Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Nov. 9, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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vV rv -:MN(! 3 1 1 3 .1 a 3 R H 0 n H Q a a R H a B B 13 R fcj n H P n i 13 LI S E D V w R R H Q D B a I 0 HICKORY DAILY RECORD Useful and Ornamental PAGE THREE !;!!fliil Jewelry and novelties of the best design and quality A large shipment of ladies and men s wrist watches jusl reeelvedi Wist watches are more popular than ever and is the most convenient way to use a watch See our nice line of Gruen, El. Sin and Watham makes. o. E. Risanar Jeweler and KeUtered Optometrist ctcr for Southern and C. and N.-W Railway.. a D a a e B Q CJ cr a ft a a s B B E a the CO" ill: iRiNG THE HIGH VALUES xlay, the value of your prop has outgrown the size of your lance policy. ve Us and Get What You are Entitled to. Jnciirunrn and Daolfir P.,.. uouiiiiiu uiiu ucaujr irullljJdllj :;;y i 4th St. Phone 292 loocl Time to Buy a New Hot Water Bottle ".til the old one actually wears out. It's liable to fail :.cal moment. ' I;u!bcr goods inclu-.le hot wattr bottles of excep ;y '.vhiili wo are now ottering, at special prices. y '.nins in rubber gloves, baby pacifiers and other rub- v ' hi to get ae.iuainted with our rubber goods line . a 1 uos we offer. COME IN TODAY nines and Murphy IN BUSINESS FOR YOUR HEALTH" ITAiYrHEDS ASSISTANCE ENEMIES PRESS FORWARD Italian Headquarters. TSW s fR the Associated Press) The bulk of tne Austro-German invading forces 7"' Presents a mam frontage of rn!f " mes back of, and along, the iorward eight or 10 ; ? . the .rivei". for the pur Ui . img ror the points of l?eilsncfr- This Producing ."'7 engagements, but no rpn T.rce has yet occurred. Jhe Liyenza rver, to which witnarawai is now progress- uuy one oi a series of sue cessive defense parallels. Tho Hal Jan army still has in reserve large ?T es. troops which, however, naturally feel tho u.l xcut inurement of their main Docly. Large reinforcements at this moment, therefore, would ren- ut'i ."'vaiuaDie assistance, in the opinion of the military authorises. . xne enemy territorial occupation m eastern Friuli presents a sinister cispeci iar oeyond its military pur Hwii. ine Alps heretofore have IUBJ e traditional boundary be tween the northern Teutonic and ui soutnern Lat n races. The Aus- iro-uermans recognize the Alpine boundary, except for Trent and Tnest. Now for the first time the Teu tonic forces are occupying parts of Venetia and age-long possessions of Latins. Such an invasion strikes at the very heart of the people of na tionality and also thrusts a Teutonic wedge southward along the Adriatic. This brings up the grave question of whether Germany w ll finally se cure territorial lodgment with ports and naval bases on the Adriatic, thus realizing her aim to become a Mediterranean, as well as a North sea nower, unless the allies turn them back from the Friulian plains. This would seem to be a warning to the allies that no time is to be lost in 'einforc ng, concentrating and co-ordinating. PRESIDENT HISSED AT SUFFRAGE MEETING The Hickory Daily Record 3 I $4,00 a Year in Advance A 1 a ma z.aaa COMPLEXION POWDER T he Powder of Fastidious Women PERFUMED WITH A SWEE1 RICH ODOR AND CLOSELY ADHERENT. it I'owdor sells for 50c box nice Powder -75c box Powder - 50c box Towder - 25c box a good assortment of powders of all kinds at aitk'O Pow mpiexion fin lickory Drug Company B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B New York, Nov. .9 President Wil son was hissed at a meeting here yesterday under the auspices of the National Woman's party in celebra tion of the suffrage victory Tuesday :n Nav York state. Several of the women who had served as pickets at the white house and who were ar rested because of their act vity ap peared in workhouse garb It was when Dudley Field Malone was speaking that the president was hissed and Mr. Malone rebuked the outburst. "Don't do that," he said. "You must not blame the president. He is isolated, away from the stream of things, surrounded by groups of ad visers, and he hasn't got the truth about suffrage. He will get it." Miss Mary Garrett Hay, New York, city chairman of the woman suffrage party which has atttributed its success at the polls to President Wilson's endorsement, announced that the party organization would continue to arouse women to their po litical responsibilities. Society .;:;tin:rTtxr::t::::;::jra::::::j;:j:::::;:;: For MJss Coone Miss Edith Clement charmingly entertained with two tables of rook last night m honor of Miss Regina Coone of Gastonia, house guest of Miss Oneita Miller. Light refresh ments were served at the close of the game. . 1 Miss Reid Entertains The Do As You Please Cluh was delightfully entertained yesterday af ternoon oy iuiss Gladys Reid with ten members present. An hour was spent pleasantly knitting and sew ing before a delicious salad course was" served. Miss Helen Snrino-s will have the next meeting. Mrs. Ivey Hostess The Embroidery Club was rlehVTit- fully entertained Thursday after noon by Mrs. G. F. Ivey at her home on Tenth avenue. The home was ar t'sticaliy decorated in white and yel low chrysanthemums for the occa sion. VVnile finsrers were husv witv needlework the food conservatio-n cards were discussed. Miss Dorothy Ivey gave several piano selections and Mrs. Alfred Moretz read a very flittim? storv. vucbiics wain tne Food Shortage" The hostess. as- isted by little Miss Edith Ivey erved a course luncheon after which the club adjourned to meet Novem ber 22 with Mrs. A. S. Abernethv. Trs. R. J. Foster was a welcome visitor. "KICK-IN" HUB SATURDAY "Kick-l:it" one of the most fa mous melodramas produced on the stage in the past twentv-vears. has been made into a Pathe Gold Rooster Play by the Astra Film Corporation under the direction of George Fitz- maurice with a cast includ'ne Wil liam Courtenay as "Chick" Mollie King as "Mollie Hewes" and Susanne 511a as "Myrtle." As a stage play it ran on Broad way two years and repeated its suc cess in London and in every large city of the United States. The storv is fiTll of fast, exciting and dramatic act'on which makes it especially well u.a to the screen. This feature picture will be shown the Hub theatre Saturday. Nov. 10th. NEW OFFICERS ELECTED Beautiful Hands Neither grease nor water can go through rubber goods to soil your hands. Get a size larger than the kid gloves you ordinarily wear and your hands will be as free for your work as if they . were bare. These gloves art strong and elastic. We car ry them in all sizes. Price 50c and up. LUTZ'S DRUG STORE "On the Corner" Phones 17 and 31 7 oncannnonnnnnnnnQnnnnnnnDonononnnnnanDnn a B n f 5 1 v. . TiV J M . i Li- i 3 FIGHTING THE GERMANS New Shipment Trolaset" Corsets REXALL Store Telephone 46 4 . ia Ambition and a Record j jit V. nr cd.i of the South are identical with the need I ciuliertj Hnilwtyi the urowto and tuctesi or oiwj toemm 'Vi'inlilaig id the other. 'I l.e Smithnrn Railway aikl no fact no tpeclal prlvUife M irj to otl.trt. ' ' -nSlt!on of the Soathern Rallvir Compiry U to e " 'f liitrre that I born of coKppratltn between thr public and f ' 'ii ra,lt to lee prrfected that fair and frank policy in f.te WAMO " ' 1 rulrnadi which lnite the confidence ' fivemKiwttJ ' "i to realize that liberality of treatment which will erahrfc ' ' ii tlm additional capital oeedcr' for thnaojulsltion of bctlotwxl " .i'K"l farllltlei Incident C demand lor lucreated a.-u tWI '"' "i and, finally To take !t niche In tb blT yolitlc 1 the South a1oru K" Indmtrlei, with nc nacre, but wun ojuat uuciu I.' i iid njual opportunitkfc " The Souther -Serves the South. is ft MOLLIE KING IN CK At a meeting of the Daughters of the confederacy Wednesday af ternoon, the following officers .were elected for the com'ng year: Mrs.' F. M. Williams, president; Mrs. L. F. Long, first vice-presidjent, Mrs. J. S. Lancastejr, second vice-president; Mrs. J. A. Gaither, secretary; Mrs. G. C. Little, treasurer; Mrs. J. S. Yount, registrar, Mrs. C. W. Thurmond, leader children's chapter; Mrs. W. B. Gaither, historian. Mrs. Belle Wilfong is the honorary pres ident of the chapter for life. Mrs. Viola Leonard Shoaf, of Lexington was an unexpected v"sitor. Assisted by Miss Kathleen Ba con, the hostess served coffee, dough nuts and mints. Newton Enterprise. LUTjHERAN SYNOD PLEDGES LOYALTY TO GOVERNMENT Salisbury, Nov. 9. Before ad jounring the Lutheran - United Synod of the south passed resolutions pledg ing unqualified loyalty to our gov ernment and calling on all Luther ans to pray that right and justice may prevail. A committee was named to wojrk with the national Lutheran commission for sailors and sold ers. The closing day was de voted mainly to addresses commem orating the reformation. BUMPER CORN CROP IS PRODUCED IN COUNTRY AT HU Saturday Nov. 10 Fraternal Directory nniiiiimiii,wttmtrttmM"""""'I!m nTHniiiiiitnH""-"""-w""g oaihem Railway System 1 Hickory Lodge No. 343 A. r . & A. M. Regular communication First and third Monday nights. Erethien cordially invited to be present. F. L. MOOSE-, W. M. D. L. MILLER, Sec'y. unirtwi" Piedmont Council No. 43, Jr, O. U.A. M. Meets every Nnday evening at 7:30 P. M. AH visit ng brothel cordially Invited. D. D. TAYLOR, Councilor. W. I. Caldwell, Rec. Sec Washington, Nov. 9. A corn crop, larger by more than 66,000,000 ' bushels than ever grown in the his tory of American agriculture, is the production of the farmers of the Un ited States this year. The depart ment of agriculture in its preliminary estimate of the crop placed the quan tity at 3,191.083,000 bushels. '"The potato crop," says the statement of the department, "es timated at 440,000,00 bushels, is the largest on record, notwithstanding' an unfavorable September and Oc tober cut down the actual production below the forecasts made earlier in the season. "The buckwheat production of 16, 815,000 bushels fell below early fore casts, although it is up to an aver age in total production compared with former years. "The tobacco crop of 1,185,478,000 pounds is the largest on record. "The cranberry crop is very short." Large increases in corn production in southern states were shown in the estimates as announced by the department. The yield per acre in most of them showed increase. Pro duction by states shows: Virginia, 71.369.000 bushels; North Carolina. 66,120,000 and Tennessee, 109,200,000. Tobacco production in southern states follows: Virginia , 126,350,000 pounds; North Carolina, 199,584,000; South Carolina, 57,970,000 pounds; Florida, 3,410,000; Tennessee, 76,950,00. PETTY CRITICISM 91 f? L Catawba Lodge No. 54? K. of P m 1 - MV. 4- Meets evry Jnursaay uigui Visiting brethren invited. HUGH D'ANNA, C. C. R. L. HEFNER, K. R. and S ,-,,,-, i.m.mmirniwnnm Lowell Courier-Citizen. Somehow we should feel sustained and soothed to a degree if only sun drv newspapers with an eye to po litical effects were not so insistent in pickink up every minor flaw in th? war adm'nistration and making so many molehills into spouting vol cances. In this we regret to ob serve the esteemed Boston Tran script excels. It miht helD the war more if the Transcript's editorial and Aver correspondence writers saw ' more of the excellent things and made 1 lfss of the inevitable defects of an im- nrovised military city. The carping attitude and the mcessant clucking or such critics make one think more of a gallinaceous old grand dam than of a forth riarht determined American, bnt on giving the government all reasonable support." The practice lacks convincing qualities and be sides it is tiresome. Hartford Courant. We are fighting the German peo ple. There is no other way by which we can fight the detestible Ger man system. The German system is not an inanimate object. It is not a natural obstacle to be removed by some feat of engineering. Be hind it was human intelligence and the human soul, and the human intel ligence and human soul behind it are the German soul and intelligence. or all that the German system has done the German people are respon sible, for the German people as a whole indorse it and are permeatedl by it. JNo intimate study ot tne German people and the German sys- em at home is necessary for an un derstanding of this truth. It has been made manifest by the temper and conduct of Germans and mis guided German-Americans in this country and by the undisputed facts of the war When the barbaric sinking of the Lusitania shocked the whole civilized world there was great rejo cing throughout the Germanic part of the population in this country, as well as in the Hohenzollern palaces and throughout unregenerate Germany. When before that, the German army went upon its devastating way through Belgium, Germans and German-Americans in the United States approved and defended, and with an amazing sophistry put the blame up on England and France. Yet, Ger many had no more right to destroy Belgium on a warlike mission than a neighbor has to destroy our garden and our home and set out family out defenseless, shelterless and hungry in wind, rain and cold, in the mad rush to get at another neighbor on the other side of us. To defend such an outrage is to show oneself pos sessed by frenzied prejudice or dull ness of moral perception. If it was the German system that torpedoed hospital ships crossing the English channel, threw" bombs on hospitals in France and Belgium, poisoned wells in evacuated territory, mutilated c"vil and military prisoners, violated women, introduced poisoned gases and liquid fire in modern war fare, . threw bombs down upon sea shore resorts where women and chil dren were going their unsusp'cious ways, took prisoners from torpedoed ships upon the decks of submarines and thensubmerged the submarine, leav"ng the victims to save them selves if they could, with no suc cor in sight and no life belts to help them, set friendly nations to quar reling among themselves and stirred up international suspicions and ani mosities, placed bombs in ships about to sail so that the ships and all abord should be lost at sea, sec fire to manufacturing plants where the lives of thousands of workers would be placed in danger if it was the German system that oraanized and instigated these crimes against humanity, it was the German people who made the commitment of the crimes possible. They were the in struments in all cases for the com missions of the crimes and they were the willng and enthusiastic instru ment. So, it is inevitable that we must fight the German people. And we are fighting them for their sakes as well as for our own sake and for the sake of the whole world. The Ger man system must be overthrown and we shall have to fight the German nationi the German people until the German people join with us in overthrowing it. It is an exceeding ly unpleasant task, and it is a task that we can not escape and into it we must put all our resources, all our energv and all our hate, for the system is hateful if its victims and dpes are to be pitied. Corsets for spring have advanced 50 per cent. To s,ve our customer, this b g increased price we bought a heavy "tock o hem :rr jti; front iace corsets h them $2. to $4 the old price. If you will ne,d a coiset in the montns it will payyou to make rnces, $v.00 ?2.50, $3.00. your selection $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00. now. B B B B Received Today Ladies' Bath Rcbes These robes are made from Beacon robe cloth, satin trimmed, with belts and cords. The cloth and trimmings would cost vou the price. Two styles, $4.00 and $5.00 each Another Express Shipment of Furs Made by Jackman of New York. Every piece guaranteed to be the fur as marked. Bought on contract made a year ago and 33 1-3 per cent cheaper than present price $3.00 to $22.50 B m a a Many Other New Goods Just Received Lad'es Coats $10. to $35 00 Ladies Coat Suits $12.50 to " 1$3Vo() "Bradley" Sweaters $2.00 to !'$9 00 "NuFashion" Serge Dresses, $7.50 to 81875 "Schlang" & "Esco" Silk Waists $2.50 to $575 "Wirthmor" & "Welworth" Waists $1.00 and $'00 lier Majesty" Underskirts $1.00 to $5 75 g "Setsnug" Underwear 75c to "I$150 g "Centemeri" Kid Gloves $1.75 to Z $225 B Thompson-West Company "The Ladies' Store." ggnaqflganaaagannnnnDnnnnDnnnnnnannnnnDnri Patronize Owe Advertisers They Are allfBoosters and Deserve YOUR Business 3DDDDDDDDDUDDDQDSBDDDQDDDDDQnnnDDDDDDDDI B B Th is is to Remind YomI B Pay your lighting bills before the 1 0th and receive the discount. B B Banishes Nervousnes m B Puts Vigor and Ambition in to Run-Down, Tired Out People. , If you feel tired out out of sorts, des- dent, mentally or physically dejsded and lack the desire to ac complish things, get a 50c box of Wendell's Ambition Pills at Hickory Drug Co today and your .troubles will be over. If you drink too much, .smoke too much, or are nervous because of over work of any kind, Wendell's Ambi tion Pills will make you feel better in three days or money back from Hickory Drug Co., on the first box purchased. For all affections of the nervous or liver complaints, sleeplessness, ex system, constipation, loss of appetite, lack of confidence, trembling, kidney hausted vitality orw eakness of any kind get a box of Wendell's Ambi tion Pills today on the money back plan. Mail orders filled, charges prepaid, by the Wendell Pharmical Company, Inc., Syracure, N. Y. 3g Continuance of service depends on bills being paid by the 1 5 th of each month following that in which service is rendered. a Don't put it off Pay before the 15th. 9 B B B El Southern Public Utilities Co. PHONE 148 flnnnnnaonnnDnonanaaaannnoooonnnnnsaonana S ATI, .. B B a a a tr B IS a B B B a cs s a d B B U ea S B B a B B B B B B B m B B B
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 9, 1917, edition 1
3
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