason lay undisturbed iu the bank until the April term of our criminal court At this term of the court the following consent order, written by Judge ISennett, providing for the disposition of the money was made: "The State "April vs. ' Term, Kllsworth and Travor. ) 1IKI7. "In the matter of certaiu mon eys, gold aud paper, takeu from the persons of these convicts, when arrested aud searched, and im pounded iu court, the court doth ajudgo: "that the following lie paid to Kev. L. K. Stacey or to his order: 1 gold pieceof the denomination of M; 1 gold piece of the denomina tion of f 10; 3 five-dollar gold pieces. "It is further adjudged that six ty and five dollars be then paid to Mr. II. II. McLcudon, their attor ney, necordiug to his claim there for. The remainder of the money is to be paid to ltev. L. E. Stacey and the widow and children ol Geo. W. Itatliir, deceased, pro rata, that is equally, cent per cent, dollar per dollar, descending to the bottom and scrupulously observing the right according to amounts lost by them iu said roblwry. Nothing herein contained is to run counter to, impair or set at naught Kev. L. I.. Macey 's specific claim to the gold coin adjudged in bis favor. K. T. Iteunett disclaims any authority to consent to this order except as to the L K. Stacey claim and adjudication, yet he supports the actiou of the solicitor iu the premises and commits himself to his support, considering it prudeut, sage, judicious to do as be has done and is doing. "In witness whereof he signs and submits to and prays the judgment of the court "The custodian of these funds is to fetch them before onr clerk of the Superior court in his office and theu and there the judgment is to lie executed by said clerk. Kisdes T. Bennett, For the Firm. L. D. Hohinhon, Solicitor. II. II. M Lenixin, Att'y for Defts. A famous Herman physician at a recent meeting of medical scientists declared that after live years of ex perimenting, he had found that the best thing for neuralgia was the in jection of alcohol. It proved success ful in 202 cases after all other known remedies had failed. But most folks would prefer to inject it themselves according to their own ideas. Good Words for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. People everywhere take pleasure iu testifying to the Rood qualities of Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy. Mrs. Edward Phillips of Barc lay, Md., writes: "I wish to tell you that I can recommend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. My little gill, Cath erine, who is two years old, has been taking this remedy whenever she had a cold since she was two months old. About a month ago I contracted a dreadful cold myself, but 1 took Cham berlain's Cough Remedy and was sooa ss well as ever." This remedy is for sale by English Drug Company. Governor-else 1 1 Ioke Smith of Cieor gia and a party of men have been touring F.uropo, having in view es pecially the removal of prejudice against emigration to the South. He says he has been successful in doing this and that s number of immigrant ships will make Savannah a port of call after this. What he has done will, undoubtedly have its influence on turning the stream southward. Soldier Shoots His Wile and U Himself Killed. Wilntnffl.ni lHtrii.tMli. A special to the Star from South port tonight says that this afternoon at 3 o'clock at the I'uited States army xt at Fort Caswell. Private Heury Hamilton of the IHMh com pany coast artillery recently trans ferred to the garrison there, shot his wife three times, seriously! wounding her; also shot aud se-1 riously wouuded Corporal Watson of the .slst company and was him self killed by Commissary .Sergi-ant I berwald, brother in law of Ham iltou's wife. Domestic troubles bet ween Ham ilton and his wife resulted iu i quarrel at their home on the post grounds today aud this afternoou leaving I berwald iu the coiuuus- aary sergeant s oflice and telling i i in that be was going to shoot his wife, he proceeded to carry out his threat. After being shot once in the hip, Mrs. Hamiltou ran out of the house and was picked up by Corporal Watson who had lieeu to post a uew guard. Hamiltou see ing this at once opened fire on Wat sou who fell with a wound iu his breast. Hamilton theu shot his wife agaiu, the ball taking eflect in the abdomen. I'berwald, who had heard Hamilton's threat and had been following him at a distance, came np and opeued tire on him with au automatic shot gun, killing huu almost instant v. the mound ed ones were given attention by the post Surgeons, but it is said Mrs. Hamilton cannot live. Hamiltou is said to lie promi nently connected at Columbus, (la. Mrs. Hamilton came from the West ud was a widow with several chil dren, when she married her second husband, the victim of today's tragedy. Big Job Before Tax Assessors this Year. Maralivlll llomr. If town projierty iu I'uion coun ty is assessed anywhere iu the neighborhood of its market value, if farm lands near town are assess ed at even half what they will bring if put up for sale; if idle tim bered lands near the railroad, for which lumlicr men would pay I0 to ."() an acre, are assessed at f 2 an acre instead of ii au acre, it will help to improve sidewalks, bridges, public roads, etc., wonder fully in this county. It will also bring about a condition under which surplus property, held for speculative purposes, will pay its proportional part of the taxes on the same basis of value that the small farmer has to pay taxes. I'nion county is not the only place where the tax assessors must make some big advances in assessed val ues. The following from the Lex ington Dispatch indicates that the assessors will have to increase the value, in some cases, 5U0 per cent, if they do their duty: "From all over the State comes a demand for a true valuatiou of properly this year. We want our own assessors to heed to the de mand that is made here at home, especially in this town. People who want tho earth for a town lot should le made to pay on a fair assessment. The idea of holding an unimproved town lot at a thou sand dollars and have it appear on the tax list at one, two or three hundred is alsurd. People who will not part with unimproved real estate in Lexington for a reasona ble sum should be made to pay full taxes on it IF YOU your tongue to and look in the glass you will see the effect You can't help puckering it make you pucker to think of tasting it By the use of. so called cheap Baking Powders you take this puckering, injurious Alum right into your system you injure digestion, and ruin your stomach. AVOID ALUM Sap plainly- was. Royal is made from pure, refined Grape Cream of Tartar-Costs more b ! A I l .1 . f. r aI . r. r i . . m - John L. Calls at White House and Compares Weights. WaxhliiKlon l)lU'h.sth. John L. Sullivan, the former pugilist, had an interesting chat with President lloosevelt today, coveriug various subjects. Mr. Sullivan said that he had seen the President at a uuniber of bouts iu New York and called the President's particular attention to one that occurred with Mitchell, the English heavy weight, in ISM, when Sullivan knocked him over the ropes. Sullivan met Secretary Taft at the door of the executive oflices as he was about to come iu. He put in a good word with the secretary for clemency for a friend who is serving a seutence on Governor's Island and concerning whom the pugilist had written Secretary Taft sometime ago. "(iuess I got you skinned a block," remarked Sullivan to the secretary talking alsiut their re spective weights. John I said he weighed IMS pounds, or .t.'ll strip ped, while Secretary Taft remark ed that his weight was only 2s:5 and the best he ever did was to tip the beam at 330. When your food has not been prop erly digested the entire system is im paired iu the same proportion. Your stomach needs help. Kodol For In digestion and Dyspepsia not only di gests what you eat, it tones tbe stom ach and adds strength to the whole body. Makes rich, pure blood. Kcdol conforms to the national pure food aud drug law. Sold by S. J. Welsh and C. N. Simpson, Jr. $ o o o o Rickets. Simply the visible sign that baby's tiny bones are not forming rapidly enough. Lack of nourishment is the cause. Scoli'j EmuUion nourishes baby's entire extern. Stimulates and makes bone. Exactiy what baby needs. ALL DftUGCSTSi St. ANO M r 6 6 4 6 Elementary Facts About the Cat tle Quarantine. l'r.n'.lve Frmr, Much has been said in The Pro gressive Farmer recently about rais ing more cattle for market, improv ing the breeds, and enlarging the dairy iudustry, we cannot let go the subject, even for the present, with out again emphasizing one great ob stacle in the South to rapid develop ment in those directions. It is the obstacle to which Dr. Tait ltutler's article on anther page is devoted to, namely: the presence of the cattle tick and the consequence quarantine and loss entailed upon the South by this pest. More than half nearly two-thirds of the counties of North Carolina are under the Federal quar antine, and a worse condition ob tains in other Southern States. This is not an irremovable obsta cle, for it is being slowly removed; but because of the necssarily slow process of its removal and the diffi culty in surmounting it until it is removed, it will remain a serious ob struction in the path to improved cattle and the fullest expansion of the stock raising and dairying in dustry in the South. At the sug gestion of one of our readers, and for the benefit of others whose ideas of the subject may have become hazy, we hike this occasion to repeat and emphasize some elementary facts relating to this pest: 1. The extremely fatal cattle fever which is known by a variety of names is naturally caused by the cattle tick introducing into suscepti ble cattle a germ that multiplies rapidly and destroys the blood dls. 2. Native cattle that have carried ticks from ealfhood are not suscepti ble to the germ, but mature cattle from uninfested territory, when bit ten by the tick, die at a high rate about 50 per cent. 3. When improved cattle from the North or West are brought into this territory, they must bd brought be fore they are a year old, or else inoc ulated against fever, lly this inoc ulation the death rate from fever is almost abolished. 4. Hut inoculation is troublesome and expensive, and the cattlo ship ped North must be freed of ticks, which is not now practicable, conse quently when cattlo from tho tick infested areas of the South are ship ped to market they must be kept in separate pens and quarantined lest they infect tho others. They must have separate cars, separate unload ing chutes, and separate pens, and the cars must be disinfected. In the tick season, moreover, all Southern cattle shipped North must be slaugh tered immediately regardless of price offered or the condition of the animal. 5. Thus it is seen that the fever tick is an obstacle to good prices for Southern cattle in the great markets, and an obstacle to improved cattle in the South, where tho lack of im proved breeds will also alTect the dairying industry. C. In the free-range territory w here crops are fenced in and the cattle allowed to run at large it is practically impossible to destroy the tick, so that work in this direction finds an inviting field only in the no fence areas. Miss Emily N. Cook of New York died recently and left $5,000 to her heirs, among whom is a Scotch collie. By the terms of her will tins dog is to have f 15 a month while it lives. Once s robber attacked her borne and the dog saved her and her prop erty by attacking the robber, thus winning everlasting affection for himself. For stomach troubles, biliousness ad constipation try Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Many remarkablt cures have been effected by them. Price 25 cents. Samples free. For sale by English Drog Company. Curious Infernal Machine. Atlanta has had a genuine infer nal machine, it was sent to the fam ily of an actress, Miss McCarthy, and nearly killed her mother. The machine was an ingenious contrivance. It was made of oak, ami was a box IS inches long, (i inches wide and i inches deep. It opened with a key, and inside were a der ringer pistol and a cake of dynamite, each at opposite ends of the box. Attached to the trigger of the revol ver was a wire, and this wire was also attached to the end of the key. When the key turned, the revolver was discharged, and the bullet struck the cake of dynamite at the other end of the box, causing the explo sion. The McCarthys live over a store, which Mrs. McCarthy conducts and owns. Tho family consists of Mrs. McCarthy, Miss Kate McCarthy, 22 years old; John McCarthy, 15 years old, and Joe and Mary McCarthy, twins, 12 years old. John McCarthy and Miss Kate, having gone to the theatre, Mrs. McCarthy and the twins wore alone. It was at 9:30 that a messenger boy left the machine. Mrs. McCar thy took it upstairs, and attracted by the novelty of the apiearance, turned tho key. Then tho explosion came. Mrs. McCarthy was hurled across the hall and into a rear room. Re covering herself, she fled from the house, leaving a trail of blood, and started out through the yard. Doing so, the sparks which had clung to her clothing set it afire. She hurried into the residence of Mrs. L. V. Johnson, w here the flames wore ex tinguished, and she was taken care of until she could be moved to a san itarium at 30 Crew street. The wreck left by tho explosion was terrific. Every room in the house was partially demolished. Sec tions of the floor were torn up, and the hallway was wrecked. The fur niture was shattered, the stairway wrenched loose, doors were torn down, and bric-a-brac was strewn from one room to another. The forco of the explosion was felt all over the neighborhood. That Mrs. McCarthy was not killed, is considered miraculous, as was also the escape of the twins, who were asleep in an adjoining room. Few people knew that on the open ing day at the Jamestown Exposi tion there was a very large force of detectives and policemen on guard everywhere looking for a desperate Chicago anarchist, who was sup posed to have left that city for the exposition to kill the President The grounds were thoroughly searched everywhere and a rigid inspection of every single person was made at every doorway. W'e have not yet secured the one thousand country hams that wo want. If you have any well cured ones we cau oiler you a fancy price for them. Doster Grocery Co. What is believed to bo the most crowded house in all New York has been found by the police. There were 200 people in tho building, they had four beds to the room, usu ally, and nearly always five persons slept in one bed. The peoplo were foreigners. In North Carolina there are 42 people to a square mile. A little Kodol taken occasionally, especially alter eating, will relieve sour stomach, belching and heartburn. J. 1). Joues, Newport, Teoo., writes: '1 am sure three one dollar bottles of your Kodol positively cured me of dys pepsia, and I can recommend it as that was three years ago and I haven't been bothered since with it." Kodol is guaranteed to give relief. Sold by S. J. Welsh and C. N. Simpson, Jr. We want to buy all kinds of country produce. Uood prices aro always paid and there is always a better demand than supply. Far mers who can make anything at all in this line to sell, should see the loster Grocery Company. X W 511 I Wc have opened a New Music Store in the Shute building on East Franklin Street, where you will find a full and complete line of the latest improved up-to-date Tianos and Organs at reasonable prices and terms to suit purchaser. We will repair and tune your piano, organ or other musical instrument and guar antee satisfaction. Fay us a visit. Simms & Harmon, I Jilonroc, - North Carolina.
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 14, 1907, edition 1
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