Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / May 1, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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, t '.M HICKORY DAILY RECORD TUESDAY V PAGE TWO Hickory Daily Record TELEPHONE 167 Everv livwiinir hxcevt Sunday. Ono thousand American surpron" will go to the war fronts to Ef fllVAf A!I7 Iritish and French surpcons m ao xx t iaiClIICl lII tUH J -. tVirt wounded. That lSig niii'if'" . , i ' m. ono form of aid that can be rusneu to anw tVl front nt onco. iMiiifflM S. H. J. C. a. m f.-:. Editor Mill"- r Manager 1 ' Adv. MKT. ;uuvr SuMcribi-M 'desiring the address of U,:.ir paper changed, will J ,n their communication both OU ami MAY addresses- T msure efficient delivery, com Mlitia U be made io wi JcriPtum leaitiuent proinptl. I uucribvrs huuIJ call 107 lejran complaints Sub City SUHSCUirTKlN KATES One ye.-.r Six months ... Three months One Mnilh .. One week $1.00 2.00 1.00 .40 .10 PUHUCATION OFFICE: J102 ELEVENTH AVENUE fiitt-rpd as second class matter Sep tember 11, 1015, at the postoffice at Hickory, N. C under the act of March 8, 1S70. ASSOCIATED l'KESS KKI'OKTS TI ESUAY, MAY 1. 1!U7 NO KEASON I OU D1CTATOH VfcL m Hi i K p n toca-i mitiTTnuiiiB ii 8 sgi tj t imiimii II 111 Ml Mills Kitchin, son of Leader Kitch- . ..,.! ni o nrivnte in H .. . i the United States army, thercny set- tin" a irood example to- younpr men m whose fathers arc in hijrh places. feel compelled 3 Criticise when you to do so, but always criticise with a view to being helpful. Nobody winds that sort. vgk Hickory Lodge, 1tNo.206,I.0.0.F. lirotner Odd Fellows invited. Meets every Tuesday night, at 7:30 Degree work every meeting. J. F. JOY, Secretary. !i!Ll!l!ffil!iiIlQJIM Wish we could induce good old Pa pa Joffre to visit Hickory for the op ening of the white way. Cermany and the Involution Wlii!.. thvr is no doubt that the food situation in this country is quite serious., there is much doubt as to the advisability of appointing .i food dictator fur the United States, and we do not believe t lie government will lind this necessary. However, Americans will submit to that if it is necessary to win the war. The feeding problem is different in the United States from what it is in Germany and England. Germany formerly produced about SO per cent of its supplies and England less than (H) per cent, if memory is correct. The authorities in Germany believed that by controlling the price of food, they could niit the demand; bii't in this they failed. The law was violated everywhere, even in a country where tho population is taught that the state comes iirst in everything. The Berlin govern-j tried to t'tx prices. In England, on the other hand, the government has offered a stimulus to crop production. Farmers are guar anteed certain pri.es for their grain for a term of years; and they- are given every encouragement to pro duce food crops. A farmer, like any other man, will respond to the call of patriotism with more heartiness if a dollar mark is tagged on' it than if he knows he cannot make a profit if he produces much or little. That is human nature, and that is what the English have figured on. England will come nearer feeding herself this year than last or the year before. Germany probably will produce less. The people of the United States would do better to submit to high price. and an abundance rather than high prices and not enough. The producers of food crops should have inducements to plant; those induce ments are afforded by the great de mand that cveryobdy believes wil obtain this year and for several years after tho war ends. In the south the production of food supplies has been stimulated and there is a prospect, according to persons who have traveled much, that farmers will grow their own sup plies and have some to sell. The:; may not do this, but they will pro duce more than ever before. With the whole country aroused to tho crisis that is confronting the world, there is reason for the hope that the United States will pro duce enough food stuffs for home consumption and to spare tho allies. Springfield Republican. From the outset it was clear that tho revolution in Russia would eith er be a great help to Germany or a .f ni,ilvirr;issment. Wnicn l- vv.iu'd nrove was not so clear, and at i present it seems to be both. On the one hand, the demoralization which it has caused has put before the ag gressive elements in Germany the temptation to play for even bigger ..-..!...., Hnlv hnlil on. thoV SaV. let f.wj - ' 3 England be wasted by submarine war- m fare, and smash Russia while it is weak. Then Germany can carrj out virtually the full pan-German pro- m gram and assure its predominance in j Europe. , 1 On the other hand not only has g tho revolution started sympathetic g vibrations in Germany which are agi- g tating to royalty and bureaucracy, g but it has seemed to offer a chance g for peace which must appeal inten- g sely to the great multitude pf Ger- g mans who are neither radicals nor an- g iuv:it iunists but plain people wun a I Hickory Lodge No. 34 n A. V. & A. M. 1 Regular communication Mon day night, April z, r.6U. Brethren cordially invited to be present. J. W. SllUFORD, W. M. 8 D. T. APPLEGATE, Secy. Piedmont Council .No. 43, Ji, o. U.A. M. Meets every Nonday evening at 7:30 T. M. All visiting brothers cordially invited. J. II. SIGMON, Councilor W. I. Caldwell, Rec. Sec l!!;!i!i:ffil!CiiIlI!!l!llllli!n:M :.,uiliuiim;iii Catawba Lodge No. 54 K. of P. Meets every Thursday night. Visiting brethren invited. profound craving for peace. The sit- g HUGH D'ANNA, C. C. g uation is enigmatic, yet it is a fair y R. L. HEFNER, K. R. and S. nninuiiB&'ii'J Professional Cards nference that Germany stands at the (rossroails hesitating which course to take. As usual, the chancellor has xun:tn::::u:n::::::::u:r::n:n::::::::: avoided committing himself. He is certainly working for peace, and on terms obnoxious to the pan-Germans, 3 but this far he has kept a free hand, if his efforts fail, so resourceful a pol itician can easily shift to the other camp as he did in the matter of un- $ restricted U-boat warfare. K it is possioie now ever mat ine Santwiawaatm-xaasiaaaswttftmom 1 growing uemanu ior a sincere oner nr peace may compel tne cnanceiior to take sides. There is interest m the report from Amsterdam that at the next meeting of the Reichstag he is to make a more t -:p-icit statement on over bhufciT'.'s Dm,? StOi' peace tonus. inou,;n muirect, tne report is made plausible by the con fidential statement of terms lately made to neutral newspaper corres pondents and still more by the boldness with which Vorwaerts, now the organ of the governemnt or Scheulmann wing of the DRINK npDnnacaaHaHHBHBaoHnBHaiiBBBiig YUU a is IN a m B B a gi 1 n a 0 E3 B3 13 a a Dont Have to Have Much be Rich. Riches are only relative. The poorest man in the world is the fellow w-h keep up with the procession when he doesn't e . way the procession is headed. The richest man is the fellow with a content just a little more than he is spending. You can be rich. Money to '-'ln? to Franklin said: "Frugality is dustry a good estate." a fair fortune fits' Of It's just a question of your starting that SAVINGS ACCOUNT with FIRST BANK N.C, ' T ?- Com- OTTLES Capita! and Surplus $3P'000.00. h Four Per Cent. Interest On Savings Acc -j pounded Quarterly. Money to Loan at All Times. Dr. W. B. Ramsay fears Hickory, TS. C. AT WASHINGTON'S TOMR Tho flags of Great Britain, France and the United Staites flew over the tomb of Washington at Mount Vernon Sunday. Washington fought as gallant a fight for liberty as the English and French are fighting to day; then he was pitted against the reactionaries under George III; to day his people have joined with the former foe in a contest against a frovernment that is every whit as party, has been demanding a public pledge that Germany is not seeking annexation or indemnities. If Dr. von Bethmann-IIollweg should llat footedly take that ground it would mean a tremendous crisis in Germany, and apprehension that he is being driven to that ground is probably the cause of the fresh attacks of his opponents, the aim is to force him out of office before he commits the em pire to a pacifist program which would ruin the hopes of the men and the parties who caused the war and hav conducted it with patriotic en ergy for the aggrandizement of Germany. But their fears may be as unfounded as in the case of the f T t a . ; j. ? . 1 m 1 . . . u-uoais; it is auucuit to imagine the chancellor uttering words be swallowed again with the ut most ease. The Russian negotiations, for ex ample, present to the present time an ambiguous face. They may equally well be taken as a sincere effort for a general peace on fair terms or for an effort to exploit the revolution by intrigue while baiting the German liberals along with fair pledges of deferrad reform.!. Till tho German government with the utmost explicitness states its peace terms it must inevitably be suspect ed of the worse motive, and this fact must be comintr home to t.he German people, who know less than the neutral newspaper men as to H what the government is driving at. n Nor should it be overlooked that for tl a great part of the German people the main reason for the war ceased abruptly with the coup d'etat. They know, because it has been dinned in to them, that the czar caused the war by treacherously mobilizing' a gainsl Cermany; is pilainly set down in the German "white book," therefore it must be so. But the czar is no more, and in his stead reigns the Russian democracy, which wants neither conquest nor indem nities, and is ever ready to let Poland go free. What, then, is the war about? German, logic is slow, and when the premieses are supplied from offteial sources it leads to wonderful Drs. Hicks & Hicks DENTISTS socialist office Phone 191. ftei!race 118-L. O&ce :n M&sonic Building. THE HICKORY HARNESS CO, Manufacturer cf all Lauds of I!. A K NESS. BRIDLES SADDLES AND STRAP WORK. Repairing a Specialty. Hickory, N. C THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP F. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor First-Class Work Guaranteed Phone 106, Work Delivered 1032 14th street Hickory. N. G Next to Firpt Buiidin & Loan office. Dr. R. P. WILSON Veterinary Surgeon Will answer calls day or night. Office phone 22G. Resident phone 301-J. QUICK SERVICE; SHORT NOTICE We can furnish FLORAL DESIGNS. Aaants for Var. Lindly Company. Cut Flow ers any iim i WUITNEtt kk JSAKT1N Dr. Glenn G. Scott DENTIST i Successor to Dr. Ia Wood) OFFICE OVER BUSY BEE CAFE AND KENNEDY ELECTRIC CO ola Bottling Co. Hickory, N. C. O O O Uses! mi V 1 v r r- PI 1 1 m 4, m yks P..1 t-i 1 tint a mini The Sold Everywhere Jitney Service. IIlCKORy CONOVER AND NEW- TO N Schedule Leave Hickory 8:20 .a. m. Leave Hickory 10:20 a. m. Leave Hickory 2:30 p. m. Leave Hickory 4:30 p. m. Leave Hickory 8:30 p. m. Leave Newton 7:20 a. m. Leave Newton 9:20 a. m. Leave Newton 1:30 p. m Leave Newton . 3:30 p. m. Leave Newton 7:30 p. in. Newton to Conover 10c Newton to Hickory 35c Hickory to Conover 25i Hickory to Newton 35c Our Motto: Good Service. CAROLINA MOTOR CO o o o o o Wherever You Need a General Tonfc Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the weilknowri tonic properties of QUININE r.A TD r A XT Tf orfc -v,i T i?pr ririvpe. out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and j of the county of Catawba, this is to Builds uo the Whole Svstem. 50 cents, notify all persons being indebted to 1 1 i 1 j 1 j j a ii 1 tne estate to maiie inwiieuiate settle AFMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE North Carolina, Catawba County. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of Harvey Dixon, late Train Schedules. SOUTHERN Westbound No 15 Ar Hickory 7:40 a. m. No. 11 Ar Hickory 11:20 a. m. No. 21 Ar. Hickory 4:32 p. m. No. 35 Ar. Hickory 11:32 p. m. Eastbound No. 3G Ar. Hickory 9:05 a. it,. No. 22 Ar. Hickory 12:00 noon. No. 12 ar. Hickory 5:32 p. m. No. 16 Ar. Hickory 6:50 p. m. C. AND N.-W No. conclusions. But in the nrpont -.o reactionary as the government that the premises lead straight to the con- oppressed tne colonies. The Amcri- l'Js. " u oermany, as its peo- can Revolution probably was as whole- y . vc uvvn L.iU' 1S n?nwng a de btates, and liberals like Balfour and excuse for not reciprocating the frank democrats like Viviani can well af- declaration of free Russia. It is ford to uncover their heads at the ?oubtful if after three years of the tomb of tho first fafW nf A "1U'" c"ees ot war the Ger cracy. " terrible demo- man people a3 a whole is willing to , continue it as a war of conquest. DR. G. E. FLOWERS Having enjoyed a large coun try practive for 32 years, an now located in Hickory and so licit a share of the general prac tice. Office at 8th avenue and 15th street. Children's diseases a specialty. There may bp a few men in West Hickory and Longview who are op posed to giving the'r own children' ATTENTION, MOTHERS ffiiiiiii;i;;;.iiii;!i!i;!i;i;i!iiii:;i,;!iH; The Mothers-Teachers Association i more advantages, but they should not 1 noM their regular monthly meet- g stand in the light of other people's at tne South building Wednes- 1 children. It would he better to move evening at 3 .10. The meeting 1 out of tho community than to do thnt, wi!1 be addressed by Mrs. Longaker of 1 though it must be borne in mind.thut Renoir College. Subject, "Vac- 1 a community that is not constantly t,inatin" going forward as these towns desire MTiS- W" A- RUDASILL, g to do is hard to find. Moving day Secretary, j would come very often, unless nil ilm ' m opponents would found a town of SUDS,lir'E FOR THE RECORD ffllllffllilllllHIM their own. Make Longview West Hickory go. CARL D. MOOR Attorney-at-Law Office over Moretz-White- g ner Clothing Co. M Hickory, N. C. Southbound Ar. Hickory 9:00 a. m. No. 9 Ar. Hickory 2:35 p. m. Northbound No. 10 Ar. Hickory 11:40 a. m. No. 6 Ar. Hickory 4:45 p. m. ment with the undersigned adminis trator, and all persons who hold claims against the estate will pre sent the same to the undersigned ad ministrator, on or before the 25th day of April 1918, properly verified, and in case they fail to present the v'tme properly verified on; or before the said date, then this notice will bfe pleaded in bar to their recovery. This the 25th day of April, 1917 NELSON WADE, Administrator D. L. RUSSELL, Atty. 4 25 6t ggrs IP a fill I-IIClp1 ckS Good Service You Will Like The Consol idated Trusi Compaq v NO MATTER How large or ness mav be we have you with us. small your busi will be glad to ALLOW US To demonstrate our take care of your wants: a bility to Capital $80,000.00, Subscribe for the Daily Record NEW PRICES Effective Aug. 1, 1916. Chassis ----- $325 Roadster - 345 Touring Car ----- 360 F. O. B. Detroit ry Garage o. Phone 225 Elliott Building 25c, Positively. Relieves; Colds-Croup, Pneumonia 50C, $1.00 TDRUGGi$TS Your Party or Dinner and '11(111 iiiiii Representative Webb came ar- i ound handsomely in support of the i administration in its fight for hu- 1 manity and we are as reauy a3 any- S body to pive him credit for it. Mr. P Webb yet has a chance to make him- 1 self strong with his constituents, and he seems to h on Vi fio-Trf m E. L Shuford, Jr. Veterinarian. After April 15 will be locat- I d at Abernethy's Stablei. il '992 'aaquinu euoqj 1 J. W. Hollingsworth I LAWYER Office Hollingsworth Clothing Co. NEWTON, N. C. !ID!llllllilK GET READY" April 2 cleW eek 8th to May 5th Buy a "CROWN" Abernethy Hardware Co. Hickory, N. C. will not be complete without some of ojr There's none so good. 'Phone us your order. ice cream. Phone 300 MURPHY, Druggists te Post umcc Oppc "IN Business for Your Health" 4 The Hickorv Daily Reco fR4.no a Ypar in Advance .a rd ; milt! ilZZUZi riiCKory manuracturin .4TTIi, t5 1 Hickory, North Carolina- Manufacturer of . r SASH, DOORS. BLINDS, MANTUA MOULDINGS, LUMBER, ETC. Send us your plans for estimates. Write for J. D. Elliott. President and Treasure. J- Worm Li. M. Elliott. Becretaxjr Elliott, V,P- Eli iott Building Compay Incorporated. ckeerfoW For all classes of construction. Estimates JVtke So Fine or ganization and best equipped contractors HICKORY. N . C-
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 1, 1917, edition 1
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