V jTHE WILMINGTON, DISPATCH MOrjDA YlERNOON OCTOBERS M l 9 1 6.s PAGE THREE J; Market Mim ROYAL STOCKS. New York, (Wall Street), Oct 16?-- Judeing liuui iuc 110c or yucca at 10- day's opening developments over the we"ek-end developments seemed fav orable. Gams irom to 3 points were registered by shipping issues, rails anj industrials. . equipments ana mpnitions were featured try Crucible Steel and Baldwin Locomotive. .Unit ed States Steel soon advanced to 15-8 points. Coppers were" nfgher with Mexicans i ;. : ' Allis-Chalmers . . . . ;."V ... 24 5-8 American Beet Sugar l.' 987-8 American Can . . ..... 60 1-2 American Car and Foundry ... 66 1-2 American Locomotive 78 American Cotton.. Oil 531-2 American Smelting ...... . . 109 5-8 American Sugar . . .. . . 116 , -wrican Tel. & Tel 1331-4 k m'KAAA. Ann American xuuauu szu Anaconda Copper, 93 1-2 tchison . . . . . 106 1-4 ' Atlantic Coast Line (bid) .. ..117 Baldwin Locomotive 84 3-8 Baltimore & Ohio 87 3-4 Bethlehem Steel .547 ( anatuan irauiiii; i.4DX- Chesapeake &-Ohio 68 1-2 Thi.. Mil- & St. Paul 95 1-4 Chi- K. l., & iac. Ky 24 3-8 Consolidated Gas .. 142 Crucible Steel 85 3-4 Erie 38 3-4 General Electric 1771-2 Great Northern Pfd. . . .. 1181-8 Great Northern Ore Ctfs. . . . . 42 3-8 Illinois Central, . I 108 5-8 Inter. Merc. Mar. Pfd. Ctfs 115 1-2 Kansas City Soutnern 28 Louisville & Nashville 138 1-2 Liggett & Myers (bid) 270 LorUlard Co. (bid) . ..190 Maxwell Motors S9 3 8 Mexican Petroleum .108 1-2 1 Missouri, Kansas & Texas pfd . . 15 Missouri Pacific .51-2 National Lead 69 New York Central 108 3-4 X. Y., N. H. & Hartford 61 Norfolk & Western 146 Northern Pacific 1111-2 Pennsylvania 57 3-4 Reading 108 1-4 Rep. Iron & Steel 74 Seaboard Air Line 17 Seaboard Air Line Pfd 38 1-2 Sloss. Shef. Steel & Iron 5 Southern Pacific ..- .'.101 Southern Railway 28 3-4 Southern Ry 68 Studebaker Corporation, 132 1-2 Tenn. Copper 23 Texas Co 221 Tmon Pacific, 149 LlllOa tTUH, . . luv J. I United States Rubber , 59 1-4 v. omxnsjc i 1 inited States Steel, ,1027-8 tnited States Steel pfd 120 irginia CTiro. unem., z 1-4 ; Ya. Iron, Coal & Coke 44 1-2' Wabash Pfd., B., 30 Western Union, 1011-2 Westinghouse Electric, 62 7-8 Gulf Steel 2nd pfd 74 1-2 American Zinc, 46 Central Leather 79 PARKER SPOKE I Republican Nominee Charged Wilson With Teaching Coward ice Raleigh, N. C, Oct. 16. John J Parker, Republican candidate for at torney general, spoke in the Court HousR Pnda v nijrht to a verv eood i Republican crowd, which heard one! i of the best speeches made to Repub licans this year. -Mr. Parker is next to one of the youngest men running on either tick-.ve , i . uui ne nas naa a repuiauuu ( uiiuor Since ne went to tne university and distinguished himself in the de bates. His speech Friday night went an hour and fifty-one minutes and he car ried state and national issues to a iinish He centered his attack upon the "free trade" and the foreign policy f the national administration, 4 giv- nig the Adamson bill a side-swipe , which sufficed very satisfactorily in this unionized town. For protection, I he was content to say that everybody hi North Carolina is for it and that the issue need not be debated. "Four , J'ears ago a great Democrat charged that Senator Simmons had strayed . from the Democratic fold and that the had anything tor do with them. , senator had protectionlzed the state, j He would not criticise Judge Mann I think he succeeded in proving it," J ing, his opponent, but noted that -Mr. Parker said, "but Mr. Kitchin ! Judge Manning sis' a corporation law- was overwhelmingly defeated. As for the foreign poliey he declar- ed that he does not believe a Demo crat lives who will in private or upon the public platform defend the Wilson Policy. "I don't believe there is a Democrat who in his heart of hearts Js not ashamed of his party's record," up in the Cape, Fear and Yadkin val he declared. 'ley sale.' Certainly the government The speaker quoted Colonel Roose-: has had plenty of time to inquire in vlt and Mr. Hughes as authority for . to that manifest violation of the law. the statement that when Wilson is- j He would look into that if elected.' sued the first "strict accountability" ; Criticising the soldiers home man Pronouncement, the President called 1 agement .he said the superintendent Ambassador Dumba in and told the i of the, convict camp in his county Austrian representative that the mes- j sage was for home consumption and nt to be rigorously interpreted. "Then the Lusitania sunk," he said. WEATHER FORECAST. Asheville at ; -;. r: s October 16. : Temperature. I u si : 66; LJ' 68 fl.1'2. ; 72- j 64 .00 72 64 j .00 72 60 j .00 ;&o . 46 j .00 86 76 .00 80 70 .00 86 74 .04 60 52 .06 62 5a .12 .72 60 j .00 58 56 .04 66 56 j .02 70 I 62 I .00 Atlanta. Charleston f - : '.-V Charlotte . . v.cloudyj'C 72 Chicago Wptldy : !60 vxai v csiuu . . . ..ciejjr Jacksonville . :clear 'New Orleans ... ain New York ;" Pittsburgh ..cloudy) . . cloudy j . .cloudy ,. .cloudy . .cloudyj . clean J Raleigh V . . 1st. Louis . . Washington Wilmington ( SUNRISE tmd SUNSET. WEDNESDAY. Sun rises Sun sets .6:19 .5:36 Stage of water in Cape Fear river at Fayetteville, N. C, at S a. m. yes terday, 2.0 feet. COTTON LETTER. New York,. Oct,, ,16, An unexcep tionally strong Liverpool caused new high prices in the market this morn ing. We are advised, however, by one of our reliable correspondents in North Carolina that Texas factors are offering cotton to the f!arn1ina m;Ufi flt nr iOM inwol. th.n r.QT, ha f. I fered by local dealers. This state ment was startling to us, but if fol I lowed by any large movement of this kind will have a serious effect upon the market as it distinctly shows that there is not the demand for export purposes that we have trained our selves to expect. There is no ques tion about a splendid textile business going on in this country, due to our supplying a number of markets that j Europe previously controlled. The j great question is what will we export, ' for without the markets that we ar filling, what will Europe need, and if Texas can offer cotton or is offer ing cotton to domestic spinners, as reported to us, it will largely be an answer to the export question. JOHNSTON, STORM & CO. fashionable .Mrs. Jnns has sued orivttfe - " r- -V Wh h h inst her hug. band? Neglect of her bulldog and failure to support, the same, I believe. Ex change. . "President Wilson has never denied j these charges. In an hour of peril he was teaching us lessons of . cowardice (and selfishness and there is no man or set of men greater enemies to the race than these." Mr. Parker was thoroughly ashamed of the Adamson bill and he declared I that labor union sympathizers, as he 1 is, the labor men will themselves in , time to come repudiate legislation i forced as this, was. He did not think the eight-hour law, which he favors, i entered into it at all and he was con- firlont thnt thf rnnrts will rlM1fl.rA it unconstitutional. He regarded it as most evil in its tendency. Mr. rarKer aiviaea nis speecn equal ly on state and national issues and rapped the whole state administra tion the last-50 minutes. He used Clarence Poe to prove that the school system which Attorney- General Bickett proises so is un worthy of North Carolina and is in ferior to. "heathen Japan." Mr. Park er declined to discuss 16-year issues, but did declare that the 1897 legisla- ture put some of the most construe- legisid-tiuu " e.b I that the bcate has, more than the Democratic legislatures did, He com- nared the cost of the state administra tions and made even the Democrats j laugh when he said that when "Old Dan Russell" was given $1,800 to use 0n the mansion and only $3,000 salary and the Democrats charged him with extravagance, but Governor Craig has twice as big an allowance for execu tive service and $2,000 more salary, besides the $4,200 for keeping up the mansion. ! "The judiciary has become the foot- ball of politics," he said explaining the increase in crime. He quoted chief Justice Clark in support of the charge. He promised to see that ; the j courts do their work so ,far as he yer and was selected by the Democ- racy over Judge .Franks Carter, a pro- gressive Democrat, who was' made to come down, to giveaway to Manning. Mr. Parker thought this showed the unprogresstvehess of the "ring." He thought something might turn could not treat conyicts as the records show the Democrats treat the old sol-f diers. It was a warm made by some speaker. speech and COTTON. I wew York?ctvl6v-The cotton market showed Tenewed strength -' at today's openinjg ithall the active months nearne 'high-T record for tne. montn. Trade interests were ac tive buyers ;:ahd:. tteW thief opening steadjed iai Mi: 3 to 13 points. Atiy "mbfkh& sold about 15 ttf 17 , points net higher,.' with De- NEW YORK : COTTON. Open. Close. . 17.35 17.60 " 17.62; 17.82 October, ..... . ... . .... December, ............. ; January, .....;.... March May, ' July New York Spot 17.8.0. . .17.56 , 17.80 J . 17.67 : 17.88 17.79 17.98 . 17.86 Wilmington cotton Charleston cotton . Savannah cotton . , .17.00 .17.1-S .17 1-4 LIVERPOOL COTTON. Open. 10.17 Close. Oct.-Nov., Jan.-Feb 10.16 1-2 10.25 10.18 1-2 10.28 1-2 March-April May-June 10.21 10.30 10,000; re- Middling, 10.29; sales, ceipts, 12,200. Chicago. Pork $23.80, Wheat $1,57 3-4 Oats 37 3-8 Corn 76 ...76 3-8 to 76 1-2 Ribs 12.72 1-2 Lard 13.72 1-2 WILMINGTON NAVAL STORES. Spirits 43. Rosin $5.50 and $5.25. Tar $2.60 and 10 1-2 cents. Crude $4.00, $4.00 and $3.00. Receipts. Cotton .. 1.43S Spirits Rosin Tar Crude SAVANNAH NAVAL STORES. Spirits 44. Rosin $6.00 and $6.05. Chapter of Accidents. of correlated accidents is told by Hen - ry Weaver, a Bald Eagle Valley far- mer, in Tyrone. Weaver says he de 5ide4 tojpiclj some pears from a large tre one Sunday." The limb broke aha in his descent he passed through the roof of a hog pen. He fell on the back of a fat porker, which was so badly injured that it died. In the barnyard adjoining the pig sty was a colt. It was so frightened by the noise that it jumped over a fence and ran into a clothes line, one end of which was fastened to a post. The post was hurled through the kitchen window of the farm house, narrowly missing the, baby sitting in the high chair The colt leaped over cnother fence and collided with a barnea-wlre fence, lacerating its legs and breast. When the veterinarian came next day to sew up the cuts he ran over Weaver's dog, . which had to be shot. American Missionary Association. Minneapolis, Mnn., Oct. 16. With the meeting of the American Mission ary Association in annual session here tomorrow, leaders in Congrega tional affairs are to enter upon the second stage of efforts for a new Congregationalism in America. For upwards of a decade they have been perfecting their preliminary plans, and at the. meeting about to begin arrangements will be perfected for putting these plans into practical operation. President Henry Church ill King, of Oberlin College, who is also president of the association, will be on hand to further the associa tion's plane, and to make two of the principal addresses. President Vin- cent, of the University of Minnesota, and a number of other men of note, also are on the program, Trial in Margaret Ward Case. . Boston, Mass., Oct. 16. More than half a dozen men and women, among them a former member of the Massa chusetts legislature, were arraigned in the Superior Criminal Court today for trial in connection with the Mar garet Ward case. The body of the Ward girl was found in an automo- j pennsylvanians, and finally Pennsyl bile at Salem early one morning j vania ceded the region to Delaware, several months ago. In- the- car,but Delaware proudly declined' to do were five men, and an examination tQ a cesgfon the of the young woman s body disclosed gr0und that nobody could cede to her that she has died after an illegal op- a(. had always been hers Qnly with. eration had been performed. ,n the pagt 20 yfeart have maps gen- .erally included the -Flat Iron within BIG LINE NAGS AT ATLANTA. the jurisdiction of Delaware, and it Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 16. The three ? less than 50 years to a time when months' campaign of the Grand Cir- V?dT p"zf lhts iok place in cuit during f which , the kings and Flat Irori because it was recog queens of. the trotting and pacing filzed as a No Mans Land, world have, entered and contested fori As to Delaware's quarrel with New stakes and purses worth more than ; Jersey, it sounds more like comic half a million dollars, will be brought .opera than a grave contention between to a close with the meeting inaugurat ed. at the State fair grounds track here oday, Never before has the big cir? cuit conducted a meeting, so far South and the -results of the experiment will be watched closely by al followers of the turf. The stables at' the local track are filled with fast horses and the association, officials. ; confidently predict a week of excellent, sport. LOCAL MARKETS, j ; , ,ti . . ; ..; 7i Eggs, dozen - 32 x Butter, ib :1 22 8S 'Spring Cbiotena, eacL i. ZQ& JtO Hens, each - .'45(8 55 Puddle Ducks :VS0 Qalneas i .--i : , 80(9 SI Beef i.--- ,S .10 Sweet potatoes, bushel .... 75g 1.00 Irish Potatoes, oushel . . . ..75 1,00 C. Hams, Ib fa. 23 T N, C. Shoulders & Ribs lb.. . 17 18 White Peas, bushel l.B0 Corn, bushel. . .. 1.000 K. C. Peanuts, bushel J 55 65 Spanish Peanuts, bushel $0 85 Virginia Peanuts, bushels. 650 70 Oranges- F'nrida . . 4.00 Limes, per 100 . ... ... f . I.5 : Banahab, bunch .. .. .. 3.000 1.0 Lemons, Fancy -. 8.00 Apples . . 3.00 3.50 Bell Peppers, bushel 75 Onions, per cc,ck . . 4.00 " f 4i ' ' " 4- -X- -X- QUARREL BETWEEN STATES 4 4 4" 4 4 4 4 4 4 (Philadelphia Record.) . Virginia's quarrel with the daugh ter state wrenched from her by the Caesrian operation comes up once more to remind the world how long such a disagreement . may live. As a matter of fact, this .question of a few million dollars between the two states once one, although now half a century 1 old, has not persisted so long as some other interstate quarrels. Hardly any two neighboring .states of the Union have escaped such disagreements, usually boundary questions involving territorial claims and matters of juris diction and sovereignty. Pennsylvania had such with Vir ginia in very early days, and New York long quarreled with Connecticut over the eccentricities of their com mon boundary. Massachusetts and Rhode Island had such quarrels. ! Other such questions arose in . the (West and the South and Maryland ! once made a claim that, had it been successfully enforced, would have made West Virginia a state of two separate parts, one isolated from the ! other by intervening territory not within West Virginia's jurisdiction. Courts and commissions have been - . 1 9 . J A Dusy aeanng wun sucn interstate ques- ?, and many such quarrels were Inherited from Colonial days. Two of tne oldest pi tnese quarrels Were those between Delaware and her neighbors, Pennsylvania arid New Jer- sey. These two qeustions came down from Colonial times and were both re lated to the most famous boundary of the Western Hemisphere, Mason and Dixon's line. The beginnings of the quarrel between Pennsylvania and Delaware preceded the coming of Wil liam Penn by a full generation, for long before he accepted the grant of Pennsylvania in payment of a royal j debt, the early settlers of his future ! principality and the Catholic adher- ents of Lord Baltimore were warring over the boundary that we now call Mason and Dixon's line. In many border forays the Catholic Marylanders charged ' with the cry, "Hey, for St. Mary," and the stern Calvinists struck home' with the ans wering cry: "In the name of God, fall on!" It required more ' than a century of physical fighting and liti gation to establish the boundary be tween the lands of the Penns and those of tn" Calverts, and after that boundary hi 3 been accepted by all concerned, there remained the famous "Flat Iron" as a subject of quarrel between the future states of Pennsyl vania and Delaware. The Flat Iron contains only a fw hundred acres, less than many a manor, conferred upon Augustine Her mann by the Calverts in return for the map which he made showing the. northern boundary of Maryland as far north as, the city that Penn was to found on the Delaware more than 20 years later, a map that helped to nurse this ancient quarrel and keep it alive throughout most of Pennsyl vania's Colonial period. In the quarrel over the Flat Iron, Delaware took the characteristic at titude of a fierce little dog fighting a mastiff. As a matter of form, Penn sylvania tried now and then to assert jurisdiction over the triangle of lovely farming country with hills and forest and sparkling streams and pleasant old homesteads,, but most- of the in- i habitants declined to be: counted as "sovereign" states. The arc of a circle with center at Newcastle, and a radius of J2. miles, which marks the northern boundary , of Delaware, was drawn before the days' bf Mason and Dixon, and accepted by them from the field notes of the American, sur veyors who had made the "survey be fore 1760. It had played an import ant part in the settlement of the ' H i i 13 oRe t i on A THEDA Starring In a Marvelous Film Version t T.omo Penn-Calvert boundary, which gave us Mason and Dixon's line. The Penns claimed under the new boundary arrangement not only the half of the peninsula between the Delaware and Chesapeake Bays, but jurisdiction over the Delaware river and over the portion of New Jersey falling within the arc of Delaware's northern circle. According to the rec ords of New Castle county, Delaware, Jerseymen were actually summoned to Court at New Castle as jurors dur1 ing part of the Colonial period. As a state Delaware gave over the atempt to claim the dry land of New Jersey as her own, but still asserted jurisdiction over the Delaware river; not merely to the middle, but to mean low water on the Jersey shore at points within the arc of the twelve- ! mile - circle. That ridiculous claim Delaware stoutly asserted for more than a century. The chief sufferers were the Jersey shad fishermen. When they were caught by the Delaware authorities fishing within the waters claimed by Delaware they, their nets and their boats, were hauled to New castle, there to be. fined, and if need be, fo be irnp'rTs'oned for trespassing. Year after year arrests of this kind happened and the Jersey fishermen complained to their onw state author ities. Delaware fishermen caught within the debatable waters, were of course, subject to arrest by the New Jersey authorities aud the Delawar- ,-c t i on w.t c c.i a rr.. j p p, , la eans had many a fight with the Jer- using a wide "variety of musical in seymen. This- quarrel between a state 1 struments filling the full stage, and of 150,000 inhabitants on the one sids and one of about a mjllion on the Naf ?nd classic attractions. He is her other, a quarrel invilving at most fish aided as the original Musical Nut. worth a few hundred dollars annually, and naught elese except pride of sov ereignty, was in costly litigation for years. When New Jersey pointed out the absurdity of the situation Dela ware .recalled those- Colonial Jersey men who obediently crossed the river at the summons of the New Castle County Court and sternly reasserted her claim. Good sense on both sides prevailed a few years ago, and now the Delaware flows to the sea unvexed by the ancient quarrel. LAND CASES ON TRIAL. San Francisco, Cal., Oct. 16. Clar ence L. Reames, United States district attorney for Oregon, is here to con duct the trials this week of -six men charged with fraud in the locating of settlers on Oregon and California grant lands. This will be the second trial of the cases, the first trial last June having resulted in a disagree ment by the jury. The six defend ants are William B. DeGram, Norman B. Cook, W. A. S. Nicholson, Sidney L. Sperry, A. J. Reetz and Franklin P Bull. Round Trip Fares From Wilmington Tickets will be sold as above by the ATLANTIC COAST LINE, the Stan dard Railroad bf the Soutli, for all pas senger trains on October 31 and No vember 1, 2 and 3. Limited returning until midnight of Saturday, November 4, 1916. Proportionate excursion Fares' from Intermediate Point. Children Half Rate. For further particulars, schedules, tickets, etc., call ' . T. C. WHITE, General Passenger Agent. Phone 160. Wilmington, N C. LEE COUNTY AGRICULTURAL FAIR at SANFORD,-N. C. RoUnd Trip Fare From Wilmington $3.90. Tickats will be sold by the-ATLAN-i TIC COAST LINE, the Standard Rail- s County has had his faltn tn human na road of the Soutn for all passenger j ture renewed, and: incidentally is $10 trains on November 1.. 2 and 3. Limited richer as a result, of the honesty of a returning until midnight of Saturday, j former patronf.his grocery.. One day November 4, 1916.. . . ; ? last week a. man gave Weniger $10,. Proportionate Fares from Interme- saying it was tor an old debt, contract diate Points. . Children Half Fare ed when : . Weniger kept tire grocery. For Rheduifis. tickets and any fur-1 He said at that time he-' Was sve'ry .hard ther information call on , T. C. WHITE, . General Passenger Agent. , Phone 160. Wilmington, N. C. c ci a r-i BARA of "East Lynne," at the Royal rrow. While the . general run of Victoria shows have been interspersed with bright vaudeville numbers, the man agement has gone one better this week and booked in an all-vaudeville bill of five bright and startling act3. Zarrow's Variety Review is the ag gregation, and it consists of five top liner vaudeville acts, each one of which can easily- be recognized as high-class and worth the very tip top prices. Charlotte is now playing vaudeville exclusively at prices rang ing to a half dollar admission, and the assertion is ventured that the show at the Victoria this week will be fully up to the standard of those expensive shows being put on in Charlotte. Featured with the Variety Review is the famous Lynch Trio, the most famous juvenile trio ever en tour in this territory, tand which is well known throughout the whole country. Presenting songs, dances, monologue, riial ogue and harmony" singihg, this act alone will be worth the price of admission. Then comes Hill and Edmunds, in a series of Irish sayings, comedy songs and gags, a comedy act thai, is sure to go over big. Musical Al Nuttle is probably an other one of the strongest attractions, 1 manipulating them presenting popu- Shyder and Vaughn, in a variety of black and tan comedy sketches, sing ing and dancing, will also go over big, and Miss, Bessie Knowles, "The Gold en Girl With the Golden Voice," will prove another very pleasing act. The usual free courtesy to ladies will be extended tonight only. TH EDA BARA TOMORROW. William Fox, the film wizard, who does the unexpected, the glorious, the iriumphant at every turn, has given to a photoplay-loving world his great est film triumph in presenting Theda Bara, his .far-famed vampire woman, in the leading . role of a marvelous rUni version of that old favorite of the millions, "East Lynne," which is tomorrow's attraction at the Royal. This should prove the greatest Fox offeimg ever presented at the Royal, as it is probable that never before was a novel filmed which has been as widely read as this old masterpiece of fiction. And in the film the story is developed with a great wealth of de tail so that those who have not read (he book not many, to be sure will get a comprehensive idea of East Lynne. Two Fox stars of the first magnitude, Theda Bara as Lady Isai bei, and Claire Whitney as Barbara Hare, interpret the leading roles. A liberty has been taken with the story which is justified it has been modernized and given a setting of to-, day and letting the characters travel about in automobiles instead of car riages. The period of the action of the book is so near the days of this generation' that- the substitution not only does not seem to be out of place but is a great , improvement. Theda Bara interprets the role of Lady Isabel with rare charm aricj strength and the entire cast does its duty well. Every Royal patron should witness this spectacle tomorrow. ' Paid Grocer After Years. Vallejo, Cal., Oct 16. County Treasurer George Weinger of Solano and he 'Was? now .making; good , money; Weniger was prised, paving forgot- j ten that the debt; existed. THEAT RE I y willfion c Presents; Tf Bam In a Brilliant Modernized VeK sion The Worfd'tf Famous Flc tion Masterpiece 44 99 ADULTS 10c. CHILDREN 5c. VICTORIA H-.D. Zarrow Presents- The Variety Review All-Vaudeville Bill of Five Classy Acts -Featuring- 'The Lynch Trio Most Famous Juvenile 'Enter tainers on the Road HILL & EDMONDS In a Series of Irish Comedy Songs, Sayings ana dags. A Com Edy Act Sure to Please. SNYDER & VAUGHN. Black and Tan Comedy. i MUSICAL AL. MUTTLE The Original Musical King. BESSIE KNOWLES. The Garden Girl With the Gol den Voice. LADIES F R EI E TONIGHT When Accompanied by the Hol der of a 30c. Paid Ticket. Matinee: 3:30 Night: 7:30 & 9 10-20c 10c-20c-30c MACHINISTS WANTED. Only Americans Eligible Pay Good for Efficient Men. Three hundred machinists are need ed at the United States Naval Tor pedo Station at Newport, R. I., ac cording to a circular received by Postmaster H. McL. Green, of this city. The circular' states that the men will be paid $3.36 per day for two weeks and'' if their services are required longer they will be given $3.76 per day. All men who show thoroughness at their "trade will be retained. The requirements are that one must be able to read blueprints and to work from them. In addition the men must be able to perform at least three of the following classes of ma chinists' trade: . Grinding,. bench work. lathes, planers, millers, turret la nes eli- and drillers. 6nly Americans are gible for employment. FORECLOSURE SALE. t By virture of the power of Rale contain ed in a certain Indenture of mortgage ex ecuted by D. M. Beardaley and wife to tb undersigned, wbich said mortgage bear date August 13th, 1914, and hi rtnly record ed in Book 78 at page 402 of the office of the Register of Deeds of New Hanover County, default having been made there under, the undersigned will on Friday the 10th day of November, 1910, at 12 o'clock, M., at the Court House door of the County of New Hanover In the City of Wilming ton sell, at public auction, for cash, to the highest bidder those two certain tracts, pieces or parcels of land lying, being ana situated in the township of. Harnett, Coun ty of New Hanover and- State of North Carolina and bounded and described u follows: First Tract: Being lot No. .5. Block A. on the Revised Map or Sea Gate Park and Beginning at ?i po.'nt in t ho Westerly line of Myrtle Avenue 701 feet Northwardly from 4ts 5ateri'rtlo.'i witti Bradley's Creek Macadam K-.1 1, raid point being S 30 degrees W. ubour ;&) fiet from high water mark of the Westerly side of Bradley's Creek, runs thence S. 30 degrees . W. and along said Westerly line of Myrt'.a Avenue 54 feet to & point in the Northerly line of lot No. 6 in said Block, -runs thenar N. 61 degrees W. and parallel with Brad- hey's Creelc Rod 193 feet and 8 Inches, thence ss. w. degrees u. ana.parauei wun Myrtle Avenue. 54 feet and thence B. 61 degrees E. and parallel with Bradley's Creek Road 193 feet and 8 inches to tbs x Westerly line of Myrtle Avenue, the Ber ginning. r Second Tract: Being lot No. 4, Block A. , 1 ' according to the Revised Map of Hea Gate Park, recorded in Book 65 at page 465 of the records of the Register of deeds of Nw -Hanover County and hounded and .descrlb ed as follows; Beginning at a point in the Easterly line of a tract of land now or formerly belonging to Gertrude J. Howell, said point being located N. 30 degees E. 715 feet from the Northerly line of Bradley's Creek Road, and running thence N... RO .. degrees K. 377 feet more or less to high ' water mark of the Westerly side of Brad- . . ley's or Lee's Creek, thence In a Southerly . direction along said biga water mark ot : ;. said Creek 58 feet to the Northwestern corner of lot No. 3, thence S. 30 degrees W. along the westerly line of said lot 3,362 feet to the Southwest corner of said lot No. 3 ' and thence N. 61 degrees W. 52.2 feet to the Beginning, jtogether with the necessary right ot way as granted in deed from A . W. Pate and wife to B. viT. Sebrell, dated April 3rd, 1909,-and recorded in Book. 58 at page 268 of the records of New Hanover r ffMse ..oCoibe 1WJ. - -J' county aroresaia. Oct Ota, 16th, sard, sotn. Mortgagee. - teda East ,1 I V'.. i.'