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The Statesville Sentinel from Statesville, North Carolina • Page 3

Location:
Statesville, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE STATESVILLE SENTINEL, STATESVILLE. N. C. II! Hold Your Money and Wait for This Sale It is a well-known fact that "what we advertise, we do." We want you to feel absolutely assured that after years of honest and clean-cut dealings with the people is community that we shall live up to this policy throughout this sale. Every reduction quoted is genuine, and we unconditionally guarantee to refund yourj of this money on any purchase that is not exactly as represented and advertised.

We intend to make this sale go down as one of the greatest and grandest bargain events ever witnessed in this part of the stte. Come expecting the greatest vaiues yuu nave ever seen ana you wui not oe aisappomiea. Sale Opens Friday, Jan. 1 3, at 9 a. m.

ON SALE Our entire stock, nothing reserved or put away, every article has been tagged with SALE PRICES so that you may easily and quickly see for yourself, i NOTE: Read These Prices ALL WINTER MILLINERY WILL GO AT THIS SALE AT ONE-HALF A Plain STATEMENT Of Facts I i II jjib From J. M. McKee and Company Regarding This Sale We must reduce our stock; we must clean out in its entirety all Fall and Winter Goods to make room for Spring Stock. This at prices unexcelled, as we would rather sell at absolute cost, and even below, than carry such goods over until another SEASON. OUR stock is CLEAN; al late BUY and well kept.

This is the store of the BETTER CLASS with no FLAMBOYANTNESS in EVIDENCE. PRICE One Lot Men's Cotton Socks XOC One Lot Ladies' Cotton Hose at 10c Children's Cotton Hose He This $20,000 Stock 15c 25c Value Dress Ginghams at 20c Value Dress Ginghams A 12 VC 20c Value 36-Inch Percales at 12Vzc has been cut to the quick; we intend giving the public a FEAST of BARGAINS never before equaled in this city. WE stake our reputation on this SALE and our GUARANTEE stands behind every purchase made. Come expecting great things and you will not be disappointed. J.

ML McKee and Company $1.00 Value Storm Serge 69C ALL CHECKED WOOL GOODS TO GO ON SALE AT ONE-HALF PRICE These prices should convince the most skeptical that our intention is to close out and reduce our entire stock at BARGAIN PRICES. 112 W. Broad St.4 N. Carolina Statesville Thousands Pjore On Sale That Are Just As Good and Better Than The Few Quoted iu second GiWbs in THIS On Friday, January 13, between the hours of 10 a. m.

On Saturday, January 14, between the hours of 10 a. m. and noon, and NO LONGER, and on this da IS NOT A CONCERN RUNNING SALES AT ALL TIMES. SALES ARE FEW AND LEGITIMATE WE ADVERTISE WHAT WE DO; WE LIVE UP TO THIS POLICY. and 12 noon, and NO LONGER, and on this date only, there will be sold 10 ards of best i grade 32-inch DRESS GINGHAMS or A 1 Hi (Only 10 Yards to a Customer) onlv, there will be sold 10 yards of high- QAp grade 4-yard SHEETING for STU (Only 10 Yards to a Customer) STATESVILLE, 112 broad J.

McKEE and COMPANY CAROLINA IB iillNlii i been nil at' -i districts which have already fixed for the first year. TOBACCO CAMPAIGN TO BE CONTINUED UNTIL FEB. 2 stocked with bass and in a year or two these lakes, which are being guarded, will afford pleasure to the angler. It DUCKS PLENTIFUL British Give Warning. Making the American dollar Do Double Duty in Armenia is believed that the piedmont lake section around Hickory will rival tidewater in the abundance of fish and AT BRIDGEWATEH ducks.

The campaign for members of the Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association is to be continued until Febuary 2 when the board of directors assumes control, according to a decision of the tri-state organization committee made at its recent Raleigh meeting. The decision to continue the campaign was made in view of the pressure brought on the organization committee from sections of counties where The British delegation, on the other hand, having given warning at the time of the failure of the proposal for limitation of submarine tonnage and of thesize of submarines that in these circumstances it could not consent to any restriction of potential anti-submarine forces, was said to be prepared to bring the question before the full committee, if necessary, and to argue that merchant ships may carry guns Sportsmen Having Great Time Hunting and Mid-Winter Fishing Suckers Are Biting. JOYNER SCHOOL The school is progressing nicely growers had not yet had an opportunity to sign the tobacco marketing with out becoming auxilliary war ves- with full attendance. Following is the honor roll for the I Hickory, Jan. 9.

Hickory sportsmen who have been enjoying the bass fishing at Bridgewater seven months in the year have found two other sources of first class sport there in angling for suckers and shooting ducks that use the big lake. Although muckers said to bite best in the late winter and early spring, fishermen from Hickory have been making nice catches anil a catch of 25 to 30 second month, ending January 6: Claree Joyner, Glenn Johnson, Nelia Renegar, Clinton Beveridge Reavis, Mary Lee Wooten, Kenneth Reavis, Edward Renegar, 1 Verlie Shore, Effie Cooke, Bessie i. -VI 1 I out warning by submarines. Although the Shantung controversy, meantime, remains in deadlock, there was evidence in both the American and British groups today a belief that the mediation of Secretary Hughes and Arthur J. Balfour was almost certain to bring the Japanese and Chinese together again on this long-discussed issue.

In American quarters hope was expressed for an agreement during the week. Reports from Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina show that an overwhelming- majority of tobacco growers in the three states have already poined the tobacco association, which is now declared to be the biggest organization in the United States, exceeding by many millions of pounds the amount of tobacco to be handled by the Kentucky burley growers association. New members are to be allowed to vote in the elections but their contracts do not count in determining the pounds is counted no extraordinary feat. The ordinary red-worn is used Cooke, Era Renegar, Evelyn Cooke, Flora Lee Swink, Sallie Bet Renegar, Eva Steele, Otis Renegar, Hazel Renegar, Raymond Renegar, Aldean Renegar, Lucy Shore. Max Joyner, Parks Jovner.

Jimmv Cooke. Buxton Wooten, Taft Wooten, Hurlie Haynes, USE SENTINm, WANTS' or bait. Since Linville river, Paddy's creek and the Catawba river empty into this artificial lake, the headwaters of these streams teem with suckers, many of which are caught in the spring by natives in traps. Ducks appeared on the lake in large numbers for the first time last fall and have remained there all winter, hunters say. Many decoy ducks have been set on the water and sportsmen slip along the banks or use motor boats in reaching the feeding grounds of the birds.

They are hard to kill, but occasionally a man brings one down on the wing, and he has something to relate when he returns home. There are Dudley Haynes, Edna Reavis, Pearl Steelman, Bertha Wooten, Carrie Belle Johnson, Eldon Steelman, Osco Haynes, Elsie Vaughn Swain, Howard Swink, Dee Shore. There will be a spelling match at Joyner's schoolhouse, Friday night, January 13. Miss Sina Joyner has been on the sick list for the past week. J.

C. Smith and Miss Claris Renegar were married Saturday. Dodge Top -Majring the Orphanage Furniture. Right Earning His Bread and learning a Trade. Left Spinning the Cloth for Her thousands of ducks at Bridgewater at BETHANY a Clothes.

ing, carpentering, tailoring, rfrrgj making and a dozen other trades. The same plan is said by these workers to have been followed with considerable success in the administering of general relief. Because rt was found that the indiscriminate distributions of money and food tended to make permanent beggars of those that received this form of relief, industrial shops have opened where employment is given to those in need, The products of these shops are either sold or used in caring for the orphans and adult refugees. Though! such methods cannot be adopted in relieving such widespread suffering as now exists in Armenia and elsewhere in the Caucasus, wh re famine conditions and accompanying disease are reported to be causing the death of thousands, they have been found to be practicable in regions where the suffering is not so acute or widespread and have resulted in the times, it is declared. A Hickory sportsman does not need to go as far as Bridgewater to hunt ducks, for these migratory birds frequent all of the lakes formed by the seven or eight hydro-power plants within a few miles of Hickory.

Occasionally ducks are killed on the Catawba river on the north of Hickory, and Peter Barger, a farmer, reported today that a large flock was feeding in the South Fork river about five miles from Hickory. He killed one last week, and was surprised by the flock when he waded into it a day or two later. Local sportsmen say that in a few years hunting and fishing will grow better in this section. The Southern Power company's big plant at Mountain island will back the waters of the Catawba up stream for many miles and ducks will use it. Many ducks are reported in the lake at Lookout Shoals, another big Southern Power company development 18 miles from GETTING the dollar to do doable doty when it is hard enough to persuade it to give one hundred cents worth of work may sound like frenzied finance.

But it is the actual accomplishment of American workers of the Near East Relief in the Levant, where living costs are constantly striving for new altitude records. Due to high prices of native products and the difficulties of importing goods into interior stations, these workers have found it cheaper and an effective aid to child training to manufacture their own supplies in the orphanages scattered throughout the entire region from Syria to the ranra.) which the Americans are caring for approximately one hundred and ten thousand children. Not only has this method been found to furnish superior products, according to workers who have been responsible for these activities, bat it prepares the children for occupations that will eventually make them self-supporting, such as print- Some farmers have almost completed their winter plowing. Mr. and Mrs.

H. C. Summers, of Reidsville, are visiting relatives and friends here. Mr. and Mrs.

H. W. Jenkins, of Mooresville, are visiting Mrs. Jenkins' mother, Mrs. M.

J. Moore. Messrs. Sidney Summers and Ed Johnson, spent the week-end with their sister and brother, Mr. and Mrs.

A. W. Johnson, of Hamptonville. Messrs. Newton and Charlie Pierce, of North Wilkesboro, spent the holidays with their parents, Mr.

and Mrs. H. L. Pierce, of Olin. Autos Are Sold 'By The J.

B. Gooper Motor Go (Formerly Statesville Motor Co-) Misses Ola and Sarah Summers spent a part of the holidays in Statesville with Misses Helen and Margaret saving of a large amount of mooev. which it has been possible to apoiv to an extension of neoessarv refief Johfcson and Myrtle Bradshaw. Hickory, and as there are two power sites to be developed within six miles of Hickory hunting be brought Tharpe, of Concord, spent Chriltmas with his parents. Mr.

and I much nearer. All the lakes are being Tharpe, of Statesville..

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About The Statesville Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
3,566
Years Available:
1909-1922