Newspapers / The Monroe Journal (Monroe, … / June 1, 1920, edition 1 / Page 3
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EIGHAT PACES THE MONROE JOlTjHAL. TOrY. Jrxn I. tKA. I innT PAGFJ XOKTH CIKOIJXA'S NEW I I H ATIOX A L RE VI V A I. T.l? J Ti ' i DanKing anu business Go Hand in Hand f A Business Man can hardly make a movie with out in some way coming in contact with a Bank. Therefore, our advice to Young Men just start ing in business is'this: Open a Checking Account HERE soon not only for the convenience, but to familiarize yourself with the Service we render and to establish a Credit that will be useful when you need it. We invite you to open an account with us today. The Savings, Loan and Trust Co. R. B. Redwine, President H. B. Clark, Cashier XaA'-"4-A4-4"" ischool presidents and professors, the i club women, the Kiwauis and the Ro- - - Italian's and to weld them into a rotSSSSSSKttf body of public servant. 5 ! busy with the problems of childhood IttnuUes to IUU.I the tirp.tt Me iH'i't i.r ArMk'a lar ami Mianw Tliat This Mate I Cfcit-e .More Auake and Keal)- lor Heroic Kf fHi for l-aiser ltrtiue anil Hrt ter S I100K. (Prom X. C. NVws Letttr.) 'The school conference at the State ..11 m ii ... " , V.ont-e lor ouirii in ureeusnoro iDf other day was a preat event hi North : Carolina. There has been no ureater I conference of any sort iu this state jin a quarter century. The Issue Itself was (treat it was. better schools of every trade (or all ! the people, and a more liberal in- , 1 vestment in educational acencies ot every kind. It was great enough to brills to i pettier a thousand or mors people ' trom every corner ct the state i teachers, principals, school superiu ; tendents, school board members, mer chants, bankers, lawyers, preachers. ' doctors, state school and churcl. S Are You Sure of Your Bank? Many business men have been seriously crippled, If not ruined, by their failure to entrust their Interests to a bank that would re spond to their needs la time of stress. ' i This bank makes It a point to study the needs of its customers how they can best be met, etc. It takes pride in Its ability at all times to render to customers every assistance that they deserve. If we are not already serving you, let's talk the matter over. aim vomit in .ortn iarouna. j In the various interests represented local, state and federalit was very like the great conference for ed- liifatimi In iha nnth al tSnlutii In Av- 2 j cock's day, and the fervor It devel- oped under the leadership and elo j quence of Governor Bickett, Con J S-ressman Small, Commissioner Clax- , ton. Superintendent Brooks, ex-Super-g intendeut Joyner and the rest .was 5 1 very like the education fervor that I developed In the state iu the early J eighties of the last century. 3 1 The Greensboro conference devel 8 I oped the fact that North Carolina Is 5 j once more awake and anxious, and S ready for another heroic effort for g larger school revenues and better 2 schools. And we dare to say that the leaders in this new century re- jvlval will spring up Just as abundant 5 ily and serve the state Just as valiantly as the educational leaders in the last flj quarter of the old century. Out of inai revival iniur uur chj niauru ysrhool3. teachers' Institutes, public THE BANK OF UNON Monroe, N. C. CAPITAL . SURPLUS $100,000.00 $100,000.00 W. 8. BLAKKNEY, Prenldent. J. II. SHCTE. Vlfe-IYeslilent W. It. COLE. Afwt. Cashier It. U. LANEY, (ashler HARGROVE HOWLEf, Asst. Cashier nil 1 ZzJZ a tZrm .T5WiT. iiv Let's Talk It Over The demand for furniture of the better grades Is increasing every day, and for the past few months we have noticed a greater demand than ever for the higher grades. Here's the reason: Economy do?s not necessarily apply to the first oast. Many a family have purchased cheap furniture because they wanted to ecomoiniie, but the furniture went to pieces quickly, and it took but a short time to convince them that clifip furniture was not economy. To be thrifty and economical buy the better grades of furniture. We have a large display of high grade furniture selling at reasonable prices. Come and see us. T. P. Dillon &Sons hich schools, the summer school at the University, the normal schools for both races, the State College for Women, and the State College of Ag riculture and Engineering. The list of noble leaders in that great move ment is a long one. It includes Alex ander Graham. I). Matt Thompson, Tomlinson, the lllairs. Noble and Moses, Finger, Alderman, Mclver and Joyner, Battle and his summer school corps. Peele, Primrose, Leazar, Pul len. Walter Page Josephus Daniels. Massey and Hill, and many others of their sort. The leaders' who stand tip to lead to-day must be tall men and true If they tank with the leaders of yester day. And their vision must be Just as clear. They must not miss the thing that was plainer than a pike staff at Greensboro, namely, that North Carolina Is dominant!)- a rural state and that the country school is the mired wheel in our educational scheme. The leaders In the great educa tional revival lust beginning under Brooks's leadership will plead for many essential things, but above all they must go to the country people, on the stump. In every country com munity in the state in a campaign of blazing appeal for better country srhools for the country children of North Carolina. , Better country schools! Aniom: other urgencies this is tire greatest U is fundamentally necessary. At le.ition and effort must be centered n. 't Vnrth I !l rill 1 1191 U'lll ha fill ally hindered nnd hobbled and crip pled as she moves to the fore in tlie forwuid march of American slates. COUNTRY PRODUCE! We Want All the Country Produce We Can Get: Chickens, Butter, Eggs, Hams, Bacon, Corn, 5 Vegetables, and in fact anything from Farm J or Garden. t The Top Notch Price Will Be Paid At All Times.' i DO NOT SELL UNTIL YOU SEE US. T. C. Lee and Son j GENERAL MERCHANDISE S COUNTRY PRODUCE FERTILIZERS ! PHONE 356. 5 IIIm lu-Mi-e. "Wlill.? I don't pay much attention to the wet !ily paper at home," admit led old liiurod Tarpy, "when 1 so away for a stay of any length and the folks send me copies of it, I devour it from end to end. It is a scrabbled smudgily printed and slovenly written sliest. The editor doesn't know his business very well and never has the money to make the Improvements ill? paper needs: but I peruse all the per snnals about who Is visiting who uuii who has taken trips to other towns or on the sea of matrimony, and m on. with the keenest Interest. "I read the advertisements ami wonder who this feller is who has bought out the Red Front Store and what old Snorkey, the former prone tor. will do for a place to loaf. I note the Uncle Dud Rubbage is no better and that the lodge has elected a new set of officers; that the So-and-So's are the parents of a bouncing boy. and that fire laddies made a gallant run but the holocaust was so far ad vanced by the time they arrived that Tarbuckle's shed was destroyed with out their assistance, and so on and so forth. It is all deeply Interesting to me, b'ctu It Is news from home. In short, I thoroughly enjoy the poor old nusillanimous Gazette when I urn away, but I kinda wish I didn't, nave to leave home to like It." A firenl IUtohI. (Rockingham Post-Dispatch.) North Carolina measured up splen didly In the number of Distinguished Service Crosses awarded in the late war. New York furnished oSS.'O troops to the armies In France and won 613 D. S. Crosses. North Caro lina furnished 73,000 men and won 173 D.'S. Crosses. North Carolina stood twenty-first in the number of men furnished but t lit seventh In the number of D. S. C. winners among the states. The 30th Division, composed of troops from North and South Caroli na, Tennessee, and the District of Co lumbia, Is credited with an even doz en Medals of Honor, the highest award in the gift of the natlon.whlrh is three more than any other division received; and the 30th also won 307 D. S. C.'s. The next divisions in or der of honors were the 2nd, 1st and 3rd. Fish Coster "Fresh! W"y, mum. it breathed its last when It saw yer coming." Customer (sniffing) "And wot a breath It had!" "Are yo-i going to the t-ru.inus on 1 t.s:.'t i: :v.:?;e r-Ly 2s .' . i: .3 car?" r-raiulb; cu ju? '"h. dear no! We are going right "Why, ct coerce. There a ti-eiry to the end of the line." . that he v.xj ! rauglit o ? a a--u:'t'i- bur ir." lr:.ie Subscriber "Coufound you mm -j editors! Here at the weddiiis Ton"; V' i,i!, i.r r. --i I Crr---yt-oiday. instead of making rue say sum r.iltht loom up s a uir; lioive?" I fill -'re the bridegroom had many "No." declared Senator aort'ium. 'si of uninterrupted bliss" before "rr-rord's f;-j shad.. I; vunld rc- tinn. you report 'many jeers of uu- quire a great deal of "I . i:; ; j: ;o;i think 1 have a great :;;av kicks?" "Not at all." said th iio" l clerk. -I know of plenty ot r.ic'.s you've never thought of." i!i? Courier Journal. :'erruptiHl bills'!" to qualify him as a dark horse. .n't - Editor "A correspondent i. I.i-s in know w hy they whitewash the inside of a hen - house." Editor "Tell him It's to keea whitevashiiiT 'e heus from picking the grain out of the wood." Are You a Typical American continually "on your toes", accomplishing "big things" with true American vigor quick-witted, keen-eyed healthy? Americans, as a rule, enjoy good health, which Is one of the secrets of their universal success. And good health is often maintained simply by proper attention to details of hygiene such as strict internal cleanliness. If the food waste is not properly eliminated, poisons are formed which break down vital ity and impair your physical energy. Keep these dangerous toxins moving out of your body. Nujol will help you. Nujol works on an entirely new principle. ??.adMf0rcin or gating the system, it simply softens the food waste. This enables the many tiny muscles In the walls of the Intestines, contracting and expanding In their normal way, to squeeze the food waste along so that it passes naturally out of the system. Nujol thus prevents constipation because It helps Nature maintain easy, thewSrld e?acuat," at regular. intervals-the healthiest habit in Nujol is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take. Try It. Nujol Is sold by all druggist, in sealed bottles only, bearing Nujol Trade Mark. Write Nujol Laboratories. Standard Oil Company (New Jersey). 50 Broadway, New York, for booklet "Thirty Feet of Danger". The Modern Method of Treating an Old Complaint Nuiol For Constipation s Here Are 5 Reasons Why The Columbia Grafonola Is the Best '"PHE features of the Columbia Grafonola which put it in a class by itself are: J The exclusive Columbia Non-Set Automatic Stop. 2 The exclusive Columbia system of tone control. 3 The unequalled quality of Columbia tone. 4 The correct and artistic design of Columbia cabinets. g Theexclusive Columbia Individ ual Record Ejector. Come in and sec our latest models. You'll quickly be convinced. Iff I 'LiniP- Come in and hear these records "Buiitiii Kardenoila." and I:oc Nights" 2ST6. "EidiT Enu. or-Vs Sin;ion on Gen-' rt-j.it;." mil! "..'M.'r Katir.ore's -Sr-t.'.iin on Thro Ins ion?s" 6141. "I'm So;-:y I Ain't Go; it Yon Conid I'v It, p.v.i?'' a-.!d "Checkers" 2S?5. "Bark Ho '.!'." n I "FliihluR a'.id'Drl.i:;'- "Hlawaain Hour-. "ClndciYlia" 283C. W.i Ian Moon,' Fnrm" 2S59. :h You' and and Tncle Zfb and His Fiddle" and "Uncle Zeb Buys a Graphophone" , "Was There Ever a Pul Like You' 'OhKTS:. When I 'Think 71v! ! Criiil Over You" and "Snoop I he Lawyer" 2852. THE W. J. RUDGE COMPANY JEWELERS AND STATIONERS.
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 1, 1920, edition 1
3
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