Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / June 9, 1917, edition 1 / Page 4
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HICKORY DAILY RECORD SAr. PAGE FOUR , Fair Treatment Time Tested-load Tested BLACK SAFETY TREAD TIRES - I twwmumminrttmttMinruttnm I a,SW!a ! WANTS 7 JSL VyqtU3 WfcJTJI flR3lfj I uacJt ana rronv. 15,.! I llP't IF fdH 1 I H UNDREDS of thousands of tire users from the Dioneer days of the automobile, acclaim Goodrich Tires the TESTED TIRES of America on the TEST of TIME. But the Road Test is the Goodrich Test for its Tires. Six fleets of Goodrich Test Cars in six widely different sections of our country, are daily putting the ROAD TEST to Goodrich Tires to bring out the BEST in tires for you. The Dixie Fleet; The Pacific Fleet, The, Mountain Fleet; The Prairie Fleet; The Lake Fleet; The Atlantic Fleet, ALL belabor Goodrich Tire against every kind of road and every kind of climatic handicap. Millions of miles the average of the combined fleets is 300,000 miles a week thus settle the durability and resilience of the Goodrich principle of the UNIT MOLD, unbroken cure, Goodrich has always main tained was BEST for fabric tires. Buy this TESTED certainty of a lasting tire, backed up by Goodrich Fair Treatment, in Goodrich Black Safety Treads. THE B. F. GOODRICH CO. Akron, Ohio Goodrich also mntes the famou9 Silvertown Cords; the tire which won the 1916 llacing Championship Also the Best Tubes Broun and Cray . Abernethy Hardware Co. Where You See This Sign Goodrich Tire, are Stocked FOR SALE FORD CAR IN GOOD condition. Address P. O. Box 409. tf FOR SALE -ORCHID FLOWER inj? sweet peas, 40c hundred. Phone FOR SALE SIX , CYLINDER Oakland touring car with electric lights and starter. Also Buick roadster. Abernethy Hardware Co. 5 12 tf OLD FALSE 'TEETH WANTED Don't matter if broken. I pay $2. to $15. per full set. Single and uartial plates in proportion. Sena bv parcel post and receive check by return mail. L. Mazer, 2007 S 5th St. Philadelphia, Pa. FOR RENT TWO ROOMS FOR light housekeeping, one room fur nished. Apply 1425 12th ave. 1 ISZZUI s W.R.Reaut,Ni.783-$150 At An DW RBDUSO Back and Front-La c FOR STOUT FIGURES Make larga Wp diPPf; bulky wai.t-Bn more """'rj . wkward bust-line smaller and hare the SOU Cor.e"' effort with fir.t wearing. Both mjSnna and low bust. $3-50 and 5 NUFORM Back and Front-Lace Fr SLENDER and AVERAGE FIGURES Ore Style, Comfort and perfectly fitting Gown Meat Economical Price. $l.oo to 3 WEINGARTEN BROS., Inc, New York LEADERSHIP IN CONGRESS oWS< est in the Lonr Rurt" Ivl AmXYuux Dealer for Them h FOR SALE Two nice new roller top desks with office chairs; two nice new flat top desks, with office chairs; three small office tables, also extra office chairs; one large table; one dictaphone with full equipment, new; one Underwood typewriter; some filing cabinets. Home Canner Company Office. 5-7-6t. LOST MONEY POUQH CON- taining $310.00 in currency. Lost Jjetween Union Square and Bud Link's on Saturday, June 9th. A liberal ueyard to anyone return ing the nioney. Guy Fry. 6 91 6t The Red Cross sewing room will be moved from the Hutton and Councin building to the room over the Buick Garage and will be ready for occu pancy by Monday morning. Collier's Weekly. There are three members of con gress who are of pre-eminent ability. They are Swager Sherley, a Democrat, who represents Louisville, Ky.; John J. Fitzgerald, a Democrat, who repre sents a district of Brooklyn, N. Y.. and Irvine L. Lenroot, a Republican, yho represents the 14 northern coun ties of Wisconsin. If congress were composed entirely of men of the stat ure of these three, this would be a wonderfully managed country. SALISBURY GARAGE IS GRANTED STATE CHARTER By the Associated Press. Raleigh, June 9. The Lewis Mo tor Company of Salisbury, capitalized at $50,000, of which $32,000 has been : paid in, was chartered today by the. secretary of state. The concern; proposes, to conduct a garage and ! deal in automobiles. Better Farming in the South Pushing Crops Up To Maximum Yields Best Way to Increase Food Crops of the South Now Is to Cultivate Thor oughly and Make Side Applications of Fertilizers. the sale Of our old customers reaped benefit of our marked-down last Saturday. More people were in our store on that day, than on any day since Christmas. ink Q1a o Qiiil uic uaic id IBM; uuii The public will have the chance to take advantage of our special sale prices v u jar ii I .'V I he Piano With a Per; L 4 Tii. iricomp.'iniblc sweetness of the Mchlin 'oiio; its rich and sonorous bass, r.n l -'is xlvety smoothness in every regitiU-.r, is due to the possession oi fhe only perfoc'.ly balanced piano cale. Broad as this claim may seem, it is susceptible of actual proof nd dcmonstratior.. Research, Scientific Investigation and Mechanical Skill on the part of Paul O. Mchlin and his sons have produced a scale in which the tensions and pressures of every string are uniform throughout. This all important feature is exclusive to Mchlin construction and is protected by broad basic patents. It is at once a chal lenge and an answer. C. M. HARDIN "FEAST OF TABERNACLES.' In a remaikallp article In the Con gregaticmalist, Boston, written by Lin coin Wirt ou the uplift movement of a Chautauqua week in a community, the Chautauqua is referred to very ap propriately in several different ways, as follows: "The encyclopedia of the common people," "The country folks' university," "The feast of the taber nacles." The article was also copied In part in the Literary Digest. Mr. Wirt says that it is only after swinging aroun-' the Chautauqua cir cle and looking into the faces of many thousands of thoughtful, prosperous America!) citizens that one can begin to realize that here has arisen almost In a night one of the greatest educa tional movements of history. By J. N. Harper, Director Farm Service Bureau, Atlanta, Georgia. Not a day pass es that the farmer is not reminded of the vital necessi ty of producing more food crops, and he is urged to put forth his best effort in doing his "bit," but the question Is "How?" It late is to now too increase GETTING OUT OF THE RUT. Going to a Chautauqua is like grab bing hold of your bootstraps and lift ing yourself out of the little old rut Into which every man works himself In the course of twelve months. Ev ery man ueeds to take a look out to the horizon at least once a year. The Chautauqua affords you the chance. I- h local A(;ent HICKORY, N C L. J No man can hope to successfully form and reform the public opinion, whit', is behind all government and progress in religion and social reform, without employing the resources of the Chautauqua platform. Dr. Frank W Gunsaul By the Associated Press. Butite, Monit., June 9. 'With at least 35 men dead and 16 others miss ing as the result of a fire which broke out in the Speculator copper mine last niffht, Butte faced its worst mine disaster today. The fire broke out in the lower lev el of the mine last night and it quickly filled with smoke and gas. There were 450 men on the night shift, and many escaped. SUBSKIBE FOR THE RECORD the acreage devoted to food crops, as practically all of the land has been planted, but large yields can be ob tained just the same, provided good cultivation is given and fertilizers are liberally applied as side applications. Potatoes have advanced 250 per cent, corn 100 per cent, hay 33 per cent, beef and pork 100 per cent, whereas the cost of fertilizer has ad vanced only 25 per cent. The wheat crop this year is short, and it has been estimated that 300, 000,000 buehelg of the 1917 wheat crop has been bought by European coun tries for future delivery. Unless the corn crop of the South is a "bumper," bread will bo a luxury instead of the staff of life. The farmer is being advised on ev ery hand to increase production, but he is limited in his credit and he finds it hard to obtain sufficient labor. The best way to increase the production of corn and other food crops, as well as cotton, is to cultivate thoroughly and often and make side applications of fertilizers. If the farmer hasn't the money to hire labor, under present con ditions, it will pay him to borrow money on his crop to pay sufficient labor to cultivate and fertilize his crops adequately. After each rain a dust mulch should be made with the cultivator. We need not expect a bountiful harvest unless the soil mois ture is conserved. As a general rule, the amount of corn produced is in di rect proportion to the amount of wa ter conserved in the soil by thorough cultivation. Hon. J. A. Wade, Commissioner of Agriculture of Alabama, in a circular letter issued to the farmers makes this statement, "It is evident that the acreage planted to corn in the State of Alabama has been increased 40 to 50 per cent and the farmers are to be congratulated for taking such a wise step. A large yield of corn is greatly needed and is probably the most profit- From Mow Until Si or success Opportunity 1 PfiafCJpl 11110 ffFP Hickory9 able crop that can be grown under the present food and feed emergency. A great part of the increased acreage is poor upland which will make a prof itable yield only by the use of com mercial fertilizer. It has always paid me to apply 200 or 300 pounds of fer tilizer around my corn the second or third plowing, or when the corn was between one and three feet high." The corn crop is the. bread of the South, and its yield should be increas-! ed to the limit. This fall and next winter the southern people should eat j more corn bread and less wheat ; bread. j Our farmers must not fail to pro-, duce all the hay possible, and it will pay to fertilize a patch of sorghum j and peas with a fertilizer containing from 10 to 12 per cent pnospnoric apia and 1 to 2 per cent nitrogen. Cotton is not generally recognized as a food crop, but the country must not overlook the fact that an acre of cotton that will produce a bale will yield almost as great a food and feed value in the seed as the same land planted to corn. Therefore, an in creased yield in that crop means in creased food and feed products. Fertilizers are used for the plant food they contain, and it will be im possible to produce profitable yields without ample plant food. Just what fertilizer to apply and how much to use as a side application will depend on the soil type, the crop planted, and the kind and amount of fertilizer used at the time the land was prepared. On Piedmont soils and clay soils we would recommend from 200 to 300 pounds of fertilizer for cotton and corn .analyzing 6 to 8 per cent phos phoric acid and 2 to 4 per cent nitro gen. For field crops in the coastal plain, we would recommend from 300 to 400 pounds of a fertilizer analyzing from 4 to 7 per cent phosphoric acid and from 4 to 6 per cent nitrogen. This fertilizer should be applied to corn when it is from knee to waist ' DnionvpRc ixr n?-i vv high and to cotton at the time the;. 1 ivibULKb ,,Lk 'iA V 1 first squares are forming. j By the Associated Press. For the silt loams in Alabama, Lou- j Amsterdam (Correspondence of the lima Is Your North Carolina 7 Subscribe for the Hickory Daily Record MORE LOANS MADE 10 IMKC1 ALUES'm I I ( IS !' 11 I By IN- A. Lor:'- i IT1? h.-ivs Two been A; American h sttanttr ,1 nil June Wt ihtir By the Associated Tress. Washing-ton, June 9. Loans of $3,000.000 to Serbia and $75,000,000 to Great Britain was made by the treasury department today. was sunk. TORNADO By the .-.: ' Mt-irY-! reports r : v; " i ' Tcnri.. 14 nv 1 WO I'.'! -' V.v: ed ('.."Si over .. .,T,.r,J:nir to :.,v fpiii: Ketjrviiit "f J'' i :;r..l live huus , , .,.;.: that pass- ommend for cotton or corn 100 to 200 pounds of a fertilizer analyzing 12 per ers now hoM nearly 3,000,000 prison cent available phosphoric acid and 2y2 . ers of war acc0rdinjf to official H per cent nitrogen. This is to be ap- - . ' plied to the corn when about knee high ures published m German n.?vspa and to the cotton when squares begin j pers. forming. Under most favorable con-! ' . n--,-. ditions a pound of fertilizer means! Germany has 1,GP0,,11 prisoners; three pounds of seed cotton. From Austria-IIxmitrary 1,092,955; Bvlaa- tnis we can seetnat i.uu invested i r;a 67,582, and Turkey 23,903, a to- ;;r. & MJ1 tal of 2,874,271 prisoners, of whom doe commodity is brought into existence, j '-u are oir;cers. ITALIAN V Mi ! r Bv the V-'.is war r cue-' t in clos ILS ASS'V: .Ah 'plies V. : ; ' . i i ;n?r ine i nihieill -' ry thins: m iml ships. SUN .' ' Hk' Italian wur confr V.:....: oiliciais They ..,! s-att-3 w.u v. 3"P- MIKETHE MESSENGER. MIKE FINDS TROUBLE EVERYWHERE ' fen Vif V. mm FROM FffiSCo To JWh . OAK1AND HA yTWA '. UaUE MP A toTW GooD )N I'M IN FINE SHftf? , FER TH' f?E3T OF f Of . 1 7. W4 wnzzL 5AY Mf?. COHDucToR.- . T VEGIH To LOOK THOUGH I LOST ME CQPetiTifV-5! mim f f. tSr-JTs- Mill" 3 ? I x$ mill ii . i iiiv i I , i r s . l fc rrr i r i j -s mm niT TQ N PRO PUCE YER. Ticket oq vll. POT YoU OFF THE. 5ToP FBK. P II i'm up against rr ffo fair -Three Thouhd . , ... - -. - ... j gotta walk avRy foot orthvvay! W ill I e 911
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 9, 1917, edition 1
4
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