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Image provided by: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, Chapel Hill, NC
Newspaper Page Text
TV 4 - .EVENING NOVEMBER 17 ,1922. HICKORY DAILY RECORD: PAGE FIVE 0 nchcrs Punch in Germany dWhcrs Punch in Germanv ""f' v-- - - .x -r ir s auuuaanDnonDQnnnEannPBonBiiiipEsssKi jj yfe&l .. CHEVROLET p '111 r T)h'7 I I .. - ivrnwr. sr1'1 13 horseback boxing. Notice the cowV.y ET . I?'' i vv -v'rlt niovmc t:cturcs. A literal tmriot? n F.jasClicr roabJy suggested the latest sport. 1 f 2S9DDDDODCnacadDDDODDDDDDODRaaaDIDDaDDDDODDDDDBCaDC3CZZZ3K CARS and SERVICE FARTS ..3 iM. Watson MotorjCo. Phone 225 Hickory, N. C. These Things Try the Toughness of a Battery 1. Hard, fast driving 2. Kough roads 3. Mud and dust 4. Infrequent testing 5. Lack of water 6. Long tours 7. Much stopping and starting 8. Cold weather 9. Hot weather 10. Poor carburetion 11. Stiff oil 12. Tight motor bearings 13. Short circuits ' ' . 14. Loose connections 15. Generator out of adjustment 16. Generator worn or dirty 1". Distributer worn or dirty 18. Excessive use of lights 19. Loose hold-downs 20. Electrical devices added beyond capacity of battery Hickory Battery Co. 1226 Ninth Avenue. Hickory, N. C. Representing Ml&ri Batteries (THREADED RUBBER INSULATION) and Batteries (WOOD SEPARATORS ) 1 i "liiiliiMiiii " ituiiift'i HUSBAND'S LOVE WORTH A MILLION illlWftl"1" fl Want Ads Bring Results. Try Them. xiiDDDDDDDDDDDDaaaaaDaaaDaaaaaaD a a a n u a a n LI ci u Q a n u R IJ 13 U . n ri ii ii u n a n n u a a n i.i For Your Ford and Chevrolet l'll rCt spnnvnfmti v fnoVi tread extends from bead to bead in JJ1ece. The tread itself is semi- v-vi.v;i liy U11U. xvii&J. " Cord Consider the cost a 30x3 nly $12.50. Get them at 'filler Vulcanizing Co. a a u a a o a a a u a a n Q One million dollars is the value which Mrs. Dorrit Van Duesen Stevens of Burlington, Vt., places on the affections of her husband. She has sued her husband's parent for that amount,' charging that they alienated her hus- Dand s love for her. L hey deny the charge. . , P D vVilhelm on His Wedding Day ' a Tfii-A. cxtraordiiiary photograph, shows the lormer- kp. closed automobile and 'catering xhe-kisre.ot unoin ..-asn Uh van of the marriage ceremony.. The -'picture was taUsti ivit (h a J-.j !iutancc camera by a photographer suUlonoit outs'ifkvthe cut!e fi-ynn n u a n a n u n u a n u Advertise in the Record " - : : : !' ls! i Try a Record Want Ad and Find Lost Articles jannnnnqbnnnm S Al g (THIS WAS WRITTEN BY A WOMAN) L' '4 j Why I Use Advertisieg A My Buyieg Guide , c t. .. s In my capacity as housewife I am the general manager of a household. Upon me devolves the duty of making rather large purchases which leads into anoth er duty that of the economical . expenditure of the household funds. My husband reads very assiduously what he calls "trade papers." These papers pertain almost entirely to his business. He says he could not get along without , therfi because they keep him posted on matters .which come up m his business life every day. In running my household I fin,d that the news papers and the magazines are my "trade papers." The advertisements tell me nearly everything I wish to know about the purchases I should make. Like my liusband who spends hours engrossed in. his trade magazines so that he may conduct his business more successfully, I study with care the advertisements in the newspapers and the magazines which I have found out enable me to conduct my business, whicTT is my household, more economically and successfully. ... In doing my neighborhood buying I think that;!; am able to choose the store that gives m the greatest value for my money. My choice is always the one where I am sure to get the advertised goods I ask for and where: I am not told : "Here is something else just . as good!" I buy advertised goods because experience has taught me I save money thereby. .., f r It has been my obseryatipni;hat the storekeeper ' who handles advertised articles sells more goods and it ' isn't hard for me;to figure out that if the dealer wants : to make only a fair: prof it he can sell me goods cheaper - if he sejls a great many goods than if he sells a smaller amount. Goincidently, I have noticed that dealers who do handle articles which are advertised seenr to grow and expand. I have often wondered if it isn't because the goods which they see oh tneir own shelves remind them constantly of the forward-looking work which is being done by the manufacturer of those goods, thus setting an example for greater industry. - y v ;r I know that if I want to buy a barrel of flour, I can buy it cheapethan I can buy a ten or twenty-five pound sack. My storekeeper can do the same thing in buying his merchandise. I have heard my husband talk often enough on the" question of small profits and rapid turnover to know that it isn't t dealer who makes the long profit that gets ahead but the one who makes the . small profit and turns his capital over -and over. But this is not the only benefit I get in buying from a store keeper who sells his customers goods which are adver- , tised. The goods I buy are fresher and hewer and I feel that because many of them have been advertised for years they are more dependable. For how could people continue to buy them. if they were not? And K6w'eoultn tinue to advertise them' if they did not buy ? Published by the Hickory Daily Record, in co-operation : with The American Association of Advertising Agencies. ' 1!) Ill; 1 ! - f 1 ' ' it j E v -Hf I 1-"'- - - 1 -t .I Hickory, N. C.