Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / Aug. 31, 1909, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE MONROE JOURNA Farmers. You Can Buy or sell antr artirls jraa wisli (a througli aur Spnrial Nutu-e Column. tn etit a aroni Trli jour wanta. Why Throw Away A lurful artK-le that you dun'l need? Sell it ta mmt star who dura nrrd It. On erntawuro. AaNrertiae it i VOLUME XVI. NO. 31. MONROE, N.O, TUESDAY, AUGUST 81, 1009. One Dollar a Year. S BY THE SAVINGS, LOAN AND TRUST CO. The steady flow of money into a Saving Account givea u roaming result. We do not mean that large oVpoa ita are nereaaary for thia, though the more that i out in the larger the aaving. but a little earn week will aecompliah wonder. We have a numlier of ruittomer who deposit a little every Saturday night and they are more than pleas ed with result. Our plan ia to invite wage earning customer to deiuait ALL of their income each week and draw out from time to time only what ia need ed. Tfu ml i sutvaJ ry amply irt iin it atom. Try it. We pay 4 per cent. R. B. Redwine, I'KKSlllKNT. H. B. Clark, Cahhikk. TIS TALK handled cleanly. THE BEST ICE in North Carolina is being made in Monroe, and we are proud of our record. It is made from the far famed Artesian Water, which is boil ed and reboiled, doubly distilled and purified for the purpose. Our new plant is right up-to-date, and ivith all these advantages it is no wonder ire are selling it as fast as it can he made. Local trade supplied by Mr. T. J. Price. Wholesale direct from us. :: :: :: MONROE ICE AND FUEL COMPANY. TheBestTestofa Life Insurance Company. IS A COMPANY with a low death rat, caused by a careful selection of riska. and refuting positively rejections of Standard Companies. IS A COMPANY with small lapae record. IS A COMPANY whoa expense of management is small. 18 A COMPANY which Is conservative before entering the cor.tractand which will be liberal in fulfilling it The SOUTHERN LIFE MEETS EVERY ONE Do not be deluded by any company or aasocistion that professes to give Insurance ac U.t than cott. If you are told that sonwtfon cam ia beat for you, remember that it costs Uu only Ucmun it it wort teu. Do not miiitake vague estimatea and general statements of agents for matters of contract. BEAD YOUR POLICY , ami remember that you can demand nothing that ia not specifically promised therein. Monroe Insurance G Investment Company . H. ('AUAYKLUMtmun. The Bank W. S. Hl.AKENEY. President, W. C. STACK, Cashier. Capital $50.ooo. Resources mHIS Bank aland the financial friend of th people. It seek confidence X and patronage by virtue of tU own merit. It wagea war on no com netitor and adnnU no questionable method to achieve success. The ad vent of new Bank is not opposed, but any busineaa enterprise calculated to build up th country ia welcome, W take no tock In anything unfair, but will encourage and promote anything tending to the welfare of th people. Our past record la a sufficient guarantee for th future. No expense haa been apared to aefeguard deposits and render good service, bet present and prospective depositor remember WW w The Bank of Union KNOCKS IT ODT! HICK'S HEADACHE TABLETS FOR ALL KINDS OF Headache arid Neuralgia Price 10c. ENGLISH DRUG CO. THE DEPENDABLE STORE. a big mistake to suppose that Ice is always pure be cause it is cold. It is pure if it is made pure and then 6 TRUST COMPANY OF THE ABOVE REQUIREMENTS. of Union J. R. SHUTE, Vice Pre.ident C. B. ADAMS, Asst. Cashier. Deposits $200,ooo $300,000. Farmer (Ira ham Is Making Cotton S0.1E OU SCHOOL. BOOKS. Yield Threa bales to the Acre. I krkn s... Now Out of Date but Quotations ''What do you think of calling 5ound Very Familiar ta Those n an old Confederate) TeterauT'' f Who Are Uettinf Aged, anted Mr. K. L liraliani, one of, A writer in the Xe York World, the heat farmer who woo the soil Joel Kenton, by name, talk ia Mwkleuburg ami makea it aaiile'bout ithoid book ami writes iu mo him with rriuiauo clover and terestiugly of Blatters which aoiue ten-foot corn and three lle to j0f us remeiulter when we were the acre of cotton, and all the like1 of that. "I think it's a slander to call yon an old wan," said the local deartuieut, the business depart ment and the editorial department of the paper all in one breath, for everybody aboat the shop kuows Farmer (intham, aud that be has come as nigh driuking from the fountain of perpetual youth as the next man. "Well. Mr. J. P. Long had a nice piece In your paper the other day about my farm, but he said I.bjlie picture of theTempleof Fame was ao old Confederate veteran I ain't an old man. I'm one of the boys, sir." "He did me another cruel injus tice, too. He said my farm was in Providence township when it is in Sharon. It looks like anybody ought to know that Providence cau't make what we make iu Sha ron." Mr. Graham ought to be on the program of the approaching agri cultural coufcrcuce in this city, for he is a man who is doing things as a farmer. This is another evidence of his youth, for you can't teach an old dog new tricks, but Mr. tiraham is learning all kinds of new things about farming, and is already one of the best intensive farmers in Mecklenburg. "I take three of the beet agricul tural papers that I can get," said Mr. liraliani, "the Progressive Far mer of lialeigh, the Cotton Journal of Atlanta, (ia., and t'ue Farmers' I'nion of Gainesville, IS a., and for some years past, largely due to their advice and following their suggestions, I am diversitying my crops, aud making all tny bog aud hominy at home, while keeping cotton for my money crop." "I sutiiMMe, like many of the far mers of the county, you have a poor stand of cotton this year." "I have Hi acres iu cotton with the fluent stsud 1 ever bad. I am ahead of all my neighliors in this respect I planted a little ahead of most of them and somehow had good luck." "How many bales do you expect to make from these lti acres'"' "Two bales to the acre in some places. I have three acres close to the house which my neighbors are predicting will make three bales to the acre. Oil of my Hi acres I will make 10 or is bales altogeth er." "How much did you have in cot ton last yesrl" "1 had 20 acres planted in cot ton last year from which I got 10 (Miles, and sold at !$ cents." "How is it that you cau put less acreage in cotton this year and ex pect to make more cotton than you did last yeait" "Well, Prof. Massey says iu the Progressive Farmer " It does not matter now just what Prof. Mussey did say, but from the way Mr. OrahHUi quoted him it must have been a plenty. It is a "caution" the way Mr. Graham can i note Prof. Massey. "How much land are you culti vating this year!'' Mr. Gritlmni was asked. "Lemme see," said this youthful disciple of the New Farming, as he ran his horny hand through his iron gray hair "Cotton 16 acre. "Corn Hi acres. "Sugar cane 1 acre. "Peas and other legumes 22 to 25 acres. "Berksbires-4. "I will make all my bread and meat on the (arm this year, and all the feed for my stock. That is, all except a little Hour. I may not have quite enough wheat to go through the winter. I raised only 2t bushels of wheat last year. I had to cnt it in, aud therefore a disadvantage. This year I am go ing to try for 2.! bushels to the acre. "The 22 to 25 acres which I have planted in peas represents all the land I am going to cultivate next year. That is all the land wntcn I shall touch with my plows." "Well, you ' I make a good deal of peavine hay oil of this land will you not!" "I am not going to try to do so at all. I am going to turn all the peas over iuto the soil for Its ben cut. "Prof. Massey ays" then Mr, Graham gave reasons for plowing' bis eas under. f "Oil of my oue acre in sugar! cane I have made MS gallons of molasses. Yes, sir, they are done made and in the house. Come out and eat a Sunday dinner with me soon. Come before watermelons are done. I have got a plenty and they are fine this year." i "Are you coining to the agricul tural conference hereon the first of Septembert" Mr. Graham was ask ed as be started ont of the door. "You bet your bottom dollar on that I couldn't afford to miss that for anything i The Crime el Idleness. I Idleness means trouble for anyone. It's the same with a lazy liver. It causes constipation and headache, jaundice, sallow complexion, pim ples and blotches, loss of appetite, nausea, but Dr. King's New Life Pills soon banish liver troubles and build op your health. 25c, at F.nglish Drug Oompany'a, I small srboul children In the literature that abides with the individual memory aud be comes a part of the soul's furni ture, so to speak, I know of noth ing that surpauaes a disused and departed school book. The Wehster Spelling lfaiok aud the Kngliah Header the first one obaolesrent and the last now no where used have probably had the loujest history of any, going through at leant three full genera- tioos. Beginning with the eyui and Knowledge, to which aMiuerva like female figure points the young girl pupil whom she ts leading, and continuing to the end, there is hardly a page in this spelling book which an old student who has used it ever forgets. Although it has gone through several editions, its type and essential style are pre served in every change of it. How familiarly, after you pass the alphabet page, these lines ap peal to us: "Am I to go int I am to go in." "She fed the old hen." "The old hen was fed by her." "Ann can hem my cap." "She ha a new fan." "Fire will burn wood and coal." "Coal aud wood will make a lire." "Will you help me piu my frockt" "The good girl may jump the rope." "linkers beak bread and cakes." "I like to play in the shady grove." "Cider is made of apples." "A tiger will kill and eat mau." "Ann can spin flax." "A shad can swim." "Cotton velvet is very soft to feel." "We ran burn fish oil in lamps." "Never pester the little boys." "I had some green corn in July on a plate." Things Ann Doesn't Know. The self obviousness and sim plicity of these sayings have now a distinct charm. But they were ganged, it must be remembered, for iufantile minds not long graduated from the cradle. Some changes in society have taken place since they were written. Ann cannot spin flax now, because that crop bus lost its prevalence, aud we no long er burn fish oil, but use, where gas and electricity are not at hand, John D. Rockefeller's product A shad can still swim, but be now does bis locomotion with rarer and tarer frequency and very soon will not do it at all unless we quit the filthy and criminal pollution of our streams and waterways. At the middle and end of the book the words aud lessons are ar ranged for the older and higher classes of pupils, and finish all the equipment that is required for a seller and reader. The pictures aud their fables perhaps interest u most in the retrospect. The milk maid in ber careless dreamland, the boy driven from the apple tree by the irate farmer and the hull that gored the ox are still uu faded treasures which carried in their day notable instruction. The wood cuts that were used, that were of the Anderson aud ltcwick fashion, look qiiaiut enough now. Who, at any rate, that was nur tured on Webster's Speller can ever forget the Milkmaid's Hev- enef She was carrying the full pail of milk on her head when she said, "The money for which 1 sell the milk will enable me to increase my stock of eggs to 300." After deducting for addling and vermin there would be at least 2.V) chick ens got from them. These were to go to market at Christmas for good prices. Consequently by May Day, she says, "I caunot fail of having money enough to purchase a new gowu. Then ! let me consider yes, green becomes tny complexion best aud green it shall I. In this dress I will go to the fair, where all the young fellows will strive to have me for a partner; but I shall, per haps, refuse every one of them, srtfMent and pustm evervthmg aboat th heat. TbrlMoMor dixun looking furnlturt or woodwork ia home wbers Liquid Vaaaar k) wed all is clean, waoaaisais, east. liquid Veneer can be apples' bf anybody, anywhere, at any time, and tbar Is o smus to dean ap aflar ward. Tbera are a cans, bo pots, a fcnthc. There are no sticky hand or sorbet. Sonpty wwWcai a pit of cats doth and wfr oi tbt (arbc. a yos woald do dusting. last try Uouid Veaatr and Urn swart sad data It win auk tvarjrUM 4 -a. kwMle f Saw 12-m. avttB0. W.H. KERRJr. f slut wilk An sir i,f ttatlia tiMttJ ) fruui them." being "transported by this thought," she gave a aud 'dee toaa of her head, "and down ranie the pail of aiilk, aud with it all her iotagiuary happiness." It must be that from this fable came the proverb, "Never tiwut your chickens before they are hatched." The Webster's Speller ia chiefly used ia the South sud West now. Hut it baa absolute merit still; aud, uterprWcd in Tagalog and other tongues of the Philippines, might prove au excellent purveyor of Kogluth to those who speak them. Liudley Murray a l.uglisb Head er was held to be excellent in It day. But it was overwhelmingly serious and solemn, aud was so ad vanced that many of the younger pupils who used it had to wait for years to have all its meaning made clear to them. Murray was not a stem (Quaker, but he seems to hsve been a man who could not smile even. To him a laugh was levity, aud in one of the editions of his reader he apologized in a footnote for a few sentences in which he thought there was something play fully said. No one else, however, discovered this. On one page, iu speaking of Niagara Falls- an idea which he might bare found in tioid smith's "Auimsted Nature" be announces its height and grandeur, but slips immediately into an un truth and anticlimax by saying that in spite of its vastuess "it is said that the Indians have some times passed dowu it in their ca noes in safety." Here are some samples of the book that I remember: "Ti education form the common mind: Just a the twig i bent tbe tree'a in clined. "Agesilaus, King of Sparta, be ing asked what things he tjiougbt most proper for boys to learn, an swered: 'Those which they ought to practice when they become men.' " An earthquake may be bid to spare The man who' utrsnglcd by a hair. Murray's Grammar was excel lent, but its circulation could not compare with that of the Kuglish Reader. Of arithmetics there were no end. Pike's was a big octavo, and begau its career in tbe eigh teenth century. It was really a whole compendium of mathematics. Dalwll's perhaps is now the best remembered ol the multiplied kinds. Colburu's was noted, aud Smith's begau almost in the cradle ly asking the kmdergartner, "How many little fingers have you on your right haudt'1 And "How many on your lea hand! ' Aatnau Daboll was a born mathematician, and bis problems were no easy nuts to crack, as a great number of the I took s iHttrons still remember. Like many school books, it was bound in full leather, while Web ster's Selling Hook bad usually liltie-papered hoard covers backed by red cloth which became almost a trade mark. Dalmll called his book "The Schoolmaster's Assist ant," with the addition of "The Practical Accountant, or farmers' and Mechanics' liest Method of Hookkeeping." The lutter depart ments were uruixued by Samuel Greeu. Arithmetic Problems In Verse. Jacob W illett's Arithmetic was the product of a Quaker teacher in Dutchess county, who also made a geography and other works. The arithmetic had great favor and was considered easier than Dabolrs. Nearly all the old arithmetics put problems usually iu terms of pounds, shillings and pence, dowu to about 1 .,!. in WUIetts' Arith metic no one who has studied il will forget this example: When first the marriage knot was tied Between my wife snd me. My age was to that of my bride As three time three to three; But now when ten snd half ten year We man and wife have been. Her age to mine exactly bear Aa eight is to sixteen. Now tell, I pray, from what I've said, What were our ages when we wed. Answer-Thy sge when married must have been Just forty-rive, thy wife' fifteen. This wss not exactly a case ol December and Slay, but it was pretty nearly one of September and the latter month, bringing golden rod and lilacs together. Willets heliied Goold Hrown on bis gram mar and was the head of a noted school to the workiugend of his life. ( ne of h is sesistant teachers, Augustus K. McCord, a county su perintendent of schools in Dutch ess county when that office existed, revived Willets' Arithmetic in the middle of the last ceutury, putting it also in boards instead of leather. W illets school hooks and many others bore this alliterative iav print: "Printed and Published by Para clete Potter, Poughkeepsie, N. Y." This Potter was a brother of the older bishops of that name. Not everyone knows that there was a sequel to Webster's Selling Hook, made by hit son, . G. Welwter, and a motto in it, under the portrait of Noah Uelwter, reads thus: "Who taught millions to read, but none to sin." Noth ing can better give the spirit in which the old school books were written, for they were nearly all hortatory and didactic, even when they dealt with figures chiefly. There was an introduction and also a sequel to the Knglisb Reader, but their school use was limited. There were In vogue, as geog raphies, Morse's, Smith's and 01 ney'i among others. But very early In the nineteenth century there was a huge geography by an elder Morse ( Jedediah Morse, 1 1- lievei, which contained remark ably frank matter, aud soate relat ing to tbe social cuatoaM of certain nation that modern taste would distinctly frown apon. It is a cu rious faw-t ia reference to the old geography maps those made in the early part of the bus! century that they populate by detiuite town marks and dcM-ribed with nouutaiua, lakes aud rivers the most unknown parts of tbe iuterior of Africa. If our ex President in bis big game huut should take one of these along as a geographical guide he would discover, to use "Josh Billings' " locution, "a good many things that ain't so." I should have said before this that there were competitors to the K.oglish Header. The Columbian Orator, by Caltel Bingham, was oue; the National Preceptor (I thiuk it was called) was another, and Porter's Rhetorical Reader came a little later. In ail these, as with Murray's book, the pieces weie selected with an eye to decla mation. Some of these were "On Linden When the Sun Was Low," "The Burial of Sir John Moore," "Marco Bozxaris," "The Old Oak en Bucket," Wclwter's Reply to Hayne," with passages from other sieeches by him, and many be sides of similar note. In more than one of the Uaiks uned for reading, the verses for a youthful speaker begiuniug You'd scarce expert one of my age To iqieak in public on the atage. I f I should chance to fall below Demosthenes and Cicero, etc. are to be found. This apt bit of verse has been usually credited to Kdward hverett, but it was writ ten, 1 Iwlieve, by his brother, Alexander liverett 'Twas a Ulortoua Victory. There's rejoicing in Fedora, Teuu. A man s life has been saved, and now Dr. King's New Discovery is the talk of the town forcuringUY. Pepper of deadly lung hemorrhage. I could not work nor get about," he writes, "and the doctors did me no good, but after using Dr. King's New Discovery three weeks, I feel like a new man, and can do good ork agaiu." For weak, sore or diseased lungs, coughs aud colds, hemorrhages, hay fever, la gripjie, asthma or any bronchial affection it stands unrivaled. Price 30c and (1. Trial bottle free. Sold aud guaranteed by Knglisb Drug Co. A miserly father maketb au ex travagant son. Tbe best remedy ws know of iu sll cases of kidney snd bladder trouble and tbe one we always can recommend ia DeWitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. They are antiseptic and at one assist the kidneys to perform their important ork . But when you ask (or these pills be positive tl.: t you get DeWitt'i Kidney sod Bladder I'll'. There are imitation! placed upon sale to deceive you, tie! DeWitt . Insist upon them, and if your dealer cannot supply you refuse anything else in pise of them. Sold by tuglish Drug Lompsny. Many are called, but few get up. DeWitt Little Early Kiseri, the pleasant, sale, sure, easy littl liver pills. A salve you may always depend upon in any case where you Deed salve, ia DeWitt' Carbolited Witch Haiel Salve, especially good for piles. Sold by English Drug Company. STATEMENT LADIES OF THE MACABEES OF THE WORLD, PORT HURON. MICHIGAN. I'oMllllnfl )K SVHKR SI, IWC. Al KHOWX St HTATKNXNT ril KM. Anmunt of f1f.r Ait ItaH-emtrr Slot ( prrvlmiH y-iir. . - J.n;i4ii.Si ln,-omf rntm CohrF-hifMrr.. II,- "44.4IUMI; MIMll.niU4. I III,- flKllA; total l.fta.iw.tM in.lmrwrmMtit Tn rniiry noltT, T.J: Miarrllaaenwi, t MM. tot.l tjBM.s Srn.lH lrtnl-.l. In fnn IHN-rm tor si, IwiT Numlvr mount RfttplU ortllli'.l" written or r.- ttrfil (liirlns yrar Kuniltrr .mount - - ,JS1.;siili lUnptlt t rtlflc.tcH In Ion Iwrm lr SI. iw m'r U..KM . mount t7.H.av Claim, unpaid li-mrW SI, !: !tinnr ninuiii .. w Claim. Im-urn-d during th. yrar NiiRlhrrwat; amount TW.TSn; Claim, mlo during the rrar Num lr Whi . mount ?;,JJJ Claim, unfiald IHM.mb.r SI. Numir r, . amount m.irii.wi A.Mni.nt. nillM-ted during th. )er IS'lSSTJ AHKKTS. V.lu. it R.l Estate $ Sn.nt Value or Sond. and "tors, ownrd .,; M lviMMtwd In I'm.! Coatpani. and HankKon Int.rrat !. lr.' Cah tn A'iaiion' unit-. ll.tlntw Interest and Krnl. du. and arrnlrd. M.4., 41 Awam.ntf at'tii.H eollvt-d and h.1,1 t'T Suhordtnste Sodl., not .1 turned ot.r to Huiir.ni. Sody l,.i All oth.r Amm. iHlalf.d In .tal.- m.nl lima Totl Im At not lraila1 . aVJr Total Aris-jiti! AnU j7t,M MABll.1T. KM. IVtitli UtnirUt4tl !. i h r 11 ma tYHri?ta, but not 1)UHtei !v rntaneHit ill hi Illy rUinift ... Hlftrie. rttn. ((?, . . All ftiir lt.ttHtlf mt ittilM, tn ttaitnt MM TH TWa. llaMIH.rp IM Bl SINKHf IN NORTH 'AP.ol.INA IN R4flfi (rt,flttp lit forr Ikaarrn har XI, Iwl-Numhar IMt. mount UIMijl. nottftti irnnr.Mi rittn r n M In lwa- Nurntvr aotiM STi.tsw.UP sWnvfll lrtlthats? In font lm hril. iwtifntmar 17V. amount. WaWhi riaim unpaid imniawr il. IvarJ , No. : mount Claim) intmrml during th ffmt: No. 1; ammini .... I .mow rial paiftHurinK they ear; No. 1 ; amount ,MHW riaim nnisBid litir Jl, tv; N. ; mount -- Total amount prvmluma nra- mraU iwllwtsFtS nr kwrafart during Um yar I t fre-l-lfnt mrm. Llltina M Holli'trr pWrlrjr ...Mm Blra U. ( Hoiwomorv.., Port Karon, Mi... Attorn for ar . Offlrora UTATK Of NORTH CAROLINA. lirnM a l)trrr.RwT, Raltffh. Uhf II. im. I.JamMat Vounf.lntturBmvOomnlntoittar. ii hrhr t rtlfr that th a how I a Ira nJ tfimvt anatrnrt of th mtnml of th ladf of th Maohi or tn World, a rriirmnl or der, of fort Huron. Mth.. Mod with thi h partmont. howifisT thwintttni of ml! Ordar on in iai ot m iffmrar. mm. WitnM my hand and official raJ, th day ja mm 1 Torno, II Wild Ncgrsj Shoot at Random. Mgh .a . tM'hatrfc Stth Angered, it ia believed, becausr two of his friends had recently been shot by police officers ia this city. Will ism H. Wade, a negro, today ran amuck on tbe prim i)al bum neaa street with a double barreled shot gun, shooting first at every white man he saw and then tiring indiscriminately at every object before him. Tbe lire was returned aud the negro finally tell dead with a bul let through bis heart, but not be fore twenty nine men, three of them members of his own race, had been more or less seriously wound ed. Wade's body was publicly burn ed after it had been cut down from a pole on which it hung for half au hour or more after he was killed. An investigation by the police this afternoon showed that when ; Wade purchased the shotgun and a box of shells a few minutes before be opened fire ou the first man there was nothing uuusiial in his manner or behavior. Other ne-1 groea who were with nitn in the morning say that he hail not leen drinking nor did he show any evi tlence of having taken cocaine. Seared With a hot Iron, or scalded by overturned kettle cut with a knife bruised by slam- nied door injured by gnu or in any other way the thing needed at once is Huckleu's Arnica Salve' to subdue iullsmmation and kill the pain. It is earth's supreme healer, infallable.for ImiUh, ulcers,, fever, sores, eczema and piles. '.'" at Kuglish Drug Company's. THE HOUSEKEEPER AND THE NEWSPAPER One of the moat iinKirtant duties of the houekeeier is shopping. The housekeeier who exercises rmwt care in her shopping and looks closed after prices and quality of goods and who buys most intelligently is the woman who consults the advertising and new columns of the newaiaiera, and reads and studies them carefully. Much valuable information i to be found in The Observer publica tiona. These publications contain the very liest wort of clean, reliable reading matter for the family, and the investment in a subscription to any of these papers will lie found very valuable. Five Observer publications and prices: THE DAILY OBSKRVKR Mornings, Kvery Day in the Year. One year IX.U) Six Months 4.0" Three Months 2.tl On Month "5 THE SUNDAY OBSERVER Every Sunday Morning. One year 12. IK) Six Months l.tw Three Months 511 One Month THE SEMI-WEEKLY OBSERVER Twice a Week. One Year tl.un Six Montha fin Three Montha ifi One Month HI We send cample copies on request The Necessity For Medicines furnishes its own reminder, but we would like to suggest in pissing, that when any such unfortunate need occurs, there is no place in town where it can be supplied with more promptness, skill, accuracy, or with a higher class of Drugs and Chemicals, than at Simpson s Drua Store, Monroe, N. C. Stop There, If you are thinking of buy ing Furniture, makes no ref erence how little you want, neither how much. :: :: Cheap Furniture or J High Grade Furniture V Was riattai Vw K LInla nnrl the surest way to convince you that we have both grades as cheap or cheaper than you 1 f will find Furniture anywhere Furniture and ret our prices. We are here for business. T. P. DILLON CASH OR CREDIT. 000ta00400000000J (iovernor tilrnn Predicts Wo l ev less Cities arc kclormed. According to atatemeuts niade by former tioveruor Robert B. tileoti of North Carol i ua the cities of Sod om sud (totuorrah, destroyed with brimtiue and tire for their wick edneMS, were places of sweet newt aud tight com a red to New York aud Chicago. In an addrewt at Chautaugua, N. Y.. the North Carolina mau declared tie bail seen nights iu tbe streets of both New York aud Chicago so uuseaksbly vile that if he were to deactila them the men in audience would pull hiiu from the platform and trample him under their feet for daring to tell it before their wives and daughters. The wrath of the Almighty will deareud on the Unit in some ruiuous calamity unit I lie great cities mend their wsya, K.ii.t Mr. (ileun. Washington's Plague Spots lie in the low, marshy Itottoius of tbe Potomac, the breeding ground of malaria genua. These geims cause chills, fever and aj;ue, bil iotutiiesK. jaundice. Iiwsitinle, weak ness and general debility aixl bring suffering or ileal h to thniiKanils yearly. Hut Klectric Hitters uever fail to destroy them and cure ma laria troubles. "They are the best all-round touic ami cure for ma laria I ever used," writes 11 M. James of Louelleu, ri. C. They cure stomach, liver, kiduey and blood troubles and will prevent typhoid. Try them, .inc. Gnaraii teed by Kuglish Drug Company The bent way to know is to find out THE EVENINtJ CHRONICLE Everv Day Except Sundav. On? Year T..l So. Months 2.MI Three Months 1.25 One Month .60 THE SATURDAY EVENING CHRONICLE One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Three Months 40 One Month 16 The O Circulation lVpartinint No, A, CHARLOTTE. N. C. A. OA 1 W is for you to come and see our 1
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1909, edition 1
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