Newspapers / French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, … / March 6, 1919, edition 1 / Page 2
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JL THURSDAY, MARCH 6th, 1919. FRENCH BROAD HUSTLER, HEXT EKSOS YILLE, X. C, i Soldiers Overseas To City and County DIRECTORY -BENDERSONVI 1 11 : " z - , - , TT - -- Serve For Y. -M. r-G. A.; . Fewer Men Go From U.S. General Pershing Tells Y. M. C. A. to "Take Their Pick" From Men of A. E. F.f Which Cuts Down Recruiting Program In This Country to I G row R asDbenn 3fow that the stftrs and stripes are waving oyer Germany,- you should give your attention tb improving tlie home lot. For one tiling you sure should set out some St. Regis ever bearing red raspberries, a Riore health ful fruit than strawberries and easier iu giun iiuu lujc iwi. mi- iamr,i.i j- BeTCS" fully supplied yiUi fresh or dried berries, jam or felly. Tiie nic' dependable fruit w know of. Good healthy, strong plCnts, 50c per dozen, $2.50 per 100. DpliTered anywhere in Zone One at the above prices. Xow is the time to set thm out. IVe also have for sale Irish Cobbler Seed Tofatoes (lyear from Xorthern seeds.) A sweet temper is to the household What sunshine is to trees and flowers. A little bit oi patience often makes the sunshine come. And a little bit of love makes a hap py home. ,,,, -.- .1 'K,r "v--. "ways with leftover fish. HERE are so man3 dainty dishes using leftover fish whict are both palatable and wholesome. , Fish a ia Creme Put two table spoonfuls of battel in. a saucepan ; .whei melted add a table spoonful of flour : when well cooked add two egg yolks and a cupful of milk which hajre been beaten together. Add slowly and stii constantly; when thick and smooth, add a teaspoonful of salt, a few drops of onion juice, a few dashes of papri ka and the fish. Fill the ramekins and cover with buttered crumbs. Place in a hot oven for a few minutes, or until the crumbs are a. light brown. Gar nish with pasley. Escalloped Fish. Take three cup ,fnls of any cooked fish ; flake it. But ter a baking dish, sprinkle with bread crumbs, then cover with flaked fish, from which all skin and bones have been removed, then add more crumbs. Cover with a cream sauce to which has been added a tablespoonful of chopped onion, a tablespoonful of Worcester shire sauce, two tablespoonfuls ci chopped parsley, two tablespoonf uls oi sauce and pepper to taste. Use two cnpfuls of white sauce. Bake uncov ered for half an hour. : Fish Souffle. To one cupful oi flaked fish add a cupful of cream sauce, three egg yolks beaten light and two cnpfuls of riced potatoes. Fold in the beaten egg whites. Brush a bak ing pan with sweet fat, put in the mix ture, rough it on top and bake until a light brown. Serve at once. Fish Salad. Mix a cupful each oi rice, celery and one-half cupful of may onnaise and a tablespoonful of chopped onion. Place any leftover cooked fish, like halibut or haddock, in the center, mixed with a half cupful of the may onnaise and the rice and celery around it. Garnish with tomato jelly cubes or with parsley. A cupful of flaked cooked fish of anj kind added to a cupful of good white sauce, served poured over buttered toast, makes a most nourishing lunch eon dish. - Bly-'Hvdware Compaiy is jAtaionsT Viae SaiUtn hi CITY Mayor: C. E. Brooks. Town Council: J. YV. Bailey, W. M. i Bacon, A. H. Hawkins, John S. For rest, J. A. Fletcher, K. G. Morris. Tax Collector: G. W. Brooks Chief of Police: Otis V. Powers. Superintendent Water Works and Streets: A. A. McCall. COUNTY County Commissioners: J. N. Russell (Chairman) J. A. Maxwell, S. J. Whit aker. Clerk of Court: C. M. Pace. Register of Deeds: A. O. Jones. Sheriff: Allard Casa. Tax Collector and Treasurer: A. E. Hudgins. Superintendent Education: W. S. Shitle. Road Supervisor: P. F. Patton. Physician: Dr. L. B. Morse. Farm Demonstrator: Frank Flem ming, ' - Attorney: 0. V. F. Blythe. Register Births and Deaths: B. F. Hood. Board of Health: J. N. Russell, (Chairman), W. S. Shitle (Secretary), Dr. J. L. Egerton, Dr. J, S. Brown, C. E. Brooks, CHURCHES First Baptist Dr. E. E. Bomar, Pastor. Services: Sunday 11 a. in. Sunday School, 9:45 a. m., N. M. Hollowell, Supt. East Hendersonville Baptist Rev. C. S. Blackburn, Pastor Services: Sunday 11 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting: 7:30 p. m. Sunday School: 9:45 a. m., C. S. Fullbright, Supt. Catholic Father Marion, Priest. Services: Sunday 11 a. m. Week days 7:30 a. ni. St. James Episcopal. Rev. A. Y. Farnum, Rector. Services: Sunday 7:30 a. m., and 11 a. m. . Sunday School: 9:00 a. m. Tlethodist Rev. M. F. Moores, Pastor. Services: Sunday 11 a. m. Sunday School 9:45 a. m., Whitfield, Supt. H. M. Presbyterian Rev. J. F. Ligon, Pastor. Services: Sunday 11 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. Wednesday Evening Pray er Meeting, 7:30 p. m. Sunday School: 9:45 a.- m. Dr. A. II . Morey, Supt. " i-v..- TRAIX SCHEDULE Trains Southbound No. 42 7:35 a. m,. No. 28... 10:55 a. m. No. 10 4:35 p. m. Trains Northbound No. 41. . . 10.30 a. m. No. 9 1.05 p. m. No. 27 . . . . 6.55 p. m. Toxaway Division No. 8 Leaves 11.10 a. m. . No. 6 Leaves. . 4.50 p. m. No. 5 Arrives ...10.05 a. m. No. 7 Arrives 4.15 p. m. EVTERTJRBAN COMPANY Lv. Hendersonville.. Arr. Asheville . j. . Lv. Asheville Arr. Hendersonville , 0 . oO &. hi. .11:00 a. m . .4:15 p. m .. 5:45 p. m 1 iMs iespap8i i in Til mk A hW J mik" ft Vw j1 m ft Them's why it would be profitable for you to advertise in it If yoa want a job If yoa zvant to hire somebody g If yoa warJt to sell something r If you warj to bay something f If yoa mjznt to rent votir hotise If yoa a)znt to' sell yoar house h If yoa want to. sell yoar farm If yoa want to bay property f j re it ' if - it .a If if mere, ts anyimng mat yoa want the atiickesi and best ruv to supply thai want is by placing I an advertisement in this paper n The results will surprise and please you a in IB w 2 Two C:ifes. Two Banks. One Florist. Five Ifotels. One Raiery. One Hospital Ono Optician. One Ice riant. IV.TCd Streets. Four Garages;. .- One Osteopath. Electric Lights. Four Coal Yards. Eight PhysJcans. : . Eleven Lawyers, lioard of Trade , Two Feed Stores. ' , ! Two IVccd Ysrds. - f , One Opera House. Five &hce Stores. .. OneilicycIe Shop. Three Grist 31ills. . Focr Drug Stores. . !; u One Photo Gallery. Three Newspapers. One Jewelry Store. ., U Six Grocery Stores. One Bottling Plant. Concrete Sidewalks. One Public Library. Four Meat Markets. . ; . t. Two Oil Companies. -Vw&- Four Barber ShOis. One Steam Laundry Six Deatal Surgeons .'IS?' "Water and Sewerage. Two Millinery Stores. Three Pressing Clubs. ! r Two Telegraph Offices. Three Hardware Stores. Two Department Stores. Three Blacksmith Shops. One Telephone Exchange. One Girls Boarding School. One Boys Boarding School. Three Real Estate Brokers. Two LlTery and Sale Stables. One Book and Stationery Store. Two Plumbing Establishments. Two Moving Picture Theatres. Two Five and Ten Cent Stores. Two Electrical Supply Stores. Building and Loan Association. Two Gent's Furnishings Stores. One Dealer in Fruit and Produce. Seven IVholesaio Establishments. Four General Merchandise Stores. One Graded School for "Whites and One for Colored. Five Churches for White and Four for Colored. Two Harness and Shoe Repair Es tablishments. . Three Fruit and Confectionery Stores. Five Life and Fire Insurance agen cies. "I--- Four Manufacturing Plants, includ ing Yt'oodwerking Establishments and j Lumber Yr.rds. . j Dr.'W.H. Yander Linden DENTIST 1 P Bone 351 p i Qiti&zvet Duff's DR. HyL. KEITH (Successor io Br. W. F. Nickel) j RFNTIST. - I DR. E. A. McMILLAN 1 63 ' . fe (Successor to Lit. vv. r. Wallace) 1 nEMTIST 1 t .uce". BurckmyeV-ciiding, 4th Ave. g Phone 442. j H Pj Hp.ndersonvllie. U. C. 3 Dentist. : J ' r : 1 1 I r- t- or-rtnT1 niniPUT - F' ncTrniDZTU I I:: I Successor toDr. Tebeau '. Patterson Building x' Phone 1 105 1R. - Atlanta, Ga., Jan.... The offer of General Pershing to release officers and men of the A. E. F. from mili tary duty in order that their services might be utilised by the Y. M. C. A. resulted in the recruiting of a large number of soldiers for "Y" work, and naturally resulted in a decrease in the number of men being sent from this country overseas. Up until the time General Pershing's offer was made, the Y. M. C. A. had done extensive recruiting for the pur pose of sending a large number of workers overseas. But when it was learned that workers could be secured In France men well fitted for the work because of their familiarity with conditions the services of many men in the United States were not needed. Yhiie many candidates for service overseas were disappointed over the outcome, the Y. M. C. A. could not have acted otherwise. General Per- -- v a ala ar.7 sol- ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF SUPPLIES SENT BY Y. M. C. A. Cost of Sweets and Smokes for One Month Reaches Staggering Fig ure Armistice Didn't End Smoking on Any Front , New York, Jan. ...Almost $4,000, 000 worth of smokes, sweets, sporting goods, chewing gum and other com modities was shipped to France during the month of November by the Army and Navy Y. M. C. A., for the use of the American Expeditionary Forces. A statement to this effect has just been issued by the National War Council and tends to demonstrate that the demand for supplies of this char acter has not been reduced by the fact that hostilities have ceased. In exact figures the value of the supplies shipped to France was $3, 835,908 and each month's Quota will ap proximate this total until the forces overseas have been materially reduced by demobilization. The demand for tobacdo, cigars and cigarettes has not diminished since the armistice was signed, as witness the fact that $1,351,000 of the total amount went for the purchase of the weed in some form. In the ship ments were 464,911 pounds of tobacco, 198,065,330 cigarettes and 99,700 ci gars. As for confectionery, there were 213,800 pounds of hard candy, 175,91 pounds of chocolates and 329,280 pack ages of cough drops, not. to mention 537,600 tins of jams and 6,541,300 pounds of sugar. The chewing gum conignments totaled 6,100,000 packages enough to load every slot machine in the United States. f. l c. F Y Brooklyn Man Is Avarded Croix da Guerre by. Commander of Polish Forces Paris, Dec. 11. "For heroic and un tiring work for the soldiers while un der Are," Sfeatty Slodra, of 2123 Ca ton avenue, Brooklyn, a Y. M. C. A. secretary, has just received the Croix de Guerre from General -Haller, commander-in-chief of the Polish army, and has been mentioned in the offi cial citations. He is the third Y. M. C. A. man thus honored for conspicu ous bravery. Modra has been with the Polish forces continuously' since his arrival in France five months ago, and has given many notable exhibitions of gal lantry and fidelity to duty. During.the last days of the hostilities he served with the First division in the Vosges, In charge of a hut in a narrow valley between the first and second line trenches. From this hut he made trip after trip, carrying supplies to the men at the most advanced posts, and was under fire repeatedly. When the fighting was at its heavi est Modra and the men associated with him in Y work continued their minis trations to the soldiers, serving cocoa, cakes, when the men were in position to receive thenf, and cigarettes. This service contributed much to the higti morale of the troops and won not onlj the praise of the officers but the last Ing gratitude of the men. 9. FLYNN it. A! iiyif- Well Known Minister Leaves Pulpit tc Take Up Work Overseas Atlanta, Ca., Jan. . . .Dr. Richard rm'o Flinn, pastor of the North Ave ;e Presbyterian church, is going tc ance for the Y. M. C. A. Dr. Flinn, who is one of the besl nawn ministers in the Southeast, anc ho has - host of friends throughou: :is LO-iion'of the country, Vvill be en aseel V1 special educational work, anc' ill likely be overseas for. some time diers it wanted and as many as it wanted, and by so doing the Assccis tion has saved a great deal of money that would have been spcat in trans porting the workers to France. The soldiers in France know the work of the Y. M. C. A. almost as well as their own, and those who have been so far selected are making excellent workers. The Y. M. C. A., however, will not discontinue the sending of men to France. Nov and then men who are especially qualified for the work over seas will be used, only they will be fewer in number. Dr. W. V. Alexander, director of personnel for the Southeastern depart ment, points out that the generous -f er of General . Pershing is only an other Indication of the high esteem which is held for the Y. M. C. A. by the United States government and by the leader of the American Expe ditionary Forces.. SWEET CHOCOLATE CARRIED UNDER FIRE Chocolate Furnished by Y. M. C. A. Arrives Just When It Is Needed With the American 'Armies In France, Jan. ... Praising the men of Company D, 109th Machine Gun Bat talion, 28th Division, Howard R. Keis- ter, a Y. M. C. A. man of Dunnellon, I Fla., tells how, when without food, they sent the sweet chocolate which he secured for them to an isolated pla toon, which was under severe fire, acress the Vesle river at Fismes. It was during the heavy fighting eastward from Chateau Thierry, that the men of the 109th Machine Gun Bat talion got ahead of their supplies, and the sweet chocolate which the Y. M. C. A. managed to get to them, was specially, welcome. The battalion reached the Vesle riv er on its advance. There the German line held. Men were thrown across the river by various units to keep in contact with the enemy. There was terrific fighting all along the line. A platoon of Company D was hurried over to help in holding the narrow strip that had been taken at great cost by the American soldiers. It wa3 sur rounded on three sides by the Boche, who tried every means in his power to dislodge them, gas, shells, machine gun fire and snipers. It was a. difficult matter to get food over to them for men with supplies had to cross the river which was exposed and under heavy fire. FIGHTING- PA EOSS John Clifford Wearing Y. M. C. A. Uniform, Proves Himself Real Hero New York, Jan. ... There have many war heroes, but there is certainly no more conspicuously heroic fire than John- II.- Cliff cj-d, Bap&st minis ter in time of peace, but real fighter in time of war, who has been awarded the Croix de Guerre for extraordinary heroism in action. John Clifford, as a Y. M.' C. A. worker, braved the red wrath of war. He has been in the firing zone as much as the hardiest infantryman and was decorated for a most unusual ex ploit. He was on of three men who braved incessant enemy shell fire while rescuing Col. Albertus W. Catlin. command!!?- officer of the Sixth re- ?.ent of Marines. The trio carried the colcnel ic &tfcty cn a stretcher. . Mr. Clifford went ever the top many times and came , near being killed on several occasions. He is fiftv-nnf yeai-s old and was born at Oxford, Eng land, ana nas preached the gospel in many para of the world. When giveu 6 chance to serve with the Y." M. C. A. iix France, he knew that it was a good thing, and he jumped at it. IS MOIT NEW ' YEAR IEETING Paris, Dec. 2S. Many times during the past year General Pershing has taken occasion to commend the worfe cf the Y. M. C. A. for the soldiers Of the A. ,E. F. and to express his Seenest appreciation for the many ccd deeds dene by the "Y" in this country. On ChristmaavDay the commander Gf the American Expeditionary Forces sent the following cablegram to D ohn R Mott, head of the National "With a deep feeling of gratitude for ' the enormous contribution which the Army Young Men's Christian AssocS; toon h:is made to the moral and phvS cal welfare of the American Army i, yanks :z,n me in sending you Chritt nas - greetings and cordial best wishSL fer the New Year.,s isft, ON "Where are my reading glasses? " Mischievous daughter has pick ed Daddy'fe pocket and watches him gleefflly as- he searches in vain for his reading glasses. If - DaddVwore KRYPTOK Glasses, he woild be freed from the "off-and-onY nuisance of the two-pairs-ofl-glasses bother, because KRTpTOKS (pro nounced CrN-tocks) would give him, in oe pair of glasses, the necessaiT correction for both reading and distance. And KHYPTOKS give mm this convenience without thaz drawback oV other bifocals the conspicuous age-revealing: seam or hump. CXI. ASSES THE INVISIBLBIFOOU-S are crystal their surfaces smooth and eWn. They can not be distinguished from or dinary lenses, that's why KRY PTOKS are caAed "the invisible bifocals." y We are competent to meet the? optical needs of the most exacting patron. Call at your convenience. " . W, H. Hawkins-: & Son the merchants who ad vertise in this aper. They will treat you right. The BEST aid CHEAPEST FOR INSIDE AND OUTSIDE WORK uss mobeIpaint PRESERVE AND EEAUTZFY YOUR PROPERTY IIEXDERSOVILLE HDYT. CO. emce .for itins Meeis! A Is there something you need in the follow- . ins Us Birth. Ann otxis cedents Wedding Stationery Envelope Ecclosures -Sale Bills Hand Bills . , Price Lists . " " Admission Tickets Bcsiness Cards Window Cuds Time Cards ' Letter Heads . , Note Heads Bill Heads Envelopes Callind Cards Leaflets Slatcments ' -KilU Tickets . ; . Metsl Tickets Shipping Tajjs r , Annonnceioents Briefs , Notes Conpons , - Pamphlets n. ' Cotaloines Blotters Circulars Invitaiions Posters Checks ; . . BSacks- .NoUces ' 1:1 Labels Lerfal Elands Menu Cards Placard q Q Dodgers : PostCards . Projramsi . Receipts Prompt, careful and effi cient attention given, to every detail Don't Send Your Order Gut of Towirlfoffl !See What We Can Do YFTOEf WW
French Broad Hustler (Hendersonville, N.C.)
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March 6, 1919, edition 1
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