Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / April 5, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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1H " HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE THREE "A La val And Rings SI a a j a a a 1" in niu..njuutum tmmr in lurce vnrierv T Va I 11 i . n , .. i i won ur(ssen vnn mint hova . "N n fyw "ice pieces of jewelry. A' Nothing shows refinement. nnH good taste in dress as jewel ry. Let us show you our nice line. E. Bisanar . rlt r and KitfiwUred Optometrist E .;.'i:lhcr:i and C. and N.-W Railways. jjj r -v. I'' I'lftlUXlQfila Candies of giving candies as an Easter . - m ii q ( r ( linnnauys bthsr c:kv U ' - orth giving. The pfr-i it has gained during the past tty ye n: ! heen created by high stand ards 'of ui.-vaiiunntion which distinguishes it from otln-r i-andies. Hickory Drug Company The R:XLL Store Telephone 46 man Ymr: .; PU L8 S,:A 0ULLS PR0VE riliUi-- : : :. ,:t, HELPFUL TO GARDENERS faTV i " rA "'' " - .i.; '.VU'.tfr 1aris April 5. Many seagulls ; which were driven inland in France W yjIHi j. .;iiLLIvVHHRE by the recent colds nap were captur- cd, anu now, witn tneir wings enppea, 1 are proving useful in destroying IW'RIHE I'' 1' Kl.COKI) worms and grubs in French gardens. (Py the Associated Press) Local and Personal a ttcoatmuninauuiim. nn" Mr. E. E. Anderson, salesman for a southern music house, is spending a few days with his fan.uy here. . Dr. R. Wtood Brown leA last night for Washington, Chicago, and Kansas Citly to spend some time on business. Mrs. Wtesley Martin and little daughter, Nancy Lang Martin, left today for Greenville to visit Mrs. Martin's parents. The services at the Methodist church tonight will be conducted by the PhilaHhea dlassi to be interesting and everybody is 1I1V11CU. (Mr. Marshall Yount has purchase ed the cafe formerly conducted by Mr. M. It Wlillis and placed Mr. Fred Wright in charge. Mr. Charles Mitchell will assist Mr. Wright. (Somebody worked off a counter feit dime of 1906 vintage on the Re cord, but it looked erood enoueh to the force. It would not pass the oanK, nowever. iMr. C. E. Norris of Knoxville, general superintendent; Mr. Walter Shipley of Charlotte, general freight agent, and Mr. W. C. Hudson of Asheville, superintendent, were in Hickory Wednesday evening and to day on a tour of inspection of the southern Railway. Teeter-Odom Mr. M. Creswell Teeter and Miss Luna Odom, daughter of Mr. Thom as Odom, were united in marriage last night at the Methodist parson age by Rev. A. L. Stanford in the presence of a few friends. Mr. Teeter is in the employ of the Stan dard Oil Confpany and his bride is a popular and well known -woman. Your Country Needs You Co. "A" 1st N. CN. G. Needs You. All able bodied unmarried men between the ages of 18 and 45 years owe it to their country to be prepared in this crisis. Be patriotic and join today before you are forced to serve. We need you now, not next year. Be first and not last. Good training and good pay for your services while training. See I IF 1 till j, l. Lveriv At Shuford Hardware Co. at once. Mrs. Blackwelder Hostess Mt3. J. W. Blackwelder was hos tess yesterday afternoon to the Round Dozen Book Club. Twelve mem bers were present. The book for the afternoon was "Come out of the Kitchen," by Alice Brewer Miller. Mrs. Blackwelder gave a short sketch of the author's life and also read an interesting magazine story. After the literary program officers for next year were elected. These were president, Mrs. W. B. Ramsay, vice- president, Mrs. F. B. Ingold. secre tary and treasurer, Mrs. C. C. Bost. A delicious three course luncheon was served. Mrs. Blackwelder's house was beautifully decorated in a profusion of spring flowers. A lovely bowl of white tulips was plac ed in the center of the table. Easter favors were given as souvenirs. The next and last meeting will be held with Mk-s. W. B. Councill. EARTH AND HEAVEN Hast thou not seen, impatient boy, Hast thou not read the solemn wrath That gray experience writs for gid dy youth On every mortal joy? Pleasure must be dashed with pain. lAnd yet, with heedless haste, i.. Tha thrHy joy isp-ears the taste, Nor hearkens to despair, but tries Ithe bowl again. The rills of pleasure never run sin cere: Earth has no unpolluted spring, From the cursed soil some danger ous taint they bear, So roses grow on thorns, and honey wears a sting. In vain we seek a heaven below the sky; The world has false but flattering charms; Its distant joys show big in our es teem, But lessen still as they draw near the eye; ;ln an emlbrace the visions die; And when we grasp the airy forms Wre lose the pleasing dream. Look up, my soul! pant toward the leternal hills. Those heavens are fairer than they iseem There pleasures all sincere glide on in crystal rills, There not a dreg of guilt defiles Nor grief disturbs the stream That Canaan knows no noxious .thing, iNo cursed soil, no tainted spring. Nor roses grow on thorns, nor honey wears a sting. Isaac Watts COLORITE Just Arriucd Jet Elack Dull Black Brown Cerise Cardinal Red Cadet Blue Violet Navy blue Old Rose Yellow Sage Green Lavender Price .25c PUTMAN DYES ARRIVED Sky Blue Yellow Orange Pink Rose Cerise Black Olive Green Price 10c Lutz Drug Store "On the Corner" Phones 17 and 317 innmw:nnwi'. tinmnninintnm: Hemstitching Picot Edge Samples on request. MISS ELIZABETH BOST Mrs. W. R. Beckley, Millinery Phone 208 Hickory, N. C. mnMn!"8in;;8m: DR. ALFRED fl BULA EYE SPECIALIST TO SEE BETTER SEE mA The Best Equipment Obtainable. Glasses Fitted Exclusively MARTIN BL06K, LENOIR, N. C If you trot it from PTTLA. It's Right. VTACH PAPER FOR DATES. BIBLE READERS AND WAR Montreal Gazette. The war development in western Asia will revive knowledge of places that figured in some of the earliest history of the world. Airmen have been dropping bombs on Beersheba, where Abraham ranked himself am ong the foresters by planting a tree, and whose people were later de nounced by the prophet Amos. Near by is Hebron, where, also, Abraham was a sojourner, as was Isaac, his son and Jacob. To the ewstward is to the people. To the westward is Gaza, a great city of the Philistines, which sold Hebrew slaves to Edom, and for a time held Samson as a prisoner, till, lifting the gates of the place from their fastenings, he went off witth them, cas'tmg them on the Mount Mntar, before Hebron. The further progress of the cam paign will tie interesting to Bible as well as newspaper readers. j(i.;) UCC('s., f ,' 1 '"' " "f t:uto find the answor among R and G " "".Me to suppose that you, too, will be .,vv i; '!:; ; 1 1017 R and G Styles. YouH find tha '' " '":;u- Wat. Corsets cor- G Bowl es A WAR POEM We live in Hickory high and dry, Classed with the cities of the sky, In Catawba county, not very far From the city of Charlotte by rail- Toad car. Carolina is our native state, We do not boast it very great, But when our country calls for men To fight for her it is greater then. Wh come from stock tried long ago And do not dread to face the foe, Since we are in peace, have tried to live And to all nations our riches give. But now our country is called to arms, Men from the cities and the farms; Sr. lot us to our flair be true. Just as our fathers use to do. Wlell rally to tha nation's call And fight like demons, lest we fall; Wa will nrnt.Art our native land And for the right well always stand. 3 W S. Notice! Bids will racaiTtd at Nawton, N. rt .tn.hiM . I AfV an tha Horwford Brid ore th Catawba Rirar. . nana ana pmnwuen thia wort may aa aaan on ftla at tha oflta of tha Raglata af Daada for Oa tawba awintf a4 alaa a tha Ragia f' offlM ia Oaldwalt aaoaty. Poa- pasifleationa xvam wi - "rt way aommlado urn W 10J It M fov aaa. aarhiflad ahaek on Tloaal bank in Iht torn af 200.00 will 'ba aquirad' a A5mPnr M: 1 W aaaara tha tight to re iast anf an ail bUmt Bidi i will ba JitaJ at MawUn, W. C a 11 e'aloek MSn5wCounty. - Br JT. t. HMrinrton, Chairman Cammlaaiontf af Catawba County, P Oabavn Bwwa, Chairman FARMERS PROSPEROUS, POOR IN CITEIS NOT (By Associated Press) Dublin, Ireland, April 5. While, the Irish farmer is prosperous beyond precedent and wages in many 'trades are higher than ever before, the con dition of the poorer classes in the cities is in many cases worse than for years. "At the present moment the artisans and the poor in Dublin are reduced to a state of privation that causes a great feeling of alarm and dismay," said the Lord Mayor at a meeting of the corporation this week. iMemibers of the corporation com plained that the work of rebuilding the city, which had been expected to do much to relieve destitution, was not going forward as had been plann ed. It had not been found possible, he explained, to import the material necessary for the work of rebuild ing, although the ministry of mu nitions had promised to facilitate it in every way. A deputation was appointed to wait upon the chief secretary and impress him with the great need of employ ment , especially in the building trades. You Ii Heed New Clothes ior Sunday Easter is dress up time How would you like a dark mixture -maybe a brown or greenish shade in it; made by Hart Schaffner & Marx. Or a stlyish, well balanced Varsity Fifty Five, one, two or there buttons; any number of pleasing variations. Easter shirts, neckwear, and hosiery; "dress up" as much as you want to in these good things. Moretz-Whitener Clo. Co. "The Quality Shop" WAKE FOREST COLLEGE PLEDGES ITS LOYALTY MRS. SUTER LEAVES Wake Forest, April 5 At a mass meeting of the student body of Wake Forest college yesterday at the con-l elusion of chapel exercises, President! William Louis Poteat presented the following resolutions, which were I adopted amidst prolonged and tumu- tuous applause. "In view of the announcement on yesterday of the policy of the gov ernment of the United States in re- ation to the imperial government of Germany, nad in view of the issue now squarely joined between demo cracy and humanity on the one hand and a ruthless autocracy on the other, the students and faculty of Wake Forest college in mass meet ing assembled unite whole-heartedly in the resolutions following: "1. That we indorse without re servation the position taken by the President of the United States m his special message to the congress on the second af April, together with the specific policies which he recommended. '2. That we respectfully urge up on the congress in general and upon the representatives of North Carolina in particular to give the administra tion united and generous support in carrying this war in behalf of human freedom all the war through to suc cess as rapidly as may be possible. "3. That we herein pledge our loy alty to the government of the Unit ed States, and offer ourselves and such resources as we control to the demands of that government when ever they are made and whatever they may involve." Mrs. Marion Suter and son, George Suter, returned to their home in Washington last night after spen ding the past seven months in Hick cry, where Mrs. Suter came in search of health. She found the Hickory climate and the treatment of Dr. H. C. Menzies more potent than all the sanitoriums and her recovery is be lieved to be complete. NEWS IS WIDELY CHEERED IN RUSSIA iPetrograd, via London, April 5. News of the impending intervention of the United States was first receiv ed at Taurdie Palace, where a coun cii of soldiers and working mejn's deputies was in session. The an nouncement, made from the trib ute, evoked a strom of applause and soon the entire palace echoed with shouts and hurrahs. Impromptu meet ings were at once held in the foyer, where orators explained to the sol diers the enormous importance of President Wilson's declaration. HICKORY POST ELECTS OFFICERS FOR YEAR i!3i,ckory post, Travelers Protec tive Association, has contributed $5 to the American Red Cross Society for the relief of suffering in the storm-swep.i Section around New Albany, Ind. The annual meeting of the post was held in the rooms of the Chamber of Commerce and the officers, who have been on the job at all times, were reelected. They are J. F. Dellinger, president; C. L. Mosteller, vtice-prestidenjt; Frank p. Johnson, secretary and treasurer. RevJ W. R. Bradshaw was chosen chaplain to succeed Rev. J. D. Harte, removed to Oxford. The local post elected Messrs. F. P. Johnson, L. I. Hatfield and W. H. Craddock, the latter of Lenoir, as delegates to the state convention at Charlotte on May 10 and Messrs. H. P. Williams, C. L. Mosteller and R. C. Buchanan were chosen as alter nates. Hickory edlegates will wear uniforms. AUSTRIANS STILL FEAR FINE ITALIAN HAND (By the Associated Press) Rome, Apx?il 5. The deep-roqted suspicion felt by Austrian prisoners for their Italian captors is shown by the fact that when they are ill in hospital they often refuse to take medicine unless the prescription is translated into their language. When satisfied that it contains no poison ous ingredients, htey take the remedy. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up Sysr Te Old Standard strengthening WSiC GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. dri8 4 Malaria.enriches the blood.and buila up the sys tem. A true tonic. For adulU and children. 50c To Cure a Cold In One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the Couch and Headache and works off the Cold DrnnUta refund money if it fails to cure. 4. w. GROVE'S sienature on each box. 25c. THE SANITARY WAY" PHONE 190. Clothes Altered. Cleaned, Pressed, Dyed and Repaired CITY PRESSING CLUB Moose & Miller. CAROLINA SPECIAL WRECKED; I SEVERAL PASSENGERS HURT Asheville, April 5. A telephone message from Morristown, Tenn., re-; ceived here last night stated the Southern railway passenger train',1 known as the Carolina Special,"! which left sheville at 8:50, last night,1 had been wrecked at a point between! Marshall and Nocoma, N. C, about j 10 o'clock. J.t was stated that the engine and two coaches were de railed, and that one car was over turned. No lives were lost, it is said, though several passengers were injured. Telegraph lines between Ashe ville and Marshall are down. SHQOQBDDDDDDaDaDDDDDBDaQDL&OU.JUUaDDB WAR HAS COST HOLLAND QUITE A NEAT SUM (By the Associated Press) The Hague, Netherlands, April 5. The war has cost Holland $235,- 480,000, according to the latest of ficial announcement, this sum hav ing been spent on the upkeep of the mobilized army and navy, together with the supply of cheap food, the care of refugees, and the like. Moreover the rate of expenditure is rising. The last half-year the cost was $57,080,000 as against $46, 000 for the preceding six months. With the ever-mounting cost of the provision of cheap food, the figures are expected to continue their upward course in the current year. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening toaic, GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria.enriches the blood.and builds np the sys tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c. a B IB 13 a s n a a a m ES a a a B a a H a a a a a Retirements Are In Order! Sf.TJ. B.Pat. QffiM Are you in need of new tires? If so it will be to your inter est to see us before buying. Jt will pay you to investigate tht quality of GOODYEAR tires. Ask your friend who use them WHY they use them. iAok up the list of new cars and see if over 35 per cent are not GOODYEAR equipped at the factory. Not because they are cheaper they are BETTER. The car man facturer's know. The quality in GOODYEAR tires make them a little higher priced, but better. We carry a complete line of GOODYEAR Tires, tubes and tire accessories. g QUALITY! SERVICE! PHONE 2 lO. g g S aODDOaDDDDDDDDDC3DaC3CaC3DGanDD0
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 5, 1917, edition 1
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