AGS TWO
8AUSJ?1tY,EyE?nyO POST, SAI THURSDAY, JANUARY SI, 1&18.
"Doing better than on
old style hulls"
Mr. J. J. Hamilton, Gastonia, N. C, ha been Seeding Buckeye
Hulls to milch cowt since November, 1916. He claims that they are
' doing better than when fed old style hulls. Similar reports have
been received from all ever the South. Wherever
X HULLS k
' , '. - ' r , , , UNTtkaa
ft . , , f r t ...
ant fed properly they are bound to give better results than old
style hulls. They can't do otherwise because they are all roughage
' while old style bulla are one-fourth trot; because they are dean, "
and free of trash because they do not clog or flux the digestive
tract; because they 'mix well with other food; because they si
' relished by the cattle. And yet they cost you several dollars less
per ton. Why not save the difference and get better roughage?
Ts secure ths best result ami to develop the eniiltre actor, wet the hullt
thoroughly turtle htm before feeding. It is assy t do this by
wettiai them dewn night sad meraiog for ths nest feeding. K at any lima
this casual be dsn, was down at wast thirty minute. If you prefer ta
feed tea halls dry, ass ecij half tt miks bj bulk as of old style nulls,
. f. Book of Mixed FeetU Frei
Givw the right formula for every combination of feeds Uicd In the South. Tells
.! how much to feed for maintenance, for milk, for fattening, for work. Describee
- Buckeye Hull and gives direction be using them properly. Send for your
copy to nearest mill. . ,(''
d.m.j The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. Dept. J
fatutti rahat OiarhH aramteal
, T. B, FINDS TOOP SCOUT
! t
r t
When Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
was asked to weigh boy food scours
from New -York city public; schools
who have been eating teat- midday
lunches his . first subject was Morris
Uilsenberg. . Morris, is eleven , years
okUand the colonel found he weighed
only forty-five pound In five days
1 the boy bad gained three ounces. One
other boy had gained two pounds,
while, another gained only one, ounce.
This as the total of what Morris had
for lunch during the five days: Two
pints of soup, four big kitchen table-
V ": ' ' A NEW YOUNG
At last Willie Hoppe, the billiard ;
champion," has an opponent worthy
of his cue. Young Welter' Cochran
of Hanson, la., has developed into s
: cp Itching Eczema
2 r r.ini hovr often you have tried
t-1 i X ya can stop burning, Itchinj
c( r-..ly by applying a little tema
i it ' t-y drufi-stior 35c. Extra
t : 1 Healing begins the
. 5 43 a...ied. Inaahortthne
' tfcy t-3i3 cf eczema, tetter,
' i.i 1 ' '.cLlxatla and eimiiaj
- i v 1 1 ta rpracvti .,
. i . :? t'.e s'r.ia ana making &
f 1 .' ' r. r' a -3 use semo, tht
-, i c I It is not i
-.i - j t . ,t stain. Whet'
; r , ml able treati
i r aJ kinds. .
, i(, , - i,t..eUa4Q-
Juxm UtH lack
CAINS THREE OUNCES
1
if
4M
4
If
ft
spoonfuls of vegetables, six of such
spoonfuls of fish, fourteen ,slfces of
bread and peanut butter, two ounces
of rice and apple sauce, one baked
apple, twenty-four ounces of cocoa
made .of milk,' twelve dates, eighteen
prunes with plenty of juice, four
ounees of cake, and two oranges.
, The test is .being made by the
Peoples' Institute, the Post Graduate
Hospital and the School Lunch Com
mittee to determine if school boys
receive sufficient noon lunches at
home.
BILLIARD "PHENOM."
nil
brilliant billiadist, and at the present
moment stanos m ma only rival.
bUity meet at the table' before the
year i very old. -
COUNTY ATTORNEY ' 1
JOINS THE MARINES
R. U. Shuford, of CaUwba County,
Resigna Office and Joint the Nations
righting Forces.
i; (Special. to the Post.) !
Hickory, Jan. 31. SIr.'R. ILlShuf
ford, county attorney of Catawba, haa
resigned his office and goes to Port
RoyaL S. C, to join the .marines)
5Ir. Shafford is a young man of Ane
parts and has been very active in be
half of governmental activities! He
is a voiversity graduate and has two
brothers in the service,
Will Ward in Albemarle Jail fpr Al
leged Assault on Five-Yesr-Old
Daughter of Earl Williams Pre
liminary Hearing Given "Today.
(Special to Post)
Albemarle, Jan. 30. A young white
man who gave his name as Will Ward
was arrested today, and lodged In Stan
ly county jadl upon a charge of crimi
nal assault upon the little five-year-old
daughter of Earl Williams, on last
night. Williams lives in West Albe
marle and the young man asked to
stay over night with him and was
allowed to do so. It was during the
night that the dastardly crime was
committed, the little girl says. She
said Ward kept her from making out?
cry by holding his hand over her
mounth and she did net tell her par
rents of the assault until this morn
ing. Immediately Mr. Williams came
over, town and swore out a warrant
before Judge R. L. Brown, of the
county court. Ward ihas made no
statement whatever regarding his
guilt or innocence. Mr. Lenta who
made the physical examination of the
little girl says she was found by hrm
to be in a painful condition. Ward is
about 22 years of age, is thought to
be from Davidson county, and is
thought also to be a. slacker or runa
way, from the army. He will be giv
en his preliminary hearing before
Judge Brown Friday morning.
JESSE H. HENDERSON IS
, KILLED NIEAR MORG ANTON
He was Unloading Car of Coal When
He Fell Into the Shute and the Coal
on Top of Him.
Morganton, Jan. 30. Injuries which
he received while unloading a car of
coal at Connelly Springs resulted fa
tally to Jesse H. Henderson, of New
port, Tenn., in the employ of Sands
and company, who operate a commis
sary outfit on the Southern railway.
The accident which caused Mr. Hen
drson's death occurred Tuesday after
noon. The unfortunate man was us
ing a large wrech to unloose the trap
dpor of the coal car to release coal
into the shute. It is supposed that
the wrech slipped, hit hiro en the
head and he fell into the shute. At
the same time the load of coal came
rushing into the Ehute, completely
covering the already . injured man.
Men who were nearby reauhed out as
soon as the coal sould be removed
enough to release him and brought on
a passing freight train to Morganton.
Upon reaching here he was placed in a
waiting automobile and taken to the
hospital but expired just as he was
being carried into the hospital. Sands
and company were notified of his
death and a representative of the com
pany came to take charge of the body
which was prepared for burial and
sent to Tennessee this morning.
SATURDAY IS GROUND HOG PAY
The Wise One and the Backer of
This Little Criter Are, Already Busy
Making Predictions.
Saturday, February 2nd, Is ground
ho gday and, the staunch friends and
believers in this criter are already
busy making predictions as to the
weather for the coming six weeks.
They "do say" that if he comes from
his winter quarters and sees his
shadow Saturday we will have six
more weeks of bad winter weather,
but if he fails to darken the ground
with his hadow the weather will
break and we may look for some good
weather.. Here's hoping Saturday
will be a gloomy one from a weath
er standpoint if the ground hog has
anything to do with the next six
week's weather. He can stand almost
anything two more days from . the
weather man if we can only keep that
little varmint from observing his out
lines on the ground Saturday. All we
can do is wait and see.
DRIVING THROUGH CEMETERY.
Superintendent Shank Has Grievance
Against Parties Using Driveways
For Public Use.
Superintendent M. A. Shank, of the
city cemeteries, complains that num
bers of parties are using the drive
ways in Chestnut Hill cemetery as a
route to get from Main to Fulton
street and vke versa, doing this in
order to avoid the mud on South Ful
ton. This practice is being indulged
in by delivery wagons and trucks and
other vehicle drivers and is badly cut
ting up the cemetery drives. This
practice should be discontinued, the
superintendent says, even though
suck vehicles would have to enceunter
mud and bad street by going out or
coming in Fulton street.
FARMERS URGED TO GROW
OTHER THINGS THAN COTTON
Atlanta! Ga.. Jan. .40. TW ana f
theHbigh price of cotton farmers shoul
not become lax in the production of
foodstuffs during the present emergen
cy, li. Groover, assistant state ag
ricultural commissioner, declared in
an address her today before the 19th
annual meeting of the association ef
Southern Agricultural workers.
It is important that the South
should bestir itself fat the great food
crisis of the world history," he said.
Other sneakers included W IL Dod.
son. of Baton Rouge, La president of
the association, and Prof.. C. B. Wu
liams, of North Carolina state col
lege. , - . - - - .. ?.
, The convention will be ia session
until Friday. '. f
A FATHER AND
The Idea ia Being Made a Nation
wide One and This Year Will Be
of the Greatest Interest.
. The announcement that a national
Father and Son week is being ar
ranged will be met with great satis
faction and with the hearty approval
of everyone. No more effective
method of uniting the forces for good
in any community has been devised.
and it should meet with the hearty
co-operation, of all Christian workers.
It is the purpose of uniting the latent
powers of Fathers and Sons in pro
moting a program of community bet
terment, not only for moral and spir
itual betterment, but for economic and
social improvement. It also provides
a most effective means of focusing
the resources of the entire commun
ity upon the building of character in
the 'hearts and lives of boys and men.
There never has been a time in the
history of this country when the call
for unselfish service, backed by Chris
tian character, has been greater.
Through it all this Father and Son
week. February 11-17. is an unparal
leled opportunity for producing a
great amount of good. Big sons, some
of whom are growing away from their
fathers, have had time to think since
they went M the military camps or
overseas. There are 1,067,693 of these
boys in the armed forces in America.
There are tens of thousands more
overseas. More than a million fathers
are feack at home, fathers who were
absorbed in business are now doing
some thinking. Fathers who were
lost in the grind of life or in the friv
olities, or were warped or twisted by
its competitions, have stopped to
think. A lot of making-up is going
on. Men are thintking clearly and
rigf'atly. Father and Son disunion is
being healed. Father and Son un
derstandings are growing. There is
j great passion in the camps and on
the field to be appreciated at home.
There is honest pride in the father's
heart on the patriotism of his boy.
He did. not talk to his business as
sociates about his son, nor did he read
his son's letters from college or fac
tory, if 'he ever received such, to his
business friends. Now they are the
first of his mail that he reads. He
carries them in his pockety and at the
club, after church, in the street car,
in fact, he shows them to his, friends,
But there are other fathers who sit
at the fireside these cold evenings not
reading the news. paper but longing
for news and wondering if that boy
will ever know without being told
How much his unsent letters are
longed for. The incense of such
hearths is not coal smoke or gas
fumes. The incense i prayer. Men
wlHo always before were careess as
to their sons are now on fire with en
thusiasm for them. Many a father
now regrets that he has allowed him
self to get too old to be accepted in
military service, many haxe applied
and have been refused and many
know they would not be accepted if
they applied. But father is not spend
ing his time thiefly in dreaming, or in
longing or even in prayer. He already
sees, as he dreams by the fire, the dis
tant long lines of wounded, mutilated
and bereaved and the son in their
midst The only thing that will keep
father going is the readjustment of
his life to the hardest work he has
ever known; for al the suffering ia not
to be the son's. This lhard work wiy
hot be, worth while unless it is sacri
ficial, unless it is some form of ser
vice, unless he ia contributing his part
to the great cause of winnings the
xar, wtuch. will set humanity free.
The courage and abandon of soa will
be reflected in this new iviewpoint at
home. It will be shared by father
and to make this clear to let father
realise Ais actual part to inspire son
to keep "clean" and to go "clean
over.". This is the object of the na
tional Father and Son celebration in
the campsx and overseas, in churches,
in schools, ni homes, in clubs, in busi
ness houses and in factories, and the
aim of the movement is not to court
publicity, not to create a new move
ment of officers, a treasurer and a
paid staff, but by the silent moving
process of organization to promote
Men. in Training s:
Fighting isn't the only duty of a
sokuar. mad exposure tq bullets, io
not as serious as ezpoeura to aU
kinds of weetbee and tUmpness.
Rheumatic achesj eat and stif
BHiscksstssJoe and psana, ehil
bUins tad eurmlgU. all or enemies
ef the okirnd the relief for aU
these pains and aches is Sloan's
I inimraiL Clf and conveaient to
carry use; docs not stain, and
penetratse without rubbing.
this Tight minded ideal throughout
the marjaood; of the nation.
The expression of Secretary of
War Baker is very appropriate at this
time; "The stress of international
circumstances and the call upon all of
us to defend what we have: long held
dear adds another to the reasons
which have always existed for mak
ing the Father and Son week an oc
casion to which everyone might ren
der co-operation and participation in
ungrudging measure."
We Uiave thanked Thee for our moth
ers, And we thank Thee still again;
No,w for fathers and for brothers
Lord, we thank Thee for good men.
For our fathers who begot us
And whose-paths of patience trod,
And whose righteous manhood U.ght
us
Of the Fatherhood of God.
Bless our brothers and our neighbors
In their tastks of hand and brain;
Strengthen all men for their labors,
Help them boar the load and strain.
Bless the men who face the dangers
On the battle and the sea;
Guide the men who roam as strang
ers
Making paths where roads shall be.
Save the manhood of our nation,
Guide us with Thy staff and rod;
Make each coming generation
Know the Fatherhood of God.
For our sisters and our mothers,
Oft we've prayed and. prayed again,
Now for .fathers and for brothers,
Father, hear our prayer for men.
GRATITUDE.
(Birmingham News.)
About a week
Ago the Missis
Decided to have
TSome solHiers to
Help us1 destroy
Sunday dinner,
So we got
Two young men
From New Jersey
And they ate
As1 if they,
Liked the food .
And smoked my
Christmas
Wjtthout touching
Which proved they
Were gentlemen, N !
And today we
Got a letter
From these boys
Saying how much
They appreciated
Our little spread,
And that when
They reach France
They will think :
Of us, ,
Maybe they will
Hand the Kaiser
One swift punch
For us both.
'I
MHJEORALGIA
Use Soothing' Musterple
When those sharp pains go shooting
through your head, when your skull
seems as if it would split, just rub a
little Mosterote on your temples and
neck. It draws out the inflammation,
soothes away the pain, ' usually giving
quick reKefi
Musterole) b a dean, white ointment,
made with oil of mustard. Better than a
mustard plaster and does not blister.
Many doctors and nurses frankly rec
ommend Musterole for sore throat, bron
chitis, croup, stiff peck, asthma, neural-
S'a congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism,
imbago. pains and aches of the back or
oints, sprains, sore muscles, braises,
chilblains, frosted feet colds of the
chest (it often prevents pneumonia) It
is always dependable.
30c and te jars; hospital sja $230.'
-a.
LATEST
STYLE
AOTO
Goggles
Our line, of auto goggles is mosjl
complete and attractive.
The kind you want at the price you
want to pay.
We have them all
Starnes & Parker
Leading Jewelers and Opticians.
SALISBURY, N. C
: NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
Having qualified as administrator
of the estate of D. C. Eller, this is te
notify all persons having claims
against the said decedent to file an
itimised, verified statement of same
with the undersigned oa or before
the 31 day of January, 1919, or. this
notice will be pleaded ia bar of their
recovery. Persons indebted to said
-estate are notified te make prompt
settlement. . , .
This Slst day of January, 1918. -,
j 1 1). A. ELLER, Admr.
Salisbury. N. C, Route 4.
Walter H. W oodson, Atty. v "
y5j
ROADS IN BAH, CONDITION.
Highways of the County as Well as
Some City Streets Showing Effects
of the Bad Weather.
Parties who have occasion to travel
the highways of the county report
practically all of them in bad condi
tion, some being almost impassible,
especially where they have not been
improved. In some sections it is al
most imposible to travel at all and
no few automobiles have been, stuck
Si
IIaWeZS
S
Banking
CLUB
ONLY A LITTLE DIME, OR A N1CKLE AND A UTTLE "STICK-TO-ir
IS ALL YOU NEED, TO GET YOU $127.50 OR $63.75.
BRING THE DIME OR NICKLE INTO OUR BANK AND JOIN OUR '
CHRISTMAS BANKING CLUB. TH EN EACH WEEK INCREASE YOUR
DEPOSIT THE SAME AMOUNT. IF YOU HAVEN'T THE DIME OR
NICKLE 2 CENTS OR 1 CENT WILL DO.
IN 50 WEEKS
10-CENT CLUB PAYS 1 27.50
5-CENT CLUB PAYS. 68.75
J-CENT CLUB PAYS 25.50
l-CENT CLUB PAYS, 11.75
OR IF YOU ARE "FLUSH" RI GHT NOW BEGIN WITH THE LAR
GEST PAYMENT AND DECREASE YOUR PAYMENT EACH WEEK.
WE ALSO HAVE 59 CENT, $1.00 A.ND $5-00 OR MORE CLUBS
WHERE YOU PAY IN THE SAME AMOUNT EACH WEEK.
WE ADD 4 PER CENT INTER EST.
Salisbury Bank & Trust Cow
1918 CLUB STARTS ON AND
""" 11 'lassHSMsnsBaassam.i.i , .
You owe it to yourself and family to investigate this method of 're
moving the cause of disease. .
10 TEN REASONS 10 .'
WHY YOU SHOULD TAKE CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS
1. Because Chiropractic never fails in discovering the exact nature1 '
of your Disease.
2. Because (Chiropractic will REMOVE the cause of your Disease.
3. Because Chiropractie ascemplishcs more titan aU other methods and
Leaves no sad after effect ,
4. Because Chiropractic is the greatest aesor kl the scieQti pre
veatioa of Disease.
5. Because The foremost physicians are recognizing the value of
Chtropruetis.
6. Because You want to be Healthy and Happy.
7. Because People in all oWilked countries are taking adjustments
and are being benefited thereby. - :
8. Beeaase The Adjustments as I give them are not disagreeable nor
painful but are followed by a wonderfully delghtJul sense of
relief.
9. Because Chiropractic has restored to Health many cases sinjilar
to your own pronounced incurable by the best physisians.
10. Because What Chiropractic haa done and is doing for o these it
will do for you. 11
SPINAL ANALYSIS AND CONSULTATION FREE.
M. H. GROVES, Chiropractor
Offiee, 218-19-20 WsHace Building, Hours, 9 to 12 A. M.; 2:30 to 5:09
P. M. Other hours by appointment., phones: Office 240; Res. 243 L3.
TAILORGRAM NO. 2 A
Save 25
Look to your wardrobe now, and
arrange to have it include at least?
one suit all others on or before Felv
the 5th, 25 per cent. off. .
Yours to serve,
J. O. Fricke & Son
MERCHANT TAILORS J
Craning and pressing Neatly Pone.
. t..i.vu Jr HAA. VMM WA ... W ..maw
and mud. Even on roads that have
been improved in the past the slush
is, fearful This-is not olfly true of
the county roads but the Btreets of
the-city that have not been paved
macadamized are in bad condition,
due to the fearful weather and long
wet spell. It will-require some davs
for the roads and and streets to get
in normal condition even after good
weather sets In.
LOIN WITH
AFTER DEQ 18.
Per Gent.