Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Feb. 3, 1916, edition 1 / Page 1
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ft Hick ' I: ORY 1 IT If 1 1 Or? V XT n TIIiTnori TirT7-vn"vr-i nnnniT i ntr Price Two Cents xm . ATTEND MEETING LARGE MUOL WEAR HICKORY OF propose to Consolidate All Secondary Schools Raise $25,000 for One Big Institution and Make It a Second Mars Hill. Plans Outlined. TWO YOUNG BOYS HELD FOR , :v attended meeting of 'rv'.tiistiTs and laymen was ;!., First Baptist church i o consider further the j -v. r.t of a Haptist academy ( ai i i : ,.i j i n: norm oi mcKoiy anu :'hn railroad, mention bf liccn made in the columns ; v. ! I. The names of those ; and in attendance indicate ilv iis of work these men r.and: t;. r.enfield, R. B. Moore, : ,!!. II. S. Menfield, A. A. R. X. Setzer, Morganton; :!v. 1. H. Mull, Drexell; D. U. T. Moore, M. S. Smith, i';'ls; Rev. M. A, Adams,' IUa 15. W . N. M. .Simms. Joe j Clarence Denton, aged 19, and '. . arshaw. icto.r Beach, r, , . .'...' i n.,.,,.,-.,,,. t ;,.t . aui uenton, aired lt, brothers, were 1 , r , IVtliM. vai ( UlilVVlUtVll ( I',r. Mi, Long Island; Rev. "nested at their home in East Hick W. N. Cook, and Messrs. ory today by Deputy Sheriff Charles A. .1. W. Elliott, C. P. Hill, j Hefner and Policeman C. M. Fry of u'iv1 of Representative !i:land.and M P in the T.t "the Baptist con- j Hickory jail on the charge of pass , -f a vast stretch of terri-! ing forged checks here yesterday. iui.ir east and west from the I The boys confessed. They will be . McDowell county line, I j heari thJ afternoon before ,ir.- north and south from, , , , CHAMB ER TONIGH T Nearly 200 members, including old members, will become hustlers tv Hl- yl lfc was evident today, tnis being the approximate result of tnec anvass for now ki,i kj XKJL WIG OF BANDITS (By the Associated Press) El Paso, Feb. 3. The flight to wards the American border of Fran cisco Villp, officially repelled, has lckory Chamber of Commerce. ! been accomplished by the moving of ORGERY South Carolina. acting Recorder M. H. Yount, who is '! into one wen equipp ; ami to locate this school . i. :tv in the triangle between t l.i-r.nir and Morganton, K. Brown of Asheville, D. - tiu superintendent of the : M'.nndary schools foster--.i' heme mission board of I'lurn Baptist Convention, -. ronference with this com :' ! men. A joint paper t !'.-. whole school problem iM.sfd to consolidate all I presiding during the illness of Judge iary school interests in 1 CamDbell. and sent on to court at Newton next week. Clarence Denton, according to the boys, was the leader. He wrote the checks and had his smaller brother attempt to catch them. One check for $7.00 drawn in favor of Clarence Denton and purporting to be signed by Dr. J. J. Hicks, was cashed at Zerden's Underselling Store. Paul buvine a pair of shoes. the committee for The boy was wearing the shoes when :, !; to the Baptist district caught this morning, and all but r fur action this year. ! forty cents of the change was recov- rr.mlttee decided that $25,- j ered. a-'p. exclusive of the school 1 Another of the checks for $9 was now held was necessary to offered to Mr. J. F. Allen in pay . s proposition with. The ' ment for some merchandise, but the ir.r.ot he put into active op-! young lady who waited on the lad :'"V a year or so. It is a large : suspected something was wrong, and v'-mrir.ent proposition, and it called Mr. Allen. While Mr. Allen .me to do big things. was endeavoring to get ur. nicies th s and plans of these i over the telephone, the boy left. it means a second Mars The City Bakery was the other n.s immediate section of the place tried, but Mr. L. vv. filing- ton told the boy he was not buying checks yesterday. This paper Svas for $12.00 and Paul attempted to buy a quarter's worth of bread. Mr. John Denton, father of the boys, said that Clarence was the in stigator. Hickory business men speak well of the father, who said today that he could not do anything with the lads. He was interested in their capture and suggested where , ,, . . , i, ithey might be caught. Officers lo- i..y Associated Press.) I cated the boys at their home, how- i :; u-t ..n, IYS. 3. The Keating ever, before they had 'started fofr : ; i,v awaits the ac-1 Lincoln county. Mr. Denton would !,e .r,ate following its nas-ilike to have the boys sent to a re- v 1 1 e t" 1''. court this afternoon in the sum of tr a-uie prohibiting interstate 1 $200 each and, failing to give bond, were taken to Newton ana put in jan. 10 LABOR BILL READY FOR SENATE i r . . house yesterday by aj T, t " hovs were bound over to of ehi!i labor products un-; '.y wii.'! amended so as to j r':.s' canning clubs from its ' The house spent the . : rt of yesterday debating opposition coming chief-J :l" SOUth. j -' spent the entire day de-; .e hill. Oposition came1 oni thes outh. Represen-! ' of North Carolina, chair-1 houso judiciary commit- PACIFIC NORTHWEST BATTLES WITH SNOW ec( -o as to leave its enforce United States marshals and ;."rial of . t.'.r IN ASHEVILLE ihere will be a ?phpm1 mDt;n night at 7:30 and every member is urged to attend. The new plan of organization will be gone into fully at this time and other questions brought before the chamber, including the proposition of the firemen to secure an auxiliary motor truck equipped with chemicals xor use m fighting fires in the su burban and adjoining towns. An invitation is extended to every man in Hickory to be present tonight. BRUISERS CONFER a large number of bandits, accord ing to reports received here today. No news has been received of the detachment of Mexican troops sent in pursuit of a band said to be led by Villa and which was said to be 90 miles south of El Paso. N TED STA Chicago, Feb. 3. Jess Willard, his managers and several promoters of New York, were here today for a conference on terms for a fight be tween the champion and Frank Mo ran of Pittsburg.,Willird denied a report that he will fight Jack Dillon. BREEDING RATS TO FEED ZOO ANIMALS (By Associated Press.) Budapest, Hungary, Feb. 3. Rats are being bred for the Budapest Zoo in order to save the scant ra tion of horseflesh for the lions and tigers, whose constant roaring shows the extent they suffer from the general shortage of food. Eagles, vultures and the wild birds are fed exclusively on rate. At times when horsemeat has been un obtainable, goats and the less valu able animals have been sacrificed to save the Jives of the beasts that once ruled the jungle. Uut the herbivorous animals havp also gone through hard times, as wild chestnuts have been substitut ed for expensive hay. They have small liking for chestnuts. The seai beat went to feed the wild beasts. Two polar bears were shot one be cause he refused to eat war food and the other because he grew so weak on the new diet it was deemed a mercy to finish him off. The bears added to the zoo's revenue in anoth er way, as the privilege of shooting them was auctioned off to local sportsmen, one of whom paid $60 for the honor. CHINESE MONARCHISTS LIGHTLY DISCUSS CHARGE ( By Associated Press.) Peking, Feb. 3. Chinese mon archists are treating the passing of the republic as a subject for humor ous chaff. Editorials, poems and songs discussing the republic lightly are now the order of the day. The following article from the Shun Tien Shih Pao of Peking, is typical of the attitude of the mon archists toward what they regard as the defunct republic: "We, the un- dutiful sons of Han,Man, Meng,Rul and Tsang, beg to announce to the public that instead of ourselves be ing destroyed and annihilated for our own sins and weaknesses, our father, Mr. Kuang Ho alias Min Kuo (Re public) has met with a tragic end. Our father was born on the 1st flay of the last month of the Gregorian year of 1912. He was known to be in excellent health; but unfortunate ly in the summer of this year h TE SHOULD HAVE BIGGEST (By Associated Press.) St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 3. President Wilson today told an audience of 15, 000, which swayed with a tumult of cheering, that the United States should have the greatest navy in the world. "I believe the United States navy should be unconquerable;" he said, "the greatest in the world." The president declared that sub marine commanders abroad had gen erally complied with international law, but acts of one commander might set the world afire. The president told how one set of belligerents were cut off from the world and how this made it harder to preserve neutrality. At the breakfast of the St. Louis business men's league the president declared that he believed that there never would be another war like the present. Governor Major of Missouri sat next to the president. The jrppm was decorated ..with American flags. When he spoke of his conviction that a tariff board should be created, the president 'was loudly 4heJ--ed. He then discussed national defense. H I MARKETS t: NEW YORK STOCKS. (By Associated Tress.) New York, Feb. 3. A more moder ate continuance of yesterday's for eign movement was reported by today's early market. Initial gains being shown in both the active and inactive lists. Texas Company was higher as was also Motors and such specialties as Tennessee Copper and American Tobacco. United States Steel was barely bteay on light trad ing. Secondary quotations were most irregular. NEW YORK COTTON PLAN TO SETTLE HAT BRIDGE QUESTION Mr. Osborne Brown, chairman of the board of county commissioners, will bring up the question of the Lookout Shoals bridge before the board at its meeting in Newton Monday, and he will have a propo sition for settling the matter satis factorily, he hopes, to all concerned. The Southern Power Company has agreed to pay a third of the cost of constructing the bridge, provided that Catawba and Iredell counties pay the remaining two-thirds, a third each, and Mr. Brown is favorably disposed towards then roposition. It would not be fair, however, for the county to operate a free bridge ;b competition witih the privateSy owned toll bridges known as Buffalo Shoals and Mooresville bridges, and the chairman proposes to buy these, FiVvided the legislature would give authority for charging a toll on the new and old bridges for a term of five years. The total cost would be about $22, f'OC, he estimates, and the tolls from the three bridees would earn the money spent in five years. USPOSITION OF APPAM WORRIES WASHINGTON HOW GERMAN C(TY CONTROLS IIS FOOD Secretary Lansing Says There Is no Question as to Her Status as Prize Passengers Land edMuch Joy in Berlin Over Ship's Feats. iOSTS BIG SUM TO DESTROY V A (By the Associated Press) .Washington, Feb. 3. Secretary Lansing stated today that there was no question as to the Appam's status as a prize, but the question of her disposition still involved further con sideration of The Hague conven tion and the Prussian-American treaty. Lieutenant Berg's refusal to per mit British prisoners to leave the ship is under consideration. (By the Associated Press) New York, Feb. 3. The cotton market opened at an advance of three to seven points today 'a response to higher Liverpool iaibifas wan March selling at 11.94 and July at was suddenly attacked by a bad cold, 1 12.23 on the call. The advance was which led to the fatal illness. Ke-; cnecKeu, nowevei, un mjuawuu,. as well as nowned Chinese doctors medical experts of Japan, Great Britain, Russia, France and Italy were instantly (Jonsultod American experts refusing -to cooperate but neither injections nor prescriptions of these doctors did him any good. His illness continued to develop, and CHICAGO WHEAT rr,r.. (By Associated Press.) Qnatflo Wash . Feb. 3. The Paci- that it was unconstitu- j fic northwest again faced the task . He also endeavored to ; ented snowstorm which has paralized plied to the tenement railroad communication, demoralized New York and Boston. electric lighting systems, caused ma r.t.Uivf; Sears of Florida i .... i r ,in.a ,i,mQ(r0 to ..... i .i nv lliyusn iua ui uuiiaio vmw.i.fc,.- e.ssfully to amend the;, ,. , OUHClingS WHICH WCIU nuv oxi .. enough to stand more than two and inspectors ol tne tie-; a nan ieei oi snuw on mc lalor. while former! with the outlook for fair and cold ('ahr.an offered an amend- j weather there was no prospect of c:' mpt canneries, because j earjy relief ::;';'i::li'L2,flaCi,TepSreMl-; I battle and other cities iinjcr of Massachusetts street car lines are not operating and ; rr:' is made liable for tran- schools have been suspended. chilli labor products. lie' hri ' t, nrotect the carriers r.IMi n r aiior MF.F.TING ON 1 Jit.' that snippers snouia nie U' f UiC IM UUUtHUll. r x 1 " " - i , -ni o j amendment to exemttt tne! ,r, 4 . . , a , ed father, have drawn upon our New York, Feb. 3. Cotton futures M l ."irh canning cKbs from ! (By Associated Press.) famil & great calamity. and we have opened steadily and closed steadily. '. 7i. i nr., 1 Ashfiville. Feb. 3 Widely known ,, ni the wound with our feet! Oppen Close ,i ' .. !.' ri., -L- f rivio. educational and social uplift mi Rliniit.pd our cnmnlaints to ! Mav -- -- 12.12 'mm 'I'Msman Keating, au- workers were here toda" lor the ope..- s heaven in vain. Indeed, it is now lm- ; July -- . "'MtSSman . . annual rhllfl I mi . . 1 ; i i! 'he hill contended that tne ing session oi unciiwi cw..- j possiDie to oring duck, our xauicr ucwu-i (By Associated Press.) OhAcagov Feb. 3J Wheat sihowed some strength today as a result of Liverpool advances that were more ' bullish than had been expected. Open- j on the 11th dav of the 12th month line- crices which varied from un-1 he showed signs of dissolution and I changed figures to one-half higher, j suddenly succumbed. He passed - 'with May at 1.33 1-2 and July at 1zo, j way" at 10 p. m. on the 12th day. ! were followed by a general advance j He closed his earthly career and and then a sharp setback, but not of went to sleep at the mature ap-e of a lasting sort. four. T "We. undutiful sons, who failed to COTTON FLTURES give proper treatment to our deceas- i .1 f .. U,i kn..A .ln. imnn Alii" ! Vn... YavIt TTW 3 (By the Associated Press) Berlin, Feb. 3. The big suburban city of Lichtenbery, a few miles from Berlin, whose population 'is almost exclusively drawn from the working classes, has,, during the past few months, been perfecting a system of municipal ownership of foodstuffs which is perhaps the most compre hensive in Germany. It has not only taken charge of and control ovter certain kinds of foods, 'as other! munkf palists have done, but it has become salesman as well has opened municipal stores and markets all over the city, has done much to keep prices down with in reach of its inhabitants and yet has made enough profit to enable it to keep its stocks replenished. Where it has been found inadvis able for the city to sell the food It self, it has been distributed., through merchants who have been permitted to charge only stipulated prices and to make a profit no larger than the city ,itself 'would make. The city now maintains four stores for the sale of meat, sausage, fats and bacon, four egg stores, and two .pctato stcres . 'Four Imdre of the latter are to be added in a short time, as soon as the expected increas ed demand for potatoes comes. The city has been able to make ad vantageous contracts with packers for both meat and fats, and of late is selling daily to about 20,000 fam ilies. Whenever a shortage has been felt, such as was the case with fat recently, Lichtenberg has procured substitutes of one kind or another. It has in its storehouses now e nough bacon to last into February, and by that time will have received the 6,000 hogs that have been appor tioned to it by military authorities. A contract to slaughter them has al ready been awarded. Of late the city has added to its stock by putting in rice, beans, peas and oat flakes by the hundredweight and is selling them at a small margin of profit at its meat stores. Until after Christmas the price of muni cipal eggs was four cents apiece as compared with eight to nine cents in other parts of greater Berlin but now it has advanced to four and a half cents. The city has just purchased an e normous quantity of potatoes, half of which it has stored away, and the other half of which has been dis tributed among regular provision dealers to be sold at specified prices. The city has also sold huge amounts of fruit. In addition to selling outright the things enumerated, Lichtenberg has supplied local merchants with great quantities of noodles, condensed milk, sardines, vegetables and macaroni which it, as a wholesale buyer, has been able to procure advantageously. (By the Associated Press) London, Feb. 3. Bombardment by German long range 15-inch guns has a greater moral than material ef fect on the towns bombarded, writes a corespondent from France. This is due to the great amount of waste space in towns, for a shell has just as much of a chance of hitting a va cant lot as a building. The Germans themselves, in the opinion of the writer know how little material dam age their shells do, for after shell ing these towns, they generally fol low up with an air raid. But tney know its moral results. In the extreme range firing, the Germans fire only when the wind is favorable to them. The noise of the great shell is distinctly trying on the nerves of the people. As open towns lie a good distance from the French lines, the Germans get their naval guns well forward, with the result that they are usually sought out by the French guns. The main drawback of these bom bardments of open towns is, from the German point of view, their expense. These great shells shells run in price up to several thousand dollars each. One lesson of the war is that it costs more to destroy a village than to build it. At one point the Ger mans battered a viaduct to pieces with-Urfnch and 9-inchhoAvitzci . This cost nearly sixty giant shells and countless 9-inch shells, to say nothing of a rain from field guns. The viaduct cost $70,000 dollars o build. French officers estimated the price of its destruction at over $400,-000. Passengers Land (By Associated Press.) Newport News, Va., Feb. 3. With her German prize commander on her bridge, the British liner Appam mov ed up early today and anchored off this port to give the 200 persons aboard at liberty a chance to land. Lieutenant Berg moved his ship only on orders from Washington. Lieutenant Betfe .still maintained his determination to permit no one on the liner except those who have official business and will extend no undue courtesises even to American officials. He will insist on his right to prevent anybody's going on board. He is holding more than 200 peo ple aboard, including his own prize crew, some twenty Germans who are prisoners of war on the Appam, Cap tain Harrison, the former lieutenant, and twelve persons who belong to the British army or navy, Lieutenant Berg says. STORK VISITS CONOVER Conover, Feb. 3. A girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Shuford to day, increasing their family to two girls and a boy. PARTIAL ECLIPSE WAS VISIBLE IN HICKORY North Carolinians had an excellent opportunity to observe the partial eclipse of thes un and many smoked glasses were being held between the eye and the sun. The first indica tion of an eclipses Kvas discernible shortly before 10 o'clock. The eclipse was total in South America and elsewhere and these general statements show what an astronom er the reporter isn't and attracted -world-wide attention. The day dawned fair and cold, buti towards noon warmed up. It was j the first bright bright day in over ; a tweek and was mighty welcome j in- this community. i It certainly was ciurerent irom ground hog weather like that of yes terday, when the little rascal fail ed to see his shadow. Germans Elated (By the Associated Press) Berlin, via London, Feb. 3. News of the arrival of the Appam at Old Point Comfort and of the daring raid of a German cruiser in the main line of sea traffic between South Africa and Europe, has aroused intense en thusiasm here for the navy. The cruiser Moewe and the Sea gull were enrolled immediately on the honor list with the Emden, Karls ruke and other cruisers. Her feats are characterized as most daring, in dicating that the spirit of the men on the Emden is still alive. There is no little mystery here re garding the Moewe. Admiralty offi cials were not inclined to give out anything about her history or when she set out for her raid. It may have been that some larg er steamer, (assuming- the name Moewe, when converted into an aux ilfgiriy crjuiser, slipped through the British lines. A similar case of a German ship slipping through the lines was the German boat that de stroyed a British torpedo boat last summer. BRITISH EXPECT YES IT'S THAT SCORE AGAIN CHILD IS BORNEO BY A LIVE WIRE w-uld not be construed as to such or-'anizations ana 1 l.n!n violators of the law. Rep-I fore congress is expected to come i up bound him up properly and deposited I 12.22 "12.26 12.39 labor conference held under the aus-: even though we are willing to sacri-1 December nif'pu of the national child labor com- : c0 nlir i;Vps a VmnHrpd-fold for him. mittee. Thee hild labor bill now be- As soon as his death took niace. we j HICKORY MARKETS 12.13 12.26 12.36 12.42 ii'.-i i!. i . r ',.-5o nro. and neDreseniauvc .r.ccii.iiiK nis remains in a comn. ana men rnttnn iiV4 ul.stit'ute varvimr only in mer Representative A. Mitchell Pal- wore badges of mourning. We here- j wheat $1-50 1 "Ulua vaiyuiK ""'J' . nnL. an , Qn,q nthers have u.. v, net ! en mer oi ivihiojii''" - Uy aimuuiive mat uic iuui iiicju., . from the GlarK amennm as adopted. been invited to speak. New, Light, Swift Cruiser Captured Appam, Says New York Agent of Liner the 'table' of our late father was tt!8t placed in a shrine; on the 18th inst. H 'a funeral service will be held; and g riwjri WEATHER on the 19th inst. at 8 a. m. the final g iilEi If Liil I IlLU interment will take place. H I "We, .the undersigned sons, beg tKUMHUUKtttttitt?ffitnttKntim:tnI to say that we shall be grateful ifj w the remains of our late father will For North Carolina: Fair tonight be honored by the presence of offi-! and Friday. Temperature below cials, "entry, scholars, merchants freezing tonignt; fresn northwest 'and military men. We make the winds. above announcement with deep sor-l row. ! COMPARATIVE WEATHER i "People of Han, Man. Meng, ilui anrl Tnrur: Feb. 2 1916 :' ii t t : -: r.. 1 e TIT TTimrv TTn 1 nr 1 , , ij unuilixui suns ui iiii. , iviitAiiiiuin her name, though I have been toia ghed Qur te&YH of blood and knock ; Minimum -- -- -- -- 33 cue. i !',; Associated Press.) ' York, Feb. 3. Daniel Bacon, ; what it was. of the British owners of the I "The cruiser which capiurt-u jC says that the vesel was cap- Appam was escorted by several oth- ; 0 u new type of light draft, er ships, including a collier. j i ..jr .tViat the sum of i ne! sviit uerman ii uis- 7i uiiuciswhu "" 'our heads on the ground." JURY HAS MOHR CASE i Mean -- -- 42. Rainfall l-o Providence, Feb. 3. The presenta- tit 1 l . T wn from the tion of all the evidence oi tne triai ppam when she warship, but a new ves- was captured and that ne mawo . . i a t p A r. n n It no lines of a mercnant- ijju,wju in gom was u - wH.-wh r-Wo-pd of the Appam when sne - Wltn vne ihuiuci ui . Mohr, was concluded today. 1915 5y 47 53 .29 .Uy disguised, "bhe was. specie room oi tne "fp- ... the murder of Dr. C. Franklin suid .dr. Bacon. "I cannot give intact." Another protest from the Senator from Georgia? First thing we know London Punch will be calling him Hoax Smith. Hartford Times. A child in a home is the best bar ricade against outside influence. Lewis Reep, seven-year-old son or Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Reep, who live near St. Paul's Seminary, was pain fully injured on Fifteenth street at 2:15 this afternoon when he took hold of a live electric light wire in front of the residence of Mrs. E. L. Shuford. I Workmen were trimming the trees, and it is supposed that a falling limb j brought the wire to the sidewalk. The lad was on his way home from the North school. Mrs. Shuford had the child carried into her home and every attention was given him. Dr. F. S. Steele, wno was summoned, said the injuries were not serious, though in the right han were burns from the wire. Mrs. Shu ford had cautioned the workmen to be careful when the little fellow came along. Nobody was more solicitious than Mrs. Shuford and none was more re lieved than she on learning that ttie lad would get on all right. The par- , ents carried him home at 3 o'clock. I . ' Tommy saw a small tug tow in a large ship, and heard the tug whistle loudly. i "Oh, papa, he cried, greatly excited. , "See. the big boat's got the little one by the tail and it's squealing!" i Woman's Home Companion, Mr. Jake Lyerly was in the Record office today with what he said was the last chapter on his part in the con troversy over the basketball score be tween the Hickory high school girls and Claremont College. He brought a note from the manager and cap tain of the Claremont team saying that he was "appointed official score man." A record reporter suggested that Mr. Lyerly settU the matter with the high school authorities about the score. ATTACK ON CALAIS (By the Associated Press) Although military operations in most of the main theatres of the war are virtually at a halt, London appar ently is expecting a new move soon by the Germans in northern France and Flanders. Press comments in dicate that an offensive on a large scale is under way, the Germans hop ing, by means of heavy artillery, to force a way to Calais on the English ; channel. ; SHOW RETURNS TO HICKORY Ferguson Brothers Stock Company, which player here all last week, re turned to Hickory today for a three nights' run. The first offering will be "The Coyette," a western play. ' TO SUCCEED SALE S (By Associated Press.) ! Raleigh, Feb. 3. S. J. Busbee of ! Wake county, now in charge of the statec onvict camp at Badin, Stanly county, was appointed warden of the state prison today to succeed the late T. Peter Sale. Secret Code of U. S. Navy Lost or Stolen; Officers Ordered Courtmartialed (By Associated Press.) San Francisco, Feb. 3. A containing the secret code of United States navy has been from the United States torpedo Hull, and according to advices Washington a courtmartial has ordered for Herman A. Jones, mander of the reserve torpedo book ; the' lOSt ; boat j from been flotilla and commander of the Hull, and of Robert D. Kirkpatrick, in whose joint possession the book was. If the book cannot be found or proof of its absolute destruction unread by any outsiders obtianed it might be come necessary, it is said by naval officers here, to provide a complete new system of secret comunication for the navy. at. f 4 i H
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1916, edition 1
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