Newspapers / The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.) / Nov. 7, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
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GERMANY MUST EITHER SURRENDER OR DIE Will Probably Choose the For mer" to Escape Invasion No Danger of Making Terms Too Severe, Says Simonds. Frank H. Simonds, the famous warj THE UNITED WAR INFLUENZA HAS BEEN , STICK TO NORTH CAROLINA lioyerncr Appeals 10 n uriveis .NMany Laborers Needed With in State. Under . the caption, "In Your Own Vineyard," Governor Bickett issues an appeal to North Carolinians to remain in the State and share with it the benefits which came to North Car- To the Citizens of Burke County: j Sometimes Under a Different The United War- Work Campaign ' Name. But History Shows It begins the week of Nov. 11th. Burke ' to Be An Old Foe. county is expected to raise $8,000.00.! influen-a is no new disease. It has On account of the prevalence, of in-;3 lonc.- an(j gioomy -history. It is said critic, writing under date of. Novcm-i f.uenza it has not been possible to;that it goJ. itg namej "influenza," in ber 1st for the New York Tribune hoQ meetings throughout the county! I CO ; whatever tnc diplomacy i as ve ad planned and as a result of the allied ultimatum ad-L.3 ,vu unrp in nVnpnd almost entire- :y rn the publicity given it by The News-Herald and the distribution of the early part of the eighteenth cen tury, in an epidemic which paid a visit to Italy in 1729. The name was first used in England in 1780. But as "la- advertising mattsr to make the cam-! grippe" it was an old isfease in, that government . says tn langua dressed to Germany in response to her request for an armistice, these cover its import "Surrender or Die." This is the choice that now presents j Da;gn a SUCCess. day. Tn2 name was given it . by j camp near Fayetteville and the tank itself to the German empire, since atp j Would like to ask every citizen of 'France in 1580. It held France in a I mp in Raleigh territory along with the present moment the German em-jtne C0Unty to read the articles in this; grip of sneezes as far back as 1510 j the hospital near Biltmore and the Dire is bounded on the east by Rus-! nf tVip Npws-HeraM hv MrsJ and treated England the same way in j-j station in Monroe. These sian bolsheyism, on the south by olina by reason of the i works. ' ' The governor adverts to ,the great rhipbuilding plant at Wilmington, the COUGHING SPELLS BREAK YOU REST Put a stop to them with old. reliable Dr. King's New Discovery That rat?, hoards throat must be soothed. Tfcat jphksm-loadad chest must be loosened. That couh must hz checked so you can sleep. t Dr. King's New Discovery hzs been relieving colds, and coughs for half a century without the least disagreeable aft2f-cfects. ... Your druggist has it because is 13 cll-knowa and in big dcnnd. Austrian anarchy, on the west by Foch's victorious armies and on the north by British blockade. We may still believe that when in Jate September Ludendorff advised ,the pursuit of an armistice, his pur- Hughson, Mr. W. C. Ervin, Dr. Isaac 1557. It was known in England in the Lvorks can for 15,000. laborers and he M. Taylor and others. - They tell you j fifteenth century and one writer says. fges the men to remain here. He of the great work these organizations ! it was prevalent at the seige of Troy. ikewise asks the rigorous applica- are doing. His reason to nis ciaim is i";tion Gf the work or fight principle ana I The News-Herald is also printing a, some animal .pestilence prevailed at list of those who have charge of the ' that time contemporary with some campaign in each town and township ! kind of human epidemic. It has been pose was the old familiar purpose of!m the county. ! found that animals often have the all past German maneuvers. We if for any reason you are not ask-j disease at the same time as humans. ! undertaking to do big things in North may believe that he sought to in-e(j to subscribe, won't you go to' the , The "flu" is said to have been in- Carolina. It is endeavoring to build volve the United States in a dispute j parties having charge of the work in , trqduced in England during the reign up fl g;reat shipbuilding plant at Wil with her European allies over peace iyour township and make a subscrip-lof Henry VII. At that time it is saidimmgton; to establish and equip one of the biggest artillery camps in the world, near Fayetteville; a large hos- calls on the exemption board for its enforcement. The governor says:. "The United States government is terms and rally the German people jtion? ' Jthat Lord Stanhope gave as an ex- behind the autocracy by presenting ! jn France some night this .winter ! cuse for not taking part in the battle them the necessarily drastic demands :when it's cold and dark there will be a; of Bosworth Field, that "there was Try this for Constipation Keep the bowels on schedule time with Dr. King's New.Life Pills, the -system,, freed from poisonous wastes, : the cdmplextion clear, the stomach sweet, the tongue uncoated, the breath - untainted. Mild yet positive ia action. Latest reports state'that the Y. M. C. A." has. more than 5,000 war work ers overseas. They' are. operating in England, France, Italy, Russia, Af rica, China, Egypt, India and with the Portugese Expeditionary forces. SowWood'sEvergrea LAWNGRASs For beautiful, green lawn TT tha best time for sowing c is Lawn Circular, telling about 31 aration, seeding and care of i ep mailed free on request. nst Write for LAWN CIRCULAR DESCRIPTIVE FALL C A T A I a"d telling about al! GArdem G FARM SEEDS for Fall p, T.W.Wood & Sons SEEDSMEN. . Blrtun0aa How to Freshen and Renew atavn A lawn can be kept in a coaT? Sfreen and flourisMii? condition atl? vided fresh lawn irrass Pro. at different periods throufrwSo year, particularly in the !tl th lau. Tne uest time to sow th aa seed is during a rainy BpellaJ? rectly after cuttinsr i i. ?4 Oi- tnoug-h tnis is not necesarv i of tne best lawns in Eic" m,?0a9 kept in a constantly green arU ir orous condition in this way aa ? strongly recommend to our r9 sners who desire to preserve lawns in good condition that a sow fresh seed occasionally m il7 top of their lawns, at the Bam. J raking any Dare spots ana an?3 a light application of our Lawyia richer. his rustling: through the front line trench such violent sneezing where our boys stand 'guard. And a i troops. , heavy ladened secretary will make his The epidemic hit England again in the eighteenth century. Horace Wal pole writes of the plague of 1743 and treatment "We have had loads of sunshine all of the enemy. The home front was to be fortified; the enemy from brok en, by the maneuver. " Unfortunately for Ludendorff way along. In .his hands will be events moved too fast. He had not!great steaming pots; in his pockets calculated upon a Bulgarian surren- j chocolates and cigarettes, der, a Turkish collapse, an Austrian': From one man to another he will debacle. All of a sudden all of Ger- j r0t passing a cup full of hot coffee to many's allies disappeared. The whole j hands that tremble with the cold, winter, and within these ten days no face of things changed. The maneu-: bringing the comfort of a bit of sweet i thing but snow and blue plagues. The ver made without sincerity or with-! and a smoke. last ships have brought over all your out intent to make peace became a! Men will hail him cheerily, and epidemic' distempers. Not a family life and death pursuit of pease to es-when he has gone things will be a cape internal revolution. The first j little easier in that trench because he proof of the change was the fall of j has passed that way Ludendorff himself. No Change of a Draw. pital for the care of our soldiers, near Biltmore, and the largest wireless plant in the world, near Monroe. These enterprises call for labor and today there" is .dire need for 15,000 laborers at Camp Bragg, 3,000 at gives this description of it and its,Camp Folk, 2,000 at Biltmore and 1, in London has escaped under five or ill; many people have been six forced to hire new laborers. Guernier, How much will it cost to make that i the apothecary, todk new apprentices, trip do you suppose. I do not know.! 2nd yet could not drug, all his pa- Today Germany faces a situation , But whether it is five dollars or twen-1 tier.ts. It was a cold and a fever. I which can neither be concealed from j ty-five, I'd like to think that it is my her people nor from her enemies I five or twenty-five, wouldn't you? to continue the war is to risk invasion j Let's make up our minds that we are for the very remote chance of modi-i going to pay for a. score of those fying allied demands. There is no (trips. Let's make - n score of the hope of victory, no practical chance nights this winter our nights. Nights of anything resembling even a. draw.! when the boys greet joyously the cof There is, at best, only "the hope of j fee, chocolate and cigarettes that our 000 at Wilmington. The government naturally expects North Carolina to 'furnish this labor, and North Caro lina can do it if North Carolina la borers will quit leaving the State and will work in North Carolina. "I therefore appeal to our citizens to stay at home and work on these government plants. The work being done is largely of a permanent char acter, and will mean much to the State for many years ko come." "I appeal to the local exemption j boards and the ' district exemption j boards to enforce rigidly the principle of work or fie-ht. There is plenty of physicians say there has been noth- work to do at remunerative wages, ing like it since the year thirty-three, d if ' in the gtate between the ages of . 18-and 45 is not working had one of the worst, and was blood ed Saturday and, Sunday," but it is gone; my father was blooded last night. His case is but slight. The and then not so bad." A writer in the New York Evening postponing the decision for a few brief weeks, with the moral certainty that as a result .of the new burden .thereby placed upon a weary people, internal revolution will follow ulti mate surrender, if it does not over take it, as in the case of Russia and Austria. In a very real sense the delibera tions now going on at Versailles are money provided and are made hap- Post says: "This nineteenth century, probably because better records were kept, pier because our representative has passed. ' ' ' Think of the wonderful success our boys and their allies over there have had during the last four months.! land, and an equal number to the con-j steadily in some useful employment he should be sent to the training camps af once. "I trust. thatv our citizens will put seems to have brought at least six,forth every effor. to meet the reason. serious epidemics of lagrippe to Eng-Iftble expectations of the g6vernment. The government has don in these this great success. It seems to me we should enter this Think of the spirit, dash and i sacri-jtinent, though not always in exactly fice required of them to bring about ! the same years. The last very serious j siege within memory of persons still iliving was m 1889-94. This epidemic beside the point, so far as Germany! campaign counting it a privilege to 'seems to have started in remote re- is concerned. However, sever the j use our time, talents and money aslgions, but soon swept from Siberia terms there agreed upon, Grmany.an offering in recognition of the ser-into Russia and thence into .the rest j pioyment service that is prepared to must and will' accept them.' NVcon-jvice our boys are rendering, and to0f Europe; and finally to America. !u:na. ih " nnf3 PTY1tftVpr, tno-pth- ; J a: e ;i i " 1 i - . n.' ... n j i 1 . v. j ' m -wi . i . . t - r siuerauun ux a pussioie prolongation assure tnem we win stana oenina . ine L.onaon records snow tnat xne ais- things what our people urged it to do, now let us do what is absolutely necessary to the completion of the work. "I direct the special attention of our citizens to the United States em- eace reached its height each winter within a month and within two months had worn itself, out. The of German resistance need worry the them with all we have. men who are writing have probably! Yours very truly, already written the armistice terms, j A. M. INGOLD, Chm., What the allies have to decide ati Versailles is merely what they deem j wise to take as guarantee of an ulti- j mate settlement. Germany's peril today does not i the Congress oi Vienna and save 19 and 486 respectively, on Decern liteM! O ft agic! Wash the Woolen Socks You Knit with Grandma THAT'S GRANDMA for you just plain, every day, white made with soiled and dirty clothes. Into the tub it goes by the spoon fulyes, by the spoonful because it's Powdered. Sprinkle it into the water any kind of water hard, soft, hot or cold and then Presto! Millions of bubbling suds go surging through the clothes. Then, out come the clothes as fresh and sweet and clean" and .as white as snow. 1 nat s whit$ rru for you, madam try it. ukawuma o rowaeree ooap Your (Grocer Has Ml F-innrinririnnririririnnnnrinnrirti-iriww EJLJLJLJLJLJLJLJLJiLJLJLJLJ L3U U UUU 1.J JL Li 1317017 SWEATER TIM er and to afford every facility to the ; 2 man who wants a jc'j, and to the job urn that wants a man. Tlie Headquarters j rQ oi mis service are located at naieign, i 31 a a a a a uiuua unites ,cxWorst year in uiiuun was m o-.but there is a representative and en- Work Campaign. jAt the' top, on January 23 '892, 506jrolling ag.ency in every county, and I r., . . r- . (persons died of influenza and 1,352 of! our j t make'the fullest can repeat the triumph of lalleyrand nnpumon:a and hronchitis ? ae-ainst1 . ,, . , , pneumonia ana Droncnuis, as against iuse possible of these agencies " x come primarily from Foch. Germany, by diplocy what she has lost by armsr is fighting well and might hold up This is the great peril; this the re the enemy for a brief time. It might Gaining danger for our alliance. Ger be able, to retire to the German fron tiers as successfully as Napoleon got back to France after Leipsic But how long would the home front hold with the ever growing prospect of invasion? Surrender or Die. Germany must surrender or die die as Russia has died and as Austria is dying. Her future depends upon her immediate escape from a war which is subjecting her population to that sort of agony out of which revo lutions inevitably arise. All Germany today is approaching the condition of Paris after the siege, the condition which made the German ineffable and terrible. Whatever Germany saves from the wreck now, she will save by negotia tion and not by fighting. The military phase of the war is already over and the problem which remains is wheth er Germany jn the peace conference Modern Strategy many means to use tne plan tor a league of. nations to save hersejf from punishment and payment as Talley rand used the scheme of the holy al liance against democracy to save France from the consequences of the revolutionary and Napoleonic strug gles. v " ' Must Surrender Promptly. But today; Germany must surren der and surrender promptly the lon ger she is held up with her back to the wall the more patent becomes her helplessness andthe longer the strain the consequences, when this civil population the more terrible will be for Germany to escape a measure of the Russian anarchy, a portion of the Austrian dissolution, save by swift surrender. Therefore the surrender is assured. , t The war is over, but the struggle German army is not capable of fight ing another campaign. ,No authentic evidence of collapse in the army is yet to be found. Nevertheless the-collapse of the nation behind the army ber 26, 1891, the approximate date of i.1 : j i : : mi: shows up pretty well with present day figures." Give War Stamps at Christmas. The Council of National Defense and the War Savings campaign are working together to eliminate as far The Human Side of Rovaltv.ias Possible the giving of non-useful, 'expensive and unpatriotic Christmas xving oeurge 01 nngianu togetner with Queen Mary and the Princess Mary, pay regular visits to the hos pital wards in England and the King seems always particularly interested in the young American soldiers there. He does not visit the wards as a rul ing monarch of one of the greatest countries in the world, but as a man full of human sympathy and interest presents this year. Their purpose in doing this is two-fold; first, the would teach the lesson that war-time is no time for aything but the essentials of life, and second, that the American custom of spending money freely and foolishly at Christmas time will this year be ' unpatriotic if there is an merican boy in the trenches at that time. Christmas this vear is to hp for his fellow men The Queen andL true test of everyman and woman'S ! means that in no long, time the army " All life-time is a school of !itself must collaPse as did the Rus- efrnWir n t I sian, the Bulgarian and now. the J F" (Austrian, once the home front was told that it was sent by the Red Cross germs and tendencies Which, j broken. Such a collapse means only and. had been read by no less than Princess also show kindly concern and, intelligent interest in the hospital and all it provides for the men who are wounded. In a recent visit of King George to the big military hospital at Dart mouth he stopped at a number of. American beds and asked kindly ques tions to each occupant; telling one boy who had lost his leg of the success he had seen with artificial limbs, aak ing another how he managed to re ceive an American newspaper of a comparatively recent $late and. ex pressing his gratification on being as a reliable means of thwart ing the enemies of strength. Scott's is Naturefs ally and its rich tonic and strength supporting properties are known, with satisfaction, to millions. Build up your strength with the nourishing qualities of Scott's Emulsion, Scott Bowm, Biooo&Md, N. J. U- 1 .1 .1 . unless mwarted, Weaken the 'one thing; it means revolution, an- system and invite disease, archy. Modern health-StrateffV ! Germany will surrender. The sir- dictates the Use of "render will not be long delayed, in my judgment, instead 01 naggnng over the terms of the armistice, Ger many will abandon the fight in the field and turn all her energies to the fight around the green table. On the military side she must sur render' or die. It will be ' different around the green table. The war is over, but the struggle to preserve the inestimable - advan tages gained for mankind in the war has only just begun. We have won the war, but we may yet lose the legitimate fruits of victory. thirty American soldiers. At the conclusion of the visit the King paused and said collectively' to fthe ward, "Remember, boys, if there is anything we can do for you at any time, we just want to know it and we shall take pleasure in doinj it." This seems, indeed, the real human touch and coming from royalty it ap peals to even the most democratic . 1 Ei mma ana meets a response m even; the democratic hearts of our soldiers overseas. In every K. of C. hut in this coun try and overseas, there is an admoni tion to "write to mother often." , patriotism. While the Council of National De fense and the War Savings Campaign would not eliminate .the giving of all presents 'at Christmas, f Qr there are cases where the giving of Christmas presents is most advisable and desir able, they would encourage the giv ing of home-made presents, and those which d6 not require labor, material or transportation in- their making that is needed by the government in its war work. Therefore, these or ganizations advise thatWar Savings Stamps, Liberty Bonds and Treasury Certificates be given where more ex pensive gifts have formerly been the custom. These not only require ho labor, material or transportation need-' ed by the government, but on the other hand they - contribute freely to the winning of the war. Money saved iiuhi retraining to ouy expensive, non-useful articles renders the coun try a double service when invested in Bonds, or War Savings Stamps. The cool mornings and even ings call for Sweaters. See our new line of warm Woolen Sweaters for Ladies and Children and Military School Sweaters for boys. Just received a hew line of Ladies' jjj Wash and Silk Waists. Jo Davis Jk Son iififfiifffii OR SALE INSURANCE REAL ESTATE In a strange city the War Camp Community service greets the soldier boy and makes him welcome. It' di rects him where he wishes to go. It is his information bureau run by a friend. . The soldier gives; you must lend. Established 3 years ago, the Sal vation Armj5 ' is operating in six'tv- three countries today' and serving the allied soldiers under constant shell fire. Sleep and Rest. One of the most common" raucA of insomnia and restlessness is indi- eesuon. lake one of Chamberlain's' Tablets immediately after supper andl -cc ii you ao nop rest better and sleeD' Some good Real Estate listed for sale in! Morganton and Suberbs. A good farm containing about 65 acres of land with splendid improvements, two miles from Court House. 144 acres of land in.Lpwer Creek township Let me show you some of 4his property. INSURANCE REAL ESTATE W. A. HARBISON All Branches of Insurance v Phone 20-J m i (better. They only cost a quarter. TKY A NEWS-HERALD SPE CIAL NOTICE FOR RESU
The News-Herald (Morganton, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1918, edition 1
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