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THE MONROE JOTJRi l.l-rirv mchoj So VOLUME XIV. NO. 47 MONROE. N.C, TUESDAY MARCH 10. 1908. One Dollar a Year Of. iS V 1I2T3 14 5 6 7 w ) 22 25 24 25 26l7Bg 291301511 MM IRELAND i'-otir Crazy Men Escape. Four male patients confined iu the ward for the violent insane at the Morgantau hospital, made their escape between H ami i o'clock Mouday. The escape was ctl'ected by breaking the irou guards of one of the windows in the ward, pre sumably by maiu strength, us the patient had no a ocean to imple ments of any kiud. A posse of men was immediately organised by the superintendent, Dr. McCanibell, and sent out in search of the men, but thus far has not succeeded in apprehending them. The men are regarded as danger ously insane, and for that reason warnings have been sent out by Dr. McCanibell through the sur rounding oonntry. The men who escaped are Bynuin Green, Watanga county; Wiley Slu der, Buncombe county; Thomas M. Collet, Davie county; and Frauds 1 lanes, Forsyth county. We are among the people who want plenty of first clas country nroduce every dav and we must I- 1...!.. MUJU1. 1 .., liul-n! Buyyij men iitmh, .1 jwii ..,,. anything to sell that is raised on the farm, we will pay you more spot cash for it thau you can get elsewhere. Come right over to our store ust north of the railroad, and see what we can do for you. Kendall Dry Goods aud Grocery Company. Aged Woman Robbed by Masked Men. News cornea that a few nights ago Mis. Dillie Hughes, a very old, feeble wouiau living alone altout a mile aud a half from Cid, in David sou county, was robbed of f.Vl by two masked men, who went to her home, entered aud forcibly took the money from her. She had it in a wallet, strapped to her body, be neath her skirt The scoundrels cut the wallet from its fastenings mid run. The outrage occurred uliout H o'clock, as the old woman was going from ker kitchen, which is some distance away from the house, to her bedroom. One of the robbers slipped np behind her, and putting bis bands across her mouth, prevented her from making ontcry, while the oth er thief searched for the wallet con taining all the money the woman had. She was terribly frightened, being alone, and hastened to a neighbor's, where she spent the uight. Her lips were bruised by the rutliauly bauds that gagged her. Chickens, eggs, good butter; hams, shoulders, dried fruit, vege tables, and in fact everything made on the farm that is good to eat, we will give good prices for. Kendall Company, North Monroe. You cau get your Seed Potutoes, Cane Seed, Onion Bets, Garden Seed, etc, from Bass & Co. To Put Anarchists Out of the Coun tryOn Killed In Chicago. The national government is tak ing steps to identify anarchists, and if when found one proves to be a foreigner", be will be sent back whence he came. Un the heels or this order, the chief or police of Chicago was attacked in his own house, but succeeded iu killing the anarchist Chief of Police Sliippy. 1 his son and his driver were all wounded. The desperate struggle, in which Mrs. Shinny and her daughter, Georgiotta, joined, was terminated when the chief drew his own revolver and killed his as sailant Attempts to identify the dead man have thus far resulted in failure. The attack is believed to have been the result of a conspiracy to barm officials who have been active in suppressing manifestations of anarchy iu this community. Other city officials are said to have been threatened aud a police spy wno recognized the corpse of the man who invaded Shippy's home as that of a person who regularly attended anarchists' meetings, asserted that the man was chosen by lot to do away with not the chief of police hut Mayor . K. Busse as well. Tbe ramifications of the plot are said to extend to other cities and to be closely connected with the killing of Kev. Leo lleiurichs, a Roman Catholic priest, who was shot down at tbe altar of his church in Deuver. Harry Sliippy was shot through the breast twice and was probably fatally wounded, liis ftilher was stabbed iu the arm, while Foley re ceived a bullet in the wrist. Mrs. Sliippy was kicked by the desper ado, but her hurts are slight Following the attack, squads of police were sent into the Italian and Ghetto quarters of tbe city. Places kuowu as headquarters of secret societies suspected of auar chistic teudenoies were raided and a score or more arrests were made. Charges Against Judge Adams De nied. It has been charged in Congress that two of the three judges form ing a court for the CbocUwChiek- asaw Indians some years ago, were brilied. Judge Spencer B. Adams of Greensboro, now State chairman S l)A....l.liMM .... -t waa Aliiuf axxxxxxnxxxxzxmix has been connecter witn ineauegeu Just at This Time We will make it to your ad vantage to replenish your stock of Winter Footwear. It is well understood that we are the leaders in Monroe in the matter of Shoes. From our hie stock we yet have some choice winter Roods that we will dispose of at re duced nrices. We have al ready begun to lay in our big stock of Spring Wear and need the room. Hence we will make it to your advantage to buy now. There are yet many weeks when heavy footwear will be nec AflRnrv. and we can sunnlv your needs in any line of goods. Anv piece of heavy goods at cut price. We are enlarging our line of Dry Goods and Notions and respectfully direct tne atten tion of the ladies to the lines. ItlcRae Mercantile Go. Law Building. THE PSOBULT OF PI.E5M. Doctor EipUlna Why Stmt Are Fat aad Soma Ar Tain. Why does one permit grow fat and another thin on the same amount of foudt This is a question often asked, aud it was partly an swered yesterday after uooo by Dr. Henry t . Sherman. "Take two lura of average weight, one tall and thin and the1 other abort and stout, aud Md them the average man's ration," aaid Dr. Sherman, "and the thia man will get thinner and the fat man fatter. The reason is that the food requirement is determined not by the weight but by the amouut of active tissue a man poMawsm. Now, the larger the weight of fat the smaller tbe amouut of active tissue. The thin mau, weighing the same as the stout man, has a large amount of active tissue, and needs a larger amount of food, even to keep him as fat as he is. The food requirement also depend more on the amount of surface than ou the weight, and the fat man has rela lively lens surface than the thin one. 1 he latter ne gets tne more nearly he approaches the dimen sions of a sphere, aud the sphere has the smallest surface kuown to geometry." Another reason why large eaters continue to keep thin, according to Dr. Sherman, is that they are sub ject to digestive disturbances which take away the appetite temporari ly, and this abstinence counterbal ances eicess at other times. "The majority of people," aaid tbe lecturer, "eat more than they require, aud offset the excess by en forced abstinence during periods of digestive disturbance." A reasonable degree of regulari ty as to meal times is more impor tant, Dr. Sherman thiuks, than the selection of food. "When the stomach has been ed ucated," he said, "to deal with food at a particular time, it can do it better at that time thau at any other." Local Items o! Interest INVINCIBLE FLOUR j Baker's Choice Floor These Roods are made from the finest PURE SOFT WIN TER WHEAT. It is a perfect combination of flavor, color, lightness and purity. Every package is paranteed to give satisfaction, and the purchase price will be refunded if it proves otherwise. Be sure to feet the genuine, bearing our name. Our Flour Not Bleached. Our flour may not be as white as some other brands; Why? Because we do not use the bleaching process; therefore we have no poisonous passes, no foreign odors, but a pure, clean, fresh ana sweet-flavored flour. CLEANLINESS MEANS HEALTH. w W" 1 1 . aT 1 1 h nenaerson Kouer mini M Monroe, N. C fcfaixmxxxmmmxxiimmxxxxTxxHmmmxixii b Dru Ctt- bribery. Tbe matter had to do with the paymeut of some lawyers for tbe Indians in settling land claims. They got 1:30,000 In foes, and it is charged that two of the Judges got some of this amount. Jndge Adams denies tne cuarge, and his friends are indignant. They claim that political enemies want to Injure the ex-judge, lie had re q nested a full investigation of the whole matter. ., Tbisie what Hon. Jake Mimre, State warden of beorgia, aaye o! KoUol for Dyepepeia: "E. C. DeWitt A Co.. Chicago, 111. Dear Sirs: I have suf Itred mor than twenty years from indigestion. About eighteeu months ( o 1 bid grown so much worse tbat I could not direst a cruet of corn bread sdJ could not ratlin anything on my etomacb. I loal t) pound; to fact I made on mv mind tbat 1 could not live but a abort time when s friend o( mint recommended Kodol. I contented to try it to please him and 1 waa better io on day. I now weigh mora than 1 er did io my life sod am la better see I lb lhio for many years. Kodol did it. I keep a bottle comtaatly, and writs this booing tbat humanity sjay ha benefitted. Voora very truly, Jake L!-. noore, nuinn, nug, i, iyu ' Mr. J. T Cot has bought Mr. E. II. Itivens' residence in tbe eastern part of kwn. Mr. Hivens will build a new home next to Mc. J K. Henderson's I residence. Mr. J. B. Yarborough. formerly of the Neweutt section of l-ancaster county, has moved to ('laiktt. (la.. where he will make bis future borne and engage io farming Mr. It. A. C. Davis left Waihaw for Tunica. Miss., where he expects to make his home. Mr. Kvis has a great many friends in his commu nity who regret to see him go away. Ijttle Irma Glenn, the twenty-monlha-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. I.1L Reaves of Waxhaw.died Monday of last week. Death was due to a com plication of pneumonia and croup. Oa Tuesday tbe remains were taken to Johnson county for interment and the burial took place at the old fam ily burying ground. The last Union county soldier kill ed in tbe Civil war was Mr. Samuel B. Hart, a member of Cotnuany I, 48th North Carolina troops. Mr Hart was killed at harmville, a , April o, in a. lie was a orouier oi uiei late Mr. Thomas Hart of Monroe and was an uncle of our townsman, Mr. i. U. Hart. A bulletin just issued by tbe North Carolina Department of Agriculture shows that of 50,000 miles of public Mads io North Carolina, only 1,1'oU are improved, of which 3'J9 are ma cadamized (Mecklenburg showing 111), 122 graveled and 438 of sand and clay mixture. This shows 2 . per cent of roads improved, which is one mile to every 1,500 persons. The Webster Literary Society of Waxhaw Institute will give a public debate Friday night, February 13th. Query, "Resolved, that the Indian has received worse treatment at tne hands of the white men than has the negro. Atlirmative: James liurgess, Uwrence King, Leroy Gregory; neg ative: (tilmore I.ynn Nisbet, F.ugene Secrest, Furman Lock. Everybody is cordially invited. While they were driving up the depot hill at Wadesboro one day last week, the horse which Mrs. II. II. UcUndon and Miss Robertson of Charlotte were driving backed off a steep embankment into a ditch. Both of the ladies were thrown out and the horse and buggy rolled into Die ditch with them. Singularly, Ibt? were not much hurt, but badly shocked. Th rwinln nf the various school districts in the county are requested to meet st their respective school houses in each district on Friday, the um day oi Marco, ai o p. m., tor the nurnoaa of eWtinff a district ex ecutive committee and for the fur ther purpose of electing a member of the county executive committee. The county committee will meet at the court house io Monroe at 1 o'clock p. m., Monday, the lGth. By order of the chairman. Mrs. Adeline Threatt, widow of the late Joseph Threatt, a most highly respected lady of Chesterfield coun ty, died on February 27th, having been stricken on the day Derore witn paralysis. She was 72 years old, a consistent member of the Baptist church, and a good woman. Her first husband was a r underburk, and she is survived by three sons and two daughters, Messrs. J. B. Funderbtirk, Columbus and Butler I breatt, Mrs. Phillips and Mrs. Presson, all of whom reside in Chesterfield county except Mrs. Phillips, whose hormvis at Matthews, N. C. the burial was at the oil family graveyard near Dudley. Mrs. Martha Ana Con der, wife of Mr. M. E. Conderof Vance town ship, died last Tuesday. Mrs. Con dor was about 50 yean old. She leaves a husband and four children, Messrs. John and Henry Oonder, who live out West, and Mrs. John Uurley and Mrs. Richard Honeycutt, both of Monroe. Mrs. Conder was a daugh tcr of the late Mr. Thomas Hem by snd sister of Mr. D. J.llemby and of the late Mr. W. 8. Hemby, who died a few weeks ago in Memphis, Tenn Mrs. Conder was a good woman, a consistent member of the Methodist church, and she will be greatly missed in the community in which she lived. The Messenger and Intelligencer savi that the meanest man in North Carolina is at large somewhere in AnDville township, and it will be a great pity if he is not raptured and dealt with io a manner fitting the crime of which he is guilty. One night last week the man alluded to above went to the stable of Mr. M. T. Ballard, Sr., who lives near Anson ville, and bridled one of his bones and then led the animal a distance of about 200 yards to the woods, where he proceeded to use his knife upon it. The animal was cut severe ly back of tbe left fore-shoulder and slightly in one or two other plsces on its body. It is thought that it was the iute ntion of the miscreant to kill the horse, but that it broke loose flora him before be accomplished his purpose. Of Mr. John Crowell, a notice of whose death appeared hist week, the Weddingtoo correspondent of the Waihaw Enterprise says: "Mr. John Crowell of Weddington was born September the 12lh, 1801, and died at his home in this county, of pneu monia, February 21th, l'J08. He leaves a wife and three sons. He is also survived by three brothers. These are Mr. James Crowell of Mon roe and Messrs. Samuel and Lester Crowell of Indian Trail. He also leaves one sister, Mrs. T. C. Morris of Indian Trail. Mr. Crowell was a man of splendid business attain ments, of a high order of intelligence and of unspotted reputation. His deeds of beneficence were quietly done but reached all whom he knew to be in need. All his acquaintances were his friends. He was an open, honorable, clean, candid, gentle, manly man. His remains were buried at V'eddington church in the pres ence of a vast concourse of people who gathered to attest the universal esteem in which he was held." Mention was made last week of the death of Mrs. L. R. Stanley, which occurred at her home in lanes Creek township on February 28th. She was a daughter of Mr. C. R. Smith of Uues Creek township. Nie was about 51 years old. Mrs. Stanley was twice married. Her first mar riage was to Mr. John Rone, who died about twenty-three years ago. Her second marriage was to the late Mr. Jas. Stanley. Mrs. Stanley leaves seven children. They are Messrs. Rutiert, Raymond and Clayton Rorie and EuHlace and Carl Stanley and Mrs. Raymond Redfearn of Monroe and Miss Nealie Rorie. Messrs. Geo. C, Frank, Preston and Luther Smith are brothers and Mesdames Emma I-eonard. Ann Whitley, T. R. Threatt, Charles Harrell and Newton Ie are sisters of the deceased. Mrs. Stan ley was one of the best of womeo. She was an excellent nurse, and throughout her community she was called upon when there was sickness to any family, r uneral services were conducted at Philadelphia Baptist church, where Mrs. Stanley had long held her membership. Hcv. J. U. Gulledge conducted the services. A millionaire Who Has Ideasot Hon esty and Justice a Curiosity. Chli-ago Juurnil. It is almost pitiful to witness the expedients resorted to by geuerous millionaires to discover some new and worthy object for their bounty. The beaten track of beneficiaries colleges, hospitals, orphangea, mu seums aud tbe like, is worn smooth. Perbsps, if all givers of surplus wealth held the same views as a rich Chicago manufacturer, we would soon hear less of "benefac tions" and more of justice .and equity. This manufacturer goes so tar as to say tbat iiersonal fortunes should not exceed $5,000,000 as their maximum limit hveu more radical is his assertion that most surplus wealth has been wrung from tbe poor, and that "it is equiv alent to a second robbery for soci ety to accept the alms of the rich for any purpose other than tbat of directly improving thecoudition of tbe poor or reclaiming tbe criuit nal.' The Lucky Quarter Is the oue you pay out for a box of Dr. King's New Life nils. They bring yon tbe health that's more precious than jewels. Try them for headache, biliousness, constipation and malaria. If they disappoint you the price will be cheerfully re tuuded at Euglish Drug (Vs. Atlanta is fully equipped to do an enormous mail order business with outsiders dt siring small packages of spring weather. Get DeWitt's CarbolUeU Witch Hi lei Stive it ia healing, toothing and cooling, It ia good (or piles. Sold by Englitb Drug Company. Rapid changes of temperature are hard on the toughest constitution. The conductor passing from the heated Inside of a trolley car to the icy temperature of the platform the canvasser spending an hour or so in a heated building and then walking against a biting wind know the difficulty of avoiding cold. Scott's EmuUfon itrengthens the body to that it can better withstand the danger of cold from changes of temperature. It wul kelp you to avoid taking cold. ALL DRUOQlSTSl SOo. AND tl.OO. We Stall Not Pass This Way Again WhM 01 It? Wu IT is worth while, thent Is it worth while to spend a life ia multiplying comforts aod luxu ries After all, to have the beat of food and tbe beat of drink and the finest abetter ia to put oneself on the level of a well stalled ox or horse. To accumulate money and proMrty, to heap them up aod guard them aud keep them, ia to degrade tbe intelligence to the level of the bee or the aut. All those things are good; some of them are necessary, rood and drink and proper shelter, work aud gain and increase of facilities, are tbe by products of liviug; they are neces sary; but who mistakes uietu lor tbe lire itself must pay for bis error as if it were a sin. Aud tbe life itselfT Let us quote from a book we may all be readiug iu a mouth or a year from now: Uf a sudden it came to him that life itself was beautiful. Not effort ouly, not work nor play, success, achievement, wealth or fame or honor, but life itself. To live was good. The hours, the golden hours. were not just empty spaces between two clock beats, to fill with acta. They were themselves a glory. To sit and let the crystal flood of time pass over him was purest pleasure. Not but life only, but all life was good. To feel tbe great and glori ous stream of tbe world's life paas on, to be one with Nature aud hear her sing. Y or she goes forward to music. It is not always a battle chaut she moves to. Ia her song there are all things. The shout of triumph and the cry of those who fall are there; but there are also other notes the ripple of the river on its stones, the murmur of tbe trees, the rhythm of the sap tbat rises in them, the thnnder in the bills. It is the song of infinite harmonies." Tbis is what conies upon us, with a misgiving that is almost a terror, when we pause to think tbat we stand here iu tbe midst of mortal life and tbat we shall not pass this way agaiu. Life is infiuitely beau tiful, and we, if we fail to bud it so, must search tor tne delect, not around us nor outside of us, but in ourselves. And if in our chase for gross things aud material thiugs we have outrun the power to live, to perceive, to enjoy, we must pay tbe penalty, for Nature is inexor able; we pay for our mistakes to the last jot just as we pay for our sins. Rut after all, the outlook is not so black. Mistakes are just the steps of the stairs up which we are climbing. Every time we recog nize one for what it is, and call it step instead of a goal, we niovs on up. And this generatlos is just in tbe act of lifting one foot oft tbe step of materialism to a step tbat shall be better worth while. We shall stand next on a plane where we shall realize, as the child who has been burned realizes what fire is, that life is not all in the body, but that life is happiness. And happiuess is not bread aud meat, nor yet is it sport, nor gayety, nor excitement, nor rivalry, nor prom inence. Happiness is growth and enlargement. He is happy who sees more, who understands more, who eflects more this year than last. He if Vappy who finds his perceptions sharpening, his powers increasing, bis sympathies widen ing, his helpfulness broadening. He is happiest who includes most life in himself and radiates most life aronud him. And how shall he face death who has grown to full stature in tbis life! If, ou tbis chance journey we call mortal life, be has not ouly found goodness and security and happiness, but has himself had power to create more goodness and more security and more happiness, shall be believe for an instant that all this can be blotted out of exist ence by a mere shadow called deathl "Dying is hard; but death ia easy," wrote a hero, as he bled to death alone at midnight by a flickering camp light Tbe change, like all strange and new experi ences, has its difficulties and pains, and then comes the new adventure, strange and thrilling and surely gladder and greater than the expe rience we have jnst exhausted and cast behind us. Death is nothing but lust the step above us. And there is but one more word to tbis little sermon about what is worth while: Men who are willful and stupid and unworthy of tbem selves often enough lay all this aside when they begin to think for their children. There is a truth as indubitable as that fire burns, and it ia this: As we choose today, so shall our children inherit. What man is willing to leave his child nothing better than mere ma terial gainst What man dons not secretly hope that his child will have real hanpineatrt What man would not, if he could, give his child some part of tbe joy of the artist's perception, some of tbe peace of the sage, some of the strength of the cominerert Well, and the moral of this Is, as Alice's duchess osed to say i As we choose today, not only so shall our life be in the future, bat so shall tbe life be which oar children inherit And so tbe main business of life is to pause long enough to look around ns and reflect and choose wisely what is worth while. DeWitt's Utile Early Risers, small, aa(, snra little pills. Sold by Eagliao Drag Company. Absolutely Pure The only baking powder made with Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Ho Alum, No Lime Phosphate Stole the Orphanage Food Supply. Islington llupatch. Our Tbomasville correspondent writes the Dispatch tbat between 10 and l'J o'clock Saturday aigbt, an abomiuiible crime was commit ted at tbe Tbomasville orphanage. TO THINK AWAY DISEASE. Washington nan Believes We Ought to Live a Century. RtlitmoiT Sua. "The human body is full of elec tricity and the brain is the switch board," declared Mr. Andrew Mc- Some scoundrel, or perhaps more Conuell of Washington in a lecture : than oue, entered tbe front door of at tbe home of Mrs. Kandolph Uw-, the dining room and went iuto the ens, 1K10 North Calvert street jcook room, where tbe bread aud "My assertion," be continued, : other eatables are kept, and stole a "is tbat any man who is not crazy ', large quantity of the food that bad can cure himself of any disease, j tieeu prepared for tbe orphans for and there is no reason why a man 'Sunday. cannot live to see a hundred years. Tbe ladies in charge of the din- "I find that by generating more ing room heard the robbers iu tbe electricity in the body more vital force is produced. Old age is sim ply a decrease of vital forces, but building aud quickly gave the alarm, but not till the robbers had escaped. Diligent search bas been the old can learn to generate more , made to tiud the criminals, but electricity. I have found this to be true of an old man who was suffer ing from paralysis. "Only two elements have baffled medicine the hardening of the arteries and the hardening of the bones. These I am confident can be overcome. "Mental activity helps to circu late tbe electricity through the body aud increases tbe circula tion." "Men like John D. Rockefeller should give you every encourage ment, shouldn't theyt" asked an auditor. "Yes," he said, "and they do. I have already enlisted several mil lionaires in my ranks." ' Then would you bold tbat Mr. Rockefeller and his associates in broken health can work twelve hoars, eat a i.Vceut meal in two minutes, and then gallop after a moving carl" "Not quite that strong," he said, smilingly. "But they can tax their brains as much as they like as long as they give a corresponding amount of time to the other or gans." " W bat is this wonderful action which you ascribe to the mental organsf" he was asked. "Thinking is the process of cir culating more electricity through the brain, and if you can give tbat an extra impetus you are on the right road to longevity." Mr. McConnell is a young man. lie said he was affected with ner vous prostration and a weak heart for ten years. He pondered over the subject after he had failed to get relief from physicians, and finally cured himself. Unequaled as a Cure for Croup. "Heiides being ao encellent remedy for colds and throat trouble!, Cham berlain'a Cough Remedy ia unequaled aa a cure for croup," ttyt Harry Wil son of Waynetowo, lud. When given at loon aa the croupy cough appeara, thia remedy will prevent the attack. It is uaed aucceatlully in many thou- anda of hornet. For sale by Dr. S. J. Welab. Golf would undoubtedly become more popular if the game could be revised ao as to include a slide to second base. Best Healer In the World Rev. F. Starbird of East Raymond, Me., says: "I have nsed iiuck Ion's Arnica Salve for several years, on my old army wound and other ob stinate sores, and find it the best healer in the world. I use it, too, with great success in my veterinary business." Price 25c. at English Drug Company's. without result If they are caught says our correspondent .io better punishment could he inflicted than to tie them down and choke them to death ou hot bread. Fortunately enough bread was left to feed the rbildreu over Sun day. No Use to Die. "I have found out tbat there is no use to die of lung trouble as long as you cau get Dr. King's New Dis covery," says Mrs. J. P. White of Kusbboro, i'a. "I would not be alive today only for that wouderful medicine. It loosens np a cough quicker than anything else, and cures lung disease even after the case is pronounced hopeless." This most reliable remedy for coughs and colds, la grippe, asthma, bron chitis and hoarseness, is sold ander guarantee at Knglish Drug Co.'s. ,10c. and (1. Trial bottle free. If he wasn't such a high temperd individual we would now dare the weather man to bring oo his old March lion. Plant Wood's Garden Seeds FOt SUPERIOR vcoc TABLES FLOWERS. Oar bwlneaa, both la Garden and Fana Beeda, ia MS of the Urfeat ia thia eoootry, a mult due to the fact that L Quality is always our JJ Q first consideration. Q Wt ass headquarters for One sad Clever Seode, Sd Oata, Sj Potatee, Cow Pms, Seta Beane aad otbsr Fan Seeds. Wood's Doeorlpttve Catalog- kike koMaaS mi arMUMlof moS aa w m mm n an vara fl eunriiii aa ap-ie mm w n It anguine aatkarttr a all raa l W Turn anna, bauKvrc ll4 II II WMMtqaa. WrlMhxM. 1 1 MT.V.VC:3IS01S,l n tamo, u Jl Mr. Julia Kilia of Vining, la., aaya: I have been aelline DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills fur about a year and they give better satisfaction than any pill 1 ever sold. There are a dozen people here who have used them aud they give perfect satisfaction in every case. I have used themselves myselt with fine results." Sold by English Drug Company. Why shouldn't the financial out look show a decided improvement; hasn't the season arrived for the hen to get back to business? Thousands Perish. Thousauds perinh every year from consumption resulting fiom a cold. Foley's Honey aud Tar cures the most obstinate rackiiu coughs and eipela the cold from your system and pre vents consumption and pneumonia. It has cured many cases of incipient con sumption. Loop - the loop performers will doubtless shun the dangers of socie ty now that one of their number has been killed while pouring tea. A Life at Stake. Your life may be at stake when you ootice auy sign of kidney or bladder trouble, as Bright 's disease and diabe tes start with a slight irregularity that could be quickly cured by Foley's Kid ney Keuiedy. Commence taking it at the flint aiKO of danger. Engliah Drug Company. The Senate committee was given to understand by Mrs. Catt that when women vote there will be fewer tick ets scratched. A Card. Tbit ia to certify that all druggists are authorized to refund your money if Foley's Hooey and Tar fails to curs your cough or cold. It atop tbs cough, heala tbe lunga and preveots serioua reaulta from a Cold. Curea la grippe coughs and prevents pneumonia aud consumption. Contains no opiates. The genuine ia in a yellow package. Kefute substitutee. English Drug Co. Newspaper reporters seem to have fully recovered from the last sad rites" but the contagious "made good his escape" is still raging. Oood Liniment Yon will hunt a good wbila before yon find a preparation that is equal to Chamberlain's Liniment sa a core for muscular snd rheumatic pains, (or tbs cars of spraioi and soreness ef the muscles. It is equally valaabls lor lama back aod all deep seated m oscu lar paint. 15 snd jo cent sizes tor sale by Dr. S. j. Welsh. Don't waste time piddling about the streets with your country pro duce. Bring it right on over the railroad to as and we will give jroa fancy prices for it Kendall Company, North Monroe. ULt,"- - -. r-c Ui- i C . -UJ HA Btaaaaaaaaai-i - " - " 1 1 ILa"- J"' lhl ' " ' asassiah-assSaaia SltMipi yass4eewsagp j,,, Taaa1,aaaaWaaaSJaiasgatWW Jlj)i tys'SMJ i"iaaiaiaiaaaaaaej y.innsa i ei-gait i i , i . msm,J - - , - -
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 10, 1908, edition 1
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