Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / April 19, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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HICKORY DAILY RECORD THURSDAY EVENING, a;k TWO Hickory Daily Record TELEPHONE 167 Sih,d bv the aif PJJ Co Every Evening Except Sunday. ? ftE """"".Manager J. V. iwv ajv Mjr II. M. Miller -Adv. fligr ""qaWribcra desiring the address of ouo8criutr n ease state their paper " - fh nr i. an(l imunicauw" in their com NEW addressee. ,. To insure eliicient delivery, .hnuld be made to tne ,cr p ion Department promptly. City Servers should call 167 legardmg complaints. com Sub- City ENLIST BOYS AND (HERO-COLA DAY IS OBSERVED IN RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY COUNTRY? GIRLS CATAWBA .1 Whereas it has pleased the Al- An unique advertising? scheine with mighty to remove from our midst by strong educational feature was that .death the child of Sovereign Claude employed by tne unero-oia Doming whitener. suuscuution llATESj100 Six months ou inrve inuiunn One Al'tnlh Due week The Mowing appeal has been sent out by Miss Mary Rowe, home demonstrator: To the Canning Clubs of Catawba County: . , If vou wish to join the girls can- nin clubs please lot . of ntire. IViy i . .. l w....,,Vwia must be sent to McKimmon, state agent, May l. So Jo names will be accepted later than nrii -o. viwjr - --- A , ..P n,ni nri .1 OWCll lO COIllPVic years ui - - - - ot. flllite "1 .4U .10 inh tir zw: but we are glad to have older women in our clubs. The enrollment in the county is always large, but u yoa uiu ested in having a club in your neigh borhood let me hear irom yoa at I have succeeded in securing a car ot cans wiiich will be given to club meni- !,. t ,k,st. Help us to standardize the canned products of Catawba county. Our brand represents the development of the "Head, Hand, Heart and Health; ami out motto is. "To Make the Best Better." I expect to hold meetings at the following places this week: Tuesday the lTth, Love school house, 7:M o'clock. Wednesday the 18th, Killian school house at 10 a. m. and Minerva at President Wilson is not asking for 3:30 p. m Sfarfnm at selective conscription for an indeii-1 g3Q a m Fnmk E Bost,s hoase 1 nite period, but for the duration of(1i m . Kocfcctt school house, 7:30 p. m. PUBLICATION OFFICE: 1102 ELEVENTH AVENUE hiileit-u ... second class matter Si'ii lember 11, IV li. I-t.otlic t Hickory, N. C, uuuer the uct of March 8, 17'J. ASS()C1ATEI) lMtESSJtEj'ORTS THURSDAY, APRIL 19. 1917 IE SELECTIVE' PLAN BEST nlants all over the country on wea nesday. April 18th, which was term ed "National Chero-Cola Day." -.The dav was universally celebrated in towns and cities where Chero-Cola plants are located. It was the oc casion for "open house" to consu mers, dealers and the public in gener al. Reports received here tell of thousands unon thousands of visi- ne near irom tors beincr entertained that day as enrollment of I the guests of Chero-Cola bottling Mrs. i iori onrl the Chero-Cola neome all over the country demonstrated to these visitors that they not only ad vertise sanitation and cleanliness but that they practice it as well. The day was in reality an educational feature and showed a fairness to consumers who were invited to the various plants to personally inspect the Chero-Cola is bottled. Therefore, resolved that we extend to Sovereign Whitener and family our heartfelt sympathy in this their hour of sad bereavement. Resolved that a copy of these reso lutions, properly engrossed, be pre sented to the family of our bereaved Sovereign. WOODMEN OP THE WORLD. J. A. REITZEL, DINWIDDIE HOLDER, A. O. MITCHELL, Commitee. FELLOW CITIZENS, HERE COMES JAMES S. VILLAS Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the way j weliknown tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the I.iver. Drives Thousands and thousands of dollars out Malaria. Enriches the Blood and were spent to snow ana prove to Builds up the whole System. 50 cents the public that tnere is merit to the James Spiro Villas, breathing loy .u.. i TTViioH States, has for aity w liic u'"" ' mally renounced allegiance to King Constantine and his German consort. In company with Attorney Jos. L. Murphy, Jr., Mr. Villas repaired to Statesville yesterday and appeared before Federal Clerk Gill, who went through the preliminaries with the Hickory restauranteur and baseball fan Mr. Gill knew Mr. Villas s ad- ;of;n -Pni- Vpnizelos ana nis ui&- gust for the king and pulled a little; fun at the expense of the popular; r.v Mr Villas will have to make yet another trip to the federal clerk hntnra n w riH a. uiuunun j. NOTICE OLD AGE! c'aim of the LheroUola bottlers re lative tu the sanitary drink they are making and tjhe sanitary pljmt in which the drink is bottled. "National Chero-Cola Day" was an SUBSCRIBE FOR THE RECORD unique advertising scheme and proved very popular everywhere it was cel- ! ebrated. I have left my books with Thos. P. Pruitt, Atty., and hope all those rikfcri n mo will rail on him at llHIVWOV-.t vv. ...v. - ' once and settle their accounts. Dr. 1 . S. Steele, M. D. 1 19 2t Tjhe commencement exercises of the Conover graded school, which is on 3 of the finest anywhere, will be held tomorrow. Mr. W. A. Self will deliver the address at 10 o'clock. a a a is a blessed time. It gives us leisure to put off our earthly Kar ments one by one and diess ourselves for heaven. But Seneca said: "Nothing is more distasteful than that an old man should have nothing to prove that he has lived long but his years.". Half the sting of dependence in our old days comes from the knowledge that our condition is the result of neglected opportu nities. Won't you open your SAVINGS ACCOUNT while you are young and. prosperous An old man still poor can never forget how easily he could have saved when he was young. FIRST NATIONAL BANK . . 1 the war. The president is too goou a democrat to deaire to impose uni versal military training on the coun try for all time. He was careful to make his position clear in his war address. The president backs up the war de partment however, in a stand for the selective system during the period of tle war. Mr. Bryan's famous de claration that 1,000,000 men would rush to the colors in 48 hours after declaration of war has been found the 20th, Catawba graded Mount Olive at J rosy dreams; a to be another of his facts show that with all the urging the country can give , it is difficult to secure enough recruits for the navy, to say nothing of filling up the army and national guard to strength. Thy local military company has dill'.cu'ty in securim- recruits, and after a hard campaign has not ob tained tnqugh to give it a strength of 100 n.en. If fio country i. to hivo an art.-.y and nobody seems to doubt it the men will have to be drafted into it from those vocations where their tem porary loss can be spared. Congress should hesitate no lon ger, but demand of the people the sup port duo the country in this hour of trouble. THE CHANCELLOR'S SPEECH Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg will inform the reichstag when it con venes next Tuesday the effect the sub marine campaign has had in winning the war. Among the additions to German strength, aside from the destruction of considerable tonnage, has been a declaration of war by the United States and Cuba, the severance of dip lomatic relations by Brazil, Bolivia and other Latin American countries. The chancellor will be able to re port more progress than at any time since the war has been in progress. Friday school at -J, P. m. 7.30 p. m. Sat;;rd:iy the Ulst, M'nerva school house, 7:30 p. m. See me and arrange about your cans and club work. Mr. Mask, county agent, will also attend these .aeetings in behalf of this club work. Yours faithfully, MISS MARY ROWE, ho.ne Demonstrator. Newton, N. C, April 1G, 1917. Agricultural C'.ub3 County Agent M-:.. .13 issued this statement: To the Farmer Leys ar.J Girls of Ca- yi tawba Coun y: W13 are very an: Io;.3 to have as many boys and '.t s as wi.l join our agricultural dJos t.iis year. The ,.t,.,;.,. 1 tin. e tor joaiinz. i.cv'3.c:. win soon m river iv n x. . n.'-r.r ivennpH into these clubs until April 28th. This is the year 01' ail years when things produced on the farm will be in great demand, as we must feeu ourselves and lurviy supply our al- 'ies in .this great war. We. there- r, .ore appeal to yoa lo join one oJ ' : ... e cubs a:ui uo ..0 .r pait in ke.p- i .us up the food sui. 'jh. of the nation, in l'herc could be no bitter expression of trao patriotic devotion to your country. g I will be glad to receive members in the following clubs: Corn, Potato, f Poultry and Pig. If you do not have I th money to bay your seed corn, po- Ji ttttots, eggs or pig, I will make ar- rangements for you if you will write t me to this effect. Hoping to hear from a large number of the boys and girls of the county, I am, Your friend, HOMER H. B. MASK, Catawba County Agent. J. E. Moses, the state pig club agent will be in the county on Thurs day and Friday of this week and will attend the meetings geheduled for Miss Rowe and Mr. Mask. Admiral Sims, who is conferring with English admiralty officials on the plan of action against subma rines, has made a preliminary report to Wushington, and it is heartening felt RUSSIA WILL NOT YIELD TO GERMAN OVERTURES Washington, April 19. Assm-' ances have reached Washington, that; now to learn that officials believe the submarines will be greatly weaken ed by united action of the allit-. The allied navies do not expect to de stroy all the U-boats, but they do ex pect to sink enough of them to make the game not worth the price from the German standpoint. While the allies must feel relieved by the announcement from Washing ton that Russia will not consider a separate peace with Germany, most of us feel better when the big guns speak on the eastern front. That will mean solidity. .1 i , . 1 unner no conditions that are conceivab e will the provisional gov-1 ernent of R-ss'a yield to the over-' tnros from the German and Austrian, socialistic representatives to nego-j tiate a separate peace. The entente embassies, with this' assurance before them, frankly con-1 f eased the crrcat sense of reliof tWvi from the apprehensions wirlp'r1 S3 "Every poor man should favor com pulsory education," declares the Pro gressive Farmer of Raleigh. That he should, and he should favor bet ter and longer schools and spend many of his idle hours working for them. We greatly fear, personally speak ing, that we will bo compelled to make inspections of Hickory gardens this summer unless there is found a better way of busting clods than us ing a hoo or an axe. Over 350 persons in Springfield Mass., have applied for garden space. Thus the food preparedness move ment extends from one section of the country to the other. Hickory has been summer weather for days, but the sheep rains of May will feel like January. which they have labored for the past two wccks that the extreme social-1 istic elements have so far dominated the provisional government through soldiers and workingmen's commit tees as seriously to jeopardize the in tegrity of the entente alliance. The gathering of socialists at Stockholm, known to be fomented by Germans and Austrians, was look ed upon with dread and suspicion and it was feared that cunning appeals to the altruistic principles of socialism the universal brotherhood of work mgmen and such considerations might force the provisional govern ment to consent to a separate peace to terminate the war. It is now learned from authorita tive source that these apprehensions and misgivings were bnsed upon mis nnderstnndings of the aims of the ex treme socialistic element in Russia and of the real strength of the pro visional government. The informa tion rece''-od today is to thP ornn 'hat, so far from contemplating anv v y. yji, Hli; UclSIS Ot f1 " ' n . gOVCTn-1 ';""" auvancea 1 s'm social ists want to carry firr democratiz ing ideas by force in'o the enemy countries and to rrp?a 1 to their brother socialists in A-stria and Germany to rhG in r?vo!t. overturn the monarch!? -rd rtiVish tnje soc-'-listic republics in the:r places. This movement h roocd to be gathering strength rapidly in Rus sia among the so'di" pr.d working men. The former a falling into line again to reneT vr campaign in the east and the vcrkinTrn are go ing back to their shops' to turn out shot i 1 shell and powder on the "reatest possible scale. From everv n-.nrtcr come assurance of support for the provisional government. having some ; . the past few ti'ERAL VON HISSING DEAD, SO REUTER'S IS REPORTS London, April 19. Router' s Am. stcrdnm correspondent says that ac- Tho Lenoir College baseball team cording to a Brussels despatch Gener- nas demonstrated its ability to en ter the ranks of the leaders in North Carolina. If we don't have a good roads el ection in the whole county, we can at least provide for more roads 1.. Hickory township. Indeed there are rumors of wars on the Atlantic coast. al von Bissintr. German cnvpmnr won. eral in Belgium, died Wednesday ev ening. During his rule in Beugium, Gen eral von Bissing has come into prom inence many times, notably in con nection with the execution of Miss Edith Cavell, the English nurse. Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days " r ft -iiKRist will refund money if PAZO . I'M KMT fails to cure any case of Itching, '.I'. lenliiiR or Protruding Piles io 6 to 14 dav. s ;. plication fives Euae and llest. EOc uummiu 13 El El a Capital and Surplus $300,000.00. Four Per Cent. Interest On Savings pounded Quarterly. Money to Loan at All Times. Hickory, N. C. Accounts. Com- rsisEBiaanGccGGEaacGEisEonnnaDODnnnsEEEisaai.l The Studebaker SIX As to Quality For sixty-five years the name Stude baker has stood for honorable deal ing with the public. Studebaker has put into its pro duct the most careful and experienced workmanship and the best materials that money can buy. These combined with time honored honesty are the things that make quality. In the Studebaker Six, quality is present in the material, deep in the vital parts where it is revealed by years of durability and by silent, smooth running efficiency. There is further evidence of Stu debaker quality which you can plain ly see. Compare its beautiful paint and varnish work with that of any car . on the market. Compare the quality of its genu- of ins leather upholstery with that cars costing $2000 or over. Note the high grade leather bound crimson carpet in the tonneau, the genuine, pin tumbler Yale ignition lock. Note the heavy gauge crown fen ders, the beautiful head lamp mount ings. These are outward evidences of quality, but the real quality in Stud ebaker, cars is that which meets em ergencies, the life giving "factor of safety" which is splendid insurance for you to buy. Come in and let us show you point by point the evidences of Studebaker quality. Let us convince you that to equu the Studebaker in quality you have to pay many hundreds of dollars moic. It is well worth your while to investigate. An Easy W ay to Provide a Income at Fifty That is what the Consolidated Trust Company will do for you if you follow our plan. Any person twenty five years oiu who can save five dollars a week can with our aid have an income of $1000.00 per year at the age of fifty. Come in andJet us talk it over with yn Our experience and Banking Facilities are at your service. Consolidated Trust Co. Successor to Abernethy Hardware Co. FOUR-CYLINDER MODELS Four Roadster $085 Four Touring Car $985 All prices f. o. b. Detroit SIX-CYLINDER MODELS Six Roadster , $1250 Six Touring Car $1250 All prices f. o. b. Detroit above the reg number. i ar ara All ul ft in WANTED! Fifteen able bodied single men between ages 18 and 45 years to enlist in Co. A. 1st N. C. infantry. Have just been authorized by War Department to enlist the other men will be used in the army. Now is the only time for you to get into yovr home company with home friends be fore you are later drafted into the service with strangers. Apply at once to CAPT. G. L. LYERLY at Shuford Hardware Co. before it is too This is an important moment m your life, de cide for yourself at once whether to join home friends now or later be drafted among strangers. late. j Hickory Banking & Trust Co. ( Catawba Trust Company. G. J. J. J. C. OFFICERS . E. Ransom, President. A. Lentz, 1st Vice-President. F. Abernethy, 2 Vice-President Walter Orebaugh, cashier. W. Cloninger, Ass't. Cashier. DIRECTORS G. E. Ransom J. A. Lentz J. F. Abernethy J. W. Orebaugh C. L. Hosteller D. M. CcComb W. L. Mitchell J. W. Shuford J. A. Cline Subscribe for the Daily Record FORD! NEW PRICES Effective Aug. 1, 1916. Chassis - - - - - $325 Roadster 345 Touring Car ----- 360 F. O. B. Detroit Hickory Garage Co. Elliott Building Phone 225 Your Party or Dinner will not be CDmplete without some of oar delicious There's none so good. 'Phone us your order. ice rream. GRIMES & MURPHY, Druggists Phone 300 "IN Business for Your Health Opposite Post Office The Hickory Daily Record $4.00 a Year in Advance I 8 ttttttntiiitttit? Hickory Manufacturing Company, Hickory, North Carolina. Manufacturer of SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MANTELS, MOULDINGS, LUMBER, ETC. FINE HARDWOOD WORK A SPECIALTY Send us your plana for estimates. Write for Catalogue and P"c t .ttttttttmttUtf: j -s J. D. Elliott. President and Treasure. J. Worth Elliott, L. M. Elliott. Secretary V.-Pr Elliott or all classes of construction. Estimates furnisnea cc ine or ganization anil best equipped contractors in tee &oum Incorporated. Company furnished cieerfoUf- HICKORY. N. O
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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April 19, 1917, edition 1
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