Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Oct. 15, 1917, edition 1 / Page 3
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MOM HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE THREE Special at Jrastime f hie; Afternoon and Tonight ' Mollie Kim - -IN 83) B a 1 "MYSTERY OF THE DOUBLE CROSS" 7th EPISODE HEARST-PATHE NEWS AND A GOOD 0M LUKE COMEDY-SpecM Ihric Tonight Special at the Pastime Tuesday Oct. 16th. y M arguerite Clark -IN- g 'THE VALENTINE GIRL" 1 f Your Insurance troubles make up a part of our busi ness. Don't hesitate to let us have Them. Hickory Insurance and Realty Company 5 !ZICSSSSI!S2DGQDDSaDDDDDnin2QI!DDDnDDODDDD& Exit Germs W r r. aified to merely bake you pure bread, but sat. - wrr that bread is placed in your pantry in its fr;-' ta'.f, free irom germs and filth, does ouu re- sjt.j:': ;'.; nr. ! ambition cease. Thi f re ?-. baker may bake you as pure bread as graces tr ;av' of kir.gs, but thip that bread a half thousand miles or -T9 o ifc'h filthy germ laden cars and its purity can no lorjir r v-u-hed for. Our br-'r! row joes to your pantry with each package ?rra;ely in germ proof waxed paper. Fr i: I":vi: tod, Cocoanut and Ribbon Cake. Best ever. F. 'o or any merchant in town for our bread. B a B a a a a City Steam Bakery Our Motto "QUALITY" fan hav beautiful hair if you keep the scalp clean and :'' T N'jr!ct reialtiin baldness. We recommend Mer- lr" II r Tonic, sold only by us on a guarantee, to be a reha 5' trfirv :'n for keepingthe scalp and hair in a healthy con I: u explain its merits to you. 50c and $1.00 the Hickory Drug Company i mi i iuij 'u an. . i jeiu j -1 ?: J. D. Elliott. President and Treasure. J. Worth Elliott, V.-Pri. L. M. Elliott. Secretary Elliott Building Company Incorporated. f?r all djR.fs of conitructlen. Estimates furnirtdfl eheerfoHy. "to organization anfi best quipped contractor! hi the South HICKORY, N. O V rr tr h !' " '"'.'ft . 1 I MUTINY IN GERMAN NAVY ' Springfield .Republican. Germany has succeeded we'll in keeping for six weeks the gecret of a mutiny on four battleships at Wil helmshaven. Like demonstra tions in the Russian army or navy are at once announced to the world and are taken as fresh evidence that Kussia is going to pieces. Of the German mutiny no hint had been given, which probabjy means that not even the British admiralty hacl any suspicion of it, for such news, when the possibility of taking mil itary advantage of it had passed, would naturally be published as wid ely as possible. Apparently it might have been kept indefinitely a secret but for Admiral Capelle IJlunt statement Tuesday to the reichstag, and this 'naturally raises the question whether instead of minimizing the gravity of the affair, as the natural tendency is, the German government is not for purposes of its own magnifying it. The motive for doing so is ob vious. Admiral Capelle charged the Socialists, including two reichstag deputies, with being implicated in a plot to form a committee of dele gates on the Russian model in order to force the government to make peace. Whether true or false, his accusation is of interest. lie said: ""'It is unfortunately a sad fact that the Russian revolution turned the heads of some persons in our navy and introduced revolutionary ideals among them. Their insen sate plan was to recruit representa tives on all the ships, to cause the crews to refuse to obey orders, t o paralyze the fleet, and force peace upon the country. It is proved that the principal agitator conferred in this building with the independent socialist faction in the reichstag, ex plained his plans to Deputies Haasfi and Voptherr, and obtained their approval." The details Admiral Capelle de clined to give, but there is every reason to suppose that the German government, having full control of information and of the press, is re sponsible for the version according to which the crew of the battleship WWstfalen threw overboard the cap tain who was drowned, and that when the marines refused to fire on the sailors, soldiers were ordered to arrest the crew. The crew of the Nuernberg is said to have seized the officers and headed for Norway, sur rendering only when overhauled by torpedo boats. Whether the gov ernment inspired the report that the kaiser ordered every seventh man to be shot and that Chancellor Michaelis succeeded in saving all but three is more doubtful that detail may have been added at Amsterdam. That the revelation was timed to damage the reichstag coalition in support of peace, in which the so cialists are a strong element, is to be assumed, and to achieve this end the government may have exagger ated the mutiny somewhat in order to give the country a scare. Yet even allowing for this possibility, the mutiny in the German navy is highly significant, and all the more so for sian revolution asserted by Admi ral Capelle to exist. It cannot be taken as an - index of feeling in the army, for, as has often been noted, ly understood, are as a rule more susceptible than armies to radical and revolutionary forces. In the English civil war the sailors were mainly for the commonwealth, the soldiers in great part for the king. Ten years ago the Russian navy was a hotbed of sedition, and when the army had been reduced to full dis cipline it was still dangerous to send a Russian battleship to sea be cause of the risk that it might run amuck. For this reason too much should not be, made of the Wilhemshaven mutiny, which at worst was not com parable with the mutiny of the .Nore which did not break Eng land's naval power. Yet from oth er reliable sources we know that the mutiny in the flee t is highly symptomatic of a tempeT in Ger many which might rapidly grow under favorable conditions, a for midable menace to kaiserism. It is for the allies to do what they enn to provide - those conditions. The discipline of the German peo ple, has produced a wonderful ap pearance of unanimity, for the af fair at Wilhelmshaven , suggests that discipline may be near the cracking point. Dr. Ferdinand King, New Yoii. Physician and Medical Author, Saytt EVERY WOMAN EVERY MOTHER EVERY DAUGHTER NEEDS IRON AT TIMES To put strength into her nerves and color into her cheeks. are to tr GOD OF THE WAYSIDE WEED Alice J. Nichols in the Christian Ad vocate. Oh, worship the God of the moun tains, '. And worship the God of the seas, And the God of the miracle music Of the wind-swept harps of the trees; Oh, worship the God of the heavens Who holdeth the stars as they speed. But worship, oh, reverently worship The God of the wayside weed! the An Ambition and a Record i TMKncKN of the South are Identical with the needs jj 3 .'nithprn Rnllwjri the rrowth and luecen cl one wam i. "-;; tfUinjol the ether. Ijj T t uthern JUUwtr ukl m hron do tpeelal prtvtt ; T.. imbltlon of the SoBAern RaUwtr Comptnr Uxo6 f , ' y ' f ;;i!ffr that la bora of eo-oprmtln between tin pubttcaod " ''.Mi, tn tee perfected that fair and f rmnk poller lntbe niiMffr ' ' ' ' ' . . r r i i' . .kl.k .k . C Am. .1 vnvmBMnl I ' " m.llU ,11.11.. ll, (WNUM.ti.v " '"i " realize that liberality of treatment which will uaCtafa ' ' '' .1 M!t!onal capital oeodei for ihoacquUltlon of bmWIM ' ' '"1 tv-ii'de, inddem M Utt emanA lot Incteaied and MM rv'i -!. dually To ' !"! 'it niche In it fcuty imlltle of tha South aloninKw f , w .in mm wm. vm "-" " ' " " i fjual ODortunltl. II Tho Couthex 6rvG3 the South. Q0 Lo, down at your feet in grasses God's finsrer has written His name. His truth in the gold-hearted daisies, 'His joy in the buttercup s flame; He fragrantly utters His sweetness dn the clover bloom's honey crammed cells, And chimeth His name in soft music On the moneywort's golden bells. Oh, not for the praise of the mighty He has written His name plain and low For the child-heart, the sad-heart, the weary, !For those who must toil as they go; Our God of the common places Is the God of the humblest need. And the lowest may carry his bur den To the God of the wayside weed. Tis easy, 'tis easy to worship The God of the wayside weed. For the common way sings of His glory, The common way speaks to our need; Out from our glad hearts oft rushes A hymn of new faith hope and trust, 'Tis easy, 'tis easy to worship The God who brings beauty from dust! Coming Pastime Nov. First EH f3S mow r.Mm AfrTn it Oee th " irrttAbl careworn, hagr SlKBS . IOC rLr cent fn Sft U6snaVrtimyrltaP- Ferdinand Kin. M-M- . anonay refund au gova w indeU rngnda . - . . n 1 recommenaso uw w ' iSaolute marantea ax?? U u T dlnpeoaed In ttJa eiir t FOR SAL! BY r. M. Shuford and Abernethy Hard ' ware Co., and all good dealers. tlx Beaunit 111! Now xwel! XUbltlOE& nnnmiinraimnumnHiiBHnnnnuimiiiHnraiumnrtHuiitimnuiniHnnmuutHwiimniimniHmHinanimiiK Without altering the World champion motor, the famous perfected clutch and transmission or the mighty axles, the Maxwell builders have produced a new wonder car, far superior in construction and in appear- iLi. . x m. f a 1 jl I - Br r? e . . . iuiw iu urijiiiiriu vet rurnra ct tj' t ivu.i,ugii Factories we nave in is nm aat rmi rlriil wv- WlRYPICKFORD Famous Players-feramount lannuminuiiuuuuaitiiiuiMuiiuiiuitiuiuiuuuiuuiiiiiniiiHiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiMiiiiii) Th car la larger and roomier, for one thing the whelba&e has been increased six inches. It Is also a stronger and more rigid machine fcr the road. The frame is now sir inches, instead of three inches deep. And the body rests directly on this powerful frame, instead of on brackets extending from the sides, as in the past. Do you know what that means? It means this: The firmness with which tha wheels grip the road and the steadiness of the car at high speed give you a sense of security such as you have been able to enjoy before only in cars shackled with a battery of shock ab sorbers. This New Car is 50 Pounds Lighter Tbars's a mrrl of engineering for you, friends! ttfbs car is made bigger and stronger and yet actually lighter. This meant greater ease end comfort on the road. More than that it means greater economy. i!iii!iiiiiiiii:i!;niiini!!niiii!n!nniinnii:iii!i:;i;:i;:iii.'iHinrii:ii!ii;imiimiimiim!imtniia And the Maxwell before was the most economical 5-pas5ener car in the world. Compensating underslung rear springs the last word is spring suspension mark thi3 wonder ful Maxwell of 191S. They mean greater comfort greater economy, by lessening wear and tear on the car. Maxwell Now Has ths Style of tho Costliest Cars The new Maxwell is a car of great beauty. It has a sloped windshield and rakish lines never before produced in any car costing less than $1200. Its ood looks now equal its proved mechanical efficiency. The new upholstery is richer and gives a new comfort. Inside and cut tha new 1918 Maxwell is a perfected car. We're proud to sell it. You'll be proud to own one. 1222. IN "POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL" OUR BOYS Chicago Post. We meet our young; friends on their way to office or store or fac- tory or on errands of business, and ; we respect their industrious young , manhood. But if we meet these ! same young men in khaki or in the uniform of the jackies, why is it that we at once feel a more intimate relationship to them? They belong to us; they have be come "our boys" not simply by the wearing of a uniform, but because of what it means that these young men who year the khaki or the Wiue have pledged their lives, if need be, to defend our country. Could there be a more altruistic or a higher mission? We do well to call them "our boys," for they are our own sworn defen ders our only defense against a ruthless and bitterly anti-American foe. 'These young men have put aside the ambitions of their business or industrial life, to lay all on the altar of our common country. And this is why you hear men and wom en say proudly as they are passing, "God bless them!" "Our boys!" The men feel a fatherly ownership in each one of them, and the women, m true motherly fashion, are knitting sweaters and helmets and socks for "some of our boys." Even at the Roosevelt meeting many of the wo men were knitting and the needles were flying fast except when tha. workers stopped to cheer. We shall not cease in this genera tion, at least, to have a very inti mate feeling of relationship for.. .'our boys, just as another generation loved "the boys m blue." Touring Car $745; Roadster $745; Coupe $1025; Berline $1095; Sedan $1095 All prices . o. b. Detroit Granite Falls Motor Sales GRANITE FALLS N C J. Vv. HOKE, HICKORY, N. C. 8 SPECIAL AT PASTIME TODAY In addition to the "Mystery of the Double Cross;.1" featuring Mbllie King, there will be a big "Lone some Luke Ccimedyi and Heatrst- Pathe News shown at the Pastime this afternoon and tonight and spec ial music by the Pastime orchestra. WATCHING US Chicago Herald. The kaiser's interest m what is going on in America is never, keener than about the time a new loan is being floated. NO PLACE FOR NEUTRALS Indianapolis News. However, you can't expect us to have much sympathy for the neu trals. After' all that has happened, this world is no place for a neutral. THE. MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMEN IN HICKORY know how to protect the dainty charm of a good com plexion from those forces that would destroy it. With what car and fine discri mination they choose their toilet requisites. It is with thesa attractive women that OUR PEROXIDE CREAM enjofcrs its greatest vogue Our peroxide cream is a delightfully perfumed, van ishing cream of the non greasy type. Price 25c a jar DRUG STORE "On the Corner" Phones 17 and 317 I? m 1? 13 1 M A km Tit!Z"Er 3" m n of ii The New Liberty Lean Campaign is on. i H 1 he Firs? National Bank will receive subscriptions S3 'B3 for the new loan without commission. Payments "to n be made two per cent on application balance as calico! Hoi H " for by government or full amount can be paid on ap gg plication. These bonds bear FOUR PER CENT interest and are excellent investment. o Your Part - - Buy a Bond Today 3 U n HTMIM PRISON AND CONVICT CAMPS BEING EXAMINED To know actual prison conditions as they exist in North Carolina, and in compliance with the state (prison law, the executive staff of the state board of health is making a complete survey of all convict camps and jails in the state. It is the plan of the board to publish in booklat form, early next year, the findings of the survey which will be made by personal inspections, pho tographs, and gradings by use of the score card system. Seven county jails have been scor ed as follows Pasquotank, 65.55; Per quimans, 64.44; Washington, 63.88. Chowan, 61.11; Beaufort, 50; An son, 46.11; Union, 38.88. The exam ination particularly takes note of the observance or lack of observance of the sanitary rules and regulations prepared by the etat board of health, in compliance with the law, Capita and Earpi3 ZHWC.e?3. SUksxj, H. C. H Fcr IV Cent. lpAatt U.u Serin ge Accotutts, Com Si " fx-u.-'.dd Quarterly. H Kv&cy U IjO-xc at All Tim&i. JB5 the right, something definite and for the sanitary management of jails and prison camps. These have to do mainly with the prison ers' health and welfare precau tions against vermin, ventilation and floor space, water supply, sew age disposal, furniture and recrea tion, clothing, bathing, beds, and flies and mosquitoes. The booklet dealing with prison conditions in North Carolina that will be published not later than March, 1918, wil contain actual photographs of conditions found through the surveys. Favorable as well as unfavorable conditions will be shown. In .other words, the pub lic is going to know, as they have true of the conditions that exiat be hind prison walls in North Carolina. .ym. TO 3EF BETT'f. is 1 01 V.X'c.rit:tirrK I The Bsst L:--.oio .T.t Ob'aihwb-lb. i if ?)x tern fxf-m a A E.c2t. i LENSES GKOUND & DUPLICATED F.cyalr DeuL Box 127 Qiarlette, N. C. DBaanBBBaBBBBBDBDaaaiiiiPiisiiiiiiiiiioiisiiaasaaaaaaBBii g B n NEEDS 10,000 STENOGRAPHERS Washington, Oct. 15. Now that Uncle Sam has the young men of the country in training for military service, he finds that he needs 10,000 typewriter operators and steno graphers and typewriters, both men and women, for the departments at Washington. The civil service com mission has notified all of its 3,U0U boards of examiners that taey should put forth their fcest efforts to secure these urgenly needed workers. While examinations are now held weekly m 450 eities, the commission states that arrangements will be made to have an examiaation held at any acces sible plaee where a small class of applicants can be secured. Tke en trance salaries range from $1,000 to $1,200 a year. Promotion is re asonably rapid to those whos ser vices prove satisfactory. No ap pointments can be made to these of other positions in the federal classi fied eiril service unless autaorieed by tie civil service commission under . , . -i i i tne 1TU service iw. . jrvjr,; imawi- mation .to the contrary ie unauthor ized. This ' is a splendid opportu nity to serve your country. " Full in formation may be secured from I the secretary of the board of civil ser vice examiners at the postoffke ' in your city. i; -s: Don't Fail to Call to See Us ON DOLLAR D AY We will have on display Ornaments, Ribbons, Veiling and many shapes in Felts and Velvets. It will PAY YOU to call early and take ad vantage of DOLLAR DAY at a a a a a a E9 a a a D a n El Mrs- W. MILLINEI Re Beck. IY STOR ley s El El a m a E3 a Q 53 flDDBlVBDBBBDDDDDDiSBi110000000000
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 15, 1917, edition 1
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