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... t!iran!nfr .pnf omla' 1 9 " 1 Ahni i plOliS AND half-sick mm m T ! m These Letters recommending Lydia E. Pink- hams vegeiaoic ompouna win Interest You For Your Own Good Please Read Them THE HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE FIVE M .T not Toll T Youncstown. i'mu- x . J,0" to fool moan and my back hurt 6" i I 0"" I una rilavod out In 1 would jMst sweep one room SJouMhuvo to rest. I would have I1U"U" ... .i.:.. 1,..)irwl m tt'hsn T SSfftdown anil at night I could not 0Ol.a..Li l had something under Slf P ,. ' t v.,.,1 mvfii rrnmns wprv v . ...,7 - ia t 1 1 i r. iioariv an in. trv ivcna and 1 said, 'I Finally my hushanu s y 'Why don t you JSK o tko anything if I could "n.vvl Vnir, ' Sn took one bott fnJasoeomlon.Mindien nener anu neighbors asked m what I was JpjpC and Mid. "Mrny oeao . i ll r ivM I hvr mt J?V,lmyri:hflil.ottl..nn(l I can- ... ,.nr.' t' Vll lli'w I lft'l, MIO v l' would like to. If you can us 1: von are welcome to it and fan" woman dot's not believe what I hnvcv-rittrn to be true. sh can write I ..ma ami I Will iirlll'v lilV VWUlil- BniroMv. , . . horns i nH.'- n " iuio. Vniinrstfiwii. ( bio. "I WAS very nervous and run urn." writiM Mrs. L. E. Wiese of would often sit down and cry, and was always blue and had no ambition. I ZfS Way r over ayear d had allowed myself to get into quite a serious condition. One day I saw your advertisement in the daily paper and began to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once. I have improved ever since taking the third bottle and find it is the best medicine I have ever taken." Benefited by First Bottle "I was completely run down and not able to do my housework. I just dragged myself around and did not have energy to get up when once I sat. down. I read advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound in our paper 'The Indiana Daily Times,' and learned all about it.. I re ceived results from the very first bot tle and now I am doing all my own work, even washing and ironing, and I never felt better in my life. I tell all my friends it is due to you. ' 'Mrs. Elizabeth Reinbold, 403 N. Pine St., Indianapolis, Indiana. You should pay heed to the experi ences of these women. They know how they felt before taking the Veg- Own, wiit'-" ... . v..u.v vij.iHuuiiu, mm mtciwarus, ift Louisa St., New Orleans, La. "I 1 too. Their words are true. Lvdia K. IMnkham'x Private Text-Book mon "Ailments - 1! ... tn W'llllll'll ' Will lift Ki1t Villi t.nsn .4. llr!i. to the lyAlA I" Piukham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. k'WAV TKAULK PASTIME TODAY tlip foil tu re attraction at the Pa.) ,K. thcaii'c tciiay will be Con.u u in "A V.'idc Open Town" a liniik pi.-t-i"c. the title would seem ;nrli.aic xnviv nun..- n""lu jfinthe photoplay, a considerable wr.tof the action depending upon .( activities of a group of (Un-c'c"- mIi l'oi t cs ft cnance who .ire ioratin); in tin- s.mall American civy ;hf biff interest in the pictures comiso uractcv from a ragged little trchin, born amidst the most unhappy en viroaient, into a successful young business man after having" gone through a reform school. Faire Binney, who has appeared in a number of important stage produc tions-on Broadway recently has the A 1 i I I. leading xeminnc roie in ine pnoxo play. Bobby Connelly and Jerry Devinc are also in the cast. RESCUE WORK IN TURKEY Springfield Republican. Altnough the Greeks are sending reinioi cements, there seems to be iittle hope that tney will be able to check the advance of the Turks toward Smyrna; the citv itself 'Jfey might be able to hold with the helu oi the allies, whose naval icrcv are gathering at 'the point ot danger. vnac causes most concern is the res cue or protection of the Christian population in the region which the Greek army is evacuating, and an unpleasantly close narallei is to be drawn with the trouDles of the' allies alter the consecutive defeats of Kol- I chak, Denikin, Yudenitch, and vVran gel; in their vicarious wars since th2 armistice the allies have with amaz ing precision backed the wron horse. For the mesent tthaAi tnPJ are Collectively resc.onsibVe. and upon them rests the more urgently me auty ol doing what they can tu save innocent lives. io protect Greeks within -Turkev may now be impossible after the stirring up. of such intense hatred by outrage, and massacre on both sides. Too much time has been wasted in vain efforts to apportion blame. In England particularly harm has been (icnc Ly the lingering delusion among the Liberals,- leit over from Gladstone's day, that only Turks commit atrocities. No doubt in point, of the numbers of the victims they hold the re-jcrd, from the magnitude of .their empire. But, as the shock ing revelations of the Balkan com mission, ot 1012 showed, there is lit-! tie enough dilference between Turk i t j .... ana vnrisiian in this respect, ana Greek, Swi'U BMlgar and Albanian have butchered each other with the utmost- cruelty and brutality. This is not the least of the reasons why many people who had studied the Blakan question were appalled at the. decision of the allies in 1920 to sanc tion an invasion by the Greeks of Smyrna and its Turkish hinterland. The consequences are described by Prof. Arnold .Toynbee i in his new THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH DATES Dates are fine food for this time of year. These recipes are aimed to appeal to the most discriminating. One-fourth cup. butter or other. fat, one-fourth cup sugar, one c gg, two cup.? Hour, five teaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon salt, one-nax-cud co n meal, one and one-half cups milk, one tup chopped dates. This' quant'iy makes 12 muffins. : Cream butter and add sugar slowly, cream-' ing 'them together. Add well beaten eg.gv. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and torn meal together and add to egg mixture alternately with milk. Add floured dates and mix thorough'y. Pour into greased maifin pans and balrc in moderate oven 25 l. 30 min utes. i-at' Date Tea Cups Twenty-four dates, 12 marshmal Icws, two cups Hour, four teaspoons baking powder, one-ha'f teaspoon salt, two tablef.ipocns sugar,, two ta biespoons butter, one -third to two thirds cup milk, one egg yolk, one half cun- chopped almonds. This makes about 21 cakes. Remove pits from dates rricl replace witn half a marsh -mallow. Sift flour, baking- powder, suit and sugar together. Cut in but-. tcr witli knife or rub in with tin ; o' fintror. Add milk n.v nrix. Kod "Ui to ojie-'nalf-incli thick n",ss and cut into round. In the oenter of each round place a stuffed dat?. .Moisten etlges and fold one-h;:if over --the other. Brush tops with" 'beaten egg yolk and sprinkle with - nuts, -Plae" in grc:sed wan and bak': in lr;t ov ;v a1 'out 15 minutes. Health IMuffi.is One cut) flt:ur, four t"-;.i;.:yp;':;; -lading, powder, onn-half ttaspoon salt. enc and one-half cups Dial?, one cup chopiiod dates, one egg, one cup milk, one tablespoon melted bui;l?i' or other fat. This quantity makes 12. iniuims. Sift flour baking powder and salt to gether. Add bran and dates and mix thoroughly. Add well beaten egg. Beat until hoi ougn am ot coffee HSE QECORD 1AIANT jDS SE HeCOHD I W ANT JlDS U II as II ON AY IS THE FIRST DAY OF TRADE WEEK You will get good values at our store and aho a coupon with every dollars worth you purchase and two coupons for every dollar paid on ac count. "WHERE QUALITY COUNTS' " REGISTERED 1ESS1 iX OPTICIAN milk and butter. ifmuasoderred nour into xenldy-abuuke book, "The Western Qestion in Tui-,lv mixed and pour into greased muf ken and Greece." j f in nans. Bake in moderate oven 25 "juuring the. early summer of 1U21 I to 30 minutes. was lor some weeks in intimate tors- tact with Greek soldiers and civilians then engaged in atrocities upon Turk ish peasants and with the survivors of their victims whom the Ottoman Red Crescent was attempting to res cue. My strongest impression during this horrible experience was of some thing inhuman both in the blood thirstiness of the hunters and in the terror of the hunted." MARK TWAIN'S CONNETICUT YANKEE PASTIME TOMORNOW Tomorrow and Friday the Pastime theatre will present William Fox's super special Mark Twain's greatest comedv "A Connecticut Yankee" in Kinf? 'Arthur's Court. The greatest satire m the history, ct .literature. St.aewl hv Emmett J. Flynn. This e-rpat nicture ran G3 weeks in New He was then engaged in getting j York, and 40 weeks in Boston. The arkish men, women, and children Motion picture News pf Nev Yov& THE RELIABLE JEWELERS" Big Four Comity Tair 'At HICKORY October 3-4-5-6 Diversified Exhibits Free Enter tainment. Addresses by noted Speakers. Four Big Days. Special railroad rates have been secured. Tur into the rescue ships. Now the for tune, of war has changed and it is the Christian population that must be rescued. The duty is imperative, and the cost must not be allowed to stand in the way. At least a nomt; can be found for these exiles; in this respect their case is more fortunate than that of the Russian refugees) after Wrangel's defeat, whose, suf ferings are one of ,the most, son . iul chapters in ; the historyot otr time. One suggestion has been to transfer them to Thrace, but before '.hat is considered the future of Thrace should be quite : definitely fixed. It is barely possible that some means can still be found to guai- "From Mark Twain's story Wil liam Fox bus produced a photoplay veron which will please American picture audiences. He has taken a modern young American, transplant-, ed him in a dream to the s'xth century when King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table held forth m Britain and then piled one comic jn cidirst on top of another as the ycung feubw proseeds to- ,Xanfc?e.ize and 'modernize the davs qf-.. jousts and iron clad warriors. It is. clever Fajr, The oroduction fiom- a scenic standpoint would bring joy to the "host.' of Tennyson. Ti-.rre ae anv numoi'r 01 g"ju antee their security in their' old laughs from the time the Yankee homes in Turkey, bj;t this would re quire such unanimity of purnose, as tbo nllips havp npvpr vpt shown ill their handling of the question of the : ffi"sed flag-waving. It says the same KaKt Tn tbpir lnr-k- of una-. t.in'o- as the villas', orator on the flwakps' to find a mounted knight. abve him inviting him to. "ioust." The rvcture is really subtly dis- mmity, indeed, both the Greco Turkish war and this tragic conse quence of it are due. CORINTH REFORMED Prayer services at the Reformed f.hurch this evening at 7:03 o'clock. Members and friends sould make an effort to be present. HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN loth a veil ue. and J5th street Rev. C. R. W. Keglr y patlor. " At S p. m; today services, subject of sermon; "Malachi 0:7 of The Les son Assigned." The public .invited. Bring your friends. TTrmH-h nf .Tiilv that we are tne pluckiest, gamest, nerviest and most democratic nation in the worPl but it says it only insinuatingly. That is its greatest apoeal. LONGVIEW LOCALS Mr. and Mrs. Ed Young and Mrs. Monroe Lail and daughter motored to AsheviUe Saturday and returned Sunday by Chimney Rock. They re port a fine time. - Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Crump went to the singing convention Sunday at Mt. Vernon. Mr. Tidm H. Sanders "spent . Satur day .and Sunday with bonis, folk;; at Wilkic Grove. : ""' Thcy Start Yaung in tsTewafk Hi teetiT' eifiwettel c3(ouk Stm in Every Package Quality Guaranteed By Tobacct'Pro ducts Corporation, New York, N. Y. LITTLE MOTHER HAPPY AGAIN "For the past nine yars i have been very much distressed with bloating and stomach trouble due to constipa tion since I was a child. No medicina gave me more than temporary relief. I got so bad I was afraid I would have to leave my three little children. BUt since taking a course of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy two years ago i have been entirely well; no constipa- OUR CONTRIBUTION tion or other trouble." It is a si mple, . Nashville Banner. harmless .preparation thai removes j American tourists abroad are our the catarrhal mucus from the intestinr contribution to the solution of Europe's al tract and allays the inflamation economic problems. which causes practically all stomach, j liver and intestinal ailments includ ing appendicitis. One dose will con- Speaking of climate, as one still can bv a vigorous use of censorship, a so- vince or money refunded. For sale journ in Asia seems to have done wond- at all druggists.. Adv. 5 H ers- for- the, Sickr Man- Europe-. f "ES57 V -..-..'..:.:.. :: '...v. - . . - -voce .WLVKW.Uwv.v4m.w ... 66 Phil (K. O.) McCor.ncll puts on the mitts with Eddie (Midget) Jensen one of the gamest of the new crop, of leather pushers being developed fa Newark, N. J. Bouts are held under the supervision ofpublic schoo Instructors. . ' . Is the Jr Right" J r- It is a maxim of 'advertis ing'" that a poor product cannot be successfully ad vertised. It may flash upon the scene with brilliance, become the talk of the hour, and to all appear ances be destined to set new records, but unless it is and does what is claim ed for it, no amount of printers' ink and artist's colors can give it perman ence. .' Once in a while some ar ticle of merchandise will appear to defy this rule, but not for long. Public response, at first, perhaps, quick and active, becomes slower and slower.' Sales fall off. The business grows sick, and in a few months or a few years, the very name of the product ? is forgotten. . : Advertising men know this so well that today the first question upon which they must He satisfied be fore they will recommend advertising to any manu facturer is Is the prod uct right? And merchandise that is r i g h t merchandise that will satisfy in service -merchandise that will bring customers back for another purchase is the first requirement of the jobber and the retailer who expect to endure and flourish. 11; ::':: 'sT7iT'J: There is no better assur ance of this kind of mer chandise than an advertis ing pledge to the public. Published by Hickory Daily Record, in Cooperation with American Association of Advertising Agencies "I :4m rot m ' . -a !' 111! - 'i . - -m a?: Mi l: m m i .' i t f i . hi 1 . U f 1 , ! I I I!; -f"; f l:1 ' .Hi I :d i a: Vi - hi t i l. A '!! 1' 1 . V, (.!" v. I ':.'; i m I '-ill -I; ; I .'' ! 'l ZJ-.t1 '. iuil-.A--'lAr17 uoiJiiJfc rv i' i -.4. ft - x f " '