6! A Y v HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE TWO JllCKOiiVDAILY RECORD TELF.rilONE 167 VuWli-iltrd bv the Clay Printing Cft Every Iiveninir Except bunday. .,rVli"Farabe"e - Edito j. c. Miller -.--Manage) Pllia.U'ATHN OFFICE: U02 KLEVENTU AVENUE SuWribors desirinpr the address of their paper changed, will please stat in their communication both OLiJ an( NEW addresses. To insure efficient delivery, com Plaints fhould be made to the Sub criitio!i Department promptly. Utj luWcribors should call 167 regarding complaint. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One yer.r Six months -" Ihree months - xv One Month "Jf On week .l Entered us second r'as matter Sep tembiT 11. liirj, & t-hc postoilicn a: Hickory, N. C. umut- the act of Marcl j, )rj. ME.MIil.i: OF ASSOCIATED PliESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not credited m this paper and also tht local news published herein. tFiIsVuy, -NOV. H. li 1 7 A DEAD I.ETTEU The decision ef the United States supivnu' court in declaring uncon stitut onal the segregation ordinance of the- city of Louisville, Ky.. can not he appreciated entirely until the full text is at hand. Assuming, however, that the Louisville ordi nance was drawn 'tin in a manner to apply equally to both races to prevent white persons from buying property for horn: owning in negro communities, as well as prohib ting colored people from living in white a-tarns it is clear that the court wtnt beneath the letter of the law and grappled its spirit. As long as the members of the court think us th.y do it is appar ent that it will be dillk'ult to draw up any segregation law that W'll pass their scrutiny. Tlvs applies to cities, where the problem was thought to he easier to handle thi'.n in the rural sections, and it is mar)A'st that there will be mod'e or less complaint, N'orth Carolina has not developed much interest in segrcgatiwn, though in nil the towns and e'ties the races naturally have flocked to themselves. Some cities have ordinances and they of course are null and void. (if greater interest in North Car olina, however, has been the agita tion for segregation in the rural dis tricts, a movement sponsored by the Farmers' Union, and urged upon the general ass.mbly, A constitutional amendment would be necessary to adopt segregation in North Carolina, and the law then would be declared unconstitutional by the highest court in the land. Segregation seems impossible for some time to come. ' It is evident that the allied govern ments have decided to recognize the importance of the Italian front and to make it impossible, if they can pre vent it, for (Jermany to smash the mil tary power of the Latin king dom. Italy has claimed all along that the way to beat Germany was to defeat her weak', r allies, and the Isun;:o campai'n. had it been pushed vigorously, might have eliminated Austria in a few more months. The English and French commanders have not taken to this theory, but since Germany has placid a large number of troop on the Italian front, the allies logically can carry on a big campaign there as well as on the French and Ilelg'an fronts. The object is to kill Germans, and one front is ns good as another for that purpose.. With the help rushed to Daly, we may expect a slowing up of the German campaign, even if Ca dorna should be compelled to retreat farther 'nto the interior. The Wisconsin Loyalty Legion has wired the New York Times that it will "measure New York city by Hil quit and kaiser1 sm masked under pac ifism," and since the east has "im pugned the loyalty of Wisconsin," the league asks "New York to set Wisconsin an example in patriotism that it can commend." That was a center shot and New York should have .been hit. The killing, wounding and captur ing of Americans in French trenches was to have been expected, though the news camo as a surprise back home. It must be borne in mind, however, that Germany will endeavor to discourage the United States, and anyth'ng attempted should not evoke surprise. If there are any sincere apostles of Tom Watson who are not nutty, we have failed to hear of them. Watson is unbalanced on pract'cally every proposition, and to be like him one necessarily must have some cu rioiw mental slants. It would seem that some children take everything that is not prohibit ed by law. The Qulnlns That Does Not Arfoct the Koao lircnus of it tonic onl laxative effect. LAXA 11 VIC liko.MOOUlNlNKIs letter than ordinary Vuinine ami cloca not caune nervouanegs nor rmiflnif in head. Rememhtr the lull name and look ior the airoturc oi li. W. GKOVJEC. 30c UEl) TRIANGLE'S WORK AMONG THE SOLDIERS The American Red Cross has done and is preparing to do a wonderful work for the United States soldiers and sailors when they are ill or wounded. But what about it when they are perfectly well, husky and full of pep ? And most of them are in that con dition all the time. . Right-o' Well, that's the job of the Red Triangle. And the Red Tri angle is the war work of the Y. M. C. A. They are both red, the Red Crisis and the Red Triangle. But they are just as separate and dis tinct as anything could be. Not on ly are they entirely separate as to the class of service they perform but they are wholly unassociated as to organization. .Money subscribed to the Red Cross is used and used well as soon as light'ng men get into the hospital. But before they get there it's up to the Y. M. C. A. to look after a very large number of their needs. The war department provides them with food, clothing and shelter. It trains them for their military duties. The personal influence of the officers is splendid in developing character, but the oiliivrs are busy and have little time to reach the man in large num bers for this defin'te purpose. The army and navy chaplains for their part" but there is much they cannot do. The Red Triangle does the rest. It suppli.s the lighting men with writing paper, envelopes pens, pen cils, postage stamps! it mails their letters for them, gives them picture shows, provides lectures on vital sub jects, supplies them gymnastic exhi b'tions ami musical and other enter tainments its; its buildings are equipped with pianos and victrolas for the use of the men; it conducts class es in French and English; it issues books and magazines; it promotes outdoor and indoor games, baseball, volley ball, basket ball, football, checkers, chess, dominoes, it holuY? Bible classes and promotes a strong relig ous work program. It takes care of these strong, well fighting men's spare time in a way that they !ik and that is good for them. It is not only a school, theatre, gymna sium. 'church and home, but is a sort of club, as well. It is the thing that keeps him fit mentally, moral ly, physically and socially. And the work is as broad as it is deep. In the great national guard, national army, naval station, aerial serv ce, officers' reserve and . other camps, the association has establish ed nearly C00 great buildings in this country manned by five secretaries, each. Each building has 90 differ ent items on its list of furnishings. "A book of twos," phase;" "May I have some writing paper?"; have you got any wrapping paper?;" "Any twine?"; "Will you wr te a money or der for me?"; "Can I get a testament here?" These and a thousand ana one other requests are filled, always with a smile and a word of personal greeting or encouragement, and with out a charge of a cent to the enlisted man for any of the things enumerated, exc:pting of course for the postage stamps. This work is to be carried overseas as fast as the American troops cross the Atlantic. It is to be placed in the armies of our allies, France, Russia and Italy .England already has it, and it is to go into the camps of the prisoners of war. To do this a great nation-wide campaign is to be waged from November 11 to 19 to raise $35,000,000 which will be need ed until July 1, 1918. Not a cent of this is to be spent on anybody but the fighting men, the well ones, which the Red Cross cannot serve. RAILROAD WSR BOARD 1 RELIEVES COAL SHORTAGE Washington, Nov. 6. The railroad's war board is now direct. ng efforts to the work of insuring an adequate coal supply for domestic and indus trial uses of coal in all sections of the country. Wihile a greater supply of coal has been mined and shipped than ever before, the difficulty today is that the consumption all over the country is greater than ever before. The railroads' war board has re ceived reports indicating that the efforts of the ra lroads and coal shippers to prevent the threatened coal shortage in the northwest dur ing the coming winter have been more successful than seemed possi ble during the summer. With five weeks or more left before the close of navigation on the Great Lakes, 23,348,100 of the 29,000,000 tons, which it was estimated will be re quired, have already been sent to the northwest. ATTORNEYS MUST NOT SERVE FOR DRAFTED MEN To all Local Exemption Boards. You are directed not to sign any paper prepared by any attorney-at-law, nor to consider any paper pre pared by any attorney at law or any other person in connection with any registrant or selected man, unless such paper shall contain a state ment that the attorney or other per son is receiving no charge whatever for services performed in behalf of said registrant or selected man. The American Bar Association, has passed a resolution unanimously that it is the sense of the association that no attorney should make any charge for services rendered a registrant or selected man, and has taken steps to have such services trndered in all worthy cases by reputable attor neys without money and without price. The North Carolina state council of national defense has taken similar action arid is prepared to have all needful setrvices rendered a regis trant or selected man without cost to the man ft mself or to any member of his family. An attorney is a sworn officer of the law, and his first duty is to the government, and that duty requires him to advise a registrant or selected man that he is not entit led to exemption, if such be the law, and it is also his patriotic duty to prepare any paper setting forth the exact facts "in any particular case for a registrant or selected man and submit these facts, not in the capac ity of a paid attorney, but as a pa triotic citizen, to exemption boards. In every county in the state attor neys will be called upon by the Am erican Bar Association, and by the State Council of National Defense, to render legal services, and they will be glad to do it. The attor neys of North Carolina are intensely Million Letters In the Mails Today Bearing Magic Words "With the Colors" Keynote of the Splendid Work the Y.M.C.A. Does Among Our Men In Uniform Is Keeping Them In Touch With the Folks at Home. STAMPED WITH STARS AND Multifarious Ways in Which the Association Appeals to Your Boy, Your Neighbor's Boy, or Some Boy You Know and Love Creates a Helpful Environment in Cantonment, on Way Overseas, in Front Line Trench and Beyond First to Aid as He Comes Tottering Back Give Your Share of the $35,000,000 Required to Accomplish This "Last Evidence That Somebody Cares." tt T was evening on the broad 4 Hempstead Plain, Long Island, where the Rainbow division was spending its last night before embark ing for France. It had been raining hard in the afternoon a cold, steady autumn downpour and there was nothing to suggest the rainbow in the outward aspect of the camp. Lines and lines of sodden canvas housed 27,000 men, gathered from 27 different states. The ground was dotted with pools and quagmires. Under the wet canvas It was damp and cold, with a penetrating chill. Lit by nickering candles, the tents were far from cheer ful shelter for a man's last night in his native land. But there were seven big tents where electric lights, numbers and friendliness made the 'night pleasant. Music, Games, Good Reading and Correspondence Facilities In Y. M. C. A. Building. In each of these a soldier was strum ming on a piano; others were reading books and magazines; hundreds were writing letters home. Behind the raised counter at one end three or four young men were busy passing out notepaper and envelopes, selling stamps and weighing parcels, which the men were sending home. One of the soldiers said to me as I etood In the tent used chiefly by men from Iowa: "We came all the way here from Des Moines, and we were mighty lonely. Then we found this Y. M. C. A. on the Job, and it's been a home and more than a home to us. It gave us what we wanted when we needed It most. We'll never forget it. The boys' best friend is the Y. M. C. A." Fine, Clean-Cut, Upstanding Fellows. How close those benches were pack ed with men, bending over the long tables absorbed in their writing! What an appeal to the sympathies those great groups of soldiers make! Fine, clean-cut, upstanding fellows, some of them mere boys, one thinks immediately of the sacrifice they have made for the rest' of us and how pre cious they are to some one back home. Somewhere, in far off farm or village or city street, there are parents or brothers or wives who would give all they possess for one glimpse of those sunburned faces as you and I see them on their last night before going across. And It was with a throb of the heart that I watched them, bent over their letter paper, in one after another of those seven big tents. These were the tents of the Y. M. C. A. On that last night in America the association was serving the soldiers in the best of all ways giving them an opportunity to write home. On previous nights they had enjoyed box ing bouts, movies, concerts, dramatics and a score of healthy entertainments as well as religious meetings. But on this last night home ties were strong est. And perhaps that is the keynote of the splendid work the Y. M. C. A. :Hs doing among our men in uniform keeping them In touch with home. Magic Words, "With the Colors." In these times there are some let ters that mean more to us tnan any we have ever read before.. They are written on sheets of paper stamped with the Stars and Stripes and the red triangle of the Y. M. C. A.," and they bear the magic words, "With the Colors." There are many more than a million such letters In the mails now while you read this. Perhaps one at patriotic and ninety and nine of them will cheerfully perform these ser , vices and regard it as a patriotic ' privilege to do so. I I have notified the adjutant gen , eral of the state not to consider af j fidavits prepared by attorneys or ; any other person unless these affida j vits shall contain a statement that , the attorney or other person prepar ing the same has done so without i receiving or expecting to receive any J compensation of any kind, j You will please gilvte ithis com ! munication the widest publicity pos I sible in your county. I T. W BICKETT, Governor , M STRIPES AND RED TRIANGLE least Is on its way to you. Each one of our 16 cantonments, where the new national army is- being trained, is using more than a million sheets of this paper every month. In the draft army alone that means 16,000,000 fila ments of love every month reaching out from the great encampment where the men are being' trained into the greatest army" this nation has ever dreamed and binding tnem to the hearts at home. Multiply that by thinking of all the other places where Uncle Sam has men with the flag In navy yards, on the high seas, in arse nals and officers' training camps and "Over There" in France. In all these places men are writing home. Those unassuming little sheets of notepaper gladden millions of hearts a day. They transfer more love from one part of the world to another than sta tistics can express. Statistics are pretty poor anyway when It comes to reckoning in terms of love and human tenderness. Let's put it this way: That the Y. M. C. A. is the biggest ex press company the world has ever seen, and the parcels it is handling are the loves and devotions of human beings. World's Best Loved Trademark. This war has made us think hard and fast Your boy or your neigh bor's boy or some boy you know and love has been called to do his share in the big job of policing the world for democracy and human liberty. Is it any comfort to you to know that wher ever his duty may call him your boy will nave a friend that will serve him in body, mind and soul? Are you glad to know that this friend will place books and magazines at his disposal, organize classes to teach him what ever he wants to learn, give him a pocket testament and invite him to join religious meetings of the faith that he was brought up in? Did you realize that the association provides athletic equipment for his favorite games, teaches him games if he knows none and holds concerts, lectures, movies, Bible classes, dramatic enter tainments and every kind of whole-' some amusement to keep him interest ed? Are you glad to know that this friend will go with him overseas, help to shield him from a score of difficult and dangerous temptations and follow him right up to the front line trench and beyond it? The last contact the soldier has with this life he loves so well is a cup of tea given him by the Y. M. C. A free just before he goes "over the top" to a hand to hand strug gle with the enemy. And as he comes ; tottering back from No Man's Land, ! wounded, but strong enough and plucky enough to keep on his feet, even before his wounds are dressed the Y. M. C. A. is waiting for nim with j tea and sweet chocolate, the great com-' forts of the man in the trenches. Do you wonder that the Red Triangle is called "the best loved trademark in the world?" One soldier in France has called it "the last evidence that any body cares." If every thinking citizen could see with his or her own eyes something of the actual work being done for our men by the association there would be no question of the Y. M. C. A having to appeal to the public for money. Rather rlian let this essential work falter for an Instant rich men would sell their motorcars, poor men would forego coveted possessions or even n cessitics. The work must go n, be cause there is no one thing that con tributes so much to the spirit and ef ficiency of the troops. The Y. M. C. A. is working night and day to help the government win this war. And every penny that is given to aid the work Is a direct assistance to the health, happiness and strength of your boy and mine. Snapshots of Kaleidoscopic Work. In all the big cities in France where our men pass through in large num bers, the Y. M. C, A Is operating hostels, where they can get beds and (Continued on page 4) Professional Cards . Dr. W. B. Ramsay Dentist Office aver Shuford's Drug Store. Hickory, N. C. THE HICKORY HARNESS CO. Manufacturer? of all htucc of HARNESS, BRIDLES. SADDLES XNP STRAP WORK. Repairing a Specialty. Hickory, N. C. THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP F. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor First-CIcsa Work liu&ranteod Phone 106, Work Delivered 1032 14th Rtraet Hickory, N C Next to f irt Builuin & loan office. W. P. Speas, M. D Practice Limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hickory, N. C. Office Over Hickory Drug Company Hours 9 to 12, 2 to 5 DR. G. E. FLOWERS . Having enjoyed a large coun try praetive for 32 years, an now located in Hickory and o licit a share of the general prsr tice. Office at 8th avenue and 15tb street. . Children's disease a specialty. CHIROPRACTOR DR. E. E. ROGERS Over Lutz's Drug Store PHONE 77 DR. R. P. WILSON Veterinary Surgeon Will answer calls day or uiuht. Resident pnone 301-J. Dr. Oma R. Hester DENTIST. OFFICE OVER BUSY BEB CAFE AND KENNEDY SLECTRIC CO iiiiiiimtiiiiiiiiiuouuuimmao Dr. O. L. Hollar HICKORY, N. C. C 1 .11...!!. 3 opeciai attention given to i PILES Fistulas, Fissures Ulcers, Pruritus 3 3 Cured. No cutting, no confien- jnmiBffliDrc I BRICK I Common and Face I if i Write or Phone Buffalo Clay Co. Statesville, N. C. P. A. MILLER Automobile and Livery Service. GO ANYWHERE Day or Night Rates Reasonable TELEPHONE 119. mn:it;!tnnniiininmmniiiJiim;; "KIRKCHIEF" THE HANDKERCHIEF DELUXE FOR MEN. Ask your dealer to show it to you. Made By Kirkpatrick MYg. Co. HICKORY, N. C. TO SEF BETTER SEE DULfl 17 Y..'- C : The Best Mitiipraent Obtainable. Glasses Filled Exclusively MART! BLOCK, LENOIR, N. C. If you jfoi It from DOT JL it si? RisSL ATttf PAPER FOR PAVES LENSES GROUND & DUPLICATED Repair Dep't Box 127 Charlotte, N. C eFM Specialist i BaDulLaaaQonDcaCEESS"", a "Castles in Spain" ! May be very ! dreams, but f I .1 1 T M. .. M m wva j THINGMOKE SUBSTANTIA A Saving Account is no Dream I It is one nf the most xiilisfanJi'al I It is your friend where others fail. j Small savings make large fortunes, just j ocean beach is made up of grains ofsa; j. I Start a savings accont at this ban!; at and watch it grow. FIRST 0 a a NATIONAL Capital and Surplus $300,000 CJ;. . Hick Four Pet Cent. Interest On Savings Ac. cur, t pounded Quarterly. Money to Loan at All Time. a a a a You can scarcely establish yourseft in a sue:? business career without first making a sound. banking connection. This bank will welcome you as it has weicc many successful men who began their career opening accounts with us. Safety, Courtesy and Prompines: to each depositor alike is our rnoUo. Consolidated HICKORY, N. STATEMENT OF HICKORY ROAD COMMISSION The following is the statement oi Hickory Township Road Commis sion from January 1st, 1917 to Nov. 1st, 1917: Balanee on hand Jan. 1st, 1917 22.26 Rec from Countv Treas 7767.2G : 8 Rec. on Subscriptions . 380.bu I . 251.75 . 70.G0 ' $8492.37 I iioaa exemption tax Rebates for work done Total- Paid Out f For Labor I For feed ' Supplies t Damage and fees $3410 62 . 1448.64 . 410.93 . lOO.ot, : Sinking fund 1612.50 Interest on bonds 1500.00 Total $8483.1! Balance on hand Nov. 1, 1917 9.18 $8492.37 Payments made on sinking fund carried with the First Building & Loan Association now amount to j $7575.00. I HHHIlHHimimimwnnnigi f Bp Are You Going IF SO Builder s Supply 3 Who can furnish you g material: Shingles, Lathes and g Wood Floors, Specialties g PHONE 64-L. JlliliiiHIIllliHIIilillill: The of school Should Not Bring your children and have i eyes examined FREE and be si as to their condition oUo IE Jeweler and Graduate Optometrist. real to the man c the nractJr.nl - . ii: T m Ik t tt-v rt lia STX 9&l 8 " 5- ' 0 i fS Y Tros j j fS Ff mTh w o o m . G I ! f.-., " S t W iii -i.S V o0id t-v'::r. 3?? ' i o SEE THE any kind of i i Ey children Be Neglec Used 40 fei n llllll!