Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / Sept. 23, 1920, edition 1 / Page 8
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Haiuon FBOOJ MARION, N. C., THURSDAY, SEPT. 23, 1920 IT PAYS TP m?LJ irmr There are many ways of effecting economy in buy- "r ing your eatables. Perhaps one of the best ways is to get the best quality. We handle only best quality goods in all our lines anoV our prices are as reasonable as they can be made under present conditions. t You can practice Economy here. mm Still Grocery Co. (Successors to McPeeters & Co.) THE HOME OF PURE FOODS MARION, N. C. ! 1 . J- V THE CHILDREN ENJOY washing and bathing in a bath room fitted out by us with up-to-date sanitary wash basins, hath tubs, foot baths, toilets, etc. Our hot and cold running water connections, showers, and other equipment is the best on the market. Ask us for esti mates. MARION TIN & . PLUMBING CO. Phone 191 IS ' YOUR HEAI. GRADUALLY SUMS? fcrftresth Ezperfstd cf a Texas Lady Who Dethrci Tfci if Wcaea KmW Ahcct Cards! Thsj 7cdd Be Ssrd llscb Sickxeu and Wcrry. NjTUOta, Teas. Mrs. W. M. Peden, this place, reixtes tb foilowtej: Interest -' faig account cf bow she recovered her strength, hiring reaHxed that the was actually losing her health: "Health Is the greatest thing la the world, and when you feci that gradually slipping away from you, you certainly sit op and taJce notice. That b what 1 did some time ago when I found myself in a rcry nervous, run-down condition of health. I was soured and felt so lifeless I could hardly go at aJL "1 was Just no account for worfc. I would get a bucket of water and would feel so weak I would have to set it down before I felt like 1 could lift it to the shell In this condition, of course, to do even ay housework was a task almost Im possible to accomplish. "1 was . . . nervous and easily upset. I couldn't rest well at night and was . . just USeless. "I heard of Carduf and after reading I deckled I had some female trouble that was pulling me down. I sent SorCafdui and began it . "In a very short while after 1 began the Cardui Home Treatment I saw aa Im provement and it wasn't long until I was all right good appetite, splendid rest, and much stronger so that I esx3y dHiny house work. "Later I took a bottle of Csrdtd as a tonic. 1 can recommend Cardui and glad ly do so, for if more women knew, it would save a great deal of worry and sickness.' The entmrtiastie praise of thousands of other women who have found Cardui helpful should coti t lace you that it is worth trying. AH druggistssefl it 1. is MR, COX SCpBES Greensboro News. Governor Cox has delivered the tmnAa in tho m nf till TnnHll- I can campaign fund, and the Repub- licans themselves have harbored his i point by ill-advised denials. It is be side the point to argue that the men who declared that there were no such quotas as the Democrat announced were acting in good faith that they did not know that the list of quotas existed. They should have "known before thejr issued their flat denials. An admission on the part of man agers that they had set quotas much higher than they realized, or hoped to realize, . would have injured them much less than to be convicted, as they have been convicted, of an at tempt to deceive the country as to what they were doing. In his Pitts burgh speech' Mr. Cox merely al leged that- the Republicans had offi cially declared their intention of raising $8,000,000 from 51 cities. He- has proved that his allegation was substantially correct; but, what is much more important, in the course of the demonstration, he has shown Republicans high in the party coun cils apparently lending themselves to an errort xo misieaa xne puDiic. This is a serious matter. If the Republican, campaign is a campaign of deception in one particular, how is it to be trusted in any particular? If Chairman Hays didn't know what he was talking about when he de nied the existence of the list of quo tas, how 8 hall we know when he does know what he is talking about? Mr. Cox, of course, holds that the matter of the campaign fund is only symptomatic of a campaign utterly untrustworthy. Day before yester day he made the telling point that every prominent Republican, Lodge reservationist. mild reservationist, pro-league or bitter-ender, who has- talked with the Republican candidate, has come away perfectly satisfied with his stand on the league of na tions. Now this is a marvel, says Mr. Cox, provided the candidate has told them all the same thing. But he will not be slow to point out that the Re publicans were pronrmt enough to deny his charges in the newspapers, but were forced to admit their truth when put under oath on the witness- stand. If the management says one thincr under one set of conditions, ad the very opposite under another, is it any undue strain on the imagi nation to suppose that the candidate said one thing to Hiram Johnson about the league of nations, and an other to Charles E. Hughes? The existence of the list of quotas, in itself, was not necessarily any great reproach to the Republican campaign. But the way in which the existence of that list was proved has shaken faith in the integrity of the whole organization; and in that Mr. Cox has scored a point the value of which it is impossible to estimate but which must be considerable. THE ONLY HOPE Current Opinion. The one hope for civilization, says Gilbert Murray, of Oxford University, is a change of heart, and lacking this, the world order is doomed. "Unless it abstains utterly from war and the causes of war, the next war will de stroy it. Unless it can seek earnest ly the spirit of brotherhood and so- I briety at home, Bolshevism will de 1 stroy it." i "Almost every element necessary to HBuccess has been put into the hands ' s : ii. i j vi uivbc iiuw voriimg uic wuxiu ex cept, as an old Stoic would say, the things that we must provide our selves. We have been given every thing except a certain necessary greatness of character. Just at pres ent that seems lacking, at any rate among the rulers of Europe. It may be recovered. We have had it in the past in abundance, and we probably have the material for it even now. If for any reason the great democra cies permanently prefer to follow low motives and to be governed by infe rior men, it looks as if not the Brit ish Empire only but the whole world established by the end of the war and summarized roughly by the League of Nations may pass from history un der the same fatal sentence as the great empires of the past, that the world which it ruled hated it and risked all to destroy it." The Greensboro Daily. News Is recognized as the state's best papar. It gives a news service unexcelled and its editorial page is always clean, broad and interesting. Inde pendent in politics, it presents news and views from EVERY angle. On its rapidly growing subscription lists are the names of the state's most prominent and forward-looking citizens. YOU cannotafford to be without this paper. Forward your trial sub scription. Six months, Daily and Sunday, $4.50. Six months, Daily without Sunday, $3.50. GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS KEEP IT UP. One step won't take you very far, You've got to keep on walking; One word won't tell folks what you are, You've got to keep on talking; One inch won't make you very tall, You've got to keep on growing; One little "ad" won't do it all, You've got to keep 'em going. Highman's Magazine. L - - GREENSBORO, N. C Ther la more Catarrh in this section of the country than ill other diseases pot together, and for .rears it wt.i sup posed to be Incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing1 to cure with local treatment, pronounced It incurable. Catarrh is 'a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con ditions and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medi cine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional remedy, is taken Internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re ward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo. Ohio. Sold by Dru;srists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Marion. Progress 1.50 per year. o O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o $ o o o o o o o o o o o lfflrfc'L0)ii f(ojsitt I have just recieived tlie largest shipment of Ladies' Long 1 for fall arid winter ever ranging in price; from $7.Q0i -to $35.00 the coat I also carry Misses' and Child ren's fall an d winter coats. Call in and examine: my stock, will save you money on your winter coat J laimitoini. MARION, N. C. - - : if'"' " L- j. o 90000C0000000000000000000 m iMit' "a"k. iiniii 1 1 liiTu i rjiii r 1 il II V W .V.tfii?M.....y ' ' ' 1 1 ..I i i 1 1 i 1 1 n ! ii 1 ij Scire sneiter x is a for ISotxr FJ&ssM What would that little family of yours-do right now if anything happened to you and you didn-t have a dol lar? Lots of things could happen to your earning power. Hadn't you better start a bank account? Put your money in our bank. You will receive 4 per cent interest. MERCHANTS & FARMERS BANK 5a' 13 1 Make muv - -.. rtm r iii - Coprriebt 1909, br C. r.. 2iciiaeriaa Co.-N. lv There's safety in a bank account, for the reason that it is a clear signal of the future. It means; that things are clear ahead, and that your road is unobstructed. Make up your mind not to travel another step if you havn't a bank account. First National Bainilk9 MARION, N. C. Resources Over $1,000,000.00 J. L MORGAN. President H. F. LITTLE, Vice-Pres. J. E. NEAL, Cashier P. A. REID, Ass't Cashier o o o o o O o o o O; o :0 -O O -.:. o o o Of,. 8 r,4.. o t o t ' - - I o o
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 23, 1920, edition 1
8
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