Newspapers / Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.) / Aug. 24, 1911, edition 1 / Page 3
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CASTOR IA Pj SCHOFIELD ENGINES ™ BOILERS ——i "Have Stood the Test of Time" 11 They have no superior in point of DURABILITY and are Best Adapted, j for Saw Mills, Oil Mills, Cotton Gins; in fact, where Heavy Duty is £ r— ——■required. Write for prices on Saw Mills, Shingle Mills,etc. Miaufactare BOILERS. We carry for immediate shipment the Best j Constructed Boilers, ranging from 12 H. P. to 150 H. P. I SgßSngpcrtint Write today for our illustrated catalog. "MST* J - S- SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Wo.'ks and Hesd Office, MACON, GJL j Branch Office, 3C7 West Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C. ||fji toYoorGoad Haalihrxd Fisssa-o jf Come—follow the .?rrov?'tl! y->':» J.* f&g&A the merrythrongcf points rha3r ir.jca {if and \7omcn jgiiit r -\ v > v c;' \ the one beet beverage because they've I s 7/2S »*. *o* % » Real satisfaction in every —snsp :.ol rpcrfcle—vim m ~ * rn, and C ' 3" Q Jcacfcc3 '• l-iftt—cools IlLe a breeze. S I Delicious —iicivesLiug—WLolesome Jm I ] oarkiic rest-THc-COCA.-CGLA CO encref ___ |Z * 1 '•Th T kc, ; co - rou ~ ,n »? ,T he I rc,h 53 Arrow think .II |j Abou J c °«-CoU" o, CocCI, [- m*, )MMmi ■ m Are You Insured? | J ™_ # IhjTm " our buildings burned to-night J F 1 wou the y be a to^ ' oss to you? Are M you insured, or, are you just "Taking ■ f fr /Ins,lfPfTM***/LA EWI/ yy matter to you? Can you afford to lose j|||Br H S\%- y° ur house or store or barn by fire? An INSURANCE POLICY won't pre- I / jl£ jjjj vent fire, but it WILL give you some f~\ thin 2 t0 re P air th e damage after it, and jyfesSL will only cost you a few cents a day. Call us Phone is No. 292 and tell us you want to talk about insur r ance. We will call and see you im mediately. Hickory Insurance & Realty Co. P oesa in Our Store. full line of Dry ions, Hats, Shoes | ng handy in the I Buy your groceries from us. | Housekeepers brag on our flour. I | Setzer & Russell I Co-education. President R. L,. Fritz in Lenoir College Bulletin We live in a world of men and women and in a land of Co-edu cation See Gen. 1:27 and the last census of the United Stites The iacts in the case establish this proposition overwhelm).igly. Of the 480 colleges in the United States, 384 admit female stud ents—Bo per cent. \t present the University of Virginia .and Princeton are the only universi ties of note in our country that do not admit women. Practical ly all the colleges that boast of themselves as "agin" co-educa tion practice it 4 'on the sl>" iike the temperance lecturer who ook a little privately tostimulate his elocutionary faculties. Even the staid University of Virgina soothes "his" longings for female students by a largely womanized summer schools for teachers. So far as we know Princeton has not yet been caught. Being non co educational is a "virtue" not entirelv unlike the little boy's definition of salt: "Salt," said he, "is what makes 'taters' taste bad when you don't put it on em." Co-education is what makes schools great when they don't have it! True, men and schools can be measured to a cer tain extent by the number and character of the things that they are "agin." Were this not true, many would be "immeasurable." A school may be long on many other things, but when "he" feels himself called upon to in veigh against co-education "he' is evidently a little short on ar gument. Sixty years ago there was not one college in the United States for women. Now there are a bove 30,000 women in the Amer ican colleges, and 2,500.000 wom en in our country who work for and earn their own living. This enormous army of working wom en must and will be educated. The time is close at hand when no school or college in this lann will dare close "his'' doors against women—the doctors and philosophers to the contrary not withstanding. At the recent Commencement at the University of North Carolina the immense audience voiced its approbation with rin ging applause as young women, in group, marched to the rostrum of this venerable institution side by side with young men anu there received from the hands o 1 the honorable Governor of the Old North State the degrees and honors of their Almus Pater. Ali this in the presence of the great and learned Dr Woodrow Wilson, former President of Princeton, Governor of New Jersey, and the finest timbyMi the forest for the White-house— and amid the echoes anu caden ces of his memorable "ommencp ment oration delivered to a clas* of over 100 men anu women an*, he used his smelling salts net once! The ironv of fate! What is the world coming to? Womei; becoming bachelors, masters, doctors! Enough to make old Atlas dizzy. Co-education is the American way. Why knock? True, co education like many other things took its rise in toe West. Pre judice and traditionalism were weakest there. These constitute the source of the chief opposition to co-education in the eastern part of our country—as practi cally admitted by a great educa tor in a recent birthday speech. The presumption is oyerwhel mingly in favor of co-education. The recent flurry of agitation in the ranks of the "antis" seems to indicate that —unlike the Irishman's turtle—they are be coming sensible of it. Even cer tain "male" and "female" col lege magazines, after ancient Chinese custom, have made at tack by emitting sophomorical vaporings. Men and women live and grow and learn together in the home, in the church, in the primary school, in the university —except two —in life and in world to come. Why not in the College? Up to this time, the people have received no satisfac tory answer. A man teaches more by wh it he is than by what he know s. The greatest and best educative influence is the influence of one's fell women; and the strongest and best human influence is the in fluence of the opposite sex and of the two sexes together. Much of the opposition to co education grows out of the fact that the educational ideals of New England and of the East and South —which, being inter- Thirty Years Together. Thirty years of association, think of it. How the merit of a good thing stands out in that time —or the worthlessness of a bad one. So there' 5 no guesswork in this evidence of Thos. Ariss, Concord, Mich., who writes: "I haved used Dr. King's New Discovery for 30 vears, and its the best cough and cold cure I ever used." Once it finds entrance in a home you can't pry it out. Many families have used it forty years. It's the most infallible throat and lung medicine on earth. Unequaled for agrippe, asthma, hay fever, croup, qu.nsey or sore lungs. Price 50c, SI.OO. Trial bottle free Guaranteed by C. M. Shuford, Moser & Lutz and Grimes Drug Cp, pretec, mean the 'ame thing -tre top hsevv on intellectual ed ucation. This intellectual intoxi cation is responsible for the ghosts. America demands to-day that her citizens and philosophers be livery, not dreaine,* on'y. She is educating for ire; hence her system—Co-eoucai,on. The claim that hign or proper standards cannot be maintained in a co-educational college 01 university is all right— except that it is not in harmony with the facts. The highest stan dards of requirements, work, conduct, anu life are oeing main tained just now iu uvir 300 col leges of our land. Four-rtrths of the best of our college work is co-education. The claims that men and wom en need seperate schools, that they are together too much in co-education.institutions are not inline with most of the best thought and practice in our coun try. The preponderance of the biolgical, psychological, and soci ological facts and arguments fa vor co education. But more con cerning these latter questions later. No co-educational college feel lonely, afraid, or ashamed. ."I see no reason why men and women should not go hand in hand from the cradle to the grave." —Breecher. Asheville Follows Hickory. A lady drummer selling iuk pads was complaining this week that Ashe ville folks had misrepresented Hickory to her, saying irwas a "village with a cotton mill at one end and a furniture factory at the other, with one b nk and could be worked between trains She said, however, that she had been work ing half a day and wasnt half through then. At the same time the Asheville chamber of commerce was writing tc Secretary Joy to know just how Hickon was working her $200,000 guaraniee fund scheme, as the mountain metrop folis wanted to follow our example. Hickory does things. She sets the pace. A Who Left Home set the world to talking, but Paul Mat hulka, of Buffalo, N. Y. says he always keeps at home the King of all Laxatives Dr. Kings New Life Pills—and that they're a blessing to all his family. Cure constipation, headache; indiges tion, dyspepsia. Only 25 at C. M. ShuforH. Moser & Lutz and Grimes Drug Co. Do You Get Up With a Lame Back? iilnsy Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everyone kjiows of Dr. Kilmer's np-Root, the greet kidney, liver and !? . bladder remedy, be ii cause of its remark -3 13 a^e health restoring j [L properties. Swainp -Ijr 17 „ Root fulfills almost - f-u n r' ever y wish ill over \V| I fljjf{ coming rheumatism, !VH= L I'M P a i° in the back, kid tlijK ne y s , liver, bladder rt l" and every part of tlie fl __ j . urinary passage. It »»*—• corrects inability to hold waterand scaldingpain in passingit, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often through the day, and to get up mauy times during the night. Swamp-Root is not recommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been thor oughly tested in private practice, and has proved so successful that a special ar rangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not al ready tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root, and how to find out ifyou have kid- nev or bladder trouble. When writing mention tfgMKSIS reading this generous | offer in this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Home el J&wanip-liooU Binghamton, N. Y. The regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles are sold by ill druggists. Don't make any mistake but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Root, and the ad iress, Binghamton, N. Y.,on every bottle. Dr. Hall in the Food Divison. The Raleigh News and Obser ver of August 9, says: Mr. Roger B. Hall, of Lenoir, who graduated at the University of North Carolina in June, has been appointed as second assist ant in the food divison of the Department of Agriculture. Prof. William M. Allen being the head of that Department. Mr. Hall comes to his new duties very highly recommended b> the University and many of the prominent citizens of Lenoir. He is said to be a capable and efficient man, and hh friends predict a successful career for him. He will be given warm welcome to Raleigh. Attack Like Tigers. In fighting to keep the blood pure the white corpuscles attack disease germs like tigers. But often germs multiply so fast the little fighters are overcome. Then see pimples, boils, eczema, saltrheum and sores multiply and strength and appetite fail. This condition demands Electric Bitters to regulate stomach, liver and kidneys and to expel poisons from the blood. "They are the best blood purifier," writes C. T. Budahn, of Tracy, Calif., "I have ever found.They make rich, red blood, strong nerves and build up your health. Try them. 50c at C. M. Shuford, Moser & Lutz and Grimes Drug Co. SUNDAY SCHOOL. Lesson IX.—Third Quarter, For Aug. 27, 1911. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Lesson. Jer. xxxix, 1-10. Memory Verses. 9. 10—Golden Text, Num. xxxii. 23—Commentary Pre pared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. We have come to the end of the story of Judah for the time being, for when In captivity their history ceases during that period. Thus the 573 years ot Acts xlii. 17-21. from the exodus to the building of the temple, perfectly agrees with the 480 of I Kings vi, 1. by sub trat ting the ninety-three years of the captivities in Judg. iii. iv. vi, xiii; so also the whole period of the present age of Israel's rejection of Christ, which comes in between the sixty-nine weeks and the seventieth' week of Dan ix. 25-27. Every believer should lay to heart that all time spent out of fellow ship with Christ is tkne lost. The ten tribes had been carried cap tive in the ninth year of their King Hoshea. which was about the sixth year of Hezekiah, king of Judah. The Lord had borne with Judah about 130 years louger. sending them prophet after prophet and giving them such good kings as Hezekiah and Josiah, but they were incorrigible. "They mocked the messengers of God and despised His words and misused His prophets until the wrath of the Lord arose against His people till there was no remedy. Therefore He brought upon them the king of the Cbaldees • • • to fulfill the word of the Lord by the mouth of Jeremiah" (II Chron. xxxvi. 15. 17. 21). The account of this siege of Jerusa lem. with the capture of Zedekiab and many of his people. Is recorded In Jer lii and II Rings xxv. and more fully In those two chapters than in our les son chapter. There were pt least two very strange things in connection with this siege and the capture of Zedekiah. Ezekiel was a captive in Babylon, hun dreds of miles distant, and yet without telephone or telegraph or wireless he was told to note the very day the siege began and set it forth by an object les son to the captives at Babylon (Ezek xxiv, 1-3; Jer. lii. 4>. He was told to tell the captives thnt the king would be carried to Babylon and die there, yet he would not see Biibvlon (Ezek. xii. 13). This is explained by verse 7 ot onr lesson. The time and mauner of the flight of the king and his men of war from the city, according to verse 4 of onr lesson, were also seen by the prophet in Babylon and set forth be fore the people by an object lesson (Ezek. xii. 1-13). The capture of Zede kiah by night helps to make more real that the darkness and the light are both alike to Him with whom we have to do; that we cannot escape Him when He wants us: that it is Impossi bleto hide from Him (Ps. exxxix. 1-12). Y\V think of Jonah and his capture and second commission and also of Nnm. xxxii. 23. "Be sure your sin will find you out." On the other hand, con sider hnw safe we are when God hides us. Think of Moses in a cleft of the rock with God's hand covering him. of Elijah hidden by the brook Cberith and at Zarephath and of Jeremiah and Baruch hidden from Jehoiakim! If we are true believers we may well rejoice that our life is hid with Christ in God (Col. Hi. 3). From the murder of Abel to the present time and on to the time when he shall be shut up for a thou sand years the devil's motto seems to be "Kill, kill!" See his dread work in verse (5 of our lesson. Yet the murder of Zedekiah's sons bears no compari son to the murder of the Son of God fn the presence of Mary. His mother These men and all others die because of their own sins. He died for the sins of the whole world. Some were carried captive to Baby lon for their good, like Daniel and bis friends, E'/.ekiel and others, but Zede kinh and his companions were carried captive as a reproach and a proverb, a taunt and a curse. This was shown to Jereminh in the vision of the two baskets of flgs (Jer. xxiv). It is not true concerning every one that "all Is for the best," but it is true concerning all who are redeemed by precious blood; that all things are for their good that they may become in their daily life more like Jesus Christ (Rom. viii). So the city was taken and burned, and the walls were broken down and the people carried into captivity for seventy years, as the Lord had predict ed by Jeremiah (chapter xxix, 10). The mountains remained as before, and It is written, "As the mountains (not the walls) are round about Jerusalem, so the Lord is round about His people from henceforth even forever." The captain of the guard left in the land some of the poor of the people who had nothing and gave them vine yards and fields (verse 10), reminding us of Zeph. ill, 12. "1 will also leave in the midst of thee an afflicted and poor people, and they shall trust in the name of the Lord." One feature of the coming kingdom will be kings' special care of and favor to the poor and the needy (Ps. Ixxii. 1-4, 12, 13). Jeremiah was still a prisoner when the city was taken (xxxviii. 28), but the captain of the guard (the chief of the executioners—margin verse 9) received orders from the king of Babylon to look well to him, do him no harm, but do whatever Jeremiah might desire (verses 11. 12; chapter xl. 2-5). Thus was fulfilled the Lord's promise to Jeremiah in chapter I, 19. "I am with thee, saith the Lord, to deliver thee." Seemed to Give Him a Stom ach. "I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good," writes H. M. Youngpeters, Editor of The Sun, Lake View, Ohio. "The first few doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets gave me surprising relief and the second bottle seemed to give me a new stomach and perfectly good health." For sale by all dealers. Subscribe to The Democrat,] r Stubborn 'ca!s^™T| j "I was under the treatment of two doctors,** writes I | Mrs. R. L. Phillips, cf Indian Valley, Va., "and they pro- I S? nounced my case a very stubborn one, of womanly weak- Eg 'A ness. I was not able to sit up, when I commenced to I take Cardui. Be I used it about one week, before I saw much change. I Now, the severe pain, t!:at had been in my side for yc .rs, I has gone, and I don't suffer at all. • I am feeling better than I in a long time, and cannot speak too highly of Cardui." ICardoi w th *t i if you are one of those ailing women who suffer from any B P of the troubles so common to women. Cardui is a builder of womanly strength. Composed I 1 of purely vegetable ingredients, it acts quickly on the I womanly system, building up womanly strength, toning up I jg the womanly nerves, and regulating the womanly system. I U Cardui has been in successful use for more than 50 years. I I Thousands of ladies have written to tell of the benefit they I |j received from it. Try it for your troubles. Begin today. E Write to: ladies' Advisory Dept. Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Twin 1 for Special Instructions, and 54-page book. " Home Treatment for Women," seatfrM. Jsl I j FARMERS! 1 lw 6ve )S ' est P a^ flour, or 38 lbs. sjj JK whole wheat flour, and 12 lis. good feed in ex- ffll ijg change for every bushel of good wheat. jjjH gg Highest cash prices paid for good wheat. lf| H Ask your neighbor about our flour. s|j I Hickory Milling Co. | 'jg 4 'We Stand Back wl{ W. of Every Sack." 3H I i w | Hitss Katfrrgn Jfetrrson | & lEublic Stenographer VJ/ | Will Call for Dictation | | Office at Hotel Huffry | AS $ Phone No. 2Q5 ' Sg § HAY AND FEEDS. I © a Call "us when you want good hay and feeds of all kinds. We also carry a full line of poultry feeds. ® $ City Feed Company, § Phoae s®: s-s 5£71« Edwards Construction Co. Hickor y' NG | Hickory Novelty Co. | Manufacturers of R § Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mould- 8 h ings and Building Ma- 8 | terial. k 8® Dressing, Re-Sawing, Ripping, and any kind of custom work 0 A done on short notice Q BSO Come and see us before you place your order. A - o X 806 21st St. Phone No. 19. X 4000e000606Q000906e060QQj
Hickory Democrat (Hickory, N.C.)
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Aug. 24, 1911, edition 1
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