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THE MONROE JOURNAL. VOLUME XVI. NO. 8. MONROE, N.C., TUESDAY APRIL 6 1909. One Dollar a Year. mniiititiiiiiiintUHiiiiuMiiMiiiiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiitttimiiuiiiitiuMuiiMiiiauitiiiiiiiiii INVINCIBLE. I 1 There's power wrapped up in that word. 1 And the strength, energy, and health that come from wholesome food are all wrap-1 ped up for your use in every bag of our -INVINCIBLE FLOUR." I The pure, health giving, wholesome, gold- z en-tinted Flour made at your own door. I Henderson Roller Mills. I t 5 iiiuiitwjuiimiiumiHMitiiiMitvminiiuiiiHimiiiiiiiMiMiaiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiKHiNiu "Don't Tell Mother." Said Little Boy Who Wu Killed by Auto. Another little boy tu kuorkeil down, run over anil killed by an antoinobile jestenlay, says the New York World. The aweiJent hap pened in Fifty-first Mtreet, near Tenth avenne, iu front of the Church of the Sacred Heart As in the rune of young Ingvanl Trim ble, this boy aU was pl:i)ini; lu the afreet. The automobile raine whizzing alone operated, mi the police charge, in a reckless tuau uer. The little rietiui wait Tommy Tully, Jr., aeveu years old, the pride of bin family and a remark ably bright pupil in the parochial: achool of the Church of the Sacred j Heart Tommy came home from arbool, as usual, at '! o'clock. He aaid to bin mother: "I'll take little mxtcr out and leave her with Borne gii lit, while I plav marbles." The little sister was Mary, five yearn old. "Tommy,'' warned hi mother, "be very careful of the automobile and tie wire you keep an eye on Mary." Tommy promised and when he had left little Mary ante with older girl, he joined Kichard ltee and Ueorge Dooley, boy a of bin owu age, iu game of marble. It waa then about :t:4." o'clock. The game had not progri'sw d fur when Tommy' Miooter alipcd out of hi finger and rolled arrow the street lie rau after it. He did not see an automobile rushing to ward him. Neither did hi play mate. They looked op only wheu they heard a acream and saw Tom my proetrale on the street, a gray touring automobile having just crouched over his little laxly. The automobile was driven by Harry K. Sutherland, twenty eight years old, of So. luS Went Eighty third street, demonstrator fear the Knox Automobile Company.Tuth- erlaod was taking the ear to t ho i rairview apartments ou Broadway, The Best Fertilizers for Corn That the yield of corn from the average firm can l greatly In creased by intelligent and lilieral fertiliration haa been repeatedly demonstrated. Large crop of good coin result from preparing the land well, usint; the right kind and quantity of fertilizer, good aeed ana proper cultivation. Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers will rreatly Increase your yield per acre " of corn or any other crop. In some cases remarkable result have been obtained. Mr. C W. Caruthera of Sumpter County, Ha, writes: "Word cannot express the value of your fertiliser. It i really o far ahead ol other companies' goods, that it would not pay anyone to use other brand, were they given free and put in the field. I can prove what I tay to be a fact. I made a test on five acres. I used on one half the land your fertiliier and on the other hall another company' fertil iser, same grade; the land received the same cultivation every time. torrtt I eutmnt of Ike imimnt ef money I got off eat k kalf mJ f ?t Htx more from Ike land n vkuklused Virgin Ctrolina Ftrtihur than JiJ eT Ike etker kaf. I tot four limes at mutk tarn from Ike Unit wkick I used your fertilizer." Write today to nearest office of the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company for a free copy of the new 1B0 f armers' Year Book or Almanac, full of the mint valuable and unprejudiced Information for planters and farmers; or ask your fertilizer dealer for a copy. Virginia-Carolina Kithmond. Vs. Nurlolk.Va. Columbia. S C JMfcMta. Ca. avunati, (is. Menials, Tins (MMiila&mllim) Vt.llCBlk.ui' Get Ready WrSprng men, also w - HcRAE MERCANTILE CO. Phone 45. I between Forty-eighth aud Forty ninth streets, to exhibit its quali. ties to a possible purchaser. Sutherliiud savs the boy tripped, fell and slid bet wee u the frout and rear wheels and that ouly the rear wheel panned over him. No oue could be found who saw exactly how the accident happened, but there waa the machine, aud there was another little victim groaning iu agony on the street liee and Dooley ruched over to their little playmate. Tommy, conscious, looked up at the boy and said faintly: ' JWt ray anything to my moth er until I find out how bad I'm hurt" Then he lapsed into micouscious ucm and did not revive. Sutherland stopped almost iu tttantry and, jumping out, gathered the hoy in his arm aud laid him on the cushions iu the rear of the automobile. Then he drove to Konwvelt Hospital and told what had happened. 1'alrolman Kdward Collins ar rested Sutherland at the hospital and locked him up in the West Forty seventh street statiou ou a charge ot homicide. "I'd Ratiicr Die, Doctor, than have my feet cut ofl," said M. L. Itinghani of Priuceville, III. "lint you'll die from gangrene ( which had eaten away ciht toes) if you don't," said all doctors. In stead, he used lluckleu'a Arnica Salve till wholly cured. Its cures of eczema, fever sores, boils, burns and piles astound the world. LT'C. at English Prug Company's. Which musical instrument is the most moral! An upright piano. Woods Liver Medicine iu liquid form regulates the liver, relieves lick headache, cunatipstiim, stomach, kid ney disotdem and acta a Rcutle lax ative. For dulls, fever and malaria. I Ha tunic etfecta on Hie system felt with the rim! dose. The ti oo dottle contains 1 ij times aa much aa the joc. siae. Sold by all dealera. Chemical Co. SoUl Ofi.it Martian, NX. Charleitoa.S C. Battinon, Mil, Colnnbui,Gs. Montgomery, Ala. SbraveiNjrt, La. Wc are petting in the latest stock of the season's poods we havo ever opened up. The most complete line of Oxfords in the city for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children. Wo lit them all. Summer Pants to suit all the an un-to-date line of - v:at 1 r anlw wis ssrnn o Be JUIUI13 UUU UllilUsCIl O Suits, ladies' Shirt Waists, ready made Skirts and all the new de signs in staple Dress Goods. We invite a careful inspection. Loan and Trust Building. A SCHOLAR'S FV'NERAL. IS MEMORMM. la ''Beside the rnni Ilrier Bufch," .an Maclaren tells the sim ple storv of the life aud death of Oeorge Howe. In the little village, Iruiutochty, the faithful schot.lmaMer discover ed "lad o' pairta," aud made it possible for him to attend the I'ui 'versify of Edinburgh. There the boy excelled, aud bis eueresws be came at once the pride and the glory of his native village. He took the first prizes in Latiu and (ires-It, received bis master's degree, aud ret o rued to his mother a broken man, and soon, in the eipremtive idiom of the Scotch, "slipt awa'." In a chapter entitled, "A Schol ar's Fuueral," the author tells bow the young man waa buried, aud the wouderlul service held over bis remains. The other day, in the towu of Monroe, this chapter waa duplicat ed when David A. Covington was laid to rest with his fathers. His career was unique. At the age of nineteen he graduated at Wake Forest College with the highest record ever unule iu the history of that iustitutiou. From there be weut to the I'niversity of ( bicago, where he so distinguished himself that he bad been recom mended for a permanent place in the faculty of that great university, and suddenly, before be was twen ty-five years old, "be was not, for Uod took him." The blending of the intellectual and the spiritual iu this young man was uothing less thau divine. At the simple exercises held over his remaius, in his native town, his faithful teacher, Dr. W. II. Kvall of the chair of (ireek in Wake For est College, paid a wonderful trib ute to his pupil. Dr. Kovall is one of Clod's own interpreters in this world below, a man who for forty years has illustrated and exempli fied the beauty and the sweetness of a life "hid with Christ in iod." Mis tribute to David Covington was a masterpiece, ocuutmil anil symmetrical as a Greek temple. lie said iu part: "Given a good mime, and the space U-tween birth and death can not atlect the truth of the assertion that the day of death is better than the day of birth. Iu short, a noble character is of priceless worth, and it is Infinitely better for the pos sessor of it to die young than never to have lived. "Of several words meaning good in the tieautiiul language that David Covingtou loved, that one whose primary meaning is beauti ful, is the one oftenest occurring in the Greek New Testament. It is the one the beloved disciple repre sents our Lord as using wheu He speaks of himself as the Good Hliep- herd. The Greek ruled out of the sphere of beauty everything that lacked symmetry. 1 he lnuiU(ul character is the symmetrically de veloped character. Much it appears tome waa the character of David Covington. What were the mate rials out of which this character was builtt I think we shsll find thorn in that sublime inventory of the Apostle l'sul in the epistle to the 1'hillippians: 'Finally, breth ren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are just, w hatso ever things are pure, whatsoev er things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there lie any virtue, and if there tie any praise, think on these things.' "David thought on the thing that are true until there came that inward state of heart that niatle truth credible and that made him know the truth by lMiug true. He would have blushed to think a falsehood. For one year it was my privilege to have him alone under my instruction, and for another year to have him with but one classmate, and never lu a single in stance did he seem to me to yield to the temptation to do his work in a superficial way. My colleague, Dr. Paschal, who had much to do in giving definite shape to his work preparatory to his course in the university, was impressed in like inn liner with this phase of his char acter. "He thought on the things that are honorable until reverence was enshrined iu his soul. "He thought on the things that are Just until there was established in bis conscience a high court of appeals whose decisions were to him authoritative and final. "He thought on the things that are pure until with the vision of the pure in heart he saw God. "lie thought on the things that are lovely until his own soul par took of their nature and became fragrant with their sweetness. "He thought on the things that of good report nntil that grace that belicveth In all things, that bopeth all things, aud that thiuketh no evil, waaenthroued iu bis heart. "If he saw virtue anywhere be thought on it nutil withiu bis own bosom dwelt the spirit of true man lines. "If there were things to praise he thought on them nutil praise of him was on nien'i lips and iu men's hearts. "Nov what began and directed nd carried on in David thia pro cess of thinking that wrought character so faiil Under what eye nd band was the task accomplish ed It Is true that by nature he waa richly endowed. His father," after whom be wu named, was a man of brilliant Intellect, and large hearted. Through his mother, daughter of Dr. W. Q. Simmons, ! we Ihiuk of Lim a beir to intellec- .tual and moral wealth. But how i were the loins of his ruibd girded for the battle which should decide whether these princely powers should he those of a David or of a Kiitd, whether they were to be glu : rified or debased! The answer to this question rau be found alone in the fait that in teftder youth he re : reived Christ the Lord into his .heart. Of the exalted fellowship .then begun faithfulness became the j tuuliul bond. The young believer I sought as bet he could to make wise use of his talents and oppor tunities. We w ho loved aud ad Imirvd him had hoped that a long laud useful career in this world was before hi in. It is now manifest that amid the vaster ministries of i the better world the Master had a larger work for his servant. Had He not said: 'I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and pre pare a place for you, 1 will come again aud receive vou uuto myself. that where I am, there ye may be also! Jl.iy it not lie that the mm istry iiihiu which be has entered has yet to do with thoxe whose lives his life touched while he was with us in the tleeht I seem uiy self to Is? a beneficiary of that min istry. I think of bun as nearer to me in a sense than while he tarried in the earthly house. "The people of Monroe mourn the loss of this brilliant, lovable young man. We were all proud ol uiui and we till loved him. ' At the funeral of the Scotch lad aliove referied to, one of the vil lagers said to his mother: "Mstrget Hon, this is no the day for niouy winds, but there's just ae heart in Driimtochy, aud it'ssair." No riore Kidnapping Stories for nikey N, w York ,.rl.l. "No more kidnapping stories for mine," said fourteen-year-old all cha' Tiglieof No. 104 Broadway, Williamsburg, w heu he w as turned out of the Bedford avenue police statiou yesterday after he had been "sweated"' by Capt. Dooley aud locked in a cell for few minutes alter telling how au attempt was made to kidnap Hyman Saul, the foiii tecn-yeiir old son of Kdwurd II. S uil, who has a hulrdashery at No. 0 Broadway. haul w a in his store when young Tighe entered yesterday morning and told him to keep a lookout for ilymau, as two men were going to kidnap the boy and hold him for ransom. Michael dcrhicd be and a num ber of lioys were playing Monday uight iu the park under the Wil liamsburg bridge at Berry and South Fifth streets. He related how a cab drew up to the curb. Two men got out, the boy added. Oue had a black mustache and wore a high hat, whilo the other was smooth shaven. They caught bold of him, and before be could make uu outcry he was put into the cab. "They thought I was Hyman Saul, and said they would make his father pay a lot of money," Tighe told Suul. "The men look me to a house in New York and put me to bed. When I woke up this morning and told the meu 1 wasn't Ilymau Saul they began to swe.ir. Xhcy brought me over to the Wallabout market, where they let me go." Saul took the boy to the Bedford avenue police station, where Capt. Dooley took young Tighe in baud. The Isjy stuck to hi story, 'Tut him iu a cell aud dou't give him anything to eat for a week," said Capt. Dooley. Young Tigbo was in a cell a few minutes w hen he confessed that he concoct ed the kidnapping story so as to become a hero iu the eyes of bis friends. Automobile Law. Kulrlrfll !'l..Mi. North Carolina's new law for the regulation of automobiles, passed iu the last days of the legislative session aud applicable to all coun ties except New Hanover on and after July 1st, is one of wide inter est. It imposes a license or regis- tuition fax of t" on each owner of an automobile, annual renewals to entail a fie of fl. The county iu which the owner lives is to receive f I of the initial ." payment for the lM?ncfit of the road fund, the Secre tary of State being required to cer tify this proportion of the fuud to the clerk of the county court The set requires that the metal regis tration tag lie carried conspicuous ly on the machine aud the registry number suspended under the rear. Speed is limited to '.'5 miles an hour on rural roads aud 12 miles in incorporated towns except iu business portions, where 8 miles is the limit. There are regulations in passing frightened hoises and lot of macbiuery iu detail for the ap plication of the law. Violators are punished by Hue or imprisonment and the third offense in addition to any olhet punishment forfeits the tegistration certificate aud the right of the oflender to operate motor car in the State. Foley's Houey and Tar is s safe guard against serious resulia from sprinic colds, which inflame tht luogs and develop into pneumonia. Avoid counterfeits br busting upon havinf tht genuine Foley's Honey au4 Tar, which contains no harmful drugs. English Uiug Company. Where can happiness always be found! In the dictionary. If yoa hav backache and urinary troubles von should take Folev's Kid ney Remedy to strengthen aud builsf up tbs kidneys so they will act prop erly, as a seriont kidney trouble msy develop. Lngltib Drug Company JUDGING SEED CORN Day a Big Success riany Farmers Had Samples on Hand and Ei pert Showed Them the Best Lars The Principles of Selcc lion and Breeding Set Forth by Mr. Hudson. Seed corn day in Monroe last Wednesday, held under the aus pices of the Fanners' Co operative Demonstration Work, was a big success. A long table had Wu erected on the west side of tbe square and petitioned off into little bius or boxes. Here the farmers brought and deHisited sample of their liest corn. All the morning was taken up around the table. Messrs. Hudson aud Campbell and l.rooui of the Usui and keneral demonstration work respectively, went through these piles aud pick ed out the liest ears. These ears will lie kept by the farmers as types to be bred to and used for wed for special seed patches. The work was very practical, very in teresting, very useful, and a large gathering of farmers were ou hand all the time. In the afternoon the crowd gathered in the court room and heard addresses. Ou the sub jcet of seed selection aud breeding of plants, Mr. Hudson sjsike in sub stance as follows: l'erhaps there is no one subject related to farming of greater nn portance to the farmer thau the improvement of bis general crops by seed select iou and breeding. The work is not only inteusely in teresting, but it usually results in awakening a keener interest in all phases of crop production, includ ing the preparation of the soil for the seed bod, the cultivation of the growing plant, feitili.ation, and even the marketing of the products. As a rule it costs no more to culti vate a crop from good seed from improved varieties than it does to cultivate a crop that will produce scrub plants. The originators aud growers of it, proved varieties not only have the satisfaction of hav ing made the growing of these crops more profitable by reason ol improved quality and increased yields, thus tMMiciittiug every oue interested iu their production aud consumption, but they usually also reap au additional financial reward from the sale, of the seed or plants of their improved varieties. Higher priced lands call for lar ger yields of belter quality in or d r to make interest on the money invested, furthermore, improved varieties are stronger constitution ally and are not so subject to ef fects of disease. In fact, some va rieties have Is-en produced that are i in mil ne to certain diseases. They simply have the vigor to resist them. The growing aud distribution of good varieties is a far reaching fac tor in our national prospeiity. The breeder, therefore, becomes a pub lic factor as well as making larger crops himself and reaping an in creased revenue resulting from the higher prices which the improved varieties command upou the mar ket. He may thus attain to prom- inenence which otherwise he would never have acquired. Good farm ing helps to make good citizens, aud good citi.ens help in the mak ing of good tanners. Art and Science In Breeding. The work of producing better plants is both an art and a science. The science of breeding includes the work of the investigator iu deter mining by means of experiment the principles relating to the dif ferent problems of breeding. The work of the scientific investigator may not in itself be profitable, yet it may result iu valuable additions to the knowledge of the subject. The work of the investigator is the discovery of the pi iuciples of breed ing. These the practical breeder may not have the training, the time, the opportunity or the meaus to discover. The art of breeding is the work of growers who by long experience with the crop from a commercial standpoint, become ac curate judges of the value of plants for cultivation aud economic pro pagation. Often, also, it embraces the principles discovered by the scientific investigator or breeder. Qualification of the Breeder. Success in the improvement of farm crops depends to a great ex tent on some important qualifica tions of the breeder. He must have a natural liking for his work and the plants which he is improving. The experience gaiued by constant association with crops with which tbe breeder is interested, is the most important factor involved in the productiou of new or improved varieties. It is this experience that makes it possible for the breed er to pick out the best plants al most intuitively, although in many cases it is Impossible to give exact reasons for the selections. This accuiate judgment conies easiest to those naturally adapted to the work. However, it may be acquir ed by any careful farmer who has a real interest in the subject, by tbe study of tbe plants from all possible sources of knowledge. Adaptation to Environment. Tbe adaptation of the varieties of crop to the conditions of the soil and climate where tbey are grown, is one of the most Important fields for tbe breeder. Farmers often suf fer great loss by paying high prices for really good seed which are not adapted to their local conditions. There is s growing demand for the production of varieties suitable to the soil and climate of the region where they are grown. Tie range of adsptibilily of the varieties has never been so determined that ' with known stil and cltu a'le n u ditious growers can intelligently buy seed for planting. However, .with proper study it will I invi sible for the breeder to produce seed Siecially adapted to wrti iilar sections. There is a broad field for usefulness for men traiueil for this kiud of work. What Constitutes Good Plants. Every farmer eiiects to grow plants like those (rum which he obtained seed; but in every field there will be found plants that aie much altove the average in value aud others that are much below the average. It is I y this variatiou that we areeuubled to iiupioveour crom. We can bring the average of plants up to the basts of the best plants by continually selecting seed from only the U-st plants. But let us thoroughly understand what constitutes a good plant. Theie are many details of interest, but briefly a good plant is oue which produces a maximum amount of fruit of the best quality and has these characteristics so well estab lished that they are reproduced iu succeeding generations. It require careful work for several genera tions to get these characters fixed or to cause the plant to at quire the habit of doing ci rtain things iu the way that we want them done. Fixed and Acquired Characters. But theqiialitiesof plantsaredue to two very dill'eivnt and import ant i a uses. These the plant breed ers must Is? able to distinguish if they exect to get the liest results from their work. Excellence may Imj either inherent or extraneous. One plant is good because its an cestor for several generations have heeu gtsxl and therefore it cannot very well lie otherwise. It will in its turn transmit these qualities to its otl'-ipriug. When a habit In comes lixed, or as we might say, when tbe plant becomes educated or trained to do certain things it will always do these things when conditions are such that it ran do them. Of course there w ill be some variations and probably an coca sional reversion to original typo, but these two matters are incousitl erate so far as general result are concerned. Another plant iaagood one because its environment the present season has been favorable enough to make it good, but it ha very little power or prepotency, as the stock breeder say, to repro duce these gooil qualities iu the next generation. A iilaut may stand where thcri was a pile of compost or where some fertill.er spilled aud may really bo a very fine plant, but we would not select it for propagation. For this reason a variety of cotton that the grower advertises as having made two bales per acre, or a variety of corn that has made a hundred bushel per acre, are not necessarily good varieties. If we could buy along with these varieties the climate, soil, fertilizers and gissl cultiva tions which made the big yield, then we would probably get us good results. Therefore, the farmer w ill lie careful in his breeding woik to select such plants as have their de sirable make up due to their liav ug inherited it rather thau thoc w hose good make up is due to good iiindiiigs. It is exceedingly difficult to carry from one genera tion to another excellence which is the sole product of environment unless the environment lie carried along with it. These good quali ties are artificial and are retained only by ceaseless vigilance. If the good variety is neglected it gradu ally returns to its original type. I mm general principles, there fore, the liest variety that a farmer can have is that w hich he grows and properly improves upon his own soil. Furthermore, these home grown plants seem to have some thing more or less human sImiiiI them. It seems that they finally become to understand w hat is ex pected of them. When we become thoroughly acquainted with them we can understand their language and know how to treat them. They seem almost to become members of the family, so that we care for them with that interest that is sure to bring success. How to Proceed. The first thing to lie done in the starting of breeding woik is to fix clearly in our minds some ideal to ward which we are to work. This ideal should uot tie too theoretical, but should le practical enough to work out and should by all means be s correct one. The first step, therefore, is to ascertain what type our soil and climate are liest capa ble of growing successfully. We will need to consult our neighlsirs to find out what varieties have done best for them, and to study variety tests of our experiment sta tions. It msy be necessary to ex periment a little ourselves with a lew of the leading varieties. Hav ing obtained such information as is desired, we will from thisknowl edge form our ideals. Next we select s variety that conform near est to this ideal. We may already have this growing on our farms Having found what we think we wsnt we should stick to it nnless we find thst there is something radically wrong with the variety. To be changing constantly mean failure. Neither do we, a a rnle, gain anything; by crowing or mix ing varieties; in fact we destroy the prepotency of both parents and leave the offspring a mongrel type that may develop into something very undesirable. Abidutelj .1 t mo cruet the active principle, and hsalthfulness.to DAKKJG POWDER Ibjolutely furt .Insures wholesome and deli cious food in every ft Ah Iu growing these good varieties we need to follow the lsst known method of farming, embracing proier preparation of the seed bed, fertilization and cultivation, lo calise these things help to make possible the highest ly pes of plants. Of course, seed for planting should lie kept perfectly dry aud free from insects. Summary.' Probably it will be iutfrcstiug to note as follows some of the uoint 1. By all means have a seed patch aud an isnlated one if possible. 2. Always select in the fields so you will know whether the good qualities are fixed or accidental and so that you may get the tyiie ol stalk desired. .'t. For general purposes perhaps two ears 1st stalk is best, but each seed grower will select according to his ideal. 4. .Stalk should not lie too high or two round and small, but should be flat Mi, strong and stocky. .". Vigorous stalk stand upright and have large, broad, green leaves. i. A medium sued stalk is bet ter thau either extreme. 7. It is best to have ears neither too liiirh nor too low on the stalk. S, Probably the most iririortant I thing about the ear is its weight. but liieio aie several things that help to determine the weight. !i. Mediuuily long ears will yield more corn than mediutnly short ears. 10. The ear should be compact, filling out well over the ends, and with rows close together. 1 1. Color of cob amounts to noth ing except to indicate purity. Breed to ono color. 1'.'. The grains should lie blocky and have large germs, thus indicat ing high feeding value and vigor ous germination. Persoual experience with u t'lbe of Xlanau Pile Kemedy will convince you it is immediate relief for all forms uf piles. Can he applied directly tu ; the attectfj parts, reducing inrUraina tiou, swelling and itching. Guaran teed. Price 50c, Sold by all dealers. ! What .State is round at both ends1 and high iu the middle? Ohio. j PcWitt's Little Early Risers, the' bet known pills and the best pills made, are easy to take and act Keutly and are certain. We sell aud recom mend them. English Drug Co. ! Driving Time 13 here, and when you turnout that does credit to your taste. Our teams are newest and best in town; good horses and easy riding buggies, good harness and ev erything that goes to make up first class Liv ery service. Prompt attention given all orders. Ri7nmV nnd We have for sale a car load ljugyits anu of Rubber and steel Tlred Harness. Buggies and Surries. Also a lot of good one and two horse Wagons, and good Harness. Give us a trial. Telephone 308. FOWLERS LEE. fill YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD! W. H. KERR, Jr., Monroe, N. C. t. . VA for every day home Paderew ski May Play No More. Nr 1 nrk W .,rl,l The magician of the piano, Igoac Jan Paderewski, may never charm again in America, possibly never again any where. He will devote the principal part of life remaining to him to composition if his fears prove true. The reason for this resolve the famous pianist virtually admitted yesterday was "piauo player's cramp," an iusiduous and creeping malady that often follows years of brilliant and nerve weanug execu tion on the keyboard, blighting the career of an artist liefore bis time. When Paderewski, who was ac companied by his wife, sailed on the Kaiser Willieltn der Grouse yes terday, be held bis left band iu the right as if it had been a winged bird that needed the most tender nursing. He seemed apprehensive that his rheumatism might be per manent. "I may never return to Ameri ca," said tbe giant Polish artist, somewhat sadly. "I still have pains shooting pains in my left arm and haud. 1 have them now." t'p Belore the Bar. X. II. Brown, an attorney of Pitta field, Vt, wiites: "We have used Dr. King's New Life Pill for years art! rind them such a good family medicine we wouldn't be without them." For chills, constipation, biliousness or sick headache they work wonders. 2.c. at English Ding Company's. tin what toe does a corn never comet Mistletoe. We often wonder how any person can be persuaded into taking anything but Foley's Honey sod Tar for coughs, colds aud lung trouble. Do not b fooled into accepting "own make" or other substitutes. Tbe genuine eon tains no harmlul drugs and is in a yel low package. English Drug Co. Why is a dead heu better than a live onct Because she will lay wherever you put her. During the spring every ona would he beuehtted by taking Foley's Kidney Kemedy. It furnishes a needed tonic to the kidneys after the extra strain of winter, and it purifies the blood by stimulating the kidneys and causing them to eliminate the impurities from it. Foley's Kidney Remedy impart new life and vigor. Pleasaat to take. English Drug Company. take a drive you want a Three Quarters Still Doing Dollar Duty Here, m If it's a rocker that you want, you could make no mistake in get ting my price before you AM1 elinn wvavs Me.' Liuy, anu men jruu wiik' always wonder how we sell them so cheap. Money saved here will buy something else. ingredient. Trk"J
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 6, 1909, edition 1
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