Newspapers / Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, … / Oct. 24, 1924, edition 1 / Page 12
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POUGHS Every few hoursswallow slowly a quarter of a teaspoonful of Vicks. Also melt a little in a spoon or a tin cup and inhale the vapors arising. VapoRub CW IF Million Jar, tW Y-atlf UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER We are exclusive Agents for Cleveland and Rutherford County. WILLIAMS & HAMRICK Telephone Office: 585 New Fanning Shelby Building. OR. DAVID M. MORRISON OPTOMETRIST 1 Eyes Examined, Glasses Fit ted, Lenses Duplicated. OFFICES: Kings Mountain, N. C. Forest City, N. C. Rutherfordton, N. C. J NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS. State of North Carolina, County of Cleveland. • The stockholders of Beam Bros. Merc, company, a corpation created, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of North Carolina, being located at Waco 5,1. will take notice that the Board of Directors of said corporation in a call meeting on September 23rd, 1924, Unanimously passed a resolution for the dissolution of the aforesaid cor poration; and all stockholders in the aforesaid corporation are hereby no tified that a meeting cf the stockhold ers will be held at Waco. N. C., in Beam Bros. Merc. Company’s store, on Monday, Oct., 20th, 1924, at 4 o’clock, p. m., for the purpose of tak ing action on the resolution passed by said Board of Directors for the dis solution of said corporation, as provid od by law. This the 24th day of September, 1924. BEAM BROTHERS MERC. CO. J. R. Rhyne, Secy. By J. B. Rhyne, President. COMMISSIONER’S SALE. By virtue of an order of Superior eouri. made entitled: "Bertha L. Beam Admr.. et al vs. Delmas Beam, et al., in a Special Proceeding, I will sell to the highest bidder at the Court House door in Shelby, N. C., on Saturday, October 25th, 1924 at 12 o'clock, M., or Within legal hours the following described real es tate, to-wit: First Tract: Situated in No. 5 Township, Cleveland county, and de scribed as follows: Being lot in town 0# Waco, and bounded as follows: Be ginning at stone in East edge of street, northwest corner Baptist church lot, and runs thence with edge ^street N. 20 W. 100 feet to stone, QrC. Beam’s corner; thence with his Jijjjje N. 67 E. 200 feet to stake, his eocner in Huss street; thence with said street S. 20 E. 100 feet to stone, notheast corner of the church lot; thence with said lot 67 W. 200 feet to the beginning, containing 20,000 feet more or less. Second Tract: Beginning at iron stake in old Goode and Mauney lines, at the cross roads, and running with said old line, N. 13 3-4 W. 47 1-2 poles to stake, Plato Warlick’s cor ner; thence with Plato Wurlick’s line N. 46 1-2 W. 28 poles to stake, his corner; thence with old line N. 86 W. 40 poles to stone; thence a new line S, 17 3-4 W. 92 1-4 poles to stone in north edge of Shelby road; thence N. 01 E. 16.60 poles to a stone S. edge M road; thence N. 64 3-4 E. 29.20 poles to the beginning, containing 23 acres, more or less. - Third tract: Lots Nos. 5 aid 6, a subdivision of M. C. Beam estate, as Shown by plat recorded in Bjok No. 1 of plats, at page No. 4 and described 4» follows: “ Lot No. 5: Beginning at stake in N. side' of Railroad street, Southwest corner lot No. 4 and runs thence Jvlth line of lot No. 1C; thence with •aid line S. 70 W. 30 feet to stake in maid line, corner lot No. 6; thence With said line S. 20 E, 78 feet to stake, North side Railroad street; thence With Railroad street ,N. 70 E. 30 feet to the beinnint. Lot No. 6: Begining at stake, North side of Railroad street, Southwest eorner of lot No. 6 and runs thence With line of lot No. 5. N. 20 1-2 W. 78 feet to stake in line of lot No. 16; thence with said line and line of lot No. 10 S. 70 W. ho feet to stake in line of lot No. 10; thence S. 20 1-2 E. with line of lot No. 7 78 feet to stake. North aide of Railroad street: thence with said street North 70 East 30 feet to the beginning. Fourth Tract: Lot No. 7: That lot of land situated in town w»co, and Known as tot "A” and bounded as fol lows: Beginning at stake in Mauney old line, near the widow F. M. Hoyles’ old line; thence with Mauney old line N. 17 W. 24 1-2 poles to stake on W. edge of Main street, thence with W. edge of Main street 22 E. 24 1-2 poles to stake; thence S. 71 W. 3 1-2 poles to the beginning, containing one fourth acre, mere or less. Terms of Sale: One-third cash on day of sale; one-third within 6 months and one-third within twelve months vfter d"te, title to be reserved until «il the purchase money is paid. De ferred payments to bear 6 per cent interest from date. This the 22nd day of September, 1924. m _ B. T.j FALLS, (Jomtoissioner. <v'. PREVENT SPREAD OF DISEASE OF CHICKS The method of spread or transmis sion of white din .The* In well known. That method la this: Chicks that sur vive the white diarrhea, contain the organisms In their bodies and a cer tain percentage of the egg* laid by that hen when grown are Infected be fore hatching. The chicks come out of the shell with the disease and Im mediately show symptoms of white diarrhea and this spreads through their first four days of life to all the other chicks in the dock. During the first four days of life, If one chick comes out of the batch Infected, others of that particular batch will become Infected. Prevention consists In hatching chicks from eggs free from Infection. If your chicks get the disease, treat ment Is practically useless. Attention would he better given to prevention than to treatment. Kill all noticeably diseased. Remove all free from dls ease away from Infected premises. The only satisfactory method of de termining whether a hen Is Infected Is hycmenns of blood test. - Draw a small vial of blood from each lien that Is to he hred from. The college Is testing blood free of charge nt the present time and will soon hnve a bulletin available explaining this method. The proper time to test for white diarrhea Is In the fall after culling. Test all hens you propose to keep over for breeding purposes. One test may not eliminate all disease. Test at least every year, or every six months, until you know they are tree. l)o not add to your flock any bird you do not know to he free from this disease. All may soon be forced to test as people are going to stop buying Indis criminately from hatcheries or breed ers whose eggs come from unknown, untested stock. They will buy from the hatchery that tests the hens that lay the eggs. The blood test Is the only means at all satisfactory for the elimination of white diarrhea, ns It eliminates the hen that lays the eggs that are Infected.—Dr. II. K. Newsom, Pathologist, Colorado Experiment Sta tion. Convenient Nests Easy to Keep in Good Order Good nests are easy to dean and easy to get at when collecting egg*. They are moat convenient to reach when located under the dropping boards or on the side walls, fnless the dropping hoards are at least four feet from the floor, the nests Should not he utuler them. There should he one rest for every four birds In the pen. A box 12 by 12 Inches Is the most suitable slr.e for the average bird. A 1 by 4-Inch piece placed about four Inches In front of the nests will give the htn a place to step from Into the ties*. By hinging this strip It can be used to close the nests apiinst pullets In the fall and the broody liens In the spring. The New Jersey experiment station ranks nesting materials In the follow ing order: hay, shavings, sawdust and straw. To make deunlng easy, they suggest building nests In sections 12 by 12 by Id inches, with a strip In front of 1 by 4-lneh material to hold In the nest filler and a similar strip for the book of the nests. This seta on a platform the width of the nest* and as long as the row of nests Is to be. The nests are covered with a top of matched lumber which answers for the platform for the second tier of nests. When it Is desired to clean the nests, they Hre simply pulled off the platform and all the nest material falls to the floor. These nests <*in he used either under the dropping boards ■or on the side walls. Chicken Lice Destroyed by Dipping in Solution Chicken lice cun he easily destroyed by dipping the birds In a solution of sodium fluorld and water, f'lve ounces of sodium duorld dissolved In a tub containing live gallons of water will be sufficient to treat 100 adult birds or twice that number of chickens ten to twelve weeks old. Kvery bird on the place should be drenched In this solution to entirely eliminate poultry lice for the next few mouths. Select ■ warm day and dip the birds early In the forenoon. Meat in Growing Mash Do not feed over It) per cent meat In the growing mush, as a high pro tein ration will mature the pullet in* stead of developing growth. Thirty live pounds of comment, -•*< pounds bran. 115 pounds middlings, 10 pounds meat scrap and 5 pounds bone meal is suggested. Milk limy replace the meat, but do not leave out the bona meal, particularly in tide case. Remedy for Scaly Leg Scaly leg is a common summer dis ease union; poultry. It is caused by a small parasite that burrows Into the scales of the bird's leg causing them to protrude. One good way to cure It Is to fill an empty fruit can with coal oil and keep the legs of.the bird Immersed in this for a few min utes. If this is done twice a week for a month it will usually kill the para sites, but It Is well to supplement this treatment by using lard as an oint ment for the legs. £8Y ST A# WANT Missionary Writes of War in China Miss Attie Bostic Gives First Hand Information of the Revolution In Chinese Republic. I hope our friends are no more ex cited about us in connection with this war than we are over the situation. It is a sad situation indeed! The two heads of the militury forces in these two provinces have been near the point of fighting several times in the past two years, but both wear by all the powers that they are peaceful and do not want war! This is so like the devil’s agents who bring on war in other parts of the world. Shanghai, the New York of China and one of the greatest of all the trading cities in all the east is in the province of Kiang su geographically, but through some curious political movements in Yuan Shi Kai’s time, has since then been under the control of the neighboring province of Chekiang, and as the war lords live and reign mostly for what they can get out of it for self, Chi, the military governor of Kiangsu has of course seriously coveted this^ very wealthy port. More than a year ago there were serious reports that war wns about to break out in connection with the matter, but a patched up agreement was arrived at by which Lu Yung Shang the chief military man in Chekiang still held sway over. Shanghai and the forts and the arsen al there, and it is now to get final possession of this port and these forts and the great arsenal that Chi Shie Yuen of Nanking, began about two weeks ago to show signs of war like preparations and report says his men made the first attack, though both men have persistently told the public that they would not attack each other, but would only defend in case they were attacked. That is the way, however, that war always begins is it not? Chekiang province has per sistently and consistently refused to acknowledge Tsao Kun as president 1 since he spent millions in buying the votes of parliament to put himself into that office, while it was publicly stated that Chi Hsie Yuen gave a round million to help him perpetrate that nefarious fraud. Chekiang calls itself an independent province, but sympathizes with both Sun Yat Sen in Canton and his opposition in Pe king, and its socalled central govern ment. Then in the far northern part of China, outside the great wall and bor dering on Siberia, are three very rich, but not thickly settled provinces, Known as Manchuria, ana over which Chang: Tso Lin rules and is entirely independent of Pekin". It was he who had the conflict with Wu Pie Fu ir. the early summer of 1921, but who was soon repulsed in his effort to get to Peking with his forces. He is undoubt edly one of the most influential and feared mitlitnry men in China with immense resources. His sympathies and efforts are now with the Chegiang Duchue, Lu Yung Shang and I heard on the streets today that he has some ship loads of troops already on their way by sea to help Lu, and I also read In the paper today that he has 30,000 men at each of six different points ready to attack the metropolitan pro vince and again strive for the mastery over Peking. He declared last week that his purpose was to kill Tsao Kun and Wu Pei Fu end bring peace to the country. Tsao Kun is the mock presi dent, who is in the position only be cause he spent millions to bribe the legislature, and Wu Pei Fu, who is in many ways the equal and in some ways perhaps the superior of Chung Tso Lin, the Manchurian warlord, is located in Honan province some 400 miles south of Peking and some 600 miles from Chnnghai, and he was one of the military men who stood by and protected Tsao Kun in buying his present seat, as was also Fung Yu Hsiang, the famous Christian general, who lost much of the respect he had so justly won, because of his mix-up in this bribery business. Wu Pei Fu ha3 easy railway connection with Nan King, Chi Hsis Yuen’s seat of govern ment and he has been sending down large forces to help Chi. Report also says that Sun Yut Sen is doing all in his power to help Lung and to over throw the Peking false government. Peking has no money and finds it dif ficult to borrow. It is altogether im possible to tell how the matter will terminate, but many of us who have lived in the midst of war and rumors of wars and bandits, soldiers in uni form and under some government one month and the next racing over the country as bandits, will be glad to see a fight to a finish. So far the reports that have come of the fight ing seem mostly to favor Lu’s side. A recent most interesting item about Chung Tso Lin is that he has secured the services of amost expert Japanese girl flyer and that he has some fine air service preparations. We are well and at peace with all men! CRYSTAL ?: BATH Thp Most Dolujhtful i Inviqoratinq \ ALCOHOL MASSAGE AtCOMOL 9S7. jj At All Good Drui)<)iJts The Reel Attraction. Washington Star. Jud Tunkins says the plain tiller of the soil has got to face the sad fact that the pigs an’ punkins at a county fair never get as much serious atten tion as the harness races. At Exactly Open Car Cost You pay exactly open car cost for the all-year comforts of the Coach. Hudson alone can build it. A3 the largest builder of 6-cylinder closed cars in the world, lo. » exclusively holds the advantages to produce this car and this price. It creates the one important buying issue today. For no one who knows closed r c~r comforts will be satisfied with an open cat,, with one-seasoji utility; and diminishing resale value. That U why the Coach outsells all rivals. Its leadership is not even challenged. Everyone knows it provides highest closed car value. Hudson invented the Coach and its development and experience make its value exclusive. And even more important in your permanent enjoyment of the Coach, is the famous Guner-Six chassis with performance distinction and long lasting reliability not excelled by any car regardless of cost. Balloon Tires Standart * Equipment « HUDSON ,Supei>Six COACH $1500 Freight ana 7\ix Extra I v HOEY MOTOR COMPANY SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM Spending Southern Railway Money for the Greatest Public Service A manufacturer’s first question, when planning the location of a factory, is “What are the railway facilities?”. Busi ness men who are investing capital in new industries in North Carolina know that a location on the lines of the Southern Rail way is an assurance of prompt deliveries of fuel and materials to the factory, and of finished goods to inland markets and ocean shipping ports. North Carolina’s prosperity depends on adequate transportation. Good railway service is a magnet that draws industry to a state, just as poor sendee throttles busi ness and discourages new enterprises. The character of Southern Railway service in North Carolina is notably contributing to the prosperity of the State. The high standards of service on the Southern could not be maintained with out continued heavy expenditures for new facilities to handle promptly and efficient ly the traffic offered oqr lines. In the past twenty years our outlays for additions and betterments in the State of North Carolina have amounted to more than $40,000,000. These-capital expenditures have been in addition to our day-to-day operating expenses and taxes in North Carolina, which annually amount to mil lions of dollars. In 1923 they totalled $26,000,000. , Most of the new capital expended on our North Carolina lines in these two decades has been devoted to improvements which enable us to move traffic promptly and thus attract new industries to the State and so contribute to North Carolina’s in creasing prosperity. Nevertheless we respond as generously as practicable to the wishes of our fellow citizens of North Carolina for improve ments which, while desirable, do not in crease the capacity of the railroad as a transportation facility. In the last ten years we have eliminated fifty-four grade crossings and have provided forty-four new or improved station buildings in the State. With the cooperation of the people of North Carolina we hope to be able to continue our policy of making our major outlays for additions and betterments that will increase our capacity to do our clay’s work. e SOUTHERN SERVES THE SOUTH
Shelby Daily Star (Shelby, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 24, 1924, edition 1
12
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