Newspapers / Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, … / Nov. 8, 1917, edition 1 / Page 4
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THURSDAY PAGE FOUR PLANTS NEED WINTER COLD WHALERS AGAIN ARE ACTIVE HICKORY DAILY RECORD . . - Sail. For a Corn-Peeling Picnic, UseJ'Gets-lt" Fain Eases at Once, Corn Just Dies! lu your oorn-rliUling easily, with :i smiU'. the lumana-peel way. Tina's" the "r.ets-It" w,v, the only way, your corn or callus comes off (omplrtc as though it were glad to wet Ol'f. Travrt Armmil thk World In Corn .nony, lv "Ota-It." .cts-It hnn cured more corns than all other remedies combined. Ii a sure .is thr sunrise, and as y.'ife as water. L'sed l.y millions. I 'out tak- a eh.inco with your feet, you an't afford to experiment with unknown mixtures when you Know iSers-lt" never falls. 'T;et.-lt" will remove any corn or rail u.-. "Wear those new, stylish nhoos or pumps If you want to, P- ahead and dance. Demand "(lets-It." throw substitutes back mi the counter! 2"o is all vou need ? iy at any drutr store, or It will bo s- rt direct by 11 Lavrence & Co., Chicago, 111. Sold in Hickory by the Hickory Dru.i,' Co., and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by Dru Company. Hickory 1 Jitney Service. HICKORY CON'OVER TO N Schedule Leave Hi kcuy , Leave Hickory Leave ilickcrv AND NKW. - -.-Coo . 10:20 a. iu. 2:30 p. m. 4:30 p. m. . 7:30 p. m. 7:20 a. m. 9:20 a. m. - --1-30 p. ro S:30 p. m. 0:30 p. m. L avc Hickory Leav; Hickory Leave Newton Lt.iv 1 Newton Lf avt: Nfivvton Lf'ave Mcvvton Lea vi' Newton ewton to Newton to Conover 15c Hickory 40c Hickory to ( onover 30c H.'ckory to Newton 40c Our Molto: Good Service. . W. CLINE Newton, N. C. Sheriff Isenhower will be at the city manager's office Saturday from 'J to 1 for the purpose of collecting taxes. ii 7 3t ! v h -4 u OUi hoy i-LuAte "i I r'.S '-,ir AS A:.rTZZIZZZT " :. i , -.iicr i , , iMim '-''-': ! '.NO GLT ME TEtl cgiuo Worth of ( i-. TRACT ) rM KiY y a. . ? T? !;? J- l j v. . ci- , wi cw. , Vv,;-v , 0u Cm -"-mJ -it 'f W-S & Mi-vvw v W &EtL " W, J. a I V4r?v , r 'S.'sBf a Mk. O iLy 4&Wji WiJk U .- - Am kJMiA JivS Jmlis itef"w-v Promptness EC5" - 1 J 1 In placing your orders will insure the best of attention. Oar facilities are the best in this section, and all orders for PRINTING, no matter how large nor small, will be handled as promptly as is consistent with good work. Look over your stock, and see if there is not something you will need in a short time, and place vour order in advance. The House that has Served You for Over 12 Years Place Your Order Today Clay Printing Co. Phone 1 67 Hickory, N. C. WHITE MAN JAILED FOR ALLEGED FORGERY Carson Wilson, a white man whose home is at Trade, Tenn., is under ar rest here on the charge of forging two checks, one of them for $47 and the other for $5. The name of L. j .u. l nomas was written on xne cnecKs as signer or endorser ana tne man I had no trouble in collecting good cash, i The larger check went to Raleigh ' before it was found that it was no j good, and the arrest followed late Wednesday. Wilson's father has ! been wired for and he is expected in j Hickory tonight. Wilson drove a truck tor a local iruit dealer tor a short while. 10 Hickory Masons propose to send $100 to the Oxford Orphanage! Thanksgiving Day, and the local: committee already has $75 in sight,' pledges made by the Blue Lodge, I Commandery and Chapter Masons. Messrs. F. A. Henderson, Geo. E-. Bisanar and John W. Ballew are the ! members of the local committee and all persons who wish to help the worthy cause should see either of these men. GERMAN PHYSICIANS FIND NERVOUSNESS CURE By the Associated Press. Amsterdam, Nov. 8. German news papers announce that the army phy- I siciaris Viavp rlisroverpd a Eiifrpsfn1 method of curing the nervous afflic tion so frequent among disabled sol diers, which causes a constant trem bling of the whole or part of the body. Dr. Ernest Bayer, head of the ner vous hospital at Rodfrbirkesn, has outlined a method of electrical treat ment, which, it is claimed, often ef fects a complete cure in a few days, and is almost invariably effective within a period of three weeks. The newspapers describe his method as follows "By the application of a gentle el ectric current which causes no pain whatever, good results have been ob tained in a few minutes or at the longest two and a half hours. A course of treatment is required after this, which does not last more than two or three weeks, and in light cases is finished in a few daysJ New attacks may occur due to excite-1 ment or nerve strain, but are easily cured. a "af Won't You ride dcwH RASE 1 OXFORD ORPHANAGE i IF THAT MEPCINE TASTS BA,p AS IT SOUNDS l'fv - 60RRY FER THT UR'JCr STORE You ctl KOOR OF MI..EOLI Pot BABY r0d? iA s 1 tan m n - CHICHESTER S PLLS l.Mili&i AkU Tour il'?llirisi. ' 'C.t'hea-rr'B lluinml l.'rni in Ii J ind t.i!d hours. eale-l 'Ait Iiiue inVt:Ui.csy Kit.tK.n. VV f your Tube, no otli.e HllT Of lrucsM- A kf t ('!! .'3II'H-TER"8 IHAMOM r,lt VM FILLS, for S6 years known as Etst Safest. Always Reliable SOLD BY DPtGGISTS EVERYWHERE FIVE TEUTON ARMIES ARE OPERATING AGAINST ITALY London, Nov. 8. It is announced at th.e Austrian-Hungarian army headquarters, according to a dispatch from Amsterdam to the .xcftange Telegraph Company, that the Teu ton arm'es operating against Italy number five. They are under Gen erals von Krobatin, von Krass, von Below, von Henriquez and Wiurm, with the leadership vested in von Be low, who commands the center army. There is a possibility, the dispatch adds, of the Austro-Hungarian fleet cooperating with General Wurm's ar my along the Adriatic coast. Mr. E. Bryan Jones left this morn ing for Fayetteville to be gone until December. WANTEJD Girl fr general olfiee j work. Prefer one who can take( dictation and use typewriter. Ad-i dress box 309 Hickory, N. C. I 11 8 1 wk Get your Christmas Red Cross seals now. Mrs. J. Worth Elliott! is taking orders and Hickory will buy more than ever Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S O ASTQ R I A Whenever 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 contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on tLa Liver, Drives out Malaria, EnricLes the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 60 cents. Honest Advertising Gets Business IF THAT NEPCSNE 1 f MAYfiir ,t i : ZTZT") I fTT, " ' KID ' Ancient Industry Has Undergone Note worthy Revival in America In Last Few Years. News dispatches telling of the re cent capture of three sperm whales by Grays Harbor hunters serve as a reminder that the ancient industry of whaling has undergone a noteworthy revival in the last few years. It is an interesting fact that this revival has been due largely to the develop ment of the battleship, one of the most modem creations of man. Hundreds of whalers. from Ameri can ports sailed the seas in the times before the Civil war, when whale oil Was used for lighting. The discovery of petroleum caused a slump in the industry. Historic New Bedford and Nantucket became the boneyards of a once mighty fleet, and the race of hardy American mariners developed by whaling became almost extinct. The old romances passed into tradi tion. But as ships, and particularly bat tleships, grew in size and number it was found that for use in certain of the bearings in their ponderous en gines there was nothing that would quite take the place of "case oil," found in the head of the sperm whale, which is strangely clear and does not I disintegrate under great pressure and I heat. So whalers began to take the j sea again. They are not so primitive ! as those of the older generation, but , their cargoes are more than ever in demand. Population Congestion. According to the most reliable esti mates the population of our globe in 1913 was 1,631,517,000. Two-thirds of this total (Europe, 448,000,000; India, 302,000,000 ; China proper, 326,000,000 ; Japan, without dependencies, 52,000,- 000) are concentrated upon less than i one-seventh of the earth's surface. The eight largest cities of Japan (1913) are: Tokyo, 2,100,000 inhabi tants; Osaka, 1,226,000 ; Kioto, 442,000; Yokohama, 394,000; Kagoya, 37S.000; Kobe, 378,000; Nagasaki, 176,000; and Hirosima, 143,000. Korea, whose population was not exactly known before its annexation to Japan, had, in 1913, a population of 15,458,000. Find Canoe 1,000 Years Old. Workmen engaged in the dry river bed of the Namazue-gawa Osaka pre fecture in Tokyo have unearthed a huge canoe made of camphor wood. The part so far dug out measures 40 feet in length, 6 feet in width and 26 inches In depth. According to archeo logists the canoe is about one thousand pears old. Wood's Seeds Rosen Rye The most vigorous grow ing and productive of Seed Ryes. Stools out better, su perior quality of grain, and destined, in our opinion, to take the place of all other Rye. .Wood's Fall Catalog Gives full description and informa tion, and also tells about the best SEED WHEAT, OATS, RYE, and Other Seeds for Fall Sowing. .... Write for Catalog and prices of any Seeds required. T, W. WOOD & SONS, SEEDSMEN, - Richmond, Va. HE OUGHT TO HAVE ASKED FOR ARNICA . KIDS LIFE INPy 3EL,EVICAN REMEMRcR ! " "7 ! cakw'u givc j j the ijam e o' ttwt hu,, i IZtttZ ! r. Exposure to Low Temperature Is Re quired to Prepare for AnotKer Period of Growth. The role of winter cold in plant growth has recently been described by Dr. F. V. Coville. After the period of growth in spring and summer there Is a period of dormancy before cold weather sets in, and if plants are main tained artificially at a high tempera ture this dormant period persists. Ex posure to cold is needed to activate the plant for another period of growth. Perhaps the liberation of enzymes acts on the stored starches, converting them into sugars, or the phenomenon may be due to a change in the permeability of the cell membrane. Though normally the stimulus re quired for a renewal of growth is sup plied by cold, mechanical injury or a period of drying may have the same effect. Theprocess occurs independent ly in any exposed part of a plant, so that if one or two branches Of a plant is kept continually warm while the other is subjected to the usual winter chilling, the former will not develop on the return of summer temperatures, though the latter develops as usual. It would be interesting to learn what stimulus takes the place of cold in the equatorial regions. FREEDOM CAUSE OF INSANITY Mental Disease Prevalent In Russia After the Revolution Is Termed "Mass Psychosis." The Russian revolution has produced a mental disease which is character ized by Prof. P. J. Rosenbach, presi dent of the Association of Phychiatr ists, as "mass psychosis." In other words, the birth of political freedom has been driving many persons Insane. It is a mistake to assume that war makes sane men mad, according to Professor Rosenbach, who says that during the war he has treated between 6,000 and 7,000 insane soldiers, but that in no case did he discover that the victim's mental affliction had been caused by war horrors or privations. During the first month of the revolu tion the rate of morbidity from mental disease rose to an astonishing extent. Professor Rosenbach inquired into the victims' antecedents and found, he says, that these men and women had been entirely normal and that they did not come from tainted families. He ascribes their sudden insanity to the sudden and drastic changes in Russian political, social aqfi. intellectual life. One of the symptoms of "mass psy chosis," he says, is "infatuation with committees, delegations and demon strations." Similar phenomena were observed during the French revolution after the war of 1870-71, Professor Rosenbach observes. Russia's Platinum Production. The production of platinum in the Ural district in Russia in 1916 is esti mated by a correspondent of the Lon don Mining Journal at only 78,674 troy ounces, against 107,774 ounces in 1915; 156,774 ounces in 1914, 173,642 ounces In 1913 and 175,381 ounces in 1912. The decrease last year extend ed to nearly all the districts, but was most marked on the Demidov estates and the Shuvalov placers. The short age of labor has been ope of the causes of the decrease. The fact that all crude platinum is now requisitioned by the government has led, It is believed, to the concealment of some quantities, so that the figures given are below the real output. A considerable quantity of crude platinum Is understood to be held by Russian banks, which ad vanced money to the producers before the metal was taken by the govern ment. Cave Men In America. . The cave man has long been sup posed to have lived only in the old world, and if the term is used to mean the very primitive species of homo sapiens, this is true. Explorations made in Kentucky this year by scien tists of the American museum, how ever, show that primitive men did live In caves In America. In the Mammoth cave and others they found unmistak able evidence that the mouths of the Kentucky caverns were used as dwell ing places and that the Indians ex plored the caves and mined quartz In ' them. This Is especially Interesting: because it is known that Indians did; not live in this region after its discov ery by white men. The American cave dwellers, therefore, must have belonged to an earlier ceriod. CABBAGE PLANTS Early frost proof, 25c per hundred. Phone j 201-K. J. M, Warlick, West Hick- jory. "KICK IN" in Five Parts. Hub Theatre SaturdayyNov. 10 Admission 5 and 15 Cents AMUSEMENTS PEARL WHITE AT PASTIME FRIDAY Pearl Wlhite, your favorite screen star, will be at the Pastime again Friday, November 9th in the 14th chapter of "The Fatal Ring" read the story and come to see her. Tom Carlton and the Spider rescue Pearl from her dangerous situation on the paddlewheel of the ferryboat. Pearl pluck'ly continues the chase of Carslake, the villain in the police boat which speeded to her rescue. Pearl, Tom and the Spider, with the police, overtake the outgoing tramp steamer and the Captain, to save him- ! self, attempts to capture Carslake. ! The wily villain outwits him and dives overboard. They find no trace of him in the water, for he has safe ly concealed himself under the police boat. Reach ng shore Carslake manages to get dry clothes and then takes the Violet Diamond to a no- i torious fence, who puts it in his ! Vault for safe-keeping. Pearl gets on the trail of Carslake, and with the Spider, traces him to the fence, and resolves to get the Diamond. She and the Spider in the dead of night break into the pawsnhop where the Diamond has been put for safekeep ing and manage to break into the ault. They recover the Violet Dia mond, but as they escape "policemen" capture them. One of the "finest" Is Carslake, who in mock politeness, haises his hat, smiles at Pearl and says, "I am afraid, Miss Standish, I vvill have no trouble you for the Vio et Diamond." T ANY LONGER Tco Late to Prevent Your Cold! But Now's the Time to Prevent its Serious Consequences You w'M not find a better remedy than Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar Honey to prevent your cold from developing into a grave and even dangerous ailment. This pleasant balsam preparation is ant sjeptic, and quick ly effective. Wjnen you take Dr. .bell's Pine-Tar Honey you check the spread of infectious germs, loosen and help eliminate the phlegm, soothe me inliammation, and relieve that grippy feeling. Uet a bottle of Dr. - Bell's P.ne TariHoney and watch your improve ment from the first dose. Do not be satisfied with haif -treatment, however. Take Dr. Beil's Pme-lar rioney till your ,grippe, coid or oronchitis is completely relieved. For ndarseness and sore throat use also as a gargle. The taste is so pleas ant, children take it without coaxing. Tear this ad out and take it to your druggist with 25c and he will give you the genu ne Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar Honey. adv ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as administrator of David Barger, deceased, late of Catawba county, N. C., this is to in, tify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to ex hibit them to the undersidned on or before the 4th day of October, 1918, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make prompt payment. This Oct. 4, 1917. LNNIE W. CLINE 10 4 4t Thurs Administrator. DON COUCH 11 8 2t pd 13 4 4t Thurs Administrator, assmsssri 7:. 1 ' Shorten the hni 5 400 atr.i f , Thursday, No. k Location in ( . . north of Pol;;.,.., Morrison e.-;a'. WhwinduJe. tionecr WANTED v phone "4 f r : CatavLa I'u i: WANTED !!;. five carpc-..:. : Moss, Hickory. FOR RENT bungalow v. ; 15th avtn.v. furnished PatricK. FOR SALE "i ". in . . :. . W:il sell cii.-.. , at Ciiy : :. Sheriff I,. : : . city manage, , ii to 4 fur :. taxes. LOST On business .-ct for right h..-.-.'.. Record o:.ijo :'. ; LOST Ladk- h Ilorscford n a ; to Record ( WANTED iv ;; good. iry. b'...:.: See Co. FOR SALE I A. J. 11 - . 11 6 3: iour or V I- I kv roat 03 city p.;.;:... . -0 to 4 for iv i taxes. r; ui2 M r. A r b uckle, whose caries goes around the world, once saicl tvo-ihuds oi In - heads aiici l- : ; U 0' his sales . vce can-e to him ti r u c!assi fied advei i: Don't w-;: -: ... tiM Mr. BiisinoM, in a personal s "area roi the man v; u want ivm sA
Hickory Daily Record (Hickory, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 8, 1917, edition 1
4
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