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THE WLMINGTON DISPAteft THORSDl A AFtTERNOOR OCTOBER-f 9 16;
PAGE SIX
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- : -4-j . ; I - - ' mm - i i , -
II x ' r 'V I NI
:" nniu iimn nnni11111 s&Lfr-s. t, .-J ( '
i
, 'I
Mr. Theo Schrader left this morn
ing for Fayetteville, where she wil!
attend the fair..
Mrs. S. C. Winner and little daugh
ter, Elma, left this morning for Fay
etteville, to attend the fair.
(V
Mrs. R. W. Hicks left this morn
ing for Dunn, where she will spend
some time-among friends and rela
tives. Yesterday's Columbia Record: Mrs.
C. S. French, of Wilmington. N. C,
is theuest o fthe Misses Meighan.
Mr. Llewellyn C. French, a student
of Donaldson Military Academy, Fay
etteville, is visiting his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. French.
Miss "Nina Thomson, of Camden.
S. C, is in the city as the guest of
her sister, Mrs. Trabus Barksdale,
at the Colonial Apartments.
Mrs. J. H. Harrelson, of Marion, S.
Fails Carried Off Honors at
Wrestling Match Teets
Stood Little or no Chance
gow. The ceremony was performed
by Rev. W. M. Baker in the presence
Ul rclaUco viiva uiiij cfc ictt iuvituu.w .
friends. Immediately following the . .-. in .tni snnrt for ' glossy hair can only he had by brewing
J C11 I. " - O mr -
That beautiful; even shade of dark,
ceremonv Mr. ana Mrs.
boarded the 6:45 northbound train for
Petersburg, Va., y;here they will re
side. '
- 4C-
WEDDING INVITATIONS ISSUED.
The following wedding invitations
were issued today and are very in
teresting: "Mr. and Mrs. Horace Cade Prince
request the honor of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter,
Sue Brunt,
to
Mr. Robert Edward Calder,
on
Wednesday the Eighth of November,
at half after five o'clock in the
afternoon,
at
St. James' Church.
Wilmington, North Carolina."
kings was demonstrated last night by
the clean exhibition that the manage
ment of Overtake pavilion furnished
i to a crowd of several hundred spec
j tators who were on hand to see a
('promised bout between Harry Fails,
Uhe local champion, and a newcomer,
named Teets.
Although the main contest was
, floor, and the referee, understanding
it to mean a surrender, pronounced
Fails the victor. This was loudly pro
tested and Fails agreed td have the
time; hy morning the gray hair has dis-
C, passed through the city yesterday World Fellowship Week of Prayer j 5" " becomes beautifully dark and
en route to Wallace, where she will wju meet n the living room of the i
spend some tine visiting, friends and 1 y,
W. C. A. at 11 o'clock tomorrow
relatives.
in his favor was not at all popular and
if the crowd's sympathies wese
most wholly with Fails during the
Mrs. Mamie Long, of Sanford, re
turned to ner home this morning,
after visiting friends and relatives
for some time here.
Mrs. N. Y. Gully, of Wake Forest,
returned to her home this morning,
after spending some time in the city
visiting her sister, Mrs. M. H. P.
Clarke.
morning.
Sf
Somd wmgTve' a Haltewe Party ?. "J "0t "end thrOW,S on or prevention o, d.sesse.-Advt
UNLIKE fiK! ilH U I VW tV
It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring will V4 jfhnL Nk
Color, lustre and Youthfulness to Hff; " jlJK ' r5 lFh ttl V
Hair When Faded, Streaked f ffl sC' IrXt AK , 1 lS I vJ
ainiii Vf i i r iim i r v
t m . . ...
x our nair is your cnarm. n maxes or
mars the face. When it fades, turns
gray or streaked, just an application or
two of Sage and Sulphur enhances its
appearance a hundredfold.
Don't bother to prepare the mixture ;
you can get this famous old recipe im
proved by the addition of other ingredi-
maTH hv Tvt who ronstantlv : cnts for 50 cents a large bottle,
seemed to be playing for time, crawl-! ready,for use. It is called Wyets
in. fho ma Vh.n rtown thf, PxhihlHon 1 Sag an Sulphur Compound. This
was a cleanly played game. ! n be ePended upon to bring
Fails secured the first fall in eight ! back hf natural color and lustre of
minutes and the number of sympathiz- i yo"r r' wr 'j
ers went wild. In the second round, i Everybody uses " Wyeth's" Sage and
after twelve minutes of hard work by! SuIJhur Compound now because it
both exponents of the mat game. ! d?3 so J1 andK evenly
rr Lun n7 q a Ann cion.o th.,!11000 can tell it has been applied.
... . . You simply damoen a snonEe or soft
brush with it and draw this through
the hair, taking one small strand at a
appears glossy
lustrous. This
ready-to-use preparation is a delightful
toilet requisite for thooe who desire
contest, they showed their sporting , . . ... . vnthflll annparftnfft.
blood in wanting the new man given i u ia nn tntan tnw. ,ro mttlra.
- ' , V i V VII V M U1IV1QMI
Mrs. Robert Northrop has returned
to the city after visiting her daugh
ter, Mrs. James P. Harriss, in Char
lotte and Miss Sue Northrop, who
is attending school in Raleigh.
-A- -if
Miss Pearl Philpitt, stenographer
in the local United States Engineer
Office, returned this morning from
Washington, D. C, where she spent
several days.
x w if
Among those who went from here
to attend the Keith-Smith wedding at
"Caledonia,' 'the Keith home near
Currie, were Misses Maude Bulluck,
Irene Dunn, Rosabell Kirkham and
Mrs. J.-F. Rulfs.
Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the
school house. The public is invited to
come and have a good time.
All the workers in the Membership
Campaign are requested to meet in
the parlors of the Y. W. C. A. tomor
row evening at 8 o'clock.
w v
tt "7T -ar
The Blue Ridge Club, of the Y. W.
C. A. will have a call meeting at 7:1")
at the association building tomorrow
evening.
In the second round of the fall Fails; SEASON OPENS FRIDAY NIGHT.
succeeded in throwing Teets with a '
hamarerlock in 5 minutes.
The match was refereed by Mr.
Hughie Bell, who gave general satis-
Hotly Contested Basket Ball Gam as
Are Promised This Season.
faction to the patrons he keeping an ;day. even,ng y M
Dr. and Mrs. L, C. Allen, Mr. and
Mrs. F. T. Allen, Miss Lydia Penton j
and Miss Arabella Gore left thir!
The Social and House Committees
and the Membership Committee of
the Helen Alexander League are re-:
quested to assemble tomorrow ,
at 4 o'clock at the Y. W. C. A. A.)
number of matters of importance ave !
to come up for discussion and a full
attendance Is desired.
45- -if 45-
The Department of Civic and Home
Economics, of the Sorosis, will meet
tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock in
the Club Room. This is a very im
portant meeting and all members are
eye on the wrestlers at all times and
officiating in a way befitting a pro
fessional conductor of matches.
Two preliminary bouts were staged
before the big contest. In the first i
of these Albert Jewell was matched
against Frank Myers. Jewell won this
match, the first fall coming in five
minutes, when Myers threw up the
sponge and the second in three min
utes. The second bout o fthe evening was
a one-round affair between the win
ner of the previous preliminary and
! Goodwin Davis. Jewell was likewise
the winner in this match, turning the
trick in 10 minutes with a scissors
hold.
urged to be present.
HOME WEDDING TODAY.
Many friends and relatives in Wil
mington and throughout Eastern
-5s- j Carolina are interested in the wed-
Annnnnpamonr Vise hean mofa '. Hinc at A. n'flnflr Vi i tr o f r-n rr-n nf i
- "Tt- t -tHe "local chapter' of the Daugn- Miss LUa Mary Keith, the attractive
j ters of the Confederacy will have a ! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin
(booth in the Corn Show. A commit-j Franklin Keith, to Mr. Julius Clar
tee has been appointed to make ar-ence Smith, which will be celebrat-
rangements for the special features, ed at "Caledonia," near Currie, the
-Jfr i beautiful country home of the par-
(. A. gymnasium. Ail the teams ar
iady and anxious for the open'iia
game. The tctan this year are ex
ceptionally strong a.s ctrh t-.a!i lu'.s
several of the former Boys' Brigade
stars added to their already strong
line up of the local Y players. J iiOl'-
in;; from the practice games all 'r.iir !
teams are evenely iim''cI and fans
are assured of hot contests eaoh Fri
dav evening.
All games are opan to the public
free of charge anl a spe:'al .'nvita
ticu is extended to tho lad'es.
The schedule for this Friday even
In.' is:
8:30 Americans vs. Tigers.
9:10 Red Sox vs. Athletcis.
L. Hanson is captain of the Amer
icans; J. A. Rennie has, the Tigers;
C. F. Rich leads the Red Sox, and
Bob Lewis handles the Athletics.
Whose Strongest Appeal is on the Basis of De
pendability, Durability and Dignified Neatness
Among these Suits are some fine, hard'wearing Worsteds, in neat Mixtures.
Hundreds of wonderfully good Mixtures of Worsteds in the good old Pepper and Salt
effects; Greys and Blacks; and the good old "stand-bys" Blue Serges, the always de
sirable plain Blacks, and a host of others, including Plain Greys, in fine, soft and hard
woven materials; neat, conservative, and made. Price from $9.95 to $17.00.
OVER COATS
Among the Overcoats are Plain Ulsters, Double-Breasted, and Blue Overcoats.
Neat Grey, Brown, Tan, and Dark Green Mixtures, in Scotch Overcoatings, that are
warm, durable and serviceable many of them waterproofed; Price from $9.95 to
$17.00.
-WILLIAMS CO.
d9
attend the wedding
Keith.
J s
The musicale that is to be given
by the Ladies' Aid Society of the
Immanuel church at Immanuel hall,
corner of Front and Queen streets,
tomorrow night, promises to be of a
very high order, as some of the best
talent -in the city is represented on
the program. No admission will be '
charged, but a sHver offering will be
taken and the money realized will
be used for the benefit of the church.
The program follows:
Piano solo, selected, Mrs. W. T,
Mercer.
Dueti "Life's Drcm :s O'er,"
Misses Marie and Bessie Nlzon.
Violin solo, "Absent," Mr.
Shore.
Solo, "All Joy Be Thine,'
Dream," Mr. Daniel A. Lockfaw
Piano solo, selected, Mrs
Mercer and Miss Christine
burg.
Solo, selected. Miss Nell Bowden.
Reading, selected, Mr. Charles
Nixcn.
3
MISS FENNEL WEDS MR. SHU
BRICK. Miss Annie Thomas Fennel, dauh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Kennell, of
Kerr, N. C, was married to Mr. Star
key Shubrick, son of Dr. and Mrs.
John Shubrick, of Rocky Mount, yes
terday ailernoon at 6 o'clock at the
residence of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Mo-
The Missionary Reading Circle of j ents of the bride. The wedding will
the Winter Park Presbyterian church ' be one of the most elaborate to take
will meet tomorrow afternoon at 3: 30 'place in this section in some time. '
o'clock at the residence of Mrs. C. A large number of Wilmington peo-
M.
TO OPEN IN FLORENCE I
Wilmingtonian to be Connect
ed With Modern Bakery.
Mr. J. Fred Russ, a progressive
.rniln ti M l r i -: '
juuug tviiiuiugiuumu, leaves me cnjf
the first of next week for Florence,
S. C, where he will embark into the
business world as a member of the
firm of Boy-Russ Bakery, Inc., a busl
Robinson. All ladies of the con-, pie are in attendance. The bride and ; ness recently chartered in that city
gregation are invited to attend
groom will come to Wilmington late with an authorized capital stock of
i this afternoon and will depart on the; $lo,000,of which $8,000 is paid in.
; northbound evening train for their j Mr. Russ was taken into partner
; bridal tour. After November 9 they ' ship by Mr. C. M. Boyd, a prominent
I will be at home at No. 107 Gatewood young real estate dealer of the
Each avenue High Point. j South Carolina city, when he was
' j The bride has a host of friends in ' recommended as being one of the
Wilmington, where the family resid-;m0st practical bakery men in the
ed for a number of years until some . Carolinas. Mr. Russ was for 18
months ago, when they removed to ( vears with the WTarren Steam Bakery
their attractive country home. The here, and just prior to the date of
bride was for some time one of th the sale of that business by Mr. R.
popular teachers in Hemenwayip. Warren, the proprietor, Mr. Russ
ichool. Her father was for.a number
the county farm for two months for me, ' . . .
I of years collector of customs here. cellent services rendered,
larceny, today withdrew her appeal, v. . , 0! 4. t t! ...
' i ome luaL u mt; mi. huso, whu
Y. W. C. A. TO OBSERVE WORLD'S J others, has built up an cxcel-
FELLOWSHIP WEEK. lent business at the old stand, and
... ,, .. ... , it it was later taken over by the
The Wort Fellowship Wank will . .
November 12-19 by the!"""' ;
The Boyd-Rus8 Baking Company,
RECORDER'S COURT.
Two Negroes Get Two Months
This Morning.
' James Hill, colored, charged vith
Dave ; larceny, was sent to the county stock
' ade fo rtwo months, by Recorder B.
' j G. Empie this morning. Maggie Di
! vison". colored, who recently took an
W. T. i apppai when she was sentenced to
ureen-
and .'icceri! eft the jentence. !
Mr. L. D. Marshburn was fined u
and coat:; for refusing to obey the
instructions of a nolicr nrin. in reg ird I
to driving H.n au'emobile without, a !
light. The
be observed
c-iso, which charged him Young Women's Christian Associa-
wnn vioiauns mai law, war, n , , T ; when ready for operation about De
misRed :couitrie.s affiliated with the worlds! . . ....
Tom McXcal. colored, charsed with ' committee in London so that uuring
assault with a deadly weapon, r.u'j- this second week in November worn-j
roU.ted to y ;mole ar.r.aulr. and iaid en in nearly every country in the.
the costs.
cember 1, will be one of the most up
j to-date in either of the Carolinas.
Four thousand dollars has been in
vested in modern equipment. In con-
r .Z u rr,xf n w rnection with the bakery business a
l women of the world. There will be i . .... .
1
The Store That
Sells Wooltex
Ye Olde Tyme
Arts and Crafts
Hand Bags
A most artistic reproduction of
ancient hand-embossed leather, in com
bination of Verdigris and Bronze color
ing. Antique shapes, with copper wrought
frames, ornamented with old Egyptian
and Mythological Characters and Em
blems, such as Scarabs, War Clubs, Sea
Serpents, Etc.
See them in ounwindpw. . ,
a prayer group every afternoon dur-j
ing the week in different hontes
throughout the city of Wilmington. I
The hour of meetings and homes ;
'will be announced later. Every ;
woman in the city is invited to these i
meetings whether a member of thej
local association or not.
The following ladies are in charge ,
of the meetings:"
Mrs. William James, chairman; :
Mrs. Nixon Davis, Mrs. John FrencV
Mrs. Charles B. Newcomb, Mrs. John ;
Hanby, Mrs. Fletcher, Mrs. Andrew
Howell, Mrs. E. L. Prince, Mrs. J.
James, Mrs. Johh Kenly.
The committee in charge of the
World's Fellowship Week will meet
tomorrow morning, Friday, at 11
o'clock. In the living room of the Y.
W. C. A.
lunch room will be operated, together
with an up-to-date soda fountain. Mr.
Russ will manage the whole.
Mr. Russ will leave for his new
home in Florence Monday and his
family will follow later. Although
regretting to see him leave, his
many friends wish for him much suc
cess in his new field.
PERSONAL MENTION.
BODY RECOVERED.
Friends of Mr. William Boykin were
glad to see him on the streets today
ter having been in for about three
weeks recovering from Injuries sus
tained in a gas explosion while about
his duties; He expects to be able to
return to vork at the Tidewater Power
Company in a short while.
Chief of Police N. M. Williams is
attending the Gape Fear Fair at Fay
etteville. Sergeant J. S. Lane is serv
ing as chief of police during ; his ab-
Wilson's Stand on Votes? For Women
Contrasted With Hughes' Wabbling
HUGHES. ,
He did not vote for Suffrage when
he had the chance.
Suffrage plank In Republican plat
form: "The Republican party, re
affirming its faith in government
of the people, as a measure of Jus
tice to one-half the adult people of
the country, favors the extension
of the suffrage to women, but rec
ognizes the right of each State to
settle this question for itself."
A few days before his public in
dorsement of the Federal Suffrage
amendment, a committee of Antis
visited him, came out trailing and
said he was the man of the hour.
The Suffragists had a similar ex
perience at the same timer
Mr. Hughes has said that suf
frage is the result of social unrest,
that it will cause sex antagonism
and that it raises a disturbance
which might as well be stopped.
WILSON.
He made a special trip to New
Jersey to vote for suffrage;
Suffrage plank in Democratic
platform: "We recommend the ex
tension of the franchise to the wo
men of the country, by the States
upon the same terms as to men."
On Sept. 9 he made a special trip
to Atlantic Citj to address the Na
tional Woman Suffrage Association.
"I have come to fight with you,
not against you,! he said. "Woman
suffrage Is a great vision of duty
women, have seen. The tide is ris
ing and cannot be stopped. In the
long run we will not quarrel as to
methods."
HUGHES POR SUFFRAGE BECAUSE HE'S AGAINST IT.
In a letter to the New York World, Senator C. S. Thomas, of Colo
rado, a member of the Committee on Woman Suffrage of the United
States Senate, said on Sept 14:
"I am moved to propound the following Inquiry to the Republican can
didate for President: Did he not say to a committee of Anti-Suffragists,
I have always been opposed to woman suffrage, probably because Mrs.
Hughes has always been strongly opposed, and my daughters think with
their mother. The increasingly active feminist movement, to my mind,
makes the ultimate granting of votes to women lamentable, but inev
itable. Sex antagonisms and tlie'snbversiou of national issues Into' petty
personal issues is to me more lamentable still, more ruinous to our
womanhood and our country, than the doubling of the electorate, or votes
for women, calamitous as that may be. "
And when Candidate Hughes subsequently declared for the Federal
amendment it was on the ground that, Inasmuch as the women were
bound to have the vote, it should be given to them by the shortest pos
sible route, irrespective of the merits f-the question.
NEW CARREL PROCESS
REDUCES AMPUTA
TIONS 50 PERCENT.
vjW!'
mm
i mm
? mm
X -V i
Drowned Negro Youth Found Near' sence from the kiltf.
Foot of Martin Street.
The body of James Carr, the eigh
teen year old negro youth who was
drowned in the-water ' of the Cape
Fear last Saturday morning when he
attempted to leap from the dock into &
lighter, was recovered this morning-a-short
distance below the.old Charbourn
mill, near the foot of Martin' streeti'
The body, which was. decomposed, was.
found on a slight incline of the river
bank, several feet out of the water by
Elijah Lennon, colored. The coroner
was called to the scene and viewed the
body. It remained where found until
this afternoon when it was carried to
the colored cemetery tor interment.
Sons of Veterans to Meet. There
will be a meeting of the' Sons of Con
federate Veterans at the W. It. I. Arm
ory this evening at 8 o'clock and each
son is: earnestly requested to be pres
ent. The veterans are always wel
come. v The "communication is sighed
by W. C. GaUoway, commandant, and
W. S. Clayton, secretary.
ENTRY NO. 0147.
ber, 1916.
rntTxf TT 1 A T
STATEOrORTH CAROLINA, . Reeister of Deeds and AodnKfv U.r
. COUNTY OF JlBW HAnwviSK,. for New Hanover Countv
JOttk HAAR, Entry Taker fpr New io-26-lawwt-hur oounty-Hanover-Oountjii
, . - , .
I, tne uOdemgilea claimant wing a citi
zen ,of the State of North Carolina, hereby
net lortn ana anow itna ine rono.wniraci. rv annnnncp th
,.t lor. Ivt-nv hDln In Wnrnptt Tnwn- Llly aUDOUnce me
ship. New Hanover County, bounded and their daughter, Miss XJoldy Glenn, to
BNNlNo"at tie mouth of a branch Mr. Robert Benjamin Smith, of Phil-
D5i AlEXIS CARKEI.
(Dr. Alexis Carrel.)
Paris, Oct. 26. An entirely n
method of sterilizing and hrnhnz
wounds- developed by Hr. Alexia. ";
New York, Nobel prize winn- r.
resulted . In reducing the num'a'1:'
amputations by 50 per con;.. "C''
ing to reports being received t,(1;;
from the hospital at Copm1'1 un"'
American Hospital at Neuiliy arr! '
American and Belgian ho;'itls !r
Belgium.
According to Hugue:-; o Koux. "i '
or of the Matin, the process mr.'
6f complete irrigation of the xvounl'
by means of a rubber iv.br wi'-'i n'
j ,ri ; P.
v i T K..rnci n "
Mr. and. Mrs. J. L. Smithy of-this j many alAtkU holes. Every cornT "
eneaeement ' of nA,ivi i . ;aii'
w w - i uooiuic uv;acl ia iiii'iuuh.-
knowa as toe Yellow Spring Branch ; adelphia, Pa.- The date of the wed
thence up Great Sptlng Branca to a small. din i to h -anfip nnMir latr
branch of the same; xtfi the 'said small; w to De maae puDiic later.
branch to a eum about eighty poles from
the. first station ; thence north 50 west, 160
polet t oa ;pine by Porter's Neck road,-this
line known as the O'Sills line ot corner and
was deeded by James Nichols to W. J. En- I
V!- -.JR",
Death of- Infant.
Many friends1 will deeply
When examination shows uv.'.
wound' is aseptic, the wound i ;
th"
A violinist was bitterly
ed with the account of in
nrin tori 4n fh minor nf ! ! T.''1
"I -told.' your man three
sympa-1 times," complained the i"
iii.i;
fo'ir
i in
One of the curious privileges of the
Tntt: benrin cr date June 25th. 1870 : thence
j: HBlakVs line to Mi'cbtnetJt a ceda? luue wnn mr- ana Mrs. rtavenwooa me owner oi xnc pup.;.. " .t.r1.
lh Marshy Branch; thence down said, Sidbury, of No. 905 Orange street, in strument Fused was a gemi'u
ctb th of thfemtant son. Raven-1 ivarius, andviu his story h -
mouth of Yellow Spring Branch, the first r wood, Jr., who died at 1 o'clock. The not word about it, not a '
Containinr one hundred -an forty (10); remains will be taken to Topsail, Pen
acres more or less, Is vacant and unappro-. der county, tomorrow for interment
- . prutea tana oeiongincr to ine iate on
post of maid of honor to the Queen Of North Carolina and subject to entry and ;
England Is that of being . allowed to
wear a charming-htihlaturei of ; the
queen set in diamonds on thd
shoulder.
left
tne unnersignea claimant aertuj oriwii wnyf asKea lae assisiani.
tntj-r Af urul Iata plAJm to and DniTfi lor .1 1 ..T. .. .. . . . .. ... ' ' , , , i jn
gtSvt tor shiafana. " : weu, saw tne aenust, "now can usea m my paper unum m
This the 26th day of October, 1916. ,1 tell when he's unconscious ?" Ex- line, you come around am'
Witness: J. J. POISSON, , Change. i
ISntwd and fllea tfllath aay of .Qcto-.v
Whereupon. the wner
laugh: ' u-iienM-'.
"That is as it- should be. ,u ' .
filldlOS
Stridivarlu3 gets his
know." Exchange.
III
i