Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / April 20, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE MONROE JOURNAL. VOLUME XVI. NO. 20. MONROE. N.O, TUESDAY APRIL 1000. One Dollar a Year. ( jij mi in mi '1 7" I'" v NElVi PERFECTION Wick Blue Flame 00 Cook-Stove ensures quick work and cool kitchen. The New Perfection hat a substantial CABINET TOP for warming plates and keep, log food hot after ft is cooked. Also drop shelves on which to set small cooking utensils every convenience, even to bars for holding towels. Made in three sires. Can be had cither with or without Cabinet Top. If not at your dealer's, write our nearest agency. R&Sfo Lamp isHrzm 3r hotly uckcfci sad WT baaaaanM. Gives fnm(ul light Mid Bum far boon with on hUinj. Portiblt, Stic, ronvcnwnt -pat what retry boom needs. U do WHO your eVakr, writs our iuiM sgrocy. STAVDABO On COMPANY f GREAT FORTUNES ARE MADE BY THE DOLLARS THAT WERE DEPOSITED IN THE BANK. Everybody now on earth would have to live five hundred years and work every second of both day and night and count $21 a second, just to count what one dollar will amount to if put in the bantr&t 10 per cent, compound interest for five hundred years. Money grows if you will let it. In our Savings department we will pay 4 per cent, interest a.nd compound the interest, every three months. We! also issue certificates of deposit bearing 4 per cent, interest SAVINGS. LOAN U TRUST COMPANY. n. H. KF.DWINE I Kr.SI1lr.NT H. B. Clark I'Asium: You Want Livery Buggies, Wagons and Harness For Sale. FOWLERS LEE. Spalding Sporting Goods. We have just received the latest cat alogue of Spalding Line of Sporting Goods and want you to call and get one. We also carry t ta ::: TENNIS in stock, and you will find that our prices are the same as you will pay at the factory. n: . t THE W. J. RUDGE CO. Don't Heat the Kitchen All the ncccavary Lsmtly cook ing may be done m well on New Perfection Tick Blue Flunc Oil Cook-Slon u oa the best coal or wood nnp. Br tuine ln "New Perfec tion" CM Store, the annoyance of tn overheated and ttuity kitchen it entirely avoided, rvca in midtummer. The tckntiUe construction of the Spencer to Have a Socialist Mayor. Salisbury I'imI. K'lMt Kpeneer will probahly rnjoy the solitary dmtinction of bring the only town or city iu North (aro- lina having a .Socialist as its execu tive head after the municipal elec tion iu May, for the nomination in the niafdt meeting last ni(bt by cit izens of that place of Mr. Howartl ('. Bueck is conceded to amount to an election. Mr. Bueck is a ma chinist iu the Southern's Hpencer shop, a young uiuti of strong con victions aud a long time champion of SociiiliMn. lie was on the Ko Ir an county Socialist ticket lant year and dared all comers. Words to Freeze the Soul. "Your son lias consumption. His case is hopelesa." These appalling words were s(okeu to (ico. E. Hie vens, a leading merchant of Spring lield, N. C, ly two expert doctors, one a lung specialist. Then was shown the wonderful power of Dr. King's Xew Discovery. "After 3 weeks' use," writes Mr. Hlevens, "he was as well as ever. I would not take all the money iu the world for what it did for my hoy." Iu fill little for coughs and colds, it is the safest, surcrtt cure of desperate lung diseases on earth. r0c. and (I. (iimrantee satisfaction. Trial bot tle free. Kuglish Drug Co. Han of So Kills Himself. Hiaiii.li.il. Vt . IH.t-h, nth. Ti lt d of life because of ill health, although he had plenty of this world's goods, being one of theasstr pent real estate owners iu the city, Mr. llaruian Lubhliangli, who had reached tee ripe Old xge of Mi, end ed it all today by shooting himself in the mouth with a pistol, lie is survived by a large family. Personal etperience with s tube of Manan I'ils KemeJy will couvince you it ii immediate relief for til forms of piles. Can be applied directly to the affertrtl parts, reducing inftamina lion, swelling and itching. Guaran teed, Price oc. Sold by all dealers. That has Snap and Looks and Go in it That is the kind we furnish. Turnouts that look Nice and Stock that will travel. New Vehicles of every kind. Anything you want furnished when you want it. GOODS aboard Improvements at Wil mington and Good Work of Mr. Ketter. Wilmiutna .?. The big dredge Vim of the Mary land I tredging aud Contract ing Co., which has been at work aiuce the first of tbe new year on the inland waterway at Beaufort, X. C, reach ed the rity ymtrrday and will be rin work Monday morning in dredging at foot of lirunswick street for the extensive dorks and slips which will be a part of the Seaboard Air Line's extensive ter minal improvement at this ort. Mr. V. K. Mclleeof Kaleigh, who will be the engineer in charge of the work for the Seaboard, has been iu the rity the past week and has everything in readiness fur the la'giuuiug of work. The dock is to be dredged to a depth of L't feet at mean low water so that the largest vesnrls may receive and discharge cargo into two large warehouses that are to he built on either side, these being 150x.00 feet in size and fitted with all the latest appli ances in elevators, trackage, etc. The buildings will be of wood with corrugated irou aides aud ton and will bave immense capacity for the Sralioard'a constantly increasing tonnage at this port. 1 bese ware- nouses win nave large receiving platforms, uOilJO feet iu size, aud the present system of warehouses already oeratcd by the Sealward will be rearranged aud re complied, so that the terminals will lie second to none of their class on the South Atlantic coast. in auuihou to the warehouses a large freight depot is to lie erected on the kite of the old passenger shed which" bas been torn away. This will be for handling the large local tonnage at lluiiugton, aud on the second tloor will lie nllices for the Wilmington agency, which is now in charge of Mr. F. A. Fet ter. Jr., aud to w hose icrsoiial ef forts and executive management a large measure of the Seaboard's Wilmington popularity and pros perity is due. The freight traffic of the SealKMtrd is constantly iu. creasing on the old Carolina Ceu- tral division and the building of the new terminals will, without a doubt, attract even a larger ton- uage to the port. Assistant General Freight Agent Cheatham of the Seaboard Sxnt yesterday in Wilmington and talks interestingly of the road s attitude towards the local port. Not only is the Seaboard making a strong bid for local tonnage in the clli- ciency of its freight movement from here, but the management has aud still is exercising its efforts to ward locating enterprises here, all of which inure not only to the ben efit of the company but to the city as well. The feeling in Wilming ton towards the Sealatard is the most friendly and is grow ing more so in the company's manifest pur pose to more than meet the city half way iu needed improvements. I Mr. Fetter is a son ol lirv. F. A. Fetter of Mouroe. The Biggest Baby In the World. 'The biggest baby in the world" lives at No. 1G17 Washington av enue, this city. He is John Wilson ebb, three years old, uud weighs 120 pounds. His mother, who weighs L'oo pounds, finds it tl i Iti cult to carry the baby Jumbo round n her arms, but says that every day she handled hiui her strength increases. Sue occasionally takes John Wilson across her lap and applies the maternal slipiwr, but confesses that it is hard work. Whenever Mrs. Webb and her I 'JO pound baby apcar upou the streets they cause a blockade of traffic by attracting curiosity seek ers. Street car conductors invari ably demand two fares for mother aud son, and as the latter is of adult size the mother hits trouble in convincing the conductors that be is only a baby three years old. John ilson bas been in almost perfect health since his birth. His ouly sickness was a mild rase of measles, which reduced his weight merely a pound or two. He cries sometimes, but so loudly that t sons in the vicinity who hear him imagine a riot is iji progress. Mrs. Vt ilson Is a widow and her infant sou contributes to her sup port. Sometimes, he earns (10 a day in public exhibitions as "the biggest baby in tbe world." lhe father, who died recently, weighed about 2r0 pounds. Mr. F. U. Fritts, Oneonta, K. Y., writes: "My little rul was ei rally ben efitted by taking Foley's Orino Lata- live, and I tuiult It is tbe beat remedy for constipation and liver trouble." Foley's Onno Lasative is best lor wo men aud children, as it is mild, pleas ant and etfective, and is a splendid spring medicine, as It cleanses the system and clears the compleiion. English Drug Company. Nothing Cheap Up Here. W1wNtro Anwfflt.n. Monroe has passed a law making it a fine of two dollars to spit on her sidewalks. ()u this account we advise the citizens of Union to torn their face) toward Wadesboro, where the fine is only one dollar and where special inducements will be offered them by enterprising merchants. People past middle life usually have some kidney or bladder disorder that aap the vitality, which is naturally lower in old see. Foley's Kidney Rem edy corrects urinary troubles, stimu lates the kidneys and restores strength and vigor. It cures uric acid troubles by strengthening lbs kidneys so they will strain out tbe one acid that set tles in the muscles and joints causing rheumatism. Euglisb Drug Co. j CANNED SQUEAL. Tfc. "-4i seJ. tH k esteemed ciHitemporary.Ctrt tou and Cotton Oil News, ia a re cent Usue, presents the following . to our notice in an editorial way: i 'Tbe Bieat packers of the North j boast that they utilise every part of lhe hog excel his suueal. The cotton nieo of tbe South should ; eliminate every item of waste aud jthcy will prureraatheBjeat pack ers of the North." Kecrutly a newspaper clipping informed us that even the soueals I of the bog were now lieng utilized. Howl By tbe talking machiue men, to lie sure. We have canned bam, canned Hrk, rauw-d pigs feet, and now canned Miueal, with the differ ence lying in tbe fact that we dou't eat tbe squeal. Canned squeal bas a market value though, and biings more than the other parrs of the bog, considering how comniou it is. However there are limits to the demand for if, so we infer that there may still Is? many squeals that will go to waste. Since cotton is not endowed with a voice there is no part of it that can he compared with the squeal of the hog. Yet it sectus that it is goiug to outdo the hog iu the utili zation of every part and parcel of it. Its w bite h lire clothes the great er part of the civilized world as well as that part of the uncivilized woild that affects clothing to auy extent. Much of the lint which comes from the seed in giuning lakes a tourney to hurope w here our gifted Teutonic cousins succeed in mak ing a very presentable cloth out of it Some of it, however, stays at home and goes to make sleeping hours endurable for many, many people, as it tills out the striped covers of the mattress. From the seed comes the oil that shortens the I .est pastry, and makes the most delicious dougbuiits. The up to date cook, tw she housekeep er or servant, uses nothing else when she has ouce tried it. The meats, ground into meal uud mixed with hulls, feed man's liest friends, the dumb animals iu the bam, or help to enrich the land which yields of its Imuuty for his table. Anil now comes the wonderful knowledge thut the stalks are ready to supply us with paer to write on. Can the hoe beat that record? We rather think not. Boy 5hot tor Looking at Race Over the Fence. Climbing a fence at Celtic Park yesterday afternoon to see a Mara thon race, says the New York World, Thomas R Daly, a young ster of fourteen, wis shut by a spe cial policeman and is lying iu a precarious condition in St. John's Hospital, Long IslaudCity, wound ed in his left thigh. Charles Hasse, wbo did the shooting, narrowly es caped with his life. As the boy toppled from the fence a mob of several hundred infuriated ersoim chased Hasso, yelling "Kill him!" After a dash of a hundred yards tiasse ran into a house. The crowd surrounded the house aud made several attempts to get iu. Olluials of the athletic meet and several ofliccrs held the crowd back, and while the enraged men were planning an attack Hawse s gray uniform was stripped from him and a civilian suit was lent him. Iu thisdisguise Hasse escaped through the mob unrccognired. When the crowd dispersed Hasse was arrest ed and locked up iu the Long Isl and City station, charged with fe lonious assault. Hasse said he fired the shot in the air to scare Paly and other boys oil, after they had thrown stones at him, but Daly and bis boy friends declared he emptied his five-barreled revolver at them. A Mountain Duel. MxIiiiiD Dl-ti-h, Ulh Sunday afternoon at Sandy Hidge, Stokes county, about VI utiles from Madison, Marvin Shelton shot and mortally wounded Oscar Wool wine, Shelton also being slightly wound ed. It seems that a crowd of men were gathered at an old barn iu a field and were drinking, when Shel ton aud Woolwine, the former lb' and the latter IS years old, fell out. I Woolwine s father-in-law took him behind the barn and, it is said, gave him a pistol, while Shelton stepped out in the field a piece and told them to all couie on, he was ready for them. Woolwine at once advanced and was fired on five times by Shelton, he himself firing four times at Shelton. One ball entered Woolwine's right side and came out his left, from the effects of which he dud yesterday. Shelton was ouly slightly wound ed, the ball lodging Just under the skin of his left ide. Both boys are of well to do families. Tbe latest news from the scene of tbe shoot ing this morning was that Shelton is still at large. The scene of the sad affair is not very far from the famous Siuithtown section, nearly all of whose mate population are now serving a sentence iu the red era! prison at Atlanta for block ading. You should not delsy under sny cir cumstances ia cases of kidney and bladder trouble. Yoo should take aomething promptly that you know is reliable, sometLinr. like Pe Witt s Kid ney snd Bladder fills. Tbey are uo equaled lor weak back, backache, in flammation of tbe bladder, rheumatic pains, etc. Wben you ask for De Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pilla, be sure you get tbem. They are anti septic. Accept do substitutes: insist upon getting the right kind. Sold by English Drug Company, Strange Case Of A Negro a vouege uraauaie. aw jar Lons timuri. a negro, said to be a graduate of Yale, was tried at St. Louw last week for f-rging a ..1..1. Tt . . . .ri. juo aii ui uir i. . i.- si ikiiiu in an anmnuvu -j, tu, uib own witne. asked himself the questions and auswerwl them him -. mai uisirtHiiiiewasover euueat Here ia tbe dialogue cairird 'on. with bisusrlf ou the stand: "Jlr. t, raves,' said lie, address ing uimseii, lake tne stairn.' -men, in a aiguineu manner, i he st.-prrtt in the wit tun stand aud ' slowly seating himself, sajing to' mesieiHgrapuer: laKetnisuown.iaU.tied tv the Airiii uituial w please.' "Tbe Judgw aud Ktectators be came luiereuieu. sour name, ptea.ser said be. alter uie style ol an out prw tit ton - . r 'U rit "a'1011- I (ioM'. i.or Kilchin has under con- 'Uuis(. raves, he replied, 'and Churches in Montana are singtt'g (sidi-ration the matter of sjiant ng a several allaseS( which the police hymns against the tiy, women oCpard.m toUunu.- W. In-acy. l!,e bave given me. Kochester have is titioned the city ! Xi als-ru banker who eiit rung "ou are the defendant in tbMianril to abolish the i-t. Itust.... 1 a.i . ...i , i. .1 ,.lw.t..u..r.i..:i-.r Casef ''', "'Weie you ever couvuted any crimef ,M Vlici unit ivti-.il titriita Iiuva you servedf " 'Illinois aud Miisouri. I serv ed two years in the Chester istii tentiary aud four years at Jcffc rsou City. " 'Were you ever iu an insane a-ylumt' " 'Five times. Once I was in the asylum for the criminal insane.' " 'Did you ever try to commit suicidt-f " 'Five times.' " 'N heu and where' Address your remarks to his Honor.' "'I jumped from the third tier of cells in the city jail and cracked my skull; I took poison iu the Cen tral lmlice station; I tried to hang myself in the 'pen,' and twice I tried to eud my life wheu I felt a desire to commit crime coming over me.' '"To w hat source do you attrib ute your mental condition!' " 'Sttereducation,' wasthequick reply to himself. 'I'm a negro and I have no business with a college education.' "'Now, Mr. Graves, yon are charged here with having forged a check on February 5. What have you to say alsmt thalf " 'Mr. Attorney, I have no recol lection of the transaction.' " 'Is there anything else you would like to say about this casef " 'Nothing that 1 can think of.' "Judge Taylor ordered Graves Isiund over to the grand jury in $1100 bail. The judge said he would preserve the record iu the case, which he declared was the most unique he had ever heard." Baggage on a Seat Does Not Re serve It. rimrltjr ami ChtMmi. The News and Observer says a case covering the "reserving'' of seats in a railroad car bv piles of baggage was recently earned to the Suprvme court of New Y'ork, which decided that seats were for passeu gers, not for baggage, and that 110 one is bound by the reservation. People who travel will see the jus tice of this decision. The piling up of baggage on a couple of seats by a man who wants to smoke or chat with a friend in another car, and thus keep people standing w ho have paid for seats just as well as he, is a nuisance that needs to lie abated. We bave seen women with children compelled to stand lie cause seats were filled with suk and sample cases by some selfish passenger who demanded three or four seats instead of one. This de cision will bring relief to a large class of travelers w ho have borne a great deal from the selfishness of those who seem to imagine the rail roads were built fur their special accommodation rather than for the general public. There are people who would appropriate the whole train it the law allowed it, and they must be constantly held in with bit and bridle iu order to make them decent. It is a pity that the law has to be invoked to com pel some people to act the part which the iustiucts of a gentleman should suggest Prohibition and the Old Man. SlUntaCon.lltulttin. "I don't knew what's to become o' the or man ef they keep on vot- in' the States dry," said the old lady. "It did.i't cost so much fer him to go to Chattynongy, but as Tennessee will Ik as dry as a bone in July, that II take him a step further, an' he jest can't afford the money. Of coiirte he kin blind tiger it to Georgy, but it's no lon ger safe fer hitu to do so, see in' that he kin no more kiver up his tracks, fer ever time he tries it they ketch op with him an' haul hiin op before meetiu', and he's (hat diversified farming and bust gittin' too ol' now ter risk bein'tling will bring money to a farmer, turned out the church, fer Satan I This farmer hail a lone mule aud might ketch him on the outside an' 1 an ox for work animals. He made sweep him off 'fore he baa a chance; to git back ag'in. But tbe States air dryin' up one after another, an' I kin see him buyin' railroad ticket as fur as Kalamazoo an' I b'lieve that couutry would be dry 'fore he hit it!" VQiiaresi especially nil weooeuy s( ......... vougu oyrup, n "',( whtcQ had eaten away eight toes) nearly as good ss manic suear. It net it .1 11 u .11 .1 . but it also moves the bowels gently, and la that way drives tas cold from ! the system. It contains no opiates, Sold by English Drug Company. War Has Uccn Declared Ajam.t .a as.. , , . 'The Houne Fly at the lUr" has not lung to do w illi tier lunch. It w u,e im Ur.,k lor the yen wi .... ' lntt w i.,, umm ,y ullli; f . : - r " . r nniliiiiu-iit i.i.U. mli.. I. .... the '.Shauie of the t ili.s ' to instimte a Miili.leu. game ataint t,e fly population that will iesUlt H,,iKu, nan i.ir a i;v tiiid home imrt as it is fur Mi-li r Cipriani. Caslns late of Yeuu.-l.,. i Itcrliu. Martinnpie, Tt.uulad ami fea oiher i,l a lea otner pl;ut-s. Wward Hatch. Jr., of NVw York is one ol the leader iu the move m-ut to make lly paiwr wmk :i lull day for ils wage. He is aided snd i. .. i Flward Hatch. Jr., of X, w York partiuent at Wahnton. the A tuer ican Civic Feilei.it ion, the W ater Pollution Committee of the New York Morchauls' Association and i , ,y volunteers iu all raits of the! I ....I &11UI luui ,.. 1,,,,. ,1.. traps, sticky paja-r and othei ofuiakethe I lean City uuplea.u.t foi the little visitors, ami now special exnertsarecouiitiiiL' die tlii-s whu h get in traps in various centres where disease is, or where it might be. Profile maps of the gaps inaiie by Hies in the popuiatioh-nl Ainer icau cities show that in July. An gust and Septenila-r the lly gets to work in Pittsburg and New Ymk. devoting only July to Philadelphia ami wailim; until September to pi to Chicago and drive folk oil hike Shore I irive. Dr. Daniel D. Jackson, who in vestigated the conduct of the New York Hies along the water front, shows that almost all of tin :u un likely to bting typhoid fever. Ib is sure that of the 7,immi yoiiiif. c hi HI re u that the here uuiiually from intestinal diseases a large per centiige are infected by the My and its bad habits. The campaign against the lly w ill Is' pushed with uuiisual vigor this summer. Death of General Butler, CttlnmNU ll.V!i. IIOi. Geiierul Matthew CalhraiOi lint ler of Gdgcfield, one of the lust of the Confederate generals, died to night at 11:10 at a local infirmary. For some weeks General Butler hud been ill ami had Is-en gradual)) growing weaker and for seveiai days it had 1st 11 seen that the eiul w is near. General Butler's death was due to a complication of dis eases, induced by au old wound. He io.it a leg at ltrnii.ly Slation, ami alter recovery continued to serve throughout the war. His wound hud not bothered him up to a few months ago. General Butler was born in ls.ti; of u distinguished South Carolina family. He served wilh distinc lion throughout the Civil war, lis ing from captain to major genual of cavalry iu the Confederate ser vice. After the war General But ler took n prominent put in the movement to reclaim the State to the Democratic party and aided greatly in Hamilton's victory in the gubernatorial race of l7t!. In INTO General Butler was elected to the Cnitcd States Senate aud setv ed three terms. During the Spun ish-American war General Butler was a major general iu the I'niled States army. After the war Gen eral Butler was appointed a mem !ier of the Cuban Peace Coinmis sion. He is survived by his w idow and three children, M. C. Butler, Jr., T. 8. A.; Dr. F. W. P. Butler f this rity, and Mrs. McNcilly, ife of a naval ollicer. On his 7 .'lid hi it Inlay, General Butler received supreme unction from the Catholic church. He died within fifty yards of the con veu tioti hall in which the accession committee met. General Butler was a nephew of Commodore Perry of the I'uited States Navy. The Postponed Baptizing. Atlanta ( "tuttmilon. The old colored brother prefaced his sermon with the following re marks: "I well knows dat some er you bas travelled fur ter see de baptizin' today, but 1 has tcr an nounce dat dar won't be no baptiz iu'. Five big alligators has ix'cn seen siuiniu' dersell's on five logs in tie millpon', haviu' ties craw led out film dcr long winter sleep; an' hit stan's ter reason dat w'en a ulliga tor sleeps all winter he's mighty hongry w'en he wakes up. Hit may lie dat Providence will protect de candidates fer de baptizin', but hit's my opinion dat ter wade into a millpon' wid five hongry ulliga tors play in' 'possum on a log. would be Hying in de face er Prov idence!" $2,120 With Mule and Ox. Tbe Spring Hope leader cites the case of John Tyson to prove l,;it0 worth of tobacco: lir. worth of cotton (II bales); fh'10 of corn, I1J3 of potatoea and (10 worth of peas total, i.Piti. "I'd Rather Die, Doctor. than have my feet cut off," said M. I Bincham of Princeville. HI. Bnt you'll die from gangrene 8lve till wholly cured. It. cures f , fever sores, boils, burns and pile astound tbe world. 2-& lat Knglish Drug Company's. T aT I-'. Le 4 rTtK r.j VAtiS a. j-.-Jr.? M ki t k 7T 9 1 it?! X V-L ja W T ra w T m.. Tt: I 'I I i a a a tai jr- m I"- W t. aaaaw , y " :'- Ko'nVvV. j The HOSt KIcMv refined j; y$Jft 1 , TWBt I ' l UStking f ; t V Sl !l , H l? aIm0St i iVVJ U Sales all ! llAnTfT'a t t l . Mr; llil rn(b.rtiil wonderful V ant Pardon for Dewey. !..r 1, ...l , t,. ;w ; U-coml timeau It it ha.-, la-en made i to p.i.l.ai hiiu. He has vneil the c i veais of hi M-nteme and has three more to serve. Tin- p!r. i. made for him thai he h is .-at:Mn :i justice, that lii luiuiiy need- him, and that his mother is N jears old iind feeble. While there ale strong in ll nonces at oik for him, tlieie is a!.-' strong ii.p.siUoti to granting months ngo the deceased was mar Dewey a panlou, the ground Is ing lietl to Miss Lota Lyon of Durham, tal.eu 1'iat In- slole thoiiMnds. that i He .ts a native of Ifichiuoud, Ya. In. 1- I... lull. 1 lint, ,.1 1 tii..r ,.,1,.,,, ,'..' , Hill tlllll I. S M VI-UIS SI II I I'lil,' six iiiis sentence ilioiiM e si r el just like hundreds of other men an- serving iu the State prison. Will Pay Fine ol Nearly $2,IHKl.(kHI. Theui.'ti trust law of Tevas ha proved so elect live that the Waters Pierce Oil Company, a branch of the Siamlaid, was convicted ami lined nearly if j.ihmi.immi ami the judgment was continued by the Tinted Slates rtdiuvnie court. I The inundate o! the I tilled States Supreme court in thecaeof the State of Teva-t agaiti-t the Waters Pierce Oil Company was expected at Austin hist week ftotu Washing ton. It was said by Jud;;e K. P. Perkins, 1111 a'totucv for the do lend, ml company, that upon re eeipt of the mandate the penalty of l.iil.'.',iHiii and several months' in terest at ii per (cut. will Is' paid the Slate iu cas'i. 1'tWitt's l.ittie Larlv Kiseiii, ttir I'l-.t knov.11 pills ,ul t,e Ih-M pillf ma.lr, ait' t' isv to l.ii.v iin.l art gently and art' ti;'!;o'i, A'r tttul i toiii-int-tul tliL'ltl. I.h:;i.-h tilii;i!ii. WHAT TO EAT s easily s..ivsi if vu take the dinner here. Vou can select tit random anv Hem on the bill of tare and he sure of ivrivi m.vil. You will tind the por- feetly ciHikcti viatnl.s dt li.-n.u.s. nit uill Ii Till the service iH-rfect. Vol will re- I'ret thai jmi didn't Iind all this out lie- lore. 1'rj it. PAKACJOX CAFE. THE GREAT OF WHAT is especially troubling the housekeepers at this "scarce season." :: :: :: LET US 1 1 IS LP YOU- Everything in the Grocery and Traduce Line that can be had. Phone us what you want and we will do the rest. :: :: Doster Grocery Company. ttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiuiiitiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuitmuiutiii ! INVINCIBLE. s I There's power wrapped up in that word. I And the strength, energy, and health that I como from wholesome food are all wrap- I ped up for your use j -INVINCIBLE FLOUR? if I The pure, health giving, wholesome, gold I en-tinted Flour made at your own door. I Henderson 9 iltlUIUUSUM UillUIUUrW llttiraVtaUU and healthful powder?. Its constant use every American household. over the wotlJ, attest its popularity and usefulness. ! High Point Man 5u it ides. Fridav Mweeu II aud I'.' o'clock J. Lindsay Ferguson, secretary and re astir, r of the AtU'ilir Furniture Ci.mpany at H'h IVint. killed hiuised ill the ultiees of his busi-nox-', using a .It calibre pistol. Apparently he laid don ou the If ii an.) placed the mu of the g:iu ng.iiiist his light temple, all things going to show that the act as pr.-mcd dated. The big ball plowed through the skull and lodg ed iu the wa'l of the room. Death came at once. T he apparent cause of the micido was ill health. Some i I' yt"i hvc Irariaclie and urinary I ' ..... trout !es y 't ttoiuij tike Foley's Kid ney Kriiiri!)- to sticuKlhen and build tip the kidneys so they will act prop el iy, an a ftenotis kidney trouble may tuvelnp, tiitilinh Drug Company, The Ml 0! and This Ilunk, at tlie beginning of its career, adopted the policy of doing the utmost pood to its cus tuniLTs w ithin the limits of safe ty. It has never forgotten tn maintain this position und it will ; strictly adhere to it in the future. Safety and Progress is Our Slogan. We would not be swift at the expi -n.se of safety, but we want jit understood that we are for progress along nil lines. Talk about .safety! The Bank of Union is conducted discreetly iand on sound business) principles, j U is as safe a bank as any man tiwih. whether State or National. Delimit vour nionev here and there will be no occasion for you ever to regret it. Our apprecia tion is strong and abiding. Respectfully, V. S. BLAkUNEY, President. QUESTION TO EAT in every bag of our Roller Mills. eM.MUnuiWimUIIIIIIIIWHIllllMSWtlMUUtl Union Reciprocity
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 20, 1909, edition 1
1
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