J HARREL'S CUTE STUDIO J Expert Kodak Finishing. Post g * Cards and Ping Pongs. Modern g $ Photography. 222% S. Elm St. 5 GREENSBORO, N. C. g jXeueK&l $ If you want them cheaper see £ COBLE & MEBANE £ $ THE CASH SHOE STORE £ $ 220 S. Elm St. Greensboro,N.C. * JOS. J. STONE & CO. j PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS I BINDERS Office Equipment and Supplies I GREENSBORO, N. C. im mn i i i - -* 't GUILFORD LUMBER & MFG. CO. } QUALITY MILLWORK j GREENSBORO, N. C. I Eastman Kodak and Supplies £ Filnn promptly developed Mail Orders a Specialty GREENSBORO DRUG CO. Corner Elm and W. Market Sts Jj ! IDR. J. S. BETTS DENTIST I Over Greeniboro Drug Co. j V\%*WNVW\\\\VkNV\W\NNV% £ FOR AUTO SERVICE £ 8 Day or Night, See or Call £ £ LEE S. SMITH Guilford College, N. C. 4 -: ... IRKAVES' EVE, EAK, NOSE ANu j THROAT KF.RMAIrt W. P. Reaves, M. D. C. R. Reavrs, M. D. ♦ R. G. Reavea, M. D J J GREENSBORO, N. C. f >H>I i| iitiHiitn>..|n|"|ii>ii|ii|iitmii#ii#iii'i|ii|iHii|ii|iit *. .. . .1. .n. 4 HANES FUNERAL HOME Funeral Directors—Embalmers Ambulance Service 1 Cor. Sycamore & Greene Sts. (1 Phone 186 (1 GREENSBORO, N. C. H ill i iH n I* POOL & BLUE, INC. Funeral Diretcors AMBULANCE SERVICE | 204 North Elm St. Office phone 420 Night phone 1490 | * THE QUALITY SHOP ? 222 S. Elm St. Ladies' and Misses' Ready-to-Wear • | I'red Liver mo re W. F. Fraser, Mgr. • ' GREENSBORO BOOK CO. 214 S. Elm Street "Everything for the Office" New Fiction, School Supplies, Stationery ; • • Greensboro, N. C. ■ . , , T | I BALTIMORE ELECTRIC j SHOE SHOP The one experienced shop In the South • i • 329 s. ELM ST. PHONE 897 I J S/wir&, 114 W. MARKET ST. DEPARTMENT NOTES Biology Class Visits Mill Pond I hirty embryo biologists did in vestigational work at Hamburg Mill pond last Wednesday. The work consisted primarily of form indenti fication, and oxygen content deter mination of water. Library Being Renovated. Ihe library is undergoing its fall cleaning under Miss Ricks' efficient direction. # * * M iss Ricks Attends Conference. Miss Ricks attended the library conference at N. C. C. W. last Fri day. She reports an interesting meet ing and the discussion of such sub jects as library service for negroes, an index of happenings of histori cal interest to the state, to be taken from newspapers; libraries for pub lic schools. It was resolved that a minimum fee of one dollar per cap ita would be necessary for the main tenance of a library in any commu nity. • • * Mrs. Hayden at Cliapel. Mrs. Hayden, the county health nurse, led chapel Monday morning, in preparation for the annual Red Cross roll call. The Home Econo mics students worked with Mr. Hay den last year in the Health Crusade. ♦ ♦ ♦ Classes Employ Project Method The class in Home Problems has finished housecleaning, and are be F AO M GILBERT WORD MONGERS " and "CHATTERING BARBERS" "Word mongers" and "chattering barbers," Gilbert called those of his predecessors who asserted that a wound made by a magnetized needle was painless, that a magnet will attract silver, that the diamond will draw iron, that the magnet thirsts and dies in the absence of iron, that a magnet, pulverized and taken with sweet ened water, will cure headaches and prevent fat. Before Gilbert died in 1603, he had done much to ex plain magnetism and electricity through experiment. He found that by hammering iron held in a magnetic meridian it can be magnetized. He discovered that the compass needle is controlled by the earth's magnetism and that one magnet can remagnetize another that has lost its power. He noted the common electrical attrac tion of rubbed bodies, among them diamonds, as well as glass, crystals, and stones, and was the first to study electricity as a distinct force. "Not in books, hut in things themselves, look for knowledge," he shouted. This man helped to revo lutionize methods of thinking —helped to make electri city what it has become. His fellow men were little concerned with him and his experiments. "Will Oueen Elizabeth marry —and whom?" they were asking. Elizabeth's flirtations mean little to us. Gilbert's method means much. It is the method that has made modern electricity what it has become, the method which enabled the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company to discover new electrical principles now applied in transmitting power for hundreds of miles, in lighting homes electrically, in aiding physicians with the X-rays, in freeing civilization from drudgery. Gen er a] ft| Elecffcric general Office COlll Oft IIV Sch t ncct,iy,N.Y. *■ ' 55.4K THE GUILFORDIAN ginning laundry, with practical work in wool and silk. The class in Cookery I, is making estimations of the caloric require ments for persons of various occu pations. Cookery No. 2 has finished prac tical experiments with the thermom eter, determining the correct temper atures for cooking various foods. Both the candy and the oven ther moneter were used. PERSONALS Ruth Ragsdale spent the week-end at her home in Madison. M isses Lloyd Merriman, Mary Ragsdale and Margaret Armfield were the week-end guests of Luna Taylor at her home in Danbury. Miss Nellie McSwain of N. C. C. W., Greensboro, was the week-end guest of Miss Gertrude Moore. Nellie Chilton and Bertha Neal spent the week-end at their homes in Walnut Cove. Pherlie Mae Siske, Hazel Col trane and Margaret Smith spent the week-end at their homes. Benbow Merriman spent the week end in Danbury as the guest of Spot Taylor. Misses Lalah Hassel, Mary Fogle man,Alta Hutson, Alma Stuart, Cor dia and Annabel Thompson spent the week-end at their respective homes. Mable Mcßane spent the week-end with Lena Meacham of Guilford Col lege. **x: *-hh ♦♦ r.i.* i;i ♦+.i:i;n SOCIAL AND COMMERCIAL ENGRAVING (Carolina Etujrauinij (Eoutpmuj 214 North Elm Strteet, Greensboro, N. C. | DAVID WHITE, Pres. J. W. BRAWLEY, VicePres. & Treas. J R. W. HARRISON, Sec. & Ally THE REAL ESTATE & TRUST COMPANY j We buy and sell Real Estate, negotiate Real Estate Loans and write ■ all kinds of Insurance | 233 S ELM ST GREENSBORO, N. C. i Reserved for j J (Sttilfnrii (CdUuu* j WOULD YOU LIKE AN INCOME at 65, when your earning power has stopped or greatly decreased? Then begin to provide for it now. You con do it by taking our Endowment Policy payable at 65—or upon your death, if before. It is Insurance, Income, Investment. Will you let us tell you about this? The Provident Life and Trust Co. of Philadelphia FOURTH AND CHESTNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA B. C. Shore, Special Agent, Guilford College, N. C. Vanstory's pwcioti^ Greensboro, North Carolina I The Golden Rule Press ( V PRINTING ( ( 317 S. Kim St., Greensboro, N. C. ,( Phone 194-J I if A STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF ) THE COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK ( i) HIGH POINT, NORTH CAROLINA ( ( AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS SEPTEMBER 15. 1922 I) . RESOURCES ( Jf Loans and Discounts „ \ A Overdrafts $1,538,784.52 1 7 U " S ' Bonds > Liberty Loan Ronds and Certificates of 851 \ A Indebtedness J I) N. C 4 per cent Bends .. ( ( Cuilford County and City of Hitch Point Bonds ZZZZZZIZ 140 412 73 / )) Stock in Federal Reserve Bank 30 000 00 \ ( Banking House and Furniture and Fixtures * 119 256 4s / |1 Cash in Vault and due from banks IZZZZZI 1,561 827 86 ( )) TOTAL .17.872,350.10 ( ( LIABILITIES ] i\ Capital Stock . / V Surplus $ 000 - 0(V \ A fT *• ~ , r , - 500.000.00 1 I) Z - 1ff.'744 I '/ Circulation „„„ \ ( „ . . . - 500,000.00 1 A Bond Account „ _ I II n „, r. J m - 9,000.00 ( '/ nills Payable and Re-Discounts (Secured by Government Bonds) 234 100 00 \ |\ DCP ° SitS 5.501:506:39 / |( TOTAL $7,872,850.10 ) fj Deposits September 15. 1921 _ 4Q6 I ( Increase for Year ) ( J. Elwood Cox, Pres. C. M. Hauser, Active V.-Pres ) () V. A. J. Idol, Cashier ( ( C. M. Marriner, Ast. Cashier E. B. Steed. Ast. Cah. ) PHONE 1378 I VLOTH w " MARKET ST POPULAR PRICED CUSTOM MADE CLOTHES NOTICE I Ins cl iPP'ng with 35! e |idM you to a 50f package of NOTRE DAME Tl.: n SOCOANLTOILSHAMPOO. Call at any dealer's. this may apply on any other Notre Dame Toilet PreDarationj- Ntr. n m r C 2^^itlf'cou^^^N'otM r i^^e C CH Cr^aln o ' , !Sy , Page 3