Newspapers / China Grove Record (Salisbury, … / Jan. 17, 1919, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 .- .-.or-.,. X r can "1-25 V Eatsfrl p crrs cssssr too- try W a ccj drank Chin Grove, N. 0. Jan. 17,'19 It certainly is time to investi gate conditions at the jail which so frequently results in the es cape of prisonsrs. ; We notice the sheriff is now . offering for sal for drainage s taxes a lot of property situated along the creeks recently dredij ed. Among the list we notice some who were extra loud mouthed in advocating the drainage scheme, from which we draw the conclusion that many who clamor from so-called Improvements are often the meat indifferent as to shoulder ing their part of the burden and burden there is to all our wants It's easy to spend public money, the other fellow's money, but. Oh my! when you hit the calam ity howler's purse that's a differ ent matter. Senator Wright has i-ffert-d a bill in the legislature for the purpose of securing an Investigation in the manner of fixing the fire ineurauce ratee in the State, which is a very important matter and something that needs to b done This iovestigatioi however phould go far enDugh to include the conduct of om State insurance commission er. Just why he, . so an xious to pre? eut Joss by fire- but indifferent to (he millions being taken from our peopl by fire iosurarujo oooapauie, a LOSS much greater than that caused by fire, would be interesting. XOSTH C1H0IMJ CREDIT DH10NS EEOW. 1 5;:c& if Om U&Mn that is Hi!?- fal u 113 Firajf. West Raleigh, N C, Jan. 14th Making his report on the condi non oi ine sixteen credit unions row operating" in the State. Dr Wm R Camp, Superintendent of these rur?l organizations for the Agricultural Extension Service, shows that they have iuitified the confidence put in them by the Secretary of Agriculture when he stated recently that they form the bst rural credit organization system in the United States. m. . Dr Camp shows in his report from 285 in October 1916, to 514 in October 1917. while on Novem DrJOofl9l9 the membership had increased to 653. The num ber of depositors is now foui times what it was then, with a greatly increased buying ot shares, and increased total of "r""" """w fiu in on shares amounts to $7,512 77 which ts an increase from a little over $1000 in 1916 to over tl.KO in November, 1918. Loans and borrowers have also greatly in creased. The most rapid strides have been made in the shape of total Al, . rT . I resources. AU of the Unions I only had $7,471,42 in total re sources in 1916. This item now amounts to $24,618.69. While the- financial progress has beu good probably the Un ions have rendered their greatest service in furthering the co-operative buying of farm supplies b cash payments so as to take advantage of discounts effered. Many communities .in which these credit organizations have bedn established bate been able to1 buy seeds, fertilizers, and all firm supplies at a reduced cost the individual saving of farmers interested. the Qe i . FATIH. I "JAn. 10 Peter A Klutti was boru March 17tb, 1875. and departed this -.life by be ing accidently killed at Bad in, N C, January 6th, - aged 48 years, 9 months, and 19 days. By baptism he be came a member of Christiana Lutheran church in youug manhood, later he moved to Faith Lutheran church to which he remained a faith ful member until a few years ago hen he removed his membership to the Lutheran church at Grauile Quarry to which he remained faithful until his death. He leaves to mourn his death a devoted wife, two sons, three daugh trs, a loving mother, one brother, and three half bro thers, besides a host of rla tives aud friends. The fun eral services were conducted at Granite Quarry by Kev. (y O KltshiH, assisted by Rev HP PishHr of China Hrovs. aud his body was laid to rest in the cemetery there. The pall bearers were Rufus PeeN er. Lou Klutlz, Dolph Brown Johu Parkf, L J Kluttz, W C Miller au-1 S K vViley. Mr Klutti was n tine youug man lardworking, good natured and was liked hy all who knew him. He had a host of frinnds as was shown hv m,:. .nQ ifnuJe"lfrom theU S army. He ..x u aa with n,ml from far and i.i. Venus has just received an invitation to attend the birth lay paity to be held in Beth any church. Cr-sceut, for the henefit of Bethanv Mission ary Society, Saturday eve niugat 7 30 p m, January 18th. A penny for every year you are old. Box supper after entertainment. Tui was to have been some time ago but was put off on ac- count ot tne uue ana is now t be January 18h. A large crowd is expected. Banks Peeler son of Ruftis reeier is ai uome irom tne armv iooks. nne in nis um- rorm. Young lady, Dec 19ch, 1918 at Lawsou Lud wick's at China Grove. Venus knows of one family that has thirteen children and they are all living and doing well. If you can beat tn m riowau uouuiy irot out your family. David L Reed Rusher, was ' hnrn Marnh 10th. 1854. and Lenartnd this lifrt .annarv an 25 days. Ou January 22, 1882. he was married to Ruth . rn ... . I au rj reeier. To tnis union were born seven childreu, C&anib8rIaIllS CflDll RemCfJy. . Before using1 this preparation lor a cougn or a coia you may wish to know what it has done for others. Mrs O Cook,v Macon III, writes, I have found it gives the quickest relief of any cough remedy Ibave ever used. Mrs James A K o t t, Chllicotbe, Mo., siys. Chamb, berlain's Cough Remedy canonot &e..beat foi coughs and colds. H J Moore uvai, fa says, l nave . o. t, nL .1 u r? edy on several occasions when I was suffering with cold upon the chest and it has always brought ebout a cure. The Stroas Withstand the Winter Cold Better man the we&K Yon most have Health. Strength and En durance to fiht Colds. Grip and Influenza. When yoctr blood Is not In a healthy condition and does not circulate proper ry, roar system is enable to withstand the winter cold. GROVE'S TASTELESS Chill TONIC Fortlfiea the Svstem Atfaimtt CtslAiL Hrfn end mnTinTn cy FunfylnjZ dm F:nrirhnf I It contains the well-known tonic prop- erties. of Quinine ind Iron' in abnnr acceptable to the moat delicate stomach, i Tfndnl DvsnQGfn fttlM and fa pleaaant to take. You can soon feel , kkU"V ypepsm 15UIU hsStresfithenlntf TnvldrmHndFfTft. RfV V DlntS What VtMl ijal, three fiopfi. and four -daugh ters, afi of whom are Cliyjng. He was baptized in Infancy and at aa early age -was con firmed in "St Paul'd E L church. : When Faith; Luth eran church was organized he transferred his name to this place, thus making him one of the charter members of Faithchurch. Mr Rusher lcved his church and was al ways found true and: ff ith ful. Besides a large num ber of friends he leaves to mourrn his death, his wife aud rchildreu, one brother, Calvin Rusher, one sister Mrs iMary Safrit and eleven graudchildren. The funeral was conducted by his pastor. Rev G (T Ritchie, assisted by his former pastor, Rev (3 P Fisher, in the presence of a large congregation in the Lutheran" church in Faith. j The pall bearers were M G M Fier' W H nbje, Mon- rut1 BWFH,,tn ieury A er GOTe Bruce and Ad"1 phus Brown A M Frick is on a short visit from the U S S Florida to fee his mother and friends. He hrought his wife a'oug who is a mighty pretty young lady. W LCauble, son of W H Cauble ot Faith, has returned 1 V y-v . m tin n wr m -k yJ Z r- X- a "" L'DC" uireU("8' I wac in one of the officers training camps and was get tting along fiue and would soon nave neen one or tne officers in the army, if the .var had not come to an end He looks fiue in his new uni form and the boys were all glad to see him back. home. A M Frick made a present to Venus of several old for eign coins for his collection. Some are silver. Abuer Owens was one of the best school teachers we ever went to be before the C'vil war. His daughter ie now the principal of our free school here and she too is a fine teacher. She has just made Venus present of a fine old time violin case that came from across the ocean and belonged to her father. We trize it highly because it is from our old time school teacher. James Chapman is going to Quautico, Va, on a business trip. Pearl Earnhardt has made a dry granite wall in front of his residence. Lonnie Underwood, who wis wounded iu one of the oaiues in crauce, is on aiur- l0U8n to eee 1,18 PeoP,tJ He ! A ? I- ! L I 11 J. 1 vismug uere witu uismoiu er at his tcraud parents, Mr and 2 Mrs Tom Hess. His pnreuts live iu Cabarrus county. We visited at the pink quarry. Joe ivirsiim is one of the be&t quarry bosses in the United States. He has a big crowd getting out the largest pieces of pure pink granite blocks we ever saw. One block is to make a mon ument and has 15r0 cubic feet iu it. . Venus. A Tonic Laxative that wQ mnore the bOa from the Lhmr and cleanse the Syatem THOROUGHLY without griping or dlatarbtng the atomach la truly a. Perfect Lax ative. . LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN . b the tame of m Sellable and Perfect LaxatlVe which eoon rellavea Ska Headache. Dlzzineu, In dlgetdon. Stomach Trouble, Gat and Pile ceased by a Torpid Urer and Constipation. Always bh a Reliable Laxative In the treatment of Colds, Grip and usnasza. ' ' ' LAX-FOS WITH PEPSIN Is a Lfcmld Digestive Tonlo Laxatire excellent la its effect on the 8rstem. both as a tonic and as a laxative. It is last as good for Children as for Adults. Pleasant xo taxe. isiiuaren ue ic aoc d ana recommended to tne pubito bVPans iji.. 1 s f-lJ . ... wimm I jnat feel like going ftffm honse to house and telling the people about Tan lac " A. J. Livingston. Ashland City, Teun. This is really the first med icine I have ever taken ttiat does what they say it will do J. F. Holley, Lexington, Ky. I would not take one thousand dol lars foi what this wonderful medicine, Tanlac, has doxe for me." Mrs. Mattie Xules, Lexington, Ky. "We have sold 1,180 bottles oi Tanlac and have never had a dissatisfied custo mer." Smiser Drug Co, Columbia, Tenn. ' For two years before taking Tanlac J had rheumatism so bad I couldn't raise my left hand to my head. I now feel like a new man " J B Woodward, Lexington, Ey. "J feel so good after taking Tanlac that-1 told mv hands the other daj I believed I could beat any of them shuck ing corn. I meant it and believe I could have beat 'em all."-J. A. White, R. F. D., Lexington, Ky. "Imny thirty years of ac tive practice as a physician I have never seen anything to equal Tanlac as a medicine to produce results." Dr. J T, Edwards, Payetteville, Ga, Twelve million Bottles Sold in Four Years sealed package Dut have an eye out p also for the name ;p SPI That nsme is your pro- . jijlji 8:!Sj tection against inferior Sp;Sjj imitations. Just as the ' ffiffi sealed package is pro-- tection against impurity. , p; Slffl xhe Greatest 'Name . p: Ask jrout newsdealez; lis cn POPULAR ;:K1ECIMK1CS MAGAZINE with its four hundred pictures and four hundred articles each month, is bigger and better than ever. Our correspondents in ail parts of the world are continually on the watch: for. new and interesting things for our readers. POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZtftE S3 SAL DY ALL NEWSDEALERS Ask Aem to show you a copy or send '20c for ihu latest postpaid. Yearly aub- icrUtion $2.00 to all parts of the United. State: its possessions, Canada and Mexico. ; POPULAR MnCMArJSCS r-gAGAS, q CiU TJ-efcigan flyemie, Chicago. ininol mBMB HIP uuo mm 1 mu "This medicine is worth its weight in gold, and if the price was fifty dollars a bottle instead of one dollar I would boy it just he same if I Had the money Robt. Young, Knoxville, Tenn'. 'Four bottles of Tanlac helped me more than fifteen years of medical treat ment thav-cost me an averageof $100 a year B. HallFountain Cito. Tenn " Money couldn't buy the good this Tanlac has done for me." Ex-Sheriff Archie An derson, -Houston, Texas. - ' Tanlac has certainly helped me and I recommend it-to others for the good it has done me." Ex-Sheriff C. W, Man gum, Atlanta Oa. ' - "I would spend the last '.'dol lar I had on earth for Tanlac: I have gained nine and a half pounds on one bottle and feel just like a new man " J;, T. Andrews. "If the people of this town only knew the good Tanlac did , me you woutdn't be able to make it fast enough to supply the demind." Mrs, Mattie C. Bond, Memphis, Tenn, 1 Yes sir,T gained twen4y-five pounds by taking Tanlac. and it has been a long time since I felt as well as I do now." Capt. Jeff D Biggs, Vickeburg, Miss. tell you the correct nwef, ; ' - , . ' Done Promtly and ": . rightly "at the Watchman Office. Give us a trial. WHEflKSIIOVJED SPIRIT OF U. S. Sacrifice to Ensure Allied Loaf Greatest Single Food Achievement. SUFFICIENT SUPPLY NOW. All the Nations Will Be Able.t Re. turn to m Their Normal Sup ply White . Bread. Overshadowing all other accomplish' ments of the American . people under the leadership of Food Administration Is the history of wheat exports In the past sixteen months. Our wheat ex port . program proved conclusively to the world that America was In this war from start to finish and willing to make any sacrifice thai; will hasten victory or maintain the health and strength of people overseas, upon whom rested the heaviest weight of our war. Now that pressure on ocean tonnage Is eased by the stopping of large move ments of troops 'to Europe, we may re lax our efforts to save wheat The ac cumulated surplus In Australia, Argen tine and other hlthgrto Inaccessible markets will become available, and probably no more than our normal sur plus will have to leave this country. We In America and the nations which have won the world for freedom will be enabled to eat their normal wheat loaf, at the common table of the peo ples of democracy. We entered the past crop year with a wheat supply which gave us only 20,000,000 bushels available for ex port. When 4he crop year ended, we had sent 141,000,000 bushels of wheat to Europe. The American people had saved out of their normal consumption 121,000,000 bushels. A survey of export figures shows that the conservation of flour brought about by the wheatless meals, wheat less days, substitution In our kitchens anid bakeries, enabled us to send to our armies and the allies 83,000,000 barrels of white flour- wheat figured as flour. Had we exported only our visible surplus, we would have been able to ship less than 4,500,000 barrels. Before the 1st of December our sur-. plus had gone overseas, and an addi tional 86,000,000 bushels had been tak en from the stock reserved for home consumption and added to the surplus already shipped to the allies. It seem ed hardly nnHdhl thai- iiLfl-H-..- totui exports above iuu,uw,uw .Dusneis Dy Juiy 1. But in January ine late Lord Rhondda, then British Food Controller, cabled that unless we could send an . additional 75,000,000, bushels he could not take responsi bility for assuring his people that they would be fed.. The American peopl responded by sending 85,000,000 bush els of wheat, saved from their home consumption,' between' the first of the year and the advent of the new crop.. By pctober JO, 1918, we had already shipped 65,060,305 bushels since July 1. Absolutely the only limitation upon' our wheat exports since the latest har vest has been the scarcity of oceaat tonnage. If exports continue at tho present rate, by July 1 of next year we will have sent more than 237,500, 000 bushels to Europe. Thus are we making good America's pledge that the bread rations of Allied Europe shall be maintained. A Memorable. Achievement of the Titanic Struggle , America saved and G3i to Europe la a year of crop fa!UZ3 141.000,000 bushels of wheat) which r;J Europe. A GERMAN HOPE DISPROVED AND A GERMAN FEAR CONFIRMED I. . A statement made by a promi nent German official soon after this country was declared In a state of war with Germany shows that even In the enemy country clar thinking students did not undervalue the strength of the American republic Only In his confidence that" we could not land in . Europe ' sufficient troops to affect the final decision was this German mistaken. . "I do not fear the American soldiers," he told a high official of our government, "because they cannot arrive In time. What 4- I fear Is the Intelligence and de- votion of one hundred million' fr original minds find people train- ed to a faith in individual Inltla- tive. The day that these peo- -ple4 now -so materialistic In out- ward appearance, are stirred spiritually, that day. Is the day of .Germany's doom." ' - 4
China Grove Record (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 17, 1919, edition 1
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