Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / March 7, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
tVEPSKSUAY EVENING HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE THREE 0 0 0 fl 0 0 0 0 0 H 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 8 0 1 a 01 n HUonunnnnnnnDnnnnDnnnnnnnnnpnnnnB i Take Care of Your Eyes cx X 1 100,000 blind people in the United States, according to the last census. According to the statement a large per centage could have been pre vented if properly cared for in time This does not in clude partial loss of sight and o'thcr complications. CI El n u n ii a n ii u imnmiwumiinnnmnmmmunmum I Society POITRS Oil. ON CrOTHINO SKS3S SETS FIRE TO HERSELF 333233332 Mrs. A. R. Launey of Savannah, Ga. is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. L. Riddle. Geo. E. Bisanar Mrs. R. G. Pope and little daughter Margaret, left yesterday for Asheville to spend several weeks with relatives. o Mrs C. C. Beam and her sister, Myrtle Stroup are visiting their sis ter, Mrs. M. H. Lohr at Hickory. Gastonia Gazette. Jeweler and Regis tered Optometrist Wutvli inspector for Southern and C. and N.-W. Railways acsiTsEflanaanannnnnnonannnnnnnnnnnnnnnara Rexall Catarrh Jelly Recommended by Us ! ,,r the treatment of Nasal Catarrh, hay fever, cold in the I, an.i other Catarrhal affections. K.iv!l Catarrh Jelly is exposed of pure medicinal ingredi which have been seleced with the view of alleviating and rm tintf catarrhal and kin ired affections. !l is put up in a collapsible tube and is convenient way to treat .lUtrh. Guaranteed to relieve you. Ord.-rs delivered anywhere in the city. Out of town orders aiii-a promptly by parcel post. Hickory Drug Company A Gocd Drug Store In The REXALL Store BMBtS HMM Just Received A hats. 1 arge vogue in shipmen: These hats are the northern cities. Come in and see them. Mrs. W. R. Beckley 'Millinery of Style." Want Ads in the Record bring Results Miss Russell Entertains (Saturday afternoon Miss Elizabeth Russell dielightfully entertained ten of her little friends in celebration of her twelfth birthday. Games were played and in an intersting contest Miss Louise Cline was the lucky win ner of the prize, a lovely crepe de chine handkerchief. Elegant refresh- " ments of chicken salad, sandwiches, iimmillUIUlWlimiUllimuiWltllllttMUmamillWimmaWIIin cakes and hot chocolate were served at the close of an enjoyable afternoon. Miss Russell's guests were Misses Lo uise Flowers, Elizabeth Barkley, Vir ginia Springs, Alice Cilley, Katharine and Louise Cline, Mildred Wilfong, Elizabeth Harris, Hermoine Warlick, and Mary Stuart Menzies. o Starnes-Wolfe Mt. Ivey Starnes and Miss Loulalee Wolfe, two popular young people, gave their friends a surprise Tuesday after noon when they were married by Rev. B. A. Yorke at his home. Besides mpmliArc rf Mr VnrlfA's fnmilv TVTtv j Joe Reinhardt, a special friend, was the only witness. The ring ceremony was used and the ceremony was im pressive. Mr. Starnes is an employe of the C. N and W Railway Company and his bride is the daughter of Mrs. Lou W. Wolfe and is a young woman of charm and accomplishment. Immediately after the wedding at 4:15, the couple left for Asheville to spend several days. o WJagoner-Long A very pretty wedding was solem nized last evening at 6 o'clock when Miss Mabel Long, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Long, became the bride of Mr. J. E. Wagoner, the ceremony be ing performed in the First Methodist church. The church was beautifully decorated for the occasion with ivy, ferns and palms. The solemn vows were spoken under a white arch, hung with ivy, from which was suspended a large wedding bell. Just before the wedding party entered Mrs. J. H. Shuford, accompanied by Miss Clara Bowles on the organ, sang "O, Prom ise Me " To the strains of Lohen grin's wedding march the ring bear er, Master Wllburn Wlest and the flower girl, Miss Ruth Setzer, carry ing a basket of exquisite hyacinths, came first. They were both dressed in white. Then came the bride, wearing a lovely suit of taupe, with ac cessories to match, and carrying a bouquet of lillies of the valley and ferns, with her maid of honor, Miss Evangeline Etley, who was dressed in a suit of gold cloth, with hat to match, and carried an armful of pink carnations. They were met at the altar by the groom and his best man, Mr. Paul Dellinger, who entered from the right. The beautiful ring cere mony was performed by the Rev. A. L. Stanford. Mr. and Mrs Wagner left on No. 16 for Atlanta to visit Mrs. Wag- J They will return home March 11th. .Mrs Wagoner is the eldest daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Long, and is very popular in this city, where she has lived all her life. Mr. Wag oner is the efficient manager of Mc Clelland's store and while he has not been a resident of this city very long, he has a large number of friends here. Crstonia, March 6 Melancholia pro.' ?'jei by a wasting illness of many mr-.tiis caused Mts. Annie Alexander, wire of I. N. Alexander to pour ker OSr -:3 oil over her clothing Tuesday mo: 'vng and set fire to herself. She w; so badly burned that she died Tr'-iay afternoon at 2:30, without hi ' 'r-g regained consciousness. R" -entlv she had exhibited at times mental aberration and it had been de cided to remove her to the state hos pital at Morganton. Accompanied by the family physician and a nurse she was to have been taken there and it is probably that this knowledge ag gravated her mental condition to a point where she decided to end her life. Mr. Alexander was up town at the time and only her three small chil dren were at home. She went into the bath room and locked the door before sotting fire to her clothing. Attract ed by the screams of her children neighbors ran to the house and had to batter down the door to the bath room to get to her. She was then so badly burned that physicians had no hope for her recovery. Mrs. Alexander was a sister of Mrs. C. A. Eury of Raleigh. A Good Town. Telephone 46. ::i!lUiIUIIilllllini!Ullilllllllllll!li!U!!!! of small street very much in GRACE REFORMED CHURCH Better Farming in the South SOUTHERN FARMER'S FERTILIZER ADVANTAGE Aid in Boll Weevil Fight. owth'i Deposit of Photphatlo Materials an C. A. WHITTLE. Recently a Southern fertilizer con- phatlc fertilizers most readily own obtained a large order for acid ble as plant food. Hence BfcAk . . rir ...inifi.Pi authorities are stressing fvjiiiB irwm noiiana ai pi wu- ositv.ui.ui .. n f.rM ,.., .v.i rr . l.k. (on AA I ..ao in fertilizers lOr DU Weevil e t, .... .v - I t-rtv vi-h pro the miruose is to aas- was ,USf one letter in her box If Uk4 Dutch farmer can afford to ten maturity of the plants ad U get lt was enough, judging from her hap tar ia ner n nhr.nhti ia muh cotton setas possible berore Dy smiie as she tore open the enve- tad mjke it pay, bow much more can the weevil has developed in sufficient ,ope It was pitiful to see the eager a Sou.Lera farmer obtain when he number to get all the new squares ana hope die from a face as some one a bur about three times as much the bolls that form, as it will ao later Iooked through his mail and saw the PHASES OF LIFE REVEALED IN POSTOFFICE CROWD .Saturday in the postoffice lobby the other day, waiting for the mail to be pat up, lots of interesting phases of life were revealed by the people passing in and out. -A business man came hurriedly in, unlocked his box and glanced methodically through the bundle of letters, his face light ing up now and then as he read a superscription which meant that there was a check inside. A young girl tripped into the lobby, her face aglow with joyful anticipation; there but phoephata with the same money? Lutth farmers are shrewd and thrif tf. They bare developed agriculture to a Ttry high state of efficiency, and tkey know aulta wall what can be 4oa5r with acid phosphate at $55 per ton. TLeir land is not poor. To the wUrar it ia blghly developed and rtlle. Kvrv rod that ran tios fe ak1 for agriculture is cultivated like a Karden. Thev have found that on In the season. PU8H COTTON IN loiter missine that meant more to him than the fall of nations. The whole bundle of letters worthless because WEEVIL TERRITORY of the absence of one beloved super- bJilUtlUIl. XllCIl till" iii.viiv6uriiv sum i.nlnn1ru1 liar am nlnvpr's hnv . UIAIWAU livi -.f.-'.J J r.. Pridmore. AaronOltliat. rV,,V. oVio Irnpw rnntninerl a Inouiry "How would you lerunze f cqo1 tnousanj was thrust of Kvery rod that can possibly to beat the boll weevu to uw e Don weevu w Z into her pocket as was a score In growing cotton unaer uu.. others AH were chucked recklessly conditions, several laciors uu. . . norket exceDt three. , w how rich their soil, fertlli- given consideration, i ne 'anu- s blue one was pink and one was v pay, out of their experience be well drained anoweii white and square. A pretty young tiy Hud that it pays them now to vegetable matter. Good seedot a va smilin ghe left me ioctt.it, . . :o w;th n letter, and b chosen, and, of course, . . variety - - - T0 m. i be Dlanted. Fer- tie girls joyfully spelled the words Vnhr UAl wvll ronditioim. etLrU xZLZn nd nrooerly cultivate, cln I card winch announcea tna,. radrfv will come home tonight. A a much as $55 per ton In acid riety adapted to ii i u., ... ... that will mature "r boll weevil conditions, early m- nrooerly cultivate. . . .. .' . .".I - ; . r-o One Grace Reformed church is located in what is now Catawba county. It is a church that is rich in history. How ever there is little on record from which to write a history of this church about Before a congregation was established in this community servic es were held. ' The tradition is that there was preaching in a double barn during the summer and in private houses during the winter months. In the year 1796 a meeting was held in the neighborhood to consider the pro priety of building a house for public worship On January 11, 1797, a deed for a tract of land containing a fraction over three acres was exe cuted by Samuel E. Jarrett to John Yoder and John Huffman for the pur pose of building a house of worship thereon. The cost of the land was eight dollars. There was a log structure erected for a church by the people who lived in the community at that time. The building was twenty-five feet wide and two stories high. The building was completed in two years. The church was the property of the Reformed and Lutheran people who lived in the community at the time and it was a union church at this time. Dr. Welker in his sketch of the Reformed churches in the Colonial Records says of Grace that "it was for many years the most prosperous and intelligent Reformed congregations in the state." This log church which was built in early times to the people who lived in the community almost what Solomon's temple had been to the Jews. Religious devotion was ab sorbing habit of many of our German ancestors. John Yoder who is spoken of in this writing was a son of pioneer Conrad Yoder and was born in 17G4 on the waters of Jacob's Fork river. He was an elder in the Reformed church at Grace and is the grand father of Col. G. M Yoder who is a distinguished historian of Catawba county. , J. H. SHUFORD.. PREACHING HEALTH ALONG THE HIGHWAYS "Smart Style" Week All Through This Week Another big lot of new Suits and Coats received this morning. The prettiest Jot we have ever had. Let us show you anyway. New "Wirthmoor" Waists $1.00 New "Welworth" Waists $2.00 Flexo Heatherbloom underskirts, all colors , $1.50 each Four New Smart Styles for "Smart Style" Week. They look good on paper. They will look better on you. We have about forty more Smart Styles that look just as good. Come m to-morrow and spend an hour or so with us. Suit Prices From - - $12.75 to $40.00. Coat Prices From - - 6.00 to 30.00 New Shipment CentcMeri Gloves. There are very few kid gloves on the market. The importers refuse to take orders for next fall. We know this, (there will be lio lamb gloves at $1.50 offered for next seas on. WJhile in New York we bought a big lot of kid gloves that we can sell now at $1.50 and $1.75. We had o take them ?nd pay for them before delivery.. We have the white, with black stitching, black, brown, greys, and beige shades. I Thompson- West Company "The Ladie's Store" Stop That Cough White Pine Cough Syrup With Tar. Price - . - 25c In Virginia he who rides may read. As you travel along the highways you meet now and then posters and placards which at first sight almost frighten you with their big head lines and warning messages. Closer attention makes known the fact that they are not "reward" notices of the sheriff or patent medicine advertise ments, nor are they "for sale" signs of some auction company, but plain facts about the ways and means of preventing disease and obtaining good health, i These posters about ten by four teen inches in size are aDDarfiTithr sheets of tin lithographed in colors oi Diack and orange. Their read ing matter is forcefully arranged to p catch the traveler's eye and is at the H same time easily read. The pass- it erby quickly gets the message and a inconsciously takes home with him li the hisrhwav swmnn nf ViooitVi H Out in one of the rural sections cmmmmmumttan:tuua: of the state appeared one of thpsp - 'On the Corner' Phones 17 and 317 iDEIBDDDDDDDDDDDDODDDDQDDQDDOnDODDDDQRQDDn If War Is Declared, Our ! Government is Prepared a a a Are you prepared for the big Spring Drive. Is your car prepared to meet the ad vance of spring and it's allies, Sunshine, Balmy Days and Good roads? If not, bring it in and let us put it in a "state of prepar edness" for you. Old Gen. Ground Hog has about shot his last Torpedo and the advance of Spring is on. We can assure you of prompt and efficient sertice and low repair costs made possible by modern equipment and methods and short cuts in our Service department. If you hare any Electric Battery trouble, tell it to Mr. Thompson, who is in charge of our Service Department. a y Lutz Drug store JBonck Garage g QUALITY! SERVICE! 3 PHONE 2 lO. NOTICE bealed proposals will be received at the office of City Manager by the City Council of the City of Hickory t;i MarVi Cth. 1917. ct 7 30 p. m , for the erection and completion of Electric Power line, approxima- Jo. b an placards with the following reading matter: "The best farm in this county is where the health of the family is best protected. "It has a good well. "It has a sanitary privy. "It haS Srrffn5 on tho mirJnuro fl: j folir Tnf0 feet, consisting o quitoes , triple irrade weatner proof wire and "It has no standing water in which three 15 K. W transformers from mosquitoes can breed. 2200 to 220 volts, two single throw "Make it yours." triple pole switches, six single po.e The Virginia state board of !iShtn "S IZtl wfufof health evidently considered it fonr? pen-acoi, un plan to give the usual idle mind of the man on the way to town or autorvobjlist something worth while to think about, or they thought this a splendid opportunity to get health truths to soak in. ammeter. Details ot above construction can be obtained by the aPPlvin at the olnce ot U y iVlana" ' ' " " " - .ww . -.w f TILIZH llUCiailJt f - M . . " -. - I ua lae uw" , k a Hndf.w in th lohbv jM'.v.4ar.e, or course, promotes tne im- rlavs and clay loams, me use u m. j - ------ aturlnK of cotton. All ag- tliizer carrying 10 per cent to t per reading a iewer, anu u phospbate nltroeen and a small per Uo 4t ma ncult "".ni'ui ui vuiiuu, -i b i tiiizer carryiuK - v - - . , , ural authorities are now recom- phosphoric acid, 3 to 4 per cent grey and haggard as he read. n littoral uka nf arid T,honhatr --a ,maii nor cent of pot- ilomance, tragedies, fortunes, lo j - - - " mr wr TiiTrfiiiJii in.ii ii a oi.-u Mr . . i " ftrtlliaerB as aa Important measure ril Tf it he had. should be usea. and gained, happiness, sorrow, cuBHaithnc the boll weevil. TL"',- at the rate of 2 st the If cb) Southern farmer had to pay Apply per acre to 400 Dounda whole round of life from the sweet On lighter soils In which to the bitter finds its way through I& iw tou for acid phosphate, what ?oeen ' phosphorus and potash are the postoffice box. Statesville (!laadvataxe he wcmld face! Since ii limiallv deficient, a fertilizer carry- mark t CB.1 r,r tihrii nAti all uoutv ita ia desirable. . i.ui.v kiiio " l jnir an tnree " . .-'..'.ntueiy situated ne is! a- IT- 1ft Land- i&H placed here In the South rM UfcpotdtH of rock phosphate fthna treated with sulphuric booiut-H acid phosphate, an ingre tfltt of fitlllzr. No onjy i8 the Southern fanner fa- by roasoa of the natural de tf phosphatic materials, but. In .at years, the South has become Ym wanufacturer of sulphuric Miip&urlc acid has an import- twloit. Sfa 10 to 12 per cent phosphoric acid GUARDSMAN GOES TO PRISON ? or 4 ner cent nitrogen and 1 or 2 FOR DIVULGING SECRETS 3 or per criii. " o , ftA ,. .... m u n rc . Minneapolis, ivunn , martu i w ficers of the First Minnesota infantry ret iming to Fort Snelling from the DOTATION. n ..: 1 nnnir.fH thah Paul DEANS in! in-i - .UCAICttll uuiua oimvuuvw 80T Bt"',J r o-1 e 1 Ct Paul a nr!. iros in T. nnmnsinv. first Minnesota r ' r'VLu r; n rate of 300 to per ceni ptiu. 400 pounds to the acr& BEANS IN THE . i "will tou' recommend rntatlon In which soy beans, cotton infantry, was sentenced to five years' IUIUUUU . ,m K 11 Hf(1 7 : T?nt- f navamunrfti j nma ntner cruu i" . . iiiiunsuiinicm. a -u.i vt vmw lq some unic f . . i... .ww. - - Sov beans are highly recommended. Kansas, February 5 by a courtmartial aaA k IQtTlllIIH H.11U. V In many forms of manufac- "'c. " ch nitrogen UUl . , A mvl . leeume and, therefore, co t g Antonio. Texas, for furnish . ' m.,sh nitrosren. The hay m;i:tn-u infnrmntlnn to fiermanv. ia mLiZT ... W4 SB"""10 I. abundant and tne ieeuiuB A Ietter addressed to reiauves in u Jcf uaW of war, hence The oil mills afford a ready Germanv state3 that iq.000,000 Ger- rr' uuftuimes or It have been drawn 7., th bean, and the caae ; - .. (.nnntrv were readv to . . 1 11 . tins SOUTTTERN HANDLED LARGE CROWDS TO INAUGURATION The Southern Railway Company is 2 23 lOt priding itself in the manner in which it handled the inauguration crowds to and from Washington. The road ran eight regular and nine special trains out of the capital and of these last seven were on time and none ot the regulars was as much as an hour late, and only three were as much as 30 minutes late. To accomplish this res-It trie o-'ther1- mobilized at Washington a corps ot expert operating and pas senger train officials, while special uniformed police officers were assign ed to the protection of passengers and baggage In addition to the heavy travel on its regular trains, the Southern ran 18 special trains into Washington and all were handled successfully. crpv City Council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. ' Certified check for $100V0 mrsi, accompany each bid until satisfac tory bond is given for completion of the work. ' JOIW W. BALLEW, City Manager SUBSCRIBE FOR THE RECORD t--.iimi3 vi u nave oeen arawn i -"". for tne bean, ana m o th niiinicu.. -i v j I market ior iu- . niu ha Mw. Th:Tre" Pce lu rise up against the government in - ... . .. I flaTlrlin IHf'll 1 II J-- --"- ion to follow is couon rn with soy beans, fol- r . .mi nawuctta. w. wwea oy m Hoilvbrook and accordine to statements by !w vllow are recommended. ficers. Schafenerg is a native of llfM ; tU Driw if'aelT is cotton the event of war with Germany, was inafii . - i A crniui ruia.ivu fcV . , 1.1 . rv" vcr mat of lormer ot enough to nreYent its m t economical olant food. W61 "7,.,, Hoilvbrook and orcordintr to statements by the of The Quleklv Auallakl Pamm I Yellow are AcWphoavUULi that form otphoa.-J. N. HARPER. Agronomist. V The South Bend Malleable H ange Marcus E. Hull, D. C. Lincolnton, N. C. At Hickory: Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays, 11 a. m'. to 2 p. m., Hotel Huffry. Germany. "THE SAM VARY W AY PHONE ISO. rinthoH Altered Cleaned. Pressed. Dyed and Repaired CITY PRESSING CLUB Moose & Miller. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Cld Standard general strengthening tonic, 3ROVE,S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria.enriches the Mood.anJ builds up the sys tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c. We know that you can be convin ced The South Bend Malleable Range is , the best range in the world. I It is the only range with the Patent ed Keystone Copper-Bearing, Alu-minum-Fused, Rust-Resisting Flues throughout. It looks best ,is built strongest, bakes best and lasts long est. Come In And Inspect Them. AternethyHardware Co. er.y tit it . ft Hickory, N. C. 3ti
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 7, 1917, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75