EIGHAT PACKS THE MONROE JOURNAL, TTKsnAY. APRIL 2A, ika. EIGHT PACES ONE, AM OM.Y ONE PRICE T( ALL KHKMS, THE ORIGIN. rons ok oe price depart. MEXT STOKES IX THE CAROIJ. SAS. mr5 SO ONE-PRICE DEPARTMENT STORES I. THE TWO CAROLINA KURD'S. THE, BARGAIN' CEX-TER. t. ALL THIS WEEK ' ' Thousands Have Rubbed Their Eyes with Surprise at Efird's Values. Our Values are Wonderful ind our Prices &re Lowest. Price Protection from &JI who Buy from Efird's. ladies' Voile and Organdie Dress:: Specially Priced. . Corset Covers and Camisoles 1 Lot -Batti-e Corset Covers, ni.vly trimmed v.ith Lace aud Ribbon. 11.00 values $l.3( CAMIM-LES Wk-. 1 Lot Silk Car.UMdes. nicely trimmed with Lace and Ribbo.i, special Thtse are regular $10 and $12.5 value?. Bis lot to select from. All new natteriis: nicelv made. The verv thins vou will want for the hot summer days. Belter pet yours while the stock is large. ' Sl.tMl CAVisoI.E Die. IY, Lot Si'k and Lire Camisoles, pot.! values for $1; our price only., SANPLE 10T COAT SUITS $50. o Coat S-:it in Fine French li:!ed e and Tricot ine, all fine Silk ' .( to t.YtH) I INDIES HOl'sE DRESSES Good for street wtar. made of seed quality f ingham. Prrtty patterns. Nicely mai. Cheaper ihan j on could buy the maferlal today. nil Di-j . . . . i$e to il.4 i $3.00 Dress . ... ..." $16 io $1.91 j . COAT si ITS , $L50 Dress . . ." $1.6$ to $2.0$ j , ot ,.,.pe al.,j Tricot Ine Coat Suits; Special Price S.W.lto HEADED GEORGETTE DRESSES LADIES NEW SII K AND POPI.IX SKIRTS You boner get in on these; won't be any more to cheap for a hmg shipment Lad it New Skirts, a!! pretty new shades and styles, will while. EFIRD'S Lew Price $21.5(1 on sale at special price of l.1Mi lo Why pay the other fellow r.ore for your Ready-to-Wear when you can al-; way get it csheaper at Efird's. S-.il no TIINIII .l-'YTIv IHtL'SSI'S ... . ........... . ... - . ... . These Drerses ere worth the price we ask whoKsale. By taking the lot of one of the I.trgtst manufacturers, hmee we can make you the low price of only ' si Mi l"OPI.IN liRESSES SHOE BARGAINS i -r 1 You can a,wc' cou,u 0,1 Ending the newest in Shoes 'at EFIRD'S at prices 4 j can afford lo i,ay. i Children's White Mary Jano Pumps $1.21 to $1 4H j Ladies' Mahogany Calf Lace Oxfords, military heel, medium toe. spe- ' j M mm j Ladies' Black Lace Oxfords, low heels with rubber, round medium 40c!. ,oes- 8Pwi"1 fl.ftt jLndies' Black Kid Lace Oxford:), flexible turn soles, low heelg with rub- - her. niedium toe, special 4i.5 j Ladies' Black Kid Pi.mi s. medium toe, flexible welted soles, baby Louis"" heels, special $H.Ki SHIRT WAIST BARGAINS V have a bis stock to select from. You can find the Waist you want at EFIRD'S AT BIG SAYING VOILE AND OKGAVDY WAISTS 1 Special Counter Yoile, Organdy and Lawn Waists, $1.50 values Special at IIMc and I.18 $10.00 Silk Poi lin Dresses, in new Spring stles and ccli'is. Special Stl.il.T to 7..VI New Spring' Coats If you haven't tot yours ytt, have a few left you can buy at a Mi savin;;. GEORGETTE CREPE W AISTS tjtt.OH Special Co.'ti.er Gtogette Crepe and Wash Silk Waists, special .... t2.S LADIES $:1.mi WAISTS 1.8 1 Counter f3."0 Georgette and Crepe Waiats . . . . 1.118 LADIES FINE SIUMI WAIST K.l.ltt LADIES' PETTICOATS $2.00 Satteen Petticoats One Special Lot of good quality Saltern Petticoats in designs, a splen 1 Counter I. adits tine Crepe de Chine and Georgette Waists, $6 values I.1Ht SKIs! !7..tl and KM.no WAISTS HU.M did buy at SI.4N 1 Coil!;:' r Ladies' fine Georgette , beaded, all the pretty new colors and styles. Yon won t find anything hke these for the money, special )fl.5 MEN'S SHOES Men's Mahoaany Calf Oxford, medium broad De, welted soles, rubber . heels, special v jut. 05 You are specially Invited to come In and look our Ladies and Men's Shoe over. You will not be urged to buy. We have the Red Crow, Kneeland and Imperial Shoes for Ladles. We also have the Kueeland Pullman Shoes for men, $6.f0 up to the best. , . Efird's Save You Money on Clothing V.'e control exclusive cpency for the famous 1I wool Monroe Cloihinir for Men and Young Men. There is no line manufactured that is more exten sively ndvetrised and established in the North or the South than the -Monroe Clothing" and no line that is more substantially made up or moderately priced. We are receiving shipments daily in all the Serges. Worsteds. Mixed Weaves, etc., that are desirable for Spring and Summer wear. They range In price from K23.(M to $(). ROYS' HHOW.V TWEED SPRING SITTS High waist, yoke efTect, belted and flap pockets, sizes 8 to 11, nt .... $.." 12 to 18 $ 12.no Boys' Suits. $10.00 values : $7.8 Boys' Black Milan Straw Hat. regular $3.50 values at 91.98 Children's Black Straw Hats, Mod shapes, $2.00 values, at $1.48 ROYS' CLOTHING Boys' Serge Suits, sizes from 8 to 18 years; $12.50 values at $.!. $12.50 Boy's Spring Csssimere belted model Suits, mixed, maroon, brown, gray mixed, all sizes $!I.M5 One lot Boys Suits, sizes 16 to 18 years; would be cheap at $10,00, at S(l.95 Eflird's Oepapflmeimll SHofcb - ' - Where You Can Always Buy It for Less Where More People are Trading Every Day. WHY SOME MEN GET ."( t A MONTH ANV OTHERS l later. Frank was back with a list showing that the Oceanic not only carried two thousand seal skins but that she also had live beaver and eleven hundred iuink pelts. The eni plnjer pressed the button a third time i:titi George, the $500 man, walked in i lie (.tlice. He was given the same In sitiictions his brothers had received. George did not return for three hours and the office had closed for the day, but hln lather and the boss were wait ing for him. 'The Oceanic carries two thousand seal skins,' he began. "They are offered at $5 each, so 1 lock a two-day option on them, and I have wired a prospect in St. Louis. oiferiiiK (hem lo him at $7. 1 expect i to have h order to-morrow. I also red beaver, which I elephoue at a profit of $700. The mink pelts are of a poor quality so I didn't try to do any thing with them.' Thai's fine, George,' said the boss. Then when ho huri r-nna lha ftmtilfivor fiimurl In ployer and find out why they eiei, he lather and smiled. You probably noticed,' he said, 'that Jim doesn't do as he's told, Frank does as he's told, while George does without being The Highest Paid Men Do Without BcIiik Told Other Are Continual Jy ItodgliiK Extra Tasks Which They Are "Not Hired To Do." To the Editor of The Journal: The other day I read a powerful lit tle story in which the writer under took to explain why some get $500 a mouth while others work for a $10M. A friend sent the poem below, and they fit together so well, and are so good, I would like for your readers to have them. W. Z. Faulkner. "It seems that three brothers left the farm to work in the city, and all foun,i f,ve iulmj got Jobs in the same company, start-1 f0, ovpr tne t( jus ai i ne sr.me pa;., ..x years later one was receiving $100 a month; the second $200; and the third $5uo. Their father, hearing of these sal aries, decided to visit his sons' em- paid on what seemed to be such an unfair basis. I will let them ex plain for themselves,' said the boss, as he pressed a button under his desk. Jim, (he lowest paid man of the three, answered. "I understand the Oceanic has Just docked," said the employer. 'Please go down there tand get an Inventory of her cargo." Three minutes later Jim was back in the office. "She carries a cargo of two thousand seal skins,' reported Jim, 'I got the information from the, first mate over the telephone.' 'Thank you. Jim,' said the boss. 'That will be all.' He pressed the button again, and Frank, the $200 man reported. 'Frank, I wish you would go down to the dock and get an inventory of the Oeeaiiic's cargo." An hour later toid. TORN AIM) III Kill) MILE OYER A HlNDIiElt FEET It' Hody Wat Found Pierced With Standing Sew Inn Machine Found Hanging in u Tree. Edwin Brietz, a staff correspondent of The Charlotte Observer, visited the cyclone struck sections of Goose Creek, Monroe and New Salem town ships Tuesday, and wrote a two-col umn article on the storm for his pa lur. In the main, his facts corres ponded closely with those hastily gathered by The Journal Tuesday morning, but he was enabled to gath er more interesting sidelight) on the occurrence on account 'of having more time at his disposal. Some of these sidelights follow: "When the storm burst upon them in all its fury, Presson and his wife were sitting on the edge of a bed playing with their small baby. Pres son put his anus around his wife and sought to comfort her. Then the house was struck. "The man, woman and baby went into the air together. As they fell Mrs. Presson rirnnned the hflhv. NOT HIS JOB." Neighbors who hurried to the spot I'm tint Rummsprl In ?n thnf." Rflld'fniinH t ha man nnri tfntunti httftHled he, on the ground. Presson's arm was wnen an extra tasK ne cnancea io still a to tin a nis w.ne . . . . .. -. '.Ye Have 50 Head Fresh Mule from 9O0 to 12O0 pounds, well broke ready for work. AI.SO SOME nE BROOD SLAKES. Give at look. iu Mllt FOWLER & LEE. DR. S. A. ALEXANDER VETERINARIAN The late Dr. Watt Ash craft office. Office Thone 113. Res. 55-J see; "That's not my Job, and it's not my care. So I'll pass It by and leave it there." And the boss who gave him his week ly pay. Lest more than his wages on him that day. "I'm not Eupposcd to do that," he said; "That duly belongs to Jim or Fred," So a little task tliat was in his way, That he could have handled without delay, Was left unfinished; the way paved. For a heavy loss that he could have , saved. And time went on and he kept his place, But he never altered his easy pace, And folks remarked on how well he knew. The line of the tasks he was hired to do; For never once was he known to turn, His hand to things not of his concern. But there in his foolish rut he stayed, And for all he did, he was fairly paid But he never was worth a dollar . more. Than he got for hla toil when the week was o'er; For he knew too well when his work was through, And he'd done ail he was hired to do. If you want to grow In this world, young man. You must do every day all the work you can. If you find a task, though It's not your bit, , And it should be done, take cart of it; For you'll nefer conquer or rise If The Bressons lost heavily In live stock. A valuable mule was hurled 4a hundred feet against a tree stump. The mules body was pierced by a two-by-four scantling. "A horse from Presson's barn was carried several hundred feet into a patch of woods. It was found early this morning, apparently unhurt. "Harrows, ploughs and other ag ricultural Implements were carried hundreds of feet by the storm which departed as suddenly as it had come. A sewing machine hung from a tree limb. Bed clothes, wearing ap- was pare!, iron beds, were scattered about the fields nearby. Lying underneath a tree Just out of the path of the storm was a worn and lorn family Bible opened at the Second Epistle to the Corinthians. "The escape of Roy Byrd, aged thirteen. Is perhaps the most remark able of all. The little fellow awoke to And himself buried under I mass of wreckage. He tried to extricate himself, groping bit way slowly and painfully in the dark. He crawled Into the well. A piece of heavy tim ber had been hurled Into the well and as he fell, young Byrd lodged on this From there he crawled to safety. "The Griffins also had a narrow cape. As the storm sweji down upon them and struck their barn, they fled from their bed. Just as they left it the chimney of their house fell across the bed, splintering It "A steel range from the Presson home was found three miles aray In a wneat neia. "A huge mass of wreckage I" a" that is left to mark the place where the Williams home, the most Impos ing In the neighborhood, once stood. This house collapsed. The roof is on the ground, almost Intact. The Observer reporter, stumbling around was a mute reminder of the hour or the catastrophe. . "The Presson baby was rescued ft om a mass of debris unhurt. This escape is all the more remarkable in view of the fact that Mrs. Presson Is believed to have dropped the Infant as she was falling "The road from! he Presson home to the next farmhouse was littered with nails and fragments of broken dishes this morning, nevertheless a neighbor, hurrying to the scene in liis barefeet last night, did not get so much as a scratch. "The cyclone Is the most fearfi'! thing Union county has known in years. Even the oldest inhabitants of, the Goose Creek section can re member nothing like It. White-j haired, bearded patriarchs halted their work of helping rebuild the Byrd home yesterday afternoon to re mark that' Union county has never before known anything like it." WE ARE NOW OPEN for business, and are prepared to overhaul your car, gas engine, tractor nd all farm machinery. Will also do your blacksmlthing, carriage and wag on work , all at reasonable prices. Call and see us for quick service and satisfactory work. Williams Motor Company, J. L. Williams, proprietor; Arthur Medlin, M. M., Unionville. N. C. FOR SALE Desirable building lots. C. D. Roberts. Phone. 208-R. WANTED bOO cords four-foot pine wood delivered at Mojiroe J. E Stack & Co. FOR SALE Corner lot 70 x 175 ft., In good neighborhood. J. E. Liles, Special Notices One cent a wora each Insertion. (UK sale bix-room house on Houston street; all modern eonven lences water lights and sewerage large back lot; on paved street. Fowler A Lee. DARDANELLA The new dance rec ord in four different styles. Hollo way's Music House. PIGS FOR SALE Ready for delivery April 20. Chas. A. Long, Route 6. WANTED Young lady or young man to do clerical work. Must write a good hand and have some acquaint a nee with Webster's Bluebark. Ad dress in own handwriting Box 7, Monroe, N. C. WANTED Man to sell trees, shrubs, roses, vines, bulbs. Permanent.- Brown Brothers Nurseries, Roches- teer, N. Y STRAYED A black horse about 6 years old. Kufus Little, Marsh ville. Route 6. AT AUCTION Mr. J. G. Rogers will sell two baby carriages at auction Saturday afternoon on the court house square at two o'clock. POTATO PLANTS One million pure Porto Rico and Nancy Hall potato ment. Two dollars per thousand, shipping polni. All orders receive prompt attention. G. J. Derrick, Lancaster, S. C. FOR RENT Furnished room; bath, hot and cold water. Phone 80-R. . you I among the wreckage, found a huge Do enlr e tblnfs you are supposed I Grandfather's clock, with the bands to do. registering Ave minutes to nine. This FOR SALE At a bargain, saw mill outfit In good running order. Will sell cheap on quick sale. E. M. Hinson, Route 3, Box 168, Mon roe. N. C. FOR SALE A lot of pure Slmpkins cotton seed. T. L. Price, Route 1. Unionville. N. C. VERY SPECIAL Red Hill Syrup, just as sweet as lasses candy that your sweetheart helped ou make whe you were sweet sixteen." "Some sweet." CrowelJ'i Variety Store. FOR A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT go to Hollaway's, Monroe, N. C. FOR SALE Ford cars, new and re built. We also carry In stock Ford roadster, touring and sport bodies. We do high grade painting and top building on all makes. Payne's Auto Works, Charlotte's Reliable Car Market, 26 East 6th Street, Charlotte. N. C. FOR SALE Five or six head of horses and mules. T, J. Price. Monroe Bottling Works. FOR SALE Two new 32x3 H clinch er casings at a sacrifice. Also two Goodyear, plain tread, one Good rich nobby tread, 24x4; clinchers slightly used. Have no use for the above. See me quick. George McClelland. FOR PLAIN SEWING phone 121-R. NOTICE I will be out of .town for Til a nt rtaariv for ImniMi Inf ft hlrsL awhile. Dr. Howard Smith will have regular days tat my office and will look after all unfinished busi ness. See the Monroe papers for his dates. Dr. Horace Smith. WE HAVE IT Enough butter paper to supply Union county, at 35 cents a pound. Crowell's Variety Store. FOR SALE One new Ford Touring tar witn starter ana one sugniiy used Ford Touring Car with Start er. D. B. Harrington, Monroe.N.C. PIANOS. PIANOS We have a house full of the latest models. Holla way's Music House. FOR SALE Old creamery building J. Frank Williams. FOR SALE One or two fresh milk cow a. fiam Medlin, Monroe Rt. f. WANTED Bix cords of pine wood. A. II. CrowelL FOR SALE Genuine Porto Rico po tato plants. Book orders now for April and May delivery. Cash must accompany order: $2.60 a thousand S. M. Knight. Monroe Route 1. PHONOGRAPHS A car of new ones Just arrived. Hollaway's Music House. . y PASTURE FOR CATTLE One of I he, best pastures in the county at the disposal of your cattle. Charges $1.75 to $2.00 per month. Mrs. J. W. Howey, Waxhaw, R. F. D. 4. I'm Mr. Berry "Air. Boscul Coffet Berry. Notice my chaff vest showing in front "When my coat is cracked open by the Boscul process like this "My vest of worth less chaff falls out' like this-. "Also the bitter tan nin it contains. bo You get only the good part of the berry fra grant, wholesome, de licious! Let's get ac quainted todayl" , In tin and iraled eartom only. N$vtr in bulk. ?1 Wa.S.ScnB Co Camden. N. J. Trr ! I,. imrtrr. Nmi.t- f H I r k- HOWARD WOLFE, RepresenUtlr Mob roe, if. V.