The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, February 05, 1918, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8
PAGE EIGHT
TO DETERMINE ISSUES
OF WAR PRESENT YEAR
Culminating Crisis Seems to Have
Coi|ie, President Wilson Tells
Fanners.
Washington. Feb. 4.?In a message
to the nation's farmers delivered
at an agricultural conference
at Urbana, 111., President Wilson
said he thought statesmen on both
sides of the water realized that the
culminating crisis of the war had
come and this year's achievements
would decide it.
The message, which the President
intended to present personally until
attacked by a cold several days ago,
was delivered by President James,
of the University of Illinois. Recounting
the aggressions of Germany,
the President said:
"We are fighting, therefore, as
truly for the liberty and self-government
of the United States as if the
war of our own revolution had to be
fought over again; and every man in
every business in the United States
must know bv this tlm? ?,?=
whole future fortune lies in the
balance.
"Our national life and our whole
future development will pass under
the sinister influences of foreign
control if we do not win. We must
win, therefore, and we shall win. I
need not ask you to pledge your
lives and fotunes with those of the
rest of the nation to the accomplishment
of this great end.
"You will realize, as I think
statesmen on both sides of the water
realize, that the culminating
crisis of the struggle has come and
that the achievements of this year
on one side or the other must determine
this issue."
The President recalled that farmers
fired the first shots at Lexington
that set aflame the American
revolution for liberty, and expressed
the hope and belief that American
farmers now will willingly and
conspicuously stand by to win this
3
UNITED STATES FOOl
SOl'TH <W
* Study of the situation do
depend largely upon flour fo
Germany. Our associates in
America for their supply of tl
economy must he practiced ii
household in order to feed tl
Corn and other substitute:
possible.
1 Hoarders of food, whethei
sociations, subject themselves
J Kl/Ot
i Flour in towns and cities s
quarter barrels; in rural and
j ter and half barrel quantities
r Not more than thirty day
, bought.
| No flour shall be sold or c
| consumer unless the buyer p
| one pound of wheat flour s
of wheat flour purchased, "1
ns follows: Hominy, corn g
edible corn starch, barley f
rice, rice flour, buckwheat fl<
tnto flour, soy bean flour and
I The dealers must notify al
i munity who do not know of t
I tions should be made to the
| cade buildin, Columbia. S. C.
* follow every reported case.
< sr<j.
Sugar should be sold in to1
pound lots; in rural and far
ten pound lots. This regulat
j to. Every retailer should us
duplication of sales.
The United Food Admini
| ants advertising sugar and I
increase the sale of these cor
If the rules of the Food j
j there will be enough food.
Dealers are prohibited f
; sales of sugar in connection
j cept that of corn meal. TlTe
require the consumer to pu
meal with one pound of su
for the purpose of increasing
: thereby saving flour.
\
. Food
THE LANCASTER NEWS, LANCAS
FORD TO MANUFACTURE I I am not Borry
ANTI-SUBMARINE CRAFT ?aua? th? p *
the best in the
x
been in the line
To Execute Contractu For "Several to get a Oerma
1 - ? . ? I have had tou
war. He said the farmers did not
want themselves exempted from
military service as a class, but that
the attention of the war department
was centered upon the task of interfering
with farm labor as little as
possible, and he believed that in the
next draft the farmers would ilnd
their labor much less seriously
drawn upon than in the first.
NOON MEAL WHEATLESS
EACH DAY IN THE WEEK
State Food Administrator Surest*
Dinner Kvery Day Without
Wheat.
The noon meal in South Carolina
should he the wheatless meal in
each day in the week, according t"
a statement issued hy William HI
liott, food administrator.
Mr. Elliott reached this conclusion
after a conference with Miss
Edith L. Parrott, head of the home
economics work of Winthrop college,
home demonstration forces and
food administration.
The new regulations of the food
administration prescribe two wheatless
days a week. Monday and Wednesday;
one meatless day a week,
Tuesday; one porkless day a week.
Saturday. No pork products to he
consumed on Tuesdays, meatless
day. One meatless meal each day
in the week and one wheatless meal
each day in the week.
The people of the State are expected
to observe these days as requested
in the President's proclamation
and in the statement issued
by Herbert Hoover, federal food administrator.
Copy of the new regulations have
been sent to all the hotels and cafes
in the state.
There are more than one hundred
thousand homes registered as
members of the food administration
in South Carolina. It is the desire
of the administration that every
home join in the food conservation
program.
%
) ADMINISTRATION.
IIOIJNA.
rom making combination
with other commodities, exdealer
in his discretion may
rchase two pounds of corn
igar. This ruling Is made
? the use of corn meal and
VILLI AM ELLIOTT,
I Administrator for S. C.
J
I
velops that America must
>r success In the war with
the war must depend upon
lour. The strictest kind of
n the use of flour in every
te armies.
s must be used as far as i
individuals, firms, or ass
to severe penalties.
JR.
should he sold in eighth to
farm communities in quari.
s' supply must be Bold or
lelivered to any retailer or
urchases at the same time
uhstitutes for every pound 1
Wheat flour substitutes are j
rits, corn meal, coin flour, j
lour, rolled oats, oatmeal, I
>ur, potato flour, sweet po- !
I feteria flour and meals. I
1 other dealers in the com- j
he rules. Reports of vlola5
Food Administration, Ar- |
Prompt investigation will j
Alt. I
*ns and cities In two to five ,
m localities tn from five to ;
ion must be strictly adhered I
e precaution to prevent the j
stration objects to march- 1
flour. Advertising tends to
nmodities.
Administration are followed
... am going back
Vessela. to h?ve better
Frightened?
admitting that
Washington. Feb. 4.?New sub- 8tepped into a 1
marine fighters of a powerful type muM,. I exp<
are ahout to be turned out in the nilnute. After
United States in large numbers. Af- evei.f curiosity i
ter testifying before the house naval and x hllVe nc
committee on the naval appropria-( 80arO(, since.
11 tion bill. Secretary Daniels author- ( German alive n<
I ized the statement that contracts ' UrU a?y Qf that
|for "several scores" of the new ' - ?
n n*t a uerman
! craft have been placed with thei WOrse than one
j Ford Motor company, of Detroit.. He a RUI1 myS,
i described them as "half way between within the la
a destroyer and submarine chaser " respon,,pn| Hnw
,200 feet long and eou'pped with on q co( ,n n
latest discoveries for combating sub- ..Tyou ev,
marines. luck?" said 'th
All parts of the ships except the "Now I've g<
engines are to be fabricated in He- iny leR by n H
troit and the parts shipped to sea- only one sa
board, where they will be assent- fjiP cermans hi
bled. Changes In the Ford plant to ;ind shoot shell
j permit the handling of the work coining up to
have progressed so swiftly. Mr. l>an- Sij them. Good
' iels said, that deliveries on the con- j wi)1 bc
i tracts during the coming summer jf pver I g
are assured. : gain?well, al
The new vessels are expected to chance. Next
' prove far superior to the chasers something to ej
now in use. including those or the "You see 1 It:
' 110-foot class. They will have and had to tak
I steam power with a greater radius not good for 11
I of action, will be more seaworthy would give two
land will be able to carry heavier ar- for one large
I mament. It has developed that the in onions. Perl
'latest German submarines are my luck change
equipped with guns which outrange things I want
those of small chasers and even mans and beefsi
( some merchant ships. ?
Henry Ford recently placed be- RAW ( 01VI (1
fore Secretary Daniels plans show- SENT TO
ing the practicability of converting _
a large part of his factory into a ship Ilnm?||nt<, ship
fabricating plant. Naval construe- portw ?f on
tors had evolved the latest subma-| .
irimini 11
! rine chaser and Rear Admiral David
W. Tavlor, with two assistants, was
? r "Washington,
sent to inspect the Ford plant. Af..
m . . - .. . the shortage of
ter the officers had made their re..
. , . land mills, I)i
; port the contracts were placed.
t? i> !<:? ... . , Adoo instructed
Possibility that additional con,
. . .. , regional rnilroa
tracts might be given other autoi
. ? ? . v. .. south, to ship i
moble firms was suggested bv Mr.
. , ... ,. HO.000 and 100
Daniels, but he said no definite ac...
. . . ... ,. to Rrunswick,
tion had been taken along this line.
In connection with Mr. Daniels'
renewed recommendation for a large ?
increase in both temporary and per- , , Z
mament enlisted personnel of the
navy, it was learned that the de- j ________
partment plans extensive enlarge- i| Nvcarc
ment of several existing training I HmNMNm
stations. Plans already have been : our ^
approved for enlarging the Pelham J
llay, N. Y., and Norfolk, Va., sta- J ' || i |t
tions. Five thousand men are now j I'liii
at Pelham Ray and 16,000 at Nor-'j I |J
fo! k. ; I'
Secretary Daniels said that the j i l||| |{||||]^
navy now has ftr?,000 men under in I i ! Ill I Hs3
... .. . Jllilll|l!li:illllllll>r
struction and, with the recom
mended increase, will have men I
enough to supply crews not only for j C()UStlT161%
the entire naval construction pro- _
gram as now contemplated, but also DCSt idtC
for the hundreds of merchant ships . .1
which are to be placed under his 3l inClT P
supervision.
AMERICAN SoIjMER 7s j
"BIT" BY TEUTON SHELL !
i
North Dakota Youth, Who Ho|wn1 II $ j
to Slay Germans, Tells of II $1.25 Mack
II <L
111 Duck. II $1.25 yard
|| they last.
|| $1.50 and I
With the American Army in || prp-Vd Tn'
France, Feb. 4.?-One of the soldiers || ^ ^
wounded in Wednesday's raid by the ||
Germans told the correspondent ||
some days ago in a little shell- || One lot Fan
wrecked village near the American || gra(je yj
lines what he hoped to do to the Ger- J;
mans. Today he is th^ most disap || sale. i'r
pointer! American in France. He II
caught a chunk of steel from an I $2.00 value
enemy high explosive shell. "It bit I
me in the leg." he said, thereby put- I Pattern,
ting him out of action for some I
| time. I One lot nic
Several days ago this youth, who I beautiful
has sandy hair and comes from u I
farm near Hlsmarck, N. I)., emerged I an(* 75c
from the trenches after doing part J
of his bit of a certain period. He j
was covered with mud from head to I JL C*
foot. Even his hair was streaked I ia
in places with the red clay. I J
"How do I like this war?" he II
said then. In response to a question. I!
"Well. It's pretty tough sometimes, II
but when you are out there under 11
the stars with a flock of Oermans In |j
front of you, you forget all the bad II 11
points of it and your idea in life is II
to do the job we came here for. I've II 4
only been in France a few weeks. Ill
came 'with a division of former na- II
tional guardsmen. I was put In that ||
organization after being drafted. II
"From the national guard division II
they took me and three or four others
and placed me in this outfit. And
' 0
TER, S. C.
for the change, be- ton and other southern i
ent unit probably Is trans-shipment by water
army. Since I have York and New Kng'and.
i I have done my best The action was taaen afte
n for one good start, ference between Mr. Mc.A<
gh luck so far, but I representatives of the Natl
tomorrow and hope
luck the next time. ;
Well, I don't mind fSSSSSS^SZSS^^SSS^S
the first time I
trench I didn't like it WT^.^. J
Mted a bullet every US & SUCCi
an hour or so, how- a*
got the better of me. ?
it hpmi Iho oHn-Kloot
l l
sr hear of such bar from these feeders
e soldier, smiling. properly fed, are a
>t a piece bit out o' hulls.
hell splinter. There By actual ^ the
t siac tion. I hat i: advantages of usin{
ad to stay far away
s at tis instead o1- I
where we eould get
ness knows how loni W .
up now. but, believ |
;et back to that lin
1 I want is allot het Every pound of the Bu
lo (11 ;t (. i wan | because the lint on the
it in the worst way The price per pound o!
. . , is very much less than
,ve been operated o. Hulls do not clog or flu
e ether and food i"- them are readily assimi
le just now. Hut I They are free of
whole months' pa> They are sacked
beefsteak smothered They take half a
haps some day when If you have not tried Bu
1 of feeders arc using th
s I \ii!l have all the have not given Buckeyi
most in life Get- successful feeders guid<
eak and onions." Mr. Ohvey Yarber, i
has fed a carload
IN ORDERED *9 'et them read
, .. ?.v ?p *->' |?-r 1 uru I stripes
Imit six yards to Customer. I lot. Vi
ry Silks, $1.39 and $1.50 CjTT
ird wide. All In this
iced Special $1.20 Yard /I j|j
Fancy Silk. Beautiful ^|ir \jlJ,
Sale price $!.??
e Silk Shirt Patterns in
stripes for shirts, 68c
value. Sale price.. 45c
ecial Showing of the
Dresses, Coats and
FOR EARLY SPRL
ODMAN-WAI
Sell it for Cash fo
4
=
NEW ENGLAND SliKSJSiii
Hulls bought.
inent Kmm Southern T? secure the best results
><> to t oo.uoo I tales thoroughly tw.lv ho*
wetting them down night a
>y Mr. M< Ailoo. iHim cannot be done, wet
feed the hulls dry, use on!
Feb. 4.?To relieve Book
cotton at New Knit- Gives the right formult
, ... South. Tells how mud
rector (Jenernl Mc- tening, for work. Desc
C. II. Markham, using them properly. J
?1 director for the M K fhe fa
Immediately between Atlanta Bim,in.han,
.000 bales of cotton Aagattm CKarlott
Savannah, Charles- I??? ?
fn A GREAT SALE
I All This W
sSs Every piece of silk included
at prices that will mean a big
> for silk will be Higher Later. Shop e
rns before they are all gone. We havi
rices they will not last long.
SPECI/
25 yard wide Taffeta. Sale price 8t)c $1.08 vat
Massaline, yard wide. Sale price Hl?r very le
imit six yards to Customer.) $2.00 Si 1
wide Poplins. Most all shades while Price..
??< $1.50 val
11.75 value Messaline. All shades. Price. .
le. Dandy quality. Worth more. One lot o
thia ua lo at v 1
TUESDAY, FEB. 5, 1918.
>orts for sedation of Cotton Manufacturers
to Now and New Kngland commercial Interests,
who explained that many cotton
sr a c*m mills recently have shut dotfn beloo
And cause they could not get sufficient
onal As- raw material 4
=rr?r. ii
esstuiiy a whole year
tver the South
^ 1JUCKEYE
j^Lintless
Hulls have
been fed by
~ - men and stockmen
throughly
'-i ' out the South
V\yp- ^for the past
jin m* year. Reports
indicate that these lintless hulls when
great improvement over the old style
se feeders have found the following
5
TNAOC MAM ?
jckeyf
COTTONSEED
HULLS V
LINTLESS A
ickeye Hulls contains much more food value
old style hulls has no food value,
f real roughage in the form of Buckeye Hulls
in the form of the old style hulls. Buckeye
x the digestive tract. Other foods mixed with
latcd.
trash and dust,
and easy to handle,
s much space in the barn,
ickeye Hulls, please remember that thousands
em and will use no other roughage. If you
s Hulls a fair trial, let the experience of these
s you in using them as they should be used.
BooneviUe, Ark.,
of Buckeye Hulls to cows and calves
'y for the range. He had been feed
las mat they did much better on Bucket
age. He has another car of Buckeye
and to develop the ensilage odor, wet the halls
rr* before feeding. It is easy to do this by
nd rooming for the nest feeding. If at any time
down at least thirty minutes. If you prefer to
y half as much by bulk as of old style hulls.
of Mixed Feeds Free
\ for every combination of feeds used in the
h to feed for maintenance, for milk, for fatTibes
Buckeye Hulls and gives directions foe
Send for your copy to the nearest mill.
fcheye Cotton Oil Co. Dept. K 11
i Greenwood Little Rock Memphis
Jachton Macon Selma
=== ^
OF SILK YOU-CAN 5AVC ill
eek
in this sale, and atom?atom
saving to our
arly and get your choice of the
. ~ L: i ?i- _r i mi i .
: a uig MUCK 01 gOOd SUK DUt
US ||j
ue U. S. Colors In yard wide silk. The I j
itest. Sale price $1.78 Yard I J
k Pongee, in plain and figured. Sale I |
$1.2? I \
lue yard wide Foulard Silk. Sale I i
$1.10 I I
f Taffeta, Poplins, Khaki Cool Shirt I I
and other leading patterns. All in one I 1
ilues up to $1.50 yard. Sale Price $1.00 I I
^ $1.00 Special in Shirt Stripes. Sale I |
price H?c I I
I A (Jrrat Sale of Skirt Patterns. I I
No two alike. Cost mark forgotten. I j
Tliey must all go in this sale. j 9
3 1-2 yards to the pattern for I I
i Skirts. Values $5.95, $6.50 up to 1 |
$7.50. All reduced. Special J I
$r,.(M) I I
i, Only a Few IWt. J |
Very Latest in I
Coat Suits 11
VG WEAR ||v
JCUP CO. II
r Less ||