«==■»=—__ »imiiiniiiiiiniiiimi»ii»miw:»mnimimsai^;«tttM»t«twwi I’ — .. ..... ^ AUCTION SMALL FARMS I .» \J • H • . ^ The ROBESON PL A.CE Subdivtd id On Highway, Near GODWIN, N. C. xj SATURDAY, MAY 17, 11 A. M. 1 ■ ; 379 acres in high state of cultivation. Several tenant houses, fine loca : tion, 100 acres river land. This property is located 2 1-2 miles south ; west of Godwin on the highway. __ I ^_ House ad Lots and Buisnes* Property at Auction at 2 p.m. at God- j win Station. This property consists of 4 Dwelling Houses, 7 Vacant i I sile 1 -_1 C_1A*» _ ' IN THU Valuable Real Estate Will Be Sold On Easy Terms anti the Purchasers Make the Price. J. M. Jon es, Owner ill Mlin*A*"* Raleigh Real Estate & Trust Company rale,gh-n-c ...^——.~. .. JUSTICE FOE THE FOtTER-FAR ENTS OF OUE CHILDREN U U strange that generoaa-heart ed A atari m a people, who poured out 'h«ir riches aa prodigally to rcaponte to CTery patristic, every charitable appeal, and who accorded inch ea tkuaiarile and liberal support to ev en measure and to oven group that Lclcfd v-iB tb„* war. should hsrve neg lected to properly encourage aad re ar rd t’ i so’ vices of one of tbs noblest refer*,?a- in the Acid of human ae r-'Wea—a profession that la lefty id ala. In oneoHtvh principles, la sacred r .ponalbllitirv, stands side by side w 1» the aiaiMry aif the Gospel itself We wish to b:*pcak, with whatever P*" * and aurttx nty we any have aad »Mk »u:h words aa may be granted to as, seme measuro of consideration for the feder-fathsra and mothers of oar children—the school-teachers of the United. States of America. There la no class of workers of which we demand so mack. We com mit into their keepii^ the minds, the bodies, and the very seals of our chil dren la the tender aad formative yean sf their Una, aad they, raceiv ing these children, can indeed be add to bold in hallow of their hands the fat ore of America. We aspect these devoted jama aad woman to wateh over aad eats for ear sens aad daugk iefca aa tbo they warn theiv’vsry own, i* **+** * MW erisacm. tram Ahsm hi hadbaruad br t __I ttglug^ht^a^Xa1 isaposai&tty eratad men aad women. No darn has psiNetmed their incruaaiagty heavy tf*M mere devotedly, mere coneelea Hmmly, aad with lean thought of self. He cbm served their country more wholeheartedly, mere loyalty, daring the trying aad tempestuous timaa of peepla. sad through the children the parents, to see tbs struggle la its true light, than securing (be coopera tion for Use community Tn .very meaa are undertaken by the Gevoramant to i win the wnr. Truly they lift mad* tha nation their everlasting debtor. Truly bod they not done their work so well this republic would not outlast the spaa of a generation. What than have the teachers receiv ed at our hands (n return T Thsy have received little of honor and somewhat tom °f pay- Other els sees he vs pros pered : other claaees through powerful organiaatiics have meurad generous wages. The teachers have no spokes man. however, to demand even tha simple justice of a living wage, so to them we give their petty prewar pit tance, ao meager, so pitifully Inade quate, that K places a burning brand of sham# and dignet upon this na tion. Tha man and arimen who are mak ing the Americans of to-morrow are being treated with laaa coosidarntiin than the janitors who sweep out the buildings in which they are employ ed; they are earning on the average, lam thao tha wages given to the scrubwoman employed In the public buildings of United States Govern ment. Normal school graduates re ceive leas aalarty than street-sweepers; high-school principals and superin tend leas than section foramen; coun try school teachers Um foe instruct ing Um farmers’ children than ha papa hie hired asm to feed his bogs. la a certain town of Illinois. for mftooce, tbo average wages of fifteen fto -fn owe month so ntf, the average monthly salary of •ftoea twaihira k tha same town was W. la another town a miner, who, by the way. su an enemy alien, draw more than 12,700 last year, wUU tha mhury at tha high-school principal in the same town was $7M. Vs wei coma with aO our hearts the longbe tated recognition that is being grrsa to tha man who erarka with his hands. We believe that this tame working man will be the first to join with us to mkisg bettor pay for tbooe who tiach his children No wonder there are fifty thousand vaesuteies in the Leaching forces of the schools. No wonder the ranks are being filled with weak seen and with Immature women who merely um tbs profession aa a stepping-stone to something bettor. No wonder there are thirty thousand teacher* In tha United States who have had no sffiiool i«t bayond the eighth-grammar grad*. Small wonder, indeed, that aeaan mil lion of our acbool-childran are being trained by teacher*, mar* boy* and girli themselves, who have had no professional education whatever Whan w* consider that the 740,000 teachers of America are paid an aver •** salary of *6*0 a year; whan, moreover, wa consider tha fact that Ihring costs have actually advanced 10* par cant since th^weginning of the war, thereby tip buyfhg-power of these insignificant salaries in half, w* can easily determine that only a fool or a martyr would choose teach ing aa a profession or would long raasmio in it unices these terrible con ditions were swiftly remedied. What a crime is this! What an indictment! What an unpardonable sin at the doors of an enlightened peo ple who now find themselves at the head and forefront of the democracies of the world! How can wa batter pr*-' para for the great undertaking* of reconstruction than by setting our eehma immediately to remedying this perilous conditio* • In these trying UM chaotic times whan the worid is beset by unrtat, by anarchy, by re volution. by tha devil’s brood of ap pelEr.g evil* that follow in the train of war, wa miss* snake sure **»■> the 'oundation* of our republic are set on a rpek that It may stand ag?unstth* (rood. The peace and security of the worid of the future will he in the safe keep ing ef the generation now in our aebaols. These boys and girls must Mw»v* up tha raveled sleava” of civil tnation. Their hands must minister to-the wounds of the nations. Thalr minds must meet and solve the difficult and crucial problems that will be their lDh*ritaM«. Th*ir hearts most be so Irabu ad the horrors of war and with the poverty and anguiah t)mt inevitably follow in its wake that they ia their time will enter upon it only Y d last resort in national aalf-de fensee or ia support of some groat principle of humanity. Never haa there been a more urgent need for high-minded, great-hearted splendidly trained. 100 per cent American Instructors to drive home nei i ■■ _jl> j»i I | TTTTT1I | 1 I the Vital lessons that theae time* hold. Never has the future of the nation been so dearly committed into the hanili of the teacher* And yet thou «»nd.< of men and women of ability who prefer to tench are reluctantly leaving their chosen calling, forced by tut hard necessities of their vary oriel ence. Tic teachers aak no largess at the hand* of fortune. They enter their profession for service, not riehau. But they invert year* and money in pro pel a.ion for the life-work and the knov kdee they gala ia shared with other* who themselves ue* it to their tkon' by every right aod in all justice expect a ro tum that will permit them and their dependents to live decently and la comfort. In every commaalty reached hy The Literary Digest there are readers of fortiifht, of vision, broad-niiid«d men and thoughtful woman who aril] —»»y, perbsp* have long dry-* nwn—the critical aod compelling Im portance of this problem. We era directing this appeal to them. We urge them to compare the — of their teachers with the aragaa of those who ant doing work of equal value. There wfll be a challenge in the facts that will stir the community in action. *• Let each cqn*> unity invest in schools so that * may thereby invest ■ n - *—|--t rs-iabrif i mil vaasaahoed that caTpUytSfijmrt in the great period of rebutting aod reconstruc tion that hei hhfore us. Let each community set for its goal, aa fa* aa js practicable, a minim tint wage of at least 11,000 a year for tbs teachers of America. Ibis would coat the tm tiou perhaps as much as we spent «> gloriously h> but one week of the Great War. We are pleading merely for the welfare of soma tingle profession; wa hi* not pleading for a special clam; we are pleading for America: for her larger, her brighter, bar richer future, for the fulfillment of bar glorious promise. We are pleading for a com ing race of men and women who shall be qualified to make complete the work of our forefathers who found ed this nation and dedicated It to liberty, and who will bring to full iimaa fraitloD the new Victoria* that w* have won in freedom's ana*. We arc pleading for a wider teaching of the principle,, the pwpaenTaSFth. ideal* of due nation that all near •hall know her meaning and d»»n hare equal access to her opportoel tlei; that the light of American lea will ao shine that It will flood every home, every heart. In oar great land —I.itarery Digest A GOOD r»IENP A good friend stands by yea when in »»nnp#opU Ull how Doan's Kidney Pill* have stood the tost Mrs. A. H. Hargrove, ' 207 & Magnolia •treat Dunn endorsed Doan’s foar yean ago and again coaflras the •tory. Could yoa ask for mar* con rlncing testimony. “My back ached and I bad palm aeroea ay loins" «aye Ha Hargrova I was annoyed by headache* and dlaay m#Ua and ay tight was blurred. ■ y kidneys acted irregularly end ay ankles were terribly swollen. 1 bought s bog of Doan’s Kidney Pills ■an using them. Dean’s lief, banishing aU thoeO kidney trouble.” ( June 19, 1914). i -rk*-g On July S, 1918, added: ** am as firm _ ^“^^tdneyKBje bqw as AJ! I have foraoriy aid in nahn *W. holds rood. My kfiaoys 5“v* in good_eooditioo and ay ^ boon •toeaw ever atoea. Prtce «0c, at an dealers Don’t •imply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan ^Kidney Pm*—the same that Mr*. Hargrove had. Paatar-M Ohara Co., Mfgrs, Buffalo, R Y. “God give us patience sad strength that we amy work to build op schools that shall be as a light ehiall« throughout the land—ton, flfty, a thousand candle poorer. Behind this movemsnt for the education of the eWldrsn of oar land there stand. One who said, Let there he light.”—C. B Ayeoek. fa*•"*** *°^ .m :::::::::::: mmt;m* r The Vital Thing that will give your old car new life i ' A/TONEY make, tha mare go’—it's the batt> * AVA tery that makes the car go. What Is tha condition of your battery? la k —'“tuir~f Doss it tasks tbs car to as long sad m tar as it should? Or don’t you know ha condition? ,3 *—r Ixtwseq aiT*8!InrT tv*J aUhaa been" j iarcsiy a qoestton of bow tnueb otrski adfau oT t^e te- J wry. It U our business to take ears of any tealsties, to repair sfl makes. Ui. our principal business is to sea you get an Eeeready-the btutry with a written fuarantee for IK year*. ( (/ I J. \V. THORNTON. Dunn. N."p. V ■ ar-ass EYERt/iB The Heart of Humanity ; Far more than a war-story—the director has used the great war as a gigantic curtain for I his human characters. DOROTHY PHILLIPS has become one of the screen's greateft actresses through this picture. It depicts the wonderful work of the Red Cross in rebuilding the brains and bodies of war orphans, borne of the most, remarkable cloae-upa of trench fighting ever recorded by a motion picture camera arewshown J Cooties—Machine Guns—flatties—Scenes of Beauty—War and Wonderful Mother Love WIiTE Monday and Tuesday, May 19-20 Matinee Tuesday 3 o’clock PRICE 55CTS. T!9^'ToWn P*tr°n*: 00 not this opportunity of seeing this wonderful pro auction. r »)imHiiiiMii«Hiiiiiiiiiiii»mitiiiiiiii»n»H»iiiiiiiiiKm«g * ■■ -— i: /"£-> :i ■ ENDORSED BY CONGRESSMAN _J_ J GODWIN , :• t ‘ • i ■ :! % . - > #■- ■ ;! Dunn, N. C., May 13th. Mr. Marsh Morrow, Dunn, N. C., j; Dear Sir: I am glad to see that you have booked Heart of Humanity for Monday and Tues day, May I 9th and 20th. Will say it is the greatest picture I h$ve even Seen, and am glad that the people of Dunn and vicinity will j 9 J,ave oppprtunity to see this wonderful i! picture. | j ! f * 1! Wishing you the vefy best of success, lam^ \\ Yours truly, ; i * H. L. GODWIN. ill; • + \ \ i _ _ >