Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / Feb. 25, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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Mr. R. W. Winston Meet Tt&c Death. Raleigh. Feb. 1. While suffering from sudden attack of nielancluv lia. Mrs. Robert W. Winston. wife Of ex-Judge Winslon of this city.; rushed through the window of her' room on the sixth floor of the Jef-, ferson Hospital in Philadelphia to day and Ml to death on the pave ment below. The tragedy incurr ed during the temporary absence of her uurse. Airs. Winston had been vuder treatment by Dr. Thomas Jlc Rae, a distinguished specialist, at this hospital for some weeks, lu hud beeu in poor health for several year, and uuder the stress of her phj sical affliction her nerves became atHcttsl. rendering her suoject to at tacks of melancholia. The people of the city were greatly shocked and grievttf by the news of her dfath. Mrs. Winston was Miss Saphronia Horner, sister of Bishop Horner and Mr. James C. Horner of Horner's School. Oxford, and of Miss Mary Horner and Mrs. A. W. Graham of Oxford. Mrs. H. G. Cooper of Hen derson. Mrs. W. S. Manning of Spar tanburg. S. C. and Mrs. Robert C. Strong of Raleigh. Her children are Horner Winston of Chicago, Ro bert Winston of Asheville. Mrs. Web of Durham and Miss Amy Winston. The broom factory of Watkins Brothers lu China Grove was burn last week. The loss was $ 1,000 with $500 Insurance. however, that will be up to you. Of course there are all kinds of stories, but the general Impression here Is that if they had used Gowans Preparation instead of a "just as good." for there are none, it would nevr have happened. I know, and you know, of many cases of croup that it h;s cured, and this was at first a very mild rase. I do not see why people do not keep a bottle of Gowans la the house It costs but fifty cents, or a dollar there Is a small twenty-five cent size a croup size that will do. It is external and anything where there is Inflammation It cures. Rut of course everybody knows everybody's business. I am very sorry. Affectionately. CLARA. Driven From Home. Sharing ami Rearing. i Ian R. Hanna, publisher of the If so it be you have a Joy. (Cleveland lO.) Leader and News, Just go outside and share It, jwill give $10,000 to establish a But if some Trouble doth annoy, school of Journalism at the Western Why, sit within And try to grin And bear it! L. C. Swain an Insurance man of Kinston committed suicide in the hotel at Washington Monday by drinking carbolic acid. Reserve University of Ohio. "Fine night," said Siuithers r.ai.'in :u the heavens. "So," said the Boston girl, "you mean infinite. " Harper's Bazar. 200 LBS. PIASTERS1 SOUffiLEGUANO t I PHOSPHATE GO. f ' CHARIEST S.C.? r Biwiimanw ; mrmum tr j s taut n aaMtt i - 1 1SSfSs VIHV OF THE PLANTERS I f STANDARD i FERTILIZER WMMCIIMfSn WCSPHATICa t CHARIX5T0N it f rfmitWM lout TT.1 1 ir-1 ; 1 ft T"M 1 l t l&&t. rianiersr enuiser & rnospnaieto. M0& Modern cad Thoroughly Equipped Fertilizer ?hzt la the South V tniin-:n tfi. hmfcect tnnJ:--J r.f r.-e!ien.--e in the manufacture of Planters Fertilizers. Our trade-mark on every big is f;ua;;:.T.ee at )cu are getting the Best Fertilizer Made. To produce ir.c:e;sed yields, fertil::;rs r.ust certain PHOSPHORIC AClD-ALM0NIA-P0TASII I, Jacob Riis in Outlook. -Doctor, what shall I do? My father wants me to tend bar on Sun day. I am doing it nights, but Suit- day 1 don't want to. What shall 1 do? The pastor of the Olivet Church looked kindly at the lad who stood be-fore l.iiM. cap In hand. The List of the Sunday - school bad trailed out; the boy had waited for this op portunity. Dr. Sehaut'fler knew and liked him cs one of his bright boys. Hi knew too, his home (ne sordid, nard-usied Uerman rather ind his patient, long suffering moth er. "What do you thiuk yourself, Karl?" "I don't want to. Doctor. I know tt is wrong." "All right then, doa't." "But he will kick ma out and never take me back. He told me so, and he'll do it." "Well" The boy's face flushed. At four teen, to decide between home and outy is not easy. And there was his mother. Knowing him, the doc tor let him fight It out alone. Pres ently ne squarea nis snouiders as one w ho had made his choice. "I can't help It if he dots." he said: "it isn't right to ask me." "If he does, come straight here. Good-by!" Sunday night the door-bell of the pastor's study rang sharply. The ; Doctor laid down his book and an swered it himself. On the thres hold stood Karl with a small bun dle done up in a bandana handker chief. "Well, I ara fired." he said. "Come in, then. I'll see you through. The boy brought In his bundle. It contained a shirt, three collars and 'a pair of socks, hastily gathered up la his retreat. The doctor hefted iU' I "Good llsM," he smiled. ' Men , fight better for It sometimes. Great t battles have beeu won w ithout bag 'gage trains." The boy looked soberly at his all. "1 have got to win now, Doctor. Cet me a job, will you?" ) Things moved swiftly with Karl from that Sunday. Monday morn ing saw him at work as errand boy n such proportions 1- armors ail uiru u: frY 200BS 1 1 I PLANTERS! tmUCKrlRTlUZER: tuMMcrian it 2 ' AND r PHOSPHATE CO. f CHARLtSTOM.it that it furnisht i.itiume and km time supply of plant food at all time. Thousands of T .in an office, earning enought for his . I . . I - I . .1. . r I M I I. ....).. L I t,A.H . U - t.m H.I Inn I 1 e oouiu icsiiiy to mo groat rjsuns secureu iroin iuu use vi u:t."-v ra ajj aevy m mo uooiuinn-uuusa wuere . . P .... .. ... me rj his mother found him at times when f, an er ,Uer Truck Feruhzcr V' hla father wa. alone kee ping bar. V an ters Soluble Guano . . . 8-3-3 J M I T"it night he registred at the near- Planters "Standard I-ertilizer" 9-2-2 MBaaaM ""Tf -.viTino. , ,i,a 1,1. pi,o. "ci.,! rn r,.it:. a-1.1 fi . ebt evening school to complete his . - I i-v..--. I .course. The Doctor ke ThoT will protluce larper crops, enrich the soil and mailo it more productive for future croi. Ak our aircnt or write us direct fur infor mation alout the best fertilizer for your laud. Planters Fertilizer & Phosphate Company, Manufacturer Charleston, South Carolina the best 8. C. Phosphate Flh Scrap, Tsnkage', German Potash, etc 1 g twmmamm y lit U" rommt mm lSsfc Bloud, rpHE SEWER SYSTEM is nearing completion and it is now time for those who will connect to begin to think of getting supplies. We have a complete line of bath tubs, lavatories, closets and all ac cessories for this system and invite you to inspect our line. HEATH HARDWARE CO. WHOLESALE MONROE, N. C. RETAIL pt a grip .his studies, as he had promised, and ,saw him through. It was not easy sledding, but it was better than the 'smelly saloon. From the nubile 'school ha graduated Into the Cooper ! Institute, where his teachers soon took notice of the wide-awake lad. 1 Karl waa finding himself. He took naturally to the study of languages, and threw himself Into It with the '(irdor of an army marching without baggage train to meet the enemy. He had "got to win," and he did All the while he earned his living working as a clerk by day with ; little baggage yet to boast of and sitting up at nights with bis books. When he graduated from the Insti tute, the battle was half won. The other half he fought on his own ground, with the enemy's tents in sight. His attainments procured for him a place in the Lenox Library and his opportunity for reading was limited only by his ambition. He made American history and litera ture his special study, and In the course of time achieved great distinr tlon In his field. "And they were married and lived happily ever aft er" might by right be added to this story. He did marry nn East Side girl who had been his sweetheart while he was fighting his uphill bat tle, and they have to-day two (laughters attending college. It Is the drawback to these sto ries that, being true, they must re spect the privacy of their heroes. If tliat were not so, 1 sliouid tell you that this hero's name Is, not Karl, tut one much better befitting his fijfht and his victory; that he was chosen historian, of his home State, and held the office with credit until spoils politics thrust him aside, and that he lives today in the capital city of another State, an authority whose word la not lightly qus'lon ed on any matter pertaining to Americana. That is the record of the Cast Side boy who was driven from home for refusing to attend bar In his father's saloon on Sunday be cause It was not right. He never saw his father again, lie tried more than once, but the door of his homo was barred against him. Not with his mother's consent; in long after years, when once again Dr. Schauflier preached at Olivet, a little German woman came up after the sermon and held her hand out to him. "You mado my Karl a man," she said. "No." replied the preacher, sober ly, "God made him." The Legislature of the State of Washington Is considering a bill to pension destitute mothers, an allow ance of $15 per month being made for the first child and $5 per month for each additional child until the children reach a certain age. An allowance of $1.60 a dny Is also made wives of prisoners In penal Institutions. We are preaching co-operation among the farmers, which Is well. There la no finer opportunity for co-operation than In the purchase of commercial fertilisers. If a neigh borhood will give an order for 100 01 about 1,00 tons the maniac turers will name very low prices, especially If It Is a cash sale. And why not a ensh sale? It Is to pay for some tlm, and with the abun dance of money In our banks seek ing loans, the farmers should be able to co-operate again and borrow mon ey, If ' necessary, to purchase for cash, and get the benefit of the cash discount, which Is much more than the Interest charged on the loan. T. B. Parker, In The Pro gressive Farmer. Why the Soutlx-m farm Boy Hmh Milking. Tait Butler, In Progressive Fanner. A friend asks: "How is it that Southern boys dislike milking cows so much, when those raised on the Northern farms do not look upon milking as more disagreeable tnau many other kinds of farm work?" There are several reasons which may account for the differnce. The writer has often asked himself the same question. He began milking cows before he was ten years old, aud preferred milking to many oth er forms of farm work. In fact, he regards milking, as he did when boy, as by no means more disagree able than the general run of work on the farm. But there is a differnce. The Southern farm boy probably dislikes milking for the following reasons: 1. He Is taught by precept and ex ample, that It is disagreeable work. This plays an important part in forming his opinion. 2. He does not know how to milk. because so little of It Is done and !t is so cordially disliked that he has never been taught to milk prop erly. We like to do the things we do well, and percontra, dislike to do those things which we do poorly. S. Milking Is not profitable to the Southern boy. A profit goes a long way towards removing the disagree able features of any business. 4. Milking Is done under the most adverse and disagreeable conditions in the South. The rows are not properly trained, the calf Is an ever- present nuisance, and the milker Is Lever in sympathy with his work. Recently the writer heard a law yer give as one of the reasons why he left the farm, that he was made to milk cows when a boy. He rated. with the innocence born of ignor ance, what a terrinle task milking was, with the cow restless and a lus ty calf fighting for a part of the scanty supply of milk afforded by the tiiisinamanged cow. 1 could not. help feeling that the boy did right in leaving the farm for the law; for a boy taught to tiillk a row- while beinic fed in a fiithy stable, and at the same timel iviupeutu lu tlifia 111 Ull unequal struggle with a vigorous and deter mined calf for the scanty supply of milk such a row would probably vleid. was scarcely likely to find dairying, or any other farm work,1 agreeable or profitable. When our cows are prsp.rly wean fd from their calves, are trained to stand quietly and enjoy the process of milking without being fed; when nllklne ia done amid clean and pleasant surroundings, and when I good cowi are milked by boys taught to do the work properly, then, and not until then, will milking cows, cease to be regarded as disagre?a-! ble work by Southern farm boys. Ia fact, not until then will it really cease to be disagreeable work. REBELS LOOT RAXCHES. Baad. Mores Through tVuutry Uaiaw in Mnngtli i;g Way. Brownsville. Tex. Feb. 20. Reb els en route from San Benito. Mexi co, to join those In control of the town of Matamoras across the borw Jer from Brownsville, looted two ranches today, according to advices received here tonight. At the So'.i cono ranch. 24 m.les west of Mata luoras, $3,000 In csh. horses and cattle were- stolen. A store was pillaged and employees of the nnch robbed. One ar.ed woman was forc ed to surrender $H0 which she had hidden In her dress. La Palma ranch was aUo raided, but the ex tent of the. operations there has not been learned. When the band loft San Benito it numbered 80 men, but recruit were found on the way, and It Is re ported that about 200 men are now in the party. Bow to Bankrupt the Doctors. A prominent New York physician says If it wet. not for the thin stockings and thin soled shoes worn by women the doctors would probably be bankrupt." When yon contract cold do not wait for it to develop into pneumonia but treat it st oooa. Cham berlain's Cough Remedy is intended cspeci sllv for coughs and eolds, and has won a wide reputation by its cures of these diseases. It is most effectual and is pleasant and safe to take. For sal. by all dealers. Adver tiu meat Twenty-eight horses and mules perished In the flames which one morning last week destroyed the stables of C. L. Bevll and J. F. West In Fayetteville. The insurance on the stock and barn was only $7,500. Insurance Adjuster Convicted cf Anton. New York. Feb. 20. "Ixzy the Painter's" confession that he had fired 300 houses at the behest of a' local "arson trust" bore first fruits today in the conviction of Robert J. Rubin, an insurance adjuster. The Jury returned a verdict of guilty of second degree arson after 20 min utes deliberation. Rubin faces a term of imprisonment from one to. 25 years. Jinks "You're losing your hair mighty fast, old man. What Is the cause of It too much tonsorial fric tion?" Rounder "No matrimonial!'" -Judge . A farewell dinner In honor of ex Speaker Cannon, given In Wash ington Saturday evening, was at tended by President Taft, cabinet officials, Chief Justice White, mem bers of both houses of Congress, past, present and prospective, and a hoBt of other political and per sonal friends of Cannon. Cuptain A. P. Garden, assistant doorkeeper of the House of Congress waa found dead In his rooms in Washington Friday night, with his throat cut. An Incoherent note, liantlly Bcrlbbled, Indicated that he had taken his life while temporari ly deranged. Garden was appointed from Wheeling, West a. More than 1000 children made their safe escape from a fire which destroyed the labratory of the Sal isbury graded school. Nine chil dren were Injured but none serious ly. The fire started from a defec tive flue on the second story of an old frame building. Notice of Administration. Having qualified aa administrator of the estate of Columbus Simpson, deceased, late of Union Connty, N. C. this is to notify ail persons hav ing claims against the estate of the raid deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned or his attorneys on or before the 14th day of January, 1914, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All per rons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. A. B. MKDL.1N, Administrator of Columbus Simpson, deed. Love & McNeeley, Attorneys. Dr. D. T. Boger, UMOXVILLE, X. C. Having resumed practicing medicine, will answer calls promptly day or night. Phon. Unlonvllle and Sincerity. The annual pension appropriation bin, carrying $180,300,000, an In crease of $15,000,000 over last year, wns taken up In the House last week. The hill carries a greater to tal than any annual pension bill ev er reported to tho House. The In crease Is caused by the extension of the pension roll by the Sherwood pension law paused by the last Congress. "Stomach Misery ALL GONE" "Mv! How I Did Kufftr But Nw I'm Happy All Day Iaiur and Slee p Fine." That's what a woman said just a few months ago. She said more and here it Is. "I wish it lay within my power to persuade every woman sufferer from dyspepsia or Indigestion (or whatever they may think their stomach trouble Is) to give MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets one week'i fair trial. I am sure that every one of them would thank mo from the bot tom of her heart." "I am well and happy for the first time In years and I do not hesi tate to give MI-O-NA Stomach Tab lets all the credit." Follow this advice. Give MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets a week's trial; If they do not benefit, English Drug Co. will return the cost 60 cents. Striking coal miners In West Vir ginia, whose most recent reign of lawlessness had Just been checked by an active State militia, descend ed upon the State capltol at Charles ton Thursday and were cleared from the building only after a riot call had brought a large force of police men. In ejecting the miners from the building several poraons were slightly hurt. It had been reported that the miners were coming to for cibly take charge of the capitol and when they began to pour Into the building the riot call was sounded. The Legislature continued in session while the disturbance was on In the corridors . "Why are all these dogs hang ing around that letter box?" "Somebody Junt mailed a package of liver." Washington Herald. DR. E. L. PAYNE, Physician and Surgeon, Monroe, N. C. Office to Postoffloa Building, ever Union Drug Co. Office hour 11 to 12 a, m.. 2 to 4 p. m. Residence phone, 27S-R. Dr. E. P. Fuett, Optometrist, CHARIOTTE, X. O. No. 30 North Tryon Street Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted. Dr. E. S. Green. DENTIST. Office in Belk-Bundy Building, Opposite Belk's Store, Monroe, N. C. V. J. PRATT, AttornejHit-Ls w, Having been appointed prosecuting attorney In the Recorder's court, I cannot appear for the defense i criminal actions. All other legal business entrusted to me will re ceive prompt and careful attention. Office: Rooms 21 and 22, Loan Trust Building., Telephone 88. Monroe, N. O. W. O. LEUMOND, Attorney-at-Law. Office In Law Building, old Library room, Monroe, N. C. Will practice In all State and Fed eral Courts. Will give special at tention to collection of claims aud settlement of estates by adminis trators and executors. W. B. HOUSTON, SURGEON DENTIST, Office- op stain, FittRerald Building, Northwest of Courthouse, Monroe, N. C. DOCTOR H.D.STEWART PHYSICIAN, MONROE, N. C. If to. deMra bit terrlera, eslt mo through. lenlncnoe 'pbone 141 , Office 'phone S97. Office hnun 11 to li, a. m.. ami from 10 tot ri. m. Office orer t'nlon Drug Company's. dene on Laneatr arena. DS. B. C. EEDFZARN, Dentist, Office one door south of C. W. Bruncr'i Store. Phone 232. Monroe ,N. 0. At Marshville on 1st and 3rd Mondays of each month and Mat thews on 2nd and 4th Monday.
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
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Feb. 25, 1913, edition 1
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