Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Sept. 28, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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j . '. I . SI .N ' HICKORY DAILY RECORD I-1WUJU,...LL' ML "V TiI -"- f 0 0 0 S v : t i 9 1 t i i B tf J n $ 0 1 U 2i & - ' You Need Your Eyes j P Personal The only way yp oa fc them is to tke oata of thei. It is too late offer fky ftr ruined. . If you hare taenlfe am m and have thm esasiiaed. If frlaswoa aro needed, I wiM proscribe some that vill serve youj eye makt your work wuy aad pleaganS leo. E. Sisanar JiMvelor and Iletfutered Optometrist , , tl.r rr Southern and C. and N.-W Railuv B a a u a D C D sir' on Going To Build? IF SO SEE THE j twin- a a r c ftmnanv a j , timish you any kind of building Shingles, Lathes and Hard W ood Moors, Specialties. PHONE 64-L. ,1! ii -.nrn MwrM.MurMHWH-f , TUmM El7 5 ;.'3y:f,j ; 5 7fJTi fVa TEHfl in i y Home He Kii3ws it Brings Happiness to all He NEW EDISON DUMD ABBEROU PHONOGRAPH is a wonderful instrument. Visit Our!Booh at the Fair ?ET" Will Tell You all Abut it M Prices: Wtg $30 MM -il. L r $75 The I JLs w EB1S0N For Those That Want a Larger Phonograph .7 ' r 4 ' '. A. ' fi Via n I III i $100 ULeSlI lien kwiii I Hill $200 I IHH $25 PIEDMONT PHONOGRAPH COMPANY l17 14Uk St. - - Hickory, N. C. VISIT OUR BOOTH Born to Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Black, a aim. Mr. and Mrs J. D. Elliott and Miss oeni yesterday in Charlotte. !Mr. G. M. Goforth of Lenoir was a mcKory visitor yesterday. Former Sheriff TVnnr, a-A tvt 'vmkwu 1TX1 L,arle Moser, two prominent automo- uue aeaiers oi Statesville, were nicKory visitors yestreday. ICol. JaS. A. Rnhinsrm nf TnT-Viam was in Hickory today en route to xjcnwir, wnere next week he will re port tne Uakiwell County Fair. iMrs. Rowell Holt and son, after spending the summer with Mrs. Holts parents. Mr. and Mrs J A MVirtin, have returned to their home at .Montgomery,, Ala IMjessrs. J. D. Elliott and K. C Menzies, two of the six Hickory men named .as delegates to the Southern Commercial Congress, which meets in New York the middle of next month, expect to attend, lit was not learned who the other delegates are. Master Carl Wilbur Childers, small son of Mrs. Gordon Childers, is some better at the home of his grandmother.' Mrs. Laura Ramsenr to. day, and little Miss Brent Childers, who also was ill- is much tetter. W ith their mother. the rhilrirrm came here from Ohio the first of the week and it is thought the long trip caused their illness. Automobile tire thieves were re ported ag numerous at the fair this week and Mr. Perry E. Deitz today is advertising foj an Ajax tire, rim and inner tube which were removed from the rear of his machine yesterdav It is said that several persons re covered their tires. Mr. Dietz' loss is about $40. trmmtmnm;imitmn AMUSEMENTS PEARL WJHITE AT PASTIME TODAY The special attraction at the Pas time this afternoon and tonight will be Pearl Wlhite in the "Fatal Ring" chapter eight. Also Hearst-Pathe News and a two reel "Lonesome Luke Comedy" that will make you laugh until your sides hurt. The follow ing is a synopsis of the story of the eighth chapter of the Fatal Ring: iA thrilling fight and a climax that ends the picture with great sus pense are features of this chapter. Pearl is temporarily blinded and is captured by Carslake and his men. They realize suddenly that she is really not blinded, but is syping up on them. Leaving the diamond in a safe they connect the switch which will blow any one to atoms who at tempts to open it. !As the picture fades tfrom vieiw Pearl is turning the combination. !1 GREAT PICTURE AT HUB THEATRE SATURDAY The big feature at the Hub thea tre Saturday, September 29th will be the motion picture version of Fedor Dostoevsky's celebrated book "Crime and Punishment." It is a Pathe Gold Rooster Play produced by the Arrow Film Corporation The star is Der went Hall Caine, son of Hall Came, the English author. The supporting cast includes such well known play ers as Marguerite Courtot, Cherrie Coleman and Sidney Bracq. "Crime and Punishment" is one of the mot remarkable pictures of the year. Destoevsky's book has been translated into every language and has created a sensation in every civ ilized country of the globe. The ad mission will only "be 5 and 10 cents. Don't miss it.. NOTICE OF RIGHT TO DEMAND THE SUBMISSIOjN OF WATER BOND ORDINANCE TO A VOTE OF TUB QUALIFIED VOTERS OF THE CITY OF HICKORY. Whereas on the 14th day of August, 1917, the City Council of Hickory passed an ordinance authorizing the issuance of the City of Hickory's Bonds in an amount not in excess of fteen thousand dollars for the pur pose of etending the water works system And whereas eaid ordinance con fninoxl jl Tiaracra-Dh in literal compli ance with Section 17 (1) (j) HI of "The Municipal Finance Act of 1917," providing that eaid ordinance should not be submitted to the voters of the city, unless within thirty days after its first publication a petition for its submission was filed under said Municipal Finance Act. And whereaa said portion of said section is inconsistent with other parts of "The Municipal Finance Act of 1917," other parts containing pro visions for submission to the voters upon fiiling a petition within thirty days after the last publication of said ordinance: And whereas the City Council de sires to comply with the spirit as well as with the letter of the law: Now, therefore, notice is hereby giver that the said Water Bond Or dinance will be submitted to the vo ters for their approval or disappro val, if a petition is filed within thirty days after the last publication of said ordinance; and that the city Will not issue or attempt to issue any Water Bonds until thirty days after the last publication of aid ordinance has passed without a petition having been filed or if one is so filed will not issue or attempt to issue such bonds, unless the ordi nance shall be approved by the voters of the city. The voters hare until the 10th day of October, 1917, to file a petition for referendum. JOHN W. BALLBW, 9 21 to 10-10 City Manager. Whenever You Need a Oeaeral Tonic Take Grove's. The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable M a General Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It sets on tisa Liver, Drives out Malaria, Knricues tne iiiooa ana Builds up the Whole System. 60 cents. KERENSKY-KORNILOFF IMBROXIGO Springfield Republican. It is not possible as yet to arrive at the full truth in regard to the ex traordinary controversy which has followed the collapse of the Korni loff rebellion. Was that a rebellion or was it a more or less accidental clash in the carrying out of plans in which both Korniloiff and Kerensky had a part? 'The exploitation of the incident in the Russian press ap pears to be mainly hostile to Kerens ky and the version of it which ha .reached his country may be open to suspicion, yet Kerensky has, never theless, means of publicity and the genuineness of the published docu ments, the text of which has not yet been transmitted, has not been denied. Yet while they might in criminate the Russian premier in the eyes of the bolsheviki, and thus give a weapon to his opponents on the conservative side, the facts thus far alleged do not appear to be verj damning. Just as it was necessary during the rebellion to avoid a snap judgment of a man like Korniloff, who had shown full devotion to the revolutionary cause, so it is need ful now to avoid a hasty opinion of Kerensky, a man whose honesty of purpose has been freely conceded by opponents in close contact with him. Briefly, the charge now brought against Kerensky by the bolsheviki is that he entered into a conspiracy against the revolution, by planning to break up the Petrograd revolution ary organizations on the pretext of crushing an imaginary bolsheviki plot. Much the same thing is alleg ed on the other side in defense of Gen. Korniloff. The version given by the Rech is that Korniloff drew up a plan to save the country by the establishment of revolutionarv military courts the mlitary control of railways and munitions fac tories, and the restoration of ofll cers' disciplinary powers. This plan, it is said, was rejected :by Kerensky. But the latter sent' Gen Savinkoff to headquarters to ask Korniloff to dispatch a cavalry corps and the "savage division to Petro grad to aid in establishing martial law there. ITo this message Gen Savinkoff is said to testify. Now comes the mysterious part of the affair, the arrival at army headquat, ters of Wiladimir Lvoff, bearing, it is said, three alternative proposals from Kerensky: (1) Kerensky's resigna tion; (2) a director; (3) a dictator ship for Korniloff. Thus put, the story appears im probable in tha-extreme, and all the more so because the plan for a direc tory provided a place in it for Kor niloff. If any mention was made of a dictatorship for him it would hard ly be by putting it on a level with the other two alternatives, and since the messenger Lvoff (who is not to be confounded with the very able and upright man who was temporarily president) is represented as the Iago of the imbroglio, it is probable iljhat he falsifies his message as well as the answer. For it is' assert ed by the Rech and Novoe Vremya that returning to Kerensky. Lvoff reported that Korniloff had demanded a dictatorship. That was the ver sion given to the press at the time of the rebellion, and ithardly seem ed in keeping with what was known of his character. That Kerensky had offered it would be equally im probable and seems to be disproved by his firm and rapid action against Korniloff. The case is quite tangled enough without the further complica tion added by the Novoe Vrernyra, which says that Kerensky, to make sure, telegraphed to Geii. Korniloff: Do you insist? Wihereupon Korni loff, supposing that the directory plan was referred to, answers as concisely, "Yes, I insist." A dra matist would hardly dare to make his play hinge on so improbable a detail, but extreme improbability does not always guarantee the truih of an historical incident. That, however, is the way in which the inside history of the Korniloff rebel lion is being told to Russia, am. whether it is literally true or not its romantic and sensational (chajracter will give it a wide hearing and probably a ready credence, and what is believed ;to be true may sometimes be as important as the actual truth. The chief question, just now leav ing these historical details to be sift ed by time, is how the controversy is likely to affect the position of the provisional government, and more particularly of Kerensky him self, who has given the government thus far such limited cohesive pow er as it has had. If the charges brought against him are well found ed he may perhaps justly be accus ed by his radical associates of dup licity or at all events of secretiy planning measures for the restora tion of order to which they would have given their sanction. That he was in any way false to the revolu tion of which as much as any man he is the embodiment cannot for a moment be credited. For the dec laration of martial law at Petro grad there were ample reasons in the existing military and political situation following the collapse of the Russian armies, and Kerensky's rejection of the Korniloff plan for military control of railways and munitions factories shows how limited was his yielding to the demand for national discipline. That he may have entertained the notion of a di rector even earlier than when that expedient was bruited during the crisis is not improbable, for the di rectory has excellent revolutionary standing from the resort to it by France. In such a "war cabinet" Korniloff would naturally have had a place as commander of the armies of the revolution, and if the general Russian estimate of his stiff but hen- est character is correct he would have served hig country well but for the treachery of the go-between Lvoff. Whatever the precise facts may be, it is one of the most extraordinary episodes of the war or of modern history. GOOD RAINFALL IN HICKORY LAST NIGHT (It didn't rain so much yesterday and last night as you. imagined, as you woke up from time to time ana heard the wind rustling the leaves and the water pattering on the roof. It was a downright good shower, am ounting to .97 of an inch, and left most upland in good condition for the plow. The mercury registered 70 degrees at the highest and 50 at the lowest, but wiseacres tday said the wind was coming from the north and a cold snap was in prospect. Quality Tcoth Paste and Tooth Powders Constant attention to the S teeth is one of the first laws to good health. The tooth paste or tooth powder you use must be the kind that will cleane the teeth without harming the gums or the enamel. Your will get the best here a quality which is absolutely guaranteed. 10c to 50c. LUTZ'S DRUG STORE "On the Corner" Phones 17 and 317 Exhibits at Fair Grounds Best Ever. g Our exhibits of suits, coats, dresses g g shoes etc., better than ever before ! Em S3 LADIES COAT SUITS B $10.00 to $45.00. m LADIES AND CHILDRENS COATS jg $2.00 to $35.00 g SERGE AND SILK DRESSES S $5 to $25.00 j-3 ELECTRIC HOUSE DRESSES 5 $1.00 to $2.00 g LADIES AND CHILDREN'S S3 SWEATERS fi $1.00 to $9.00. j LADIES AND CHILDRENS SHOES S 50c to $11.00 B IHUHHtWIHHtmmtYf P. A. MILLER Automobile and Livery Service. GO ANYWHERE Day or Night Rates Reasonable TELEPHONE 119. CHIROPRACTOR DR. E. E. ROGERS Over Lutz's Drug Store PHONE 77 RHEUMATISM IS A WEATHER PROPHET Miore Prevalent Than for Many Years Sudden Changes of Tem perature an Immediate Cause SERGES AND WOOLENS 50c to $2.00 yard. SILKS AND GEORGETTE CREPE 50c to $2.25 yard. COTTON NOVELTY GOODS 15c to 50c yard CRETONES AND DRAPERIES 15c to 50c yard SILK AND COpLTON HOSIERY 15c to $1.50 pair A complete line of notions, gloves, leather 4goods, buttons, trimmings., handkerchiefs, towels, ribbons, etc. mpson- West Company 3 m m m m m m m m m u 3 B B B B sa st B 3 n B B B a a a m "The Ladies' Store." - - -- - . .r ; . ave When rheumatism fastens on an in dividual, he generally know what the trouble is. The inflammation, soreness, pain, swelling joints and backache, with loss of appetite, plainly indicate rheumatism. Fhy sicians differ as to the disease, but all agree that rheumatism is caus ed by poison getting into the sys tem. Cold and moisture, with sud den changes of temperature, cause aggravated attacks and intense suf fering. The first twinge of pain or stiffness of muscle demand quick action. Don't suffer a minute: get from Hickory Drug Co., or any druggist a bottle of Rheuma. It's a great spec ialist's prescription which gives re lief in all forms of rheumatism. It brings swollen joints down to nor mal, reduces the pam and restores the whole system without the least injury to the heart. This two weeks treatment 15 inexpensive and your money returned if you do not get the joyful relief anticipated. adv Vigdrous Men andWomen are in Demand Tf xrnn-r nmhition h&S left VOU. VOUr happiness has gone forever unless you take advantage of Hickory Drug fin's, magnificent offer to refund your money on the first box purchas ed if Wendell's Ambition Pills do not nut mir pnt.iro svstem in fine condi tion and give you the energy and vig or you have lost. T? a wmhitions. he stronc. he vigor ous. Bring the ruddy glow of health to your cheeks ana tne rignt sparine that denotes perfect manhood and womanhood to your eyes. Wendell's Ambition Pills, the en-eat nerve tonic, can'e be beat for that tired feeling, nervous troubles, poor blood, headaches, neuralgia, trem bling, nervous prostijation, mental depression, loss of appetite and kid ney or liver complaint. In two days you will feel better. In nrooV von will feel fine, and after alrinc n'ne box vou will have vour old-time confidence and ambition. Mo Biiro nd cet a 50 cent box to day and get out of the rut. Remem ber 'Hickory Drug Co and dealers everywhere are authorized to guaran tee them. Mail orders filled, charges prepaid by The Wendell Pharmlcal Company, Inc., Syracuse, is. x. zg The oyster's Candies Home Made Kind Take Home a Box B B B B B B B a B Corby's Pound Cake White and Yellow Raisins Try a Pound for Sunday Big Assortment Assorted Cakes Get a Pound for Sunday. ner and Martin "Sell For Less Profit" B a B B B B B B B B B B B B B B B sanEangEssaQanaHnannnnnonnnnnnnnanannDcnp noooooooooooa 0 0 Used 40 Years g Q GAR Tire Woman's Tonic o o o Sold Everywhere j r.e 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOO t An Ambition and a Record THE needs of the South are identical with the needs of the Southern Railway i the erowth and success cf one means the upbuilding of the other. The Southern Railway Mks no favor i no tpecial prMlec e not accorded to others. The ambition of the Southern Railway Company It to ee that unity of Interest that is born of co-operation between the public and the railroads; to see perfected tbat fair andf rank policy in the manage ment cf railroads which invites the confidence of governmental agencies; to realize tha t liberality of treatment which will enable U to obtain the additional capital needed for the acquisition of better and enlarged facilities Incident ( tb demand for Increased and better service; and, finally To take !ts niche In tbt Guty politic of the South alongside of other great industries, with m more, but with equal liberties, equal rights and equal opportunlrisa , The Southesa Serves the South." f) Southern 'Railway System'
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 28, 1917, edition 1
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