Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Oct. 16, 1917, edition 1 / Page 2
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TUESDAY HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE TWO Hickory Daily Record TLLLl'UO.MS 17 I uhlibhtd uy inn day i'rintintf Co. Lvty iivemn lixcepl Sumiay. S. 11. Farabee - Editor j. u Miller Manager 1'UULICATIUN OFFICE: U02 liLUVJSNlli AVliMUlS Subscribers desiring the address oi their paper changed, will pleane stau m tlicir communication tootn ULU and MEW uUdies.. Tu insure ellicient delivery, com plaints should be made to the Suu Bcnption Department promptly. City lubacnhcrs Btiould call 107 vegarduig complaint. AUTHORITATIVE DENIAL SUlJSUtirTlON ItATUS $4.U0 u.uu u.io y er.r .si II I II lit fid iiuw months A,yu one Month .40 im week .10 Entered as second class matter bep icuiOer 11, iyi, postoilice ui ucKury, Is. J., uuai tue act ol Marcu l&iw. MEMUKK Ol'1 ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated l'ress is exclusively entitled to the use ior republication vt all news credited to it or not credited m this paper anU also Ut local news published herein. TUESDAY, OCT. 1G, 1'J17 .UTKAL TO HOUSEWIVES Mr. Bryan's Commoner for Octo ber reproduces an interview with the Nebraska State Journal of Lincoln, in which this statement appears: "I read a statement which pur ported to have been made by Sena tor LaFollette in a speech in Minne sota to the effect that four days be fore the sinking: of the Lusitania i had notified the president that ther. was ammunition on board the ves sel. Wthen I passed through' Wash ington last Wednesday I notified the state department and also Senator LaFollette that the senator had been misinformed and that I had not known until after the sinking of the Lusitania that it carried ammunition in its cargo." This is an authoritative denial Senator LaFollette could have ascer tained whether Mr. Bryan made sucn a statement as to the Lusitania, bu the Wisconsin senator preferred to make a direct charge in the hop.. that he would not be called to ac count. He knew he was fabricating, knew that he was prejudicing the interests of the land that had hon ored him, but that mattered not. The senate investigating commit tee will bo able to disprove Mr. LaFollette's alleged facts, and it will show that he deliberately deceived the American people to serve the kaiser's ends. In behalf of the national and state food administrations, the allies of the United States and the American boys who are lighting the battles oi the people back home, the Kecord is addressing this editorial to its good women subscribers. They see thaw the table is supplied; they generally do the ordering of groceries. The world is short of wheat and Hour. This country produced jusw a fraction more than it consumes i. normal times. Some of us must save Hour, meat and sugar. We can't deny our allies, who are already on short rations; we should not deny our soldier boys and the other sol diers boys who are helping them to win the war. Then we must deny ourselves. Missrs. Hoover and rage want your cooperation. Everything is plentiful in this section except meat and .sugar. But it is not plentiful in other sections; it will not be pleii. tiful here unless we do our part. There' are too many mouths to feed for there to be an abundance. Mr. Page wants the cooperation of housewives and he will send out in structions. i ou may bo given a pledge card. If you are not sent one, make up your mind to cut down, to substitute corn meal for wheat flour, to lighten up on the sugar If you do it voluntarily, you will help a great deal even a few of you. Wo haven't realized yet how se rious the situation is. When the gov ernment urged farmers to increase their yields, many of us thought that too much might be produced, that prices would bo low. That is not the case. The need to save cer. tain staples was never greater, ana the Kecord is sure the good women of this section will help. IT LOOKS HOPELESS The Russian situation today pre sents a parallel with the Frencu revolution at one time, but we have about reached the point where we are unable to take comfort from parallels or anything else that is pre sented by history. It is interesting to note, however, that the French was about as badly discouraged in every way as the Russians are now and that Doumourriez fought the battle of Valmy with two armies which before that fateful day had been notable more for their sprint ing ability than anything else. The Prussians, Austrians and French no bles were nearing Paris, but the -French rallied unexpectedly and gave them a tremendous thrashing. With the Germans comparatively near Petrograd, the. Russians are as bad ofF ay the French ever were. There is a chance that the Teutons will find an inhospitable country be fore them, and that the Russians, remembering the Napoleonic invas ion, might turn on the enemy with terrible results. There is a bare chanco but little more. The Russians do not seem to Know tnat their land is danger of being spolitated; they do not seem to have that love for the fatherlana that characterizes other peoples, anu as a result the Germans probably will be able to do what they please. D Special at Pastime g This Afternoon and Tonight Marguerite Clark g IN I 'THE VALENTINE GIRL" a- By LAURA SAWYER Special Music Tonight. lUUIIIIUIIIIIIHIHIIHTI Professional Cards ...miimiinm Dr. W. B. Ramsay Dentist Office over Shuf ord's Drug Store. Hickory N.C. Those fellows who continue to bet on the National League are bound to win some time, since the junior league cannot win all the time. The Flora McDonald College girls are made of the right stuff. It is not an easy job picking cotton. SIGNS OF BREAKDOWN IN GERMANY? The Liberty Loan will be sub scribed, but Hickory people shouiu not delay. They should decide the amount they can invest and then go to their banker and place the or der for bonds. Mayoc Mitchel may not be reel ected, but he is causing all the can, didates except the socialist, Morris Hilquit, to assert that they are for America first. And that is worth vhile. There's a ina dhance for large boys to earn extra money and at the same time help their country working on near by farms this fall. The crops should be gathered. The State Fair opens in Raleigh today and from all accounts it is to bo better than ever. Springfield Republican. The very retort one would have made to the German foreign minis ter's shifty statement in the reich stair concerning Alsace-Lorraine has swiftly come from the lips of Deputy HaussYnann. "Apart from Alsace Lorraine," said Dr. von Kuehlmann, "there is absolutely no impediment to peace;" and that was tantamount to saying that Belgium should be given up, replied Haussmann. But the foreign secretary de clined to go that far; nor would he concur in Haussmann's further statement that an undertaking to give up Belgium "should be herald ed forth to all nations." To spread abroad the idea that only France's demand for Alsace-Lorraine stands between the world and peace is only another cunning expedient of the insincere diplomacy :of the German foreign ofiibe. Its hyprocrisy is ex posed at once by Deputy Hauss mann's reminder concerning Belgium; for neither in the recent answer to the pope nor in any other author itative statement by th Gorman cov- ernment has one word ever been said to effect that an unconditional Ger man retirement from Belgium could be depended upon. Yet the tone of the speeches of Chancellor Michaelis and Dr. von Kuehlmann, as they are reported to the world, reveal an extraordinary and significant stressing of the idea that the surrender of German tern tory is unthinkable It is not rt markable that the rulers of an em pire who can prove by the military map that Germany is victorious on all fronts should face their own par. liament with protests against yield, ing a foot of German soil? Can any. one recall a proud conqueror, in the flush of triumph, instead of dictating the terms of peace to the stricken foe proclaiming to his own people, as Von Kuehlmann did for his imperial master: "So long as one German hand can hold a gun, the integrity of the territory handed down to us as a glorious inheritance by our fore fathers can never be the object of negotiations or concessions. Bis, marck was not constrained by circm stances to declaim in that heroic vein after Sedan, nor was Castlereagh af. ter Austerlitz. All that those triumphant foreign secretaries need ed to say was "Sign here." The internal situation in Germany is not entirely clear to us, nor are we yet sure of the precise relation between the recent mutiny in the German navy and the present diffi culties of the government with the reichstag. That the astonishing mu tiny took place at all is a fact of undeniable importance, and if we connect it with the growing fever of the masses of the German people for peace we shall not go far wrong. It may now be at least a plausible ex planation of the government s cours. in disclosing the mutiny in the reichstag that, realizing the impos sibility of keeping the secret inde finitely, it hoped immediately to uti lize the occurrence as ammunition against the radical socialists, who are the most persistent assailants of its war policies. But the government's effort to sad dle these socialists with responsibil ity for the mutiny appears to have already reacted upon it to the extent that the majority socialists under Rcheidemann have rallied to the de fense of their comrades of the mi nority. It is a weak or cowardly government that dares not arrest and hand over to the courts, as the Ber lin Tagoblatt suggests, any mem bers of the reichstag who are really guilty of instigating a mutiny in his majesty's high seas fleet, for the crime is one of high treason. Yet no deputy has been arrested and six weeks have elapsed since the mutiny. No one outside of Germany, and perhaps no one inside, can say how far the mutinous spirit pervades the n i i . . v.erman peopie, nut certainly we must now be prepared at least to re vise our preconceived opinions of the possible effects of the cast-iron discipline which the world has as. sumed must make a strict and un. swerving obedience amoner the Ger. man loyalty to the monarch and the ruling caste. What may not Germany be ca pable of if the isolated crews of four or five warships have revolted on their very decks and even thrown German captain into the sea to drown? If German military dis-, cipline has begun to crack, what may not happen among a whole peo. pie tnai is siowiy but surely realiz. This picture is worth 25c but there will be no advance in the admission price. Special at the Pastime WEDNESDAY, OCT. 16 Emmy Wehlen IN "MISS ROBINSON CRUSOE" A Metro Wonderplay in Five Parts. Special Music at Night by Hardie Turner. THE HICKORY HARNESS CO. Manufacturer of all libido of HARNESS. BRIDLES SADDLES AND STRAP WORK. Repairing a Specialty. Hickory, N. GL THE ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP F. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor Firgt-Class Work Guaranteed Phone 106, Work Delivered 1032 14th street Hickory. N- a Next to Firft Buildin & Loan office. W. P. Speas, M. D. Practice Limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Hickory, N. C. unnnnDnnnuiiaancaoncsancacaoanDnnnnnnonno f Office Over Hickory Drug Company OVER $400,000 PAID OUT IN SIX GAMES The Chicago Americans defeated the New York Nationals in the sixth and last game of the world's series, 4 to 2, and strode off the field with the lion's share of the gate receipts. The Sox lost only two games, those at New York last week. The largest assemblage of specta tors to witness any game of the se ries was on hand yesterday. Accord ing to the official figures 33,969 persons paid admission to the Polo grounds, their contributions total ling $73,348. Of this sum, the stock holders of each of the two clubs will receive $33,006.06, and the National commission, $7,334.80. The players ceased to participate in the gate receipts after the fourth game but they will receive $152,888, 58 as their share, this amount be ing divided CO per cent to the Chica. go team and 40 per cent to Nev York players. The total receipts for the six games amounted to $425, 878, and after substracting the mon ey paid to the players, the two clubs are each richer by $115,200,81 and the National commission $42,587.80. GREAT REJOICING BY RHEUMATIC CRIPPLES If So Crippled You Can't Use Arms or Legs, Rheuma Will Help You. If you want relief in two days, swift, certain, gratifying relief, take a small dose of Rheuma once a day. If you want to dissolve every par. tide of uric acid, poison in your body and drive it out through the natural channels so that you will be forever free from rheumatism, get a bottle of Rheuma from Hickory Drug Store or any druggist at once It must give the joyful relief ex. pected or money refunded. Rheumatism is a powerful disease strongly entrenched in joints and muscles. In order to conquer it a powerful enemy must be sent against it. Rheuma is the enemy of rheu matism an enemy that conquerors it in nearly every instance. Judge John Barhorst, of Ft. Lor amie, Ohio, knows it. He was walk ing with crutches, today he is well. It should do as much for you; it sel dom fails. adv TAR HEEL SHERIFFS WILL AID LIBETY LOAN CAMPAIGN Raleigh, Oct. 16. Eighty-nine of the hundred county sheriffs in North Carolina met here uil)on invitation of Governor Bickett to discuss mat ters of grave importance to the Fraternal Directory :;mnuumunm;: Hours 9 to 12, 2 to 5 Hickory Lodge No. 343 A. F. & A. M. Regular communication First and third Monday nights. Frethien cordially invited to be present. F. L. MOOSE-, W. M. D. L. MILLER, Set'y. DR. 6. E. FLOWERS Having enjoyed a large ooun- try practive fer 82. years, an now located in Hiekery and so licit a share of the general prac tice. Office at 8th avenue ani 19th street. Children's cleeaiet a specialty. onnonpoonnononQanneanaanssiss a o a a a a 53 a a 3 Hen tvL f 'i :H . ZTT'"'"" I I -J Cr . 1 f IMS! The New Liberty Loan Campaign The First National Bank will receive suh for the new loan without commission. Prtyr be made two per cent on application balance for by government or full amount can be pz'J plication. These bonds bear FOUR PER CENT and are excellent investment. Do Your Part - - Buy a Bond FIRST NAT! s on. ' to Alltel : sp. "--terest I nnnv g Capital and Surplus $300.0C0.(KJ. 5 Fnur Per Cent. Interest On Scvings A; a pounded Qu&rterJy. Q Money to Loan at All Times. rt J 8 I h n. aif S ae" .mrwMsaaa; Piedmont Council No. 43, Jr, O. U.A. M. Meets every Kinday evening at 7:30 P. M All visits brothei cordially invited. D. D. TAYLOR, Councilor. W. I. Caldwell, Rec. Sec CHIROPRACTOR DR. E. E. ROGERS Over Lutz's Drug Stor PHONE 77 limilHliiHIDiiB! III!) IKHlffiffll HU U3 UMflUMM U!tiflU HUniUeESHa Catawba Lodge No. 54 K.ofP DR. R. P. WILSON Veterinary Surgeon Will answer calls day ex uUcht. Resident piione S01-J. Meets every Thursday night. Visiting brethren invited. HUGH D'ANNA, C. C. R. L. HEFNER, K. R. and S. IT'S SURPRISING Dr. Oma H. Hester DENTIST OFFICE OVER BUST BEB CAFE AND KENNEDY ELECTRIC CO grim ion of rn.tt. and ssary to the business of war in all realty is occupying the att ou" country. its requirements are men, money. Many are pledging their lives to i coun try's cause. Labor is supplying the energy ne produce the material equipment. You are not asked to give, mere! your money, at interest, to the go through the purchase of Liberty Loan Bond As an American Cooperate. We handle subscriptions. Consolidated Tru HICKORY, N. C to :i'nment '.am That So Many Hickory People Fail To Recognize Kidney Weakness Are you a bad back victim? 'Suffer twinges; headaches, dizzy spells ? i Go to bed tired get up tired? j It's surprising how few suspect the kidneys. J It's surprising how few know, what to do. j Kidney trouble needs kidney treat ment. I Doan's Kidney Pills are for the' kidneys only. i Have convinced Hickory people of: their merit. j Here's a Hickory case; Hickory tes timony, j Kidney sufferers hereabouts should head it. j Mrs. C. H. Henkel, 419 Eighteenth1 St., says: "Doans Kidney' Pills, pro cured at Lutz's Drug Store, have al-' ways helped me when my back has' been lame and has started to ache. I have no hesitation in recommending this medicine." j Price 60c at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy Dr. O. L. Hollar HICKORY, N. C. Special attention given to Fistulas, Fissures Ulcers, Pruritus PILES Cured. No cutting, no confien-roe.u. a Croup and Pneumonia Vichs, Brames, Gowans and Cobles (iiq id remedy) Cough Syrups. state and nation, and gave complete infloTSPTYipnfc -fir fVip frnvprnnr'a tta posal to carry the liberty loan bond 1 . DJ?ran's Kidney PiUs--the same sale in North Carol na to the re-1 mrs- -nenKei naa. roster. BRICK Common and Face Write or Phone Buffalo Clay Co. StatesvilleN. C. iiiiiiiiiiminiuniiimiiinmiimmmunui Pine Tar and Cherry Bark Cough Syrup?. Rexail special Cold tablets, Hills Cascara Quinine and Lax ative Bromo Quinine. When 50U need anything for that cold c ness Telephone us your orders. Parcel post orders mailed promi hoarse- motest parts of the state, endeavor ing to dispose of $10,000,000 worth of bonds to men. who cannot sub scribe to bonds of higher denomina tion than $100. Following this, the sheriffs organ ized the North Carolina Sheriff's as sociation, with R. H. Edwards, of Goldsboro, president, N. W. Wallaee. of Charlotte, first vice-president; D. r$. Stafford of Greensboro, second vice-president: .Leon Lane, of Pitts- boro, third vice-president, . and J. H Sears of Raleigh, secretary-treas. urer. ; ? MARSHAL JOFFRE SPENDS DAY WiITH AMERICAN TROOPS American Training: CamD in France, Oct. 15.-(By the Associat ed Press)-nMarshal Joffre, hero of cne jviarne, spent the entire day with the American troons. He reveiwed Major General Sibert's' continuum. and inspected the training schools and the other troops. Marsuiau Joffre was arPAmrnn.ivl by General Pershing and two other oncers and the partv received an ovation at many French villages through which thev, motnrpd. TVi. j marshal, in addressing the officers, saia mai America had come to help deliver humanity from the yoke of German insolence, and added: "Let us be united; victory surely will be ours.' Milburn Co., Mfgs., Buffalo, N. Y. i" SUBSCRIBE FOR THE RECORD trumpet call to the empire's ever lasting prosperity and glory? Was ever a great people more biu terly betrayed by the cocksure prophets than the hungry, grim and mournful millions of Germans un der the dazzling yet bankrupt lead ership of Emperor William the Sec- A Furnace With No Pipes Think of it! Stands in the cellar directly under one register and pours heat up through all the house. Warms to the farthest corner and maintains a temperature there but two or three degrees less than in the room where the register is. Very Economical S.r.SS4 ve t leart one-third your fud coal, coke or wood. The He Original Patented Fipeless Furnace 1mm by natural air drculanoo scientific men tay the moat ettaent "if""! mrnmm and healthful Far more cheaply installed man any other f system, and doesn't require the labor and care. Positively Guaranteed to Satiefy or no tale. Come in ana eeerarvaiiBKff the grmmt advantage of the Caloric C'P'I "SSL: I P. A. MILLER Automobile and Livery Service. GO ANYWHERE Day tor (Night Rates Reasonable TELEPHONE;! 19. i:iinn:iiMiirnnniinMnmimimiuin "KIRK CHIEF" THE HANDKERCHIEF DELUXE FOR MEN. Ask your dealer to show it to you. Made By Kirkpatrick Mfg. Go. HICKORY, N. C. Hickory Drug The REX ALL Store lompany Telephone 46 Subscribe for the Hickorv Dairy Record mf 'THE SSBtai ; L. 'L, v- J-"- -3 vas - nrA T1Vlll-ira Un-.. 1 1 1 in l.-vi- j. m ' "ve aireauy nappen- an r 1 "T 8 1 01 t,ne,ed to amaze us; one predicts nothing, German War lordls to make the I yet before the. end things may hap universal horror they had willed a pen more amazing stiU P Abernethy Hdwe. Co. HICKORY, N.C. f Mil ' MaWrilEW . UULD BfS SPECIALIST TO SEF BETTER SEE BUM 17 YeM KsrMrtMLB . The Best Equipment Obtainable, wiasses rmea exclusively MARTIH BLdCIt, UKOm.tl.C. LENSES GROUND ft DUPLICATED Repair DeVt. Box 127 CfcrlQCte, N. C j fHE needs of the South are identical with the !U ! of the Southern Railways the grovt!i aiiJ 6ua;rci cf o;.c iu"5 1 the upbuilding of the other. no favors no epecioi rriril ' The Southern Railway i loontftf To cither. r . The ambition of the Soorhern Railway Comrany Is 11 I Uhirv of interritf that I tim Af ftwmntmn IWtt-i-rn t'.i- r:i - toe -rail roads; to see oerfected that fair went of railroads which invites the afcncicst to realize tba t liberality of treatment winch v. ..i c. -.. j- , to obtain the additional capital needed for thi: acquisition f lv. rt enlarged faculties incident I serricei and, finally To take !ts niche In the trr -mliric nf the tomb r.'.r other freat Industries, with D gsere. but with equal libmie.. W rtf bts and equal opportunidMb -operation dciwvcji i.i- 1 -- - .-. air and frank policy ia tic fJi;-; the confidence of jrc.vcr.V' - a C of treatment which v. .)! c. -v I , !a for thi; acquisition . f lv:rt 1 b demand for increased ana ; -' I " The Southern Serves the Scuth. aW. U sJ n i-T- r t e B 6 I I 1 I I a K I I a a a a a a a a a s a a B t s i
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
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Oct. 16, 1917, edition 1
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