Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / July 26, 1917, edition 1 / Page 4
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THURSDAY EVEN(fi HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE FOOT mmm mmm mm mmmmm m mi m mhhmmMmmmmBHm' mnmtimnmanammmnmmmam RECORD WANTS OLD falsi: thktjii WANTED Don't matter if broken. I pay $2 to $l.r. er sot. Send by parcel post a nl receive check by return anail. L. Mazer, 1IU07, S. 5th St., I'hilaJclphia, I'a. 7 0 tf FOK HUNT 8 KOOM HOUSE with lare garden, '2013 10th av enue. Also store house, desira bly located within two hundred yard of four large manufacturing plants. Henry Leonard. G 15 tf rK KENT -2 large air rooms. Lights and water. Apply Record ollico. C 23 tf FOU KENT SIX-UOOM UKICK- hou.se, two acre lot, good orchard, on Highland avenue, half mile from square. Write or phone John A. Isenhowir, Newton. G 27 tf HAROAINS IN CANNING OUTFITS Wo have fifteen demonstration Homo Canners, of different capac ities at half price. Home Can ner Mfg. Co. 7 7 tf FOR SALE- FIVE -PASSENGER Hup tourning car with electric starter and lights. Abernethy Hardware Company. 7 7 tf WANTED AMI1ITIOUS YOUNG married men to learn the moulder's trade. Will pay 15 cents hour while learning. Southern Desk Company. 7 15 tf WE WANT YOUR SURPLUS To matoes, beans and cabbage. Phone l or 225 for prices and this for delivery. Catawba Packing Co. 7 17 tf If you have cow trouble call W. C. Shell, phone 181. He will exchange, buy or sell. Good milk cows a spec ialty. 7 17 tf FOR SALE CHALMERS, 6 CYL inder, six passenger automobile. Good condition, new tires. Apply J. C. Shuford. 7 23 Gt FOR SALE SECOND Handed Re frigerator for $5.. Phono 279 L. 7 23 3t FOR SALE A PONY AND I1UGGY Can bo seen at Ren. S. D. Mc- Abe's at Valdese. Arminta Deal. 7 3 Ct .MISPLACEID MAN'S DARK grey Palm Beach suit and one ark blue poplin skirt. Any in formation concerning these will be appreciated. J. A. Bowle3. 7 25 tf t lv.. I . 7TT M 1 t j . i fi ( PlD YuH f?irVo n-u'5 loo tfle w x burrose f no-i jubryvr WELL IT TATes K OH i I'M so CtLd . '- f- Jl rco a MPccno--jro I Fof? m To0 Vttf WMfME L Too To TASTE WHAT'S To MF LKP V ) You EE THE 8)BY'S pf? G-AWDS S)KE ) O A IT WUZ 0 0 " " l!! 2 5 J V 2ToTW6 0f?US. To cMSEOoyvnM IN THIS BoTTtE irtP J JJL'K ) MEDICINE AND TUT f Vt Z. buy ( ? ) (HG TM0M? J srofrAND I M05T To W 1 1 TELL ME WHAT IT IS j IH' , IODINE BOTTLE ? ' T J XIr m J I StYnP D0 0 o GIVE THE BABY v ,H vcR STEAD J v SYftuP.' J ( 4Re o Mt'CK AUK WiD TH' STbAJACH ) V- a SYRUP 0 ( HI MEPICiNEj rN YR 7 JT Z I CAN HARDLY TELL J i POMP - I'M Too J r) LL f?i&HTjl 0 A3 V A T ATriEM wy YouN& To r ' Army Shoes Munson Last Steamer Trunks Suit Cases and Bags Yoder-Clark Clothing "The Men's Store" FOR SALE GOOD Ill-acre farm ten miles from Hickory on Lincoln ton road. In high state of culti vation. Snap for right party. Apply to C. T. Morrison, Hickory, N. C. G 20 3t FOR SALE HORSE AND WAGON in gooil condition. Julius Butler, West Hickory. 7 24 2t Tues Sat iWlfKT WATf'TIKS JUST 1Iprivri isupplv of Ingersoll wrist waun for the soldiers. 7 26 It A. J. Essex. HIGHEST RICES PAID FOR scrap iron, rags, brass, copper, rubber, ; bones, hides and tallow. L. M. f Davidson, next to Henkel Craig I Stables. Hickory, N. C. 7 2G w wks NOTICE Sealed bids will be received at the ofl'jce of the city manager until 8 p. m. August 3rd for approximately 350 school desks of different sizes, and ."00 opera chairs. The city re serves the right to reject any and all bids. JOHN W. BALLEW, 8 25 2t City Manager Train Schedules. SOUTHERN Westbound No. 15 Ar Hickory 7:40 a. m. No. 11 Ar Hickory 11:20 a. m. No 21 Ar. Hickory 455 p. m. N. 35 Ar. Hickory 11:32 p. m. Eastbound No. 36 Ar. Hickory 9:05 a. m. No. 22 Ar Hickory 11:20 a. m. No. 12 ar. Hickory 5:32 p. m. No. 16 Ar. Hickory 6:50 p. m. C. AND N.-W Southbound No. 9 Ar. Hickory 2:35 p. m. Northbound No. 10 Ar. Hickory 11:40 a. m. Jitney Service. HICKORY 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." raj Leave Newton .. 3:30 p. m. Leave Newton 7:30 p. m. Newton to Conover 15c Newton to Hickory 45c Hickory to Conover 30c Hickory to Newton 45c Our Motto: Good Service. R. W. Cline Newton, N. C. Hickory Daily Record MIKETHE MESSENGE Co. NOTICE OF SALE OF PROPERTY FOR CITY TAXES By virtue of authority vested in mo by the city charter and by order of the Mayor and City council, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, in front of the City Hall in Hickory, N. C, on the 22nd day of August, 1917, at 12 o'clock, noon, the following real estate, for delinquent taxes due thereon for the year 19 1G. Persons desiring to pay their taxes before day of sale can call at the City Office and by paying the amount due and 20c for advertising which is added in the amount and get their receipt. White Bolick, Wu L., I home . .$12.2 Click, J. F., 1 home 13.07 Dietz, Oliver C, 1 house 14.40 Fisher, J. K., 1 home.. H-24 Flowers, II. W., 1 home, 13.G7 Hahn. Geo. L., 1 lot 10.25 Hamrick, Emma C. Admr., 1 house , 5.12 Huffman, Mrs. D. C, 1 home 7.76 Isenhour, D. D, 1 house 12.24 Link, J Frank, 1 lot 2.17 Martin, D Butler, 1 home 18.14 Miller, Blooming W., 1 house rrd lot, balance 17.98 Morrow, W. C, 1 house 4.14 Peterson, J F, 1 home, bal 4.9G Prevost, Chas H 1 house 21.08 Robt. Ransom, Jones land 1 stable and 3 vacant lots, bal 223.30 Reid, Buchanan and Penny, 1 lot 8.07 Rowe, Peter A 1 lot 10.30 Setzer, Alonzo F, 1 house, bal 4.86 Shell, Robert B, 19 acres 29.08 Sigmon, Ardy O, 1 home 8.20 Smith, Jno W, 1 house, bal 14.71 Warlick, Fred M., 1 lot bal 7.85 Warren, Mrs. Laura, 1 lot 1.31 Whit?, Edward P 1 lot 8.07 White, Wm A, 1 house 19.S3 Whitener, C L 1 home 24.22 Prevost R L 1 house and 5 lots 16.75 Boyd, Mrs Minta B 1 home and lot 17.75 Gardner, R F, 1 house and 11 acres 17.25 Colored Abernethy, Jamies, 1 home 9.84 Adams, James, 1 lot and 3 houses , 17.00 Alexander, Heywood, 1 house 7.20 Archer, Lula 1 house 6.10 Arthur, Willie T 1 house 9.18 Barber, William, 1 lot and 1 house, balance 2.12 Bell, Geo W'm, 1 house 10.67 Blackburn, Arthur, 1 house 9.67 Bost, Henry, 1 home 4.14 Bost, Lou, 1 house 3.21 Bost, R C, 1 home and 1 lot 9.84 Buggs, Robt J 1 home 6.87 Burton, Adolphus, 1 house and 1 lot 11.24 Cherry, Wfm, 1 home 9.70 Clark, Geo W, 1 house 5.56 Davidson, John 1 house , 9.27 FiiiPPiv Will. 1 Viniiso . 9.35 Ford, Alice, 1 hom.3 2.18 Forney, William, 1 home and 2 lots 6.21 Gaither, Phillip G, 1 home 4.13 Glassby, James, 1 house 8.30 Goodson, Sam, 1 home 3.01 Grier, Will, 1 house 7.90 Hamrick, Frank, 1 lot 1.20 Harris, Munroe 1 house 8.07 Hemphill, Mary, 1 house 4.13 Hoke, Joe, 1 home 4.13 Holland, Milas W, 1 home, bal 6.46. Hoover, David, 1 house and 1-2 acre 4.39 Hoover, Henry, 1 house 9.28 Hoover, Henry W, 1 house 3.16 IN GERMAN 1 qp births 1 On lime i By the Associated Press. Amsterdam, Netherlands, July 26. 'Apart from the inroads made upon Germany's male population by the war, the check to the neutral renew al of her people is making itself very sharply felt. The provisional birth statistics for 1916 show very clear ly what a shrinkage will be evident in the German army levies for these years of war, assuming that the em peror, or at least his military system, have not disappeared from the Ger man empire before the time for their calling up comes round. The official statistics which "relate to German towns of 15,000 and more inhabitants, show that the number of infants born alive in such towns decreased by 131,068 in 1915 as com pared with 1914, and that in 1916 they agin declined by 114,557, mak ing a total decrease between the be ginning of 1915 and the end of 1916 of 245,625, or 39.5 per cent of the number of living births recorded in the year 1914. This percentage al most entirely accords with the de crease percentage in the absolute number of such births recorded in the 26 largest German cities, which are separately tabulated. It is clear that such a decline in the number of births can by no means be counterbalanced by the sim ultaneous decrease shown in the mor tality rate of infants under one year old, although this is relatively some what greater than the shrinkage shown in the number of births. The mortality rate of infants under one year old, measured by comparison with the number of births, has con tinually declined since the year 1914. In the 26 largest German cities the rate of such infants mortality, as compared with births, fell from 15.3 in the year 1914 to 13J m 191b, while in all German towns of 15,000 the more inhabitants it declined in the same period from 15.5 to 13.3. As the German Press emphasizes with legitimate satisfaction, the rate of infant mortality in the year 1916 was lower even than in the year 1912, when it stood at 14.1, hitherto a record low rate. Such a comparative mortality decrease, how ever, can ntuarall y have but the very slightest effect on the shrinkage in the actual number of births in Ger many in the past two years of war, and the next population satistics of the country must show evidences of the check which war has imposed. n nenever 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 coutains the wellknowu tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cent WANTED BOY 16 or 17 Years Old Apply Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. Hickory Overall Co. 7 26 2t WANTED (Position to do clerical and stenographic work. Refer ences furnished. Position, care Record. 7 26 3t F M and W Huffman, Amanda, 1 house and lot 3.14 Hull, Minnie, 1 home 5.14 Jackson, Thos, 1 home, bal. 6.18 Johnson, Lizzie, 1 home and 1 lot 3.48 Jones, James, 1 hom.3 3.20 Killian, Pink, 1 house 6.82 Knox, Victor, 1 home 8.45 Leach, Isaac, 1 house, bal 3.07 Lutz, John T, 1 home 11.25 Mackey, Robt, 1 house 9.61 McClain, Katie, 1 house, bal .95 Morrison, Jas. Rufus, 1 house 9.76 Morison, Omer, 1 home 8.79 Morrison, Sid Estate, 1 house 2.16 Patterson, Toney, 1 home, bal 3.28 Peterson, Henry, 1 house, bal 6.53 Reinhardt, Albert, 1 home, 1 house, 1 lot 14.85 Reinhardt, Ed, 1 house, 1 3-4 acres ; 3.16 Rowe, Dora, 1 house 3.96 Scott, Ivey 1 house 7.54 Smith, Frank, 1 home 3.26 Smith, Sid, 1 house, balance 6.68 Tillery, R L, 1 home 9.67 Ward, Fannie, 1 house 1.20 )Williams, James, 1 house and lot 4.20 Alexander, Jas M, 1 home 22.28 D T Bost, Charlie, 1 home 8.41 D T Brower, G M, 1 lot 2.25 D T Howard, Allen, 1 lot 1.76 D T Smyre, John, 1 store lot 20.95 D T Wilson, Willie Estate, 1 house , 5.60 D T Setzer, Walter, 1 lot 8.33 This July 23, 1917. JOHN W. BALLEW, City Manager. HE GETS THE SCARE OF HIS YOUNG LIFE Ik Place Phone HOW SERVIA WAS LOOTED Springfield Republican. Servia, in a formal note made public at the state department at Washington, charges Austria and Bulgaria with an illegal economic exploitation of occupied provinces and gives notice that "she reserves the right of claiming, at the time of the peace negotiations, an in demnity corresponding to the dam age inuicted both on the Servian state and its subjects, by these flagrant violations of public inter national law." The note giving the first official glimpse behind the scenes in occu pied Servia claims, that over 100, 000,000 crowns have been illegally exorted, as well as 6,000,000 crowns in the form of forced subscriptions to the Austrian war loans and the Austrian and Bulgarian Red Cross. The Servian trade is stated to have been ruined by the abolition of the Servian moratorium for the purpose of allowing enemy merchants to col lect immediately, with 6 per cent in terest, debts estimated at 20,000 000 crowns. Failure to pay is stat ed to be penalized by sale of proper ty at ridiculous auction figures, which allows the invadersVto make immensely profitable purchases of large stocks of goods. In adition many shops have been pillaged and trade has fallen off at least one half. "Bu such arbitrary measures to wards our merchants and by means of this legalized pillage, the military authorities have attepted to ruin our trade," the note says. "Austrian and German firms will take the places of the ruined Servians and will so bring about the denationaliza tion of Servian commerce." All private houses abandoned by their owners, including the royal pal aces, are stated to have been plun dered under the theory that they were "unowned property," because the owner was absent. The national and the ethnographical museums are reported to have been completely ransacked by the Austrians, the national library, the university of Nish, and the library of the school of theology at Prizzen by the Bul garians. Books, manuscripts and art works were stated to have keen car ried away as booty. "The Bulgarians," it is stated, "have plundered to an extent and with effrontery unexampled in mod ern warfare. Austria also has plac ed the assessment of all taxation in the hands of a military committee. In the provinces occupied by Bulga ria, the whole Servian taxation sys tem has been swept away. "Similarly the Austrian authorities have ordained that Servian money shall be accepted at 50 per cent of its normal value. Servian money was taken by force from private j "H tPD "T is when you get your work done if sent to us. Look over your stock and see if you do not need something in the printing line. Our facilities are not excelled in this section, and we can always give you as good a price as is consistent with good work. We are equipped to handle anything in the printing line. Special ruling of all kinds. The House that has Served You for Over 12 Years Your Order uay mini 167 Hickory, N. C. persons and Austrian money given in exchange at a rate less than half its value. The Austrians collected our banknotes at a very low price with the intention of changing them abroad at a higher rate." GREAT ACTIVITY IN U. S. TRAINING CAMP American Training Camp in France, July 25. iBy the Associat ed Press There was greater ac tivity in the training camp today than any time since American troops reached France, actual intensive work having begun. There is no disposition on the part of the Amer ican commanders to belite the am ount of work necessary to bring their men up to the highest hopes of early efficiency. Trenches were being dug today in the way of practice with an en'thu siams almost equal to that with which soldiers dig themselves in under ac tual artillery fire. These trenches were of full depth and were dupli cates of certain sections of the front line, consisting of front, or five trenches and reserve trenches, con necting them. The Americans were digging today just as if they hoped soon to be fighting. CHICHESTER 8 PILLS wPV . T,!E DIAMOND BUAKlTr v i,tuu-l Am jourUniRtitfor t lil-clir-U-r's IMoDtoad Braad " "i ta ana uoia tnmiUc hpies. sealed with Blue Rlbtxin. i e bo ouw. Hut r 'IASIIVB It RAND FILLS, for aft yeare known ai Best, Safest Alway RellabU SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHFRE OR. ALFRED DULA EVESS'KCIALIST TO SEE BETTER SEE DUU 17 Year's Experience The Best Equipment Obtainable. Glasses Fined Exclusively I MARTI S BLOCK, LENOIR, .'. C. 5 If you (jot It from VXJLA. It's .A'" Rigiit. W A t.U i'Al'KJt KUK DAi lCh. Repair Dep't. Box 127 Charlotte, N. C. LENSES GROUND & DUPLICATED WILL GO ON YOUR BOND Bankers, Receivers, Adminis rators, Guardians, County Officers- any position of trust. W;E WILL BOND YOU. New Amsterdam Sasualty Company of New York City. J. W. Hollingsworth Attorney, Newton, N. C. Today Co Co Off With Magic "Ge ir 2 Drops Do the Work, P aunessiy. "I tell you, before I h- . r . of 'Gets-It' I used to try on.; .::- -'vr another for corns. I stiil hu-t tn-:n. X used bandages and they nn.de rey Corns Drive Yon Tr - i--!t'' and They'll I'eel Highr i: toe so big it was murder to rut nn my shoe. I used salves an-, " r r things that ate off more- of u,- toft than they did the corn. I'! cut digr with knives ami seizors. Jir.x now no more foolincr for v.-. Two drops of 'Gets-It' H..l all t'n. -.v..rk. It makes the corn shrivel : t ? loose that you can just pick ir nc.nt Off with your finRers!" There has been nothinsr r;; v.- dis covered for corns since ",-;?-, f was born. It's the new w:y-th8 common-sense, simple, sure -:sy "Gets-It" is sold everywh-f, -a bottle, or sent on recti; ' of :!; by E. Lawrence & Co.. Chit i- i. ii Sold in Hickory and reeonuir. i--d by Hickoory Drug Co. ENFORCE AUTOMOIULK LAW Notice is hereby given )r-' tion 13 of the state automobi'i will be enforced. The sect in lows : ''Sec. 13. That no person erate a motor vehicle upon tW lie highways of this state whu der the age of sixteen years an is not competent physically mentally, and no person shu'.' ate a motor vehicle when i: cated, or in a race, or on a ! wager, or for the purpose of u, a speed record; Provided, n; herein contained shall prevent r on private race courses or tr. The officers hope that the n for whose benefit the act was ed, will assit in its cnfoiveii JOHN A. ISENIIOWER. Sr. E. W. LENTZ, Chief of folii 7 25 6t Plies Cured In 6 to 14 Day? Vour dniRrtrfst will refpnd money ii l'A.' OINTMENT fails to cure any case of 2ii:jv. Blind, Bleedinsror Protruding riles in fAo '- The first application gives Ease and Kf f ' 34-3 MAXIMS of MtKa THE NO MATTER. How MiucH vvr oUFFR IN lFL WH Af?H Mighty HAPPY VVHEH WE A CHMCE To ' 1 &
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 26, 1917, edition 1
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