Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 5, 1916, edition 1 / Page 12
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ir KS - PAGEXWELVIL the Wilmington dispatch. siJdy 5 morning. November 5; 1 3 1 6. Liggette Chocolates 80c to $1.50 pound Johnston's Chocolates 80c to $1 .50 pound. Between the two lines we have the best Candy to be had at any price. If you purchase a box and for any reason do not like it, just throw the box away and telephone 248 and we will rush your money back to you by messenger. FLVINGTO JU "Serves You Right"1 I PRESIDENT BLAZES AWAY AT THE ENEMY IN HIS LAST SPEECH. (Continued from Page One) "When I see this unblushing; this impudent attempt to reinstate these forces without any concealment of pny kind, do you wonder that I would like to get out again and- de nounce the whole crowd as I know them? . " m "It is delightful to fight the things that p. re wrong. It is delightful to bit something that is worth hitting and destroying. The only thing that i disappointing in contests of this sort is that these, fellows dodge and will "not get hit. They sneak andjsrill not reveal their purpose. They have,' rt- sand or stomach for the fight in the open and they rect things that Ioo likf bulwarks, but are mere pre tenses. "But, after all, my fellow-citizen, the thing that is being attempted in New Jers-ey is only part of what is being attempted in the United States .and being attempted in the United States with more and more transpar ency of purpose. "Look how he campaign has gone. First of all, an attempt to set up some and empIoyr-thosV who,- because-; they did; bo, know what America could af ford, wre willing -to take what; they cbold f " - u And now' what do we witness? Having despaired of an issue, they are not only filling the country witn alarms but they are: attempting co ercion of them laborers. - They im agine that these' men- are not' their :owu! masters and dare not vote as they think, and at last, I thank God the American laborer is awake. He at last judges his friends by; what they do and riot by what they say. He knows that lie has found friends because he has found men who will do the things that he has demanded should be done in justice and equity to him. "Let them fill the air with alarms. The alarms are their own, not ours. They used to control the credit of the country; they now control nothing but the betting. So that I think as we look back upon this campaign for we are now looking back upon it, and we hear now nothing but cries of distress as we look back we can see a very heart-ending and encouraging thing. We can see the people at last asserting themselves by rejecting the old leadership under which- they were so long astray and turning to do things for themselves. make party capital put of things do again what' we did" when we were which, if not ettled ''"wisely,, might provincial5 afld isolated t; and uncbn bring this, country . at any moment '; nested with the greatforces of the into this woi Id conflict which is de-Uvorld, ,for now we-are, in she grc4t vatrtatine' Rnrnno" ' I Arift" of' hrnnanitv which is to deter "Is it not. amazing my, fellow-ciii-I'mine theDjolitics of every country in zens, tp witness Buch' effort for party, the world. . I advantage and does "it not point for "With this outlook is it worth while us this moral, that we- are no wr in the to-stop to- think of party advantaged presence of things which otight to make things fundamental ( "the only things we care abdutH which ongrxi to make the just foundations of peaco the things that we are seeking for rath.er than the accidental elements of peace ; not searching, for the detail, but searching ; for the ; heart purpose that is in the whole thing. Is it worth stopping to think of. how we have voted in the past?. We are now going to vote, if we be men with eyes open that can see the world as those who wish to make a new Amer 'ica in a new world. v "My feirbw-citizens, it is an unpre cedented :: thing in the world' that any nation in determining it3 foreign re- . :;-' - - - njvi, ' V" : Ai "The world will never be again lations should be unselfish, and my what it has been. The United States ambition is to see America ret the will never again be what it has been, great example, not only a great ex- "The United States was once in en- ample morally, but a great example joyment of what we used to call intellectually. spienma isolation. The j,oou mnes "You cannot have good business! of Atlantic seemed to hold all Euro::out 0f a discontented population. You pean affairs at arm's length from us. cannot have it out of a population, The great spaces of the Pacific seem- large portj0ns of which feel they are ed to disclose no threat of influence . not getting the square deal. The upon our place. . sources of business are in the hearts ' "Now, from across the Atlantic and j and energifes of mankind. Now, sim- from' across the Pacific we feel to the ilarly, you cannot get a great position 1 5 kind of handsome issue, not a very interesting attempt, because the is-jlican party and Democratic is this: sue was a new one every weeK. as "The Republican party oEers them soon as you approach what was said '.masters: we offer them comrades and quick the influences which are af fecting ourselves and in the mean time, whereas, we used to be always in search of asRistnnnfl and . stimula "The difference between the Repub- 1inr, frnrn nnt nf nar ,nntriP i. KeeLock Eye Glasses WILL NOT WIGGLE, SHAKE OR GET LOCSE. Let us Show You the NEWEST INVENTION IN THE OPTICAL TRADE. Spectacles or Eye Glasses Correctly Fitted to Your Eyes. FOR $1.00 AND UP. EYES TESTED FREE Dr, Vineberg Masonic Temple. to be the issue, it seemed to fade and disappear and there was nothing i for you to grasp or grapple. "Ana alter nnmng mat xne searcnj for an issue was in vain, they came leaders. The Republican party offers to take care of them. We offer to go into the fight shoulder-to-shoulder with tnem to get their" rights. down once more to the only thing line ig selfHliscIpHne.-' No man they have m recent years ever known jneedg tQ them ,n their how to talk about and that was the . Tfaey kn(w what isgueg are afid protective tariff. , in their minds they see those little "They know perfectly well that all , coterleB that used to the af. the pretenses about the Protective - fairg Qf cQ and control tariff have been torn away not by thejtrMH11rv nf t. 0 TTnito1 an.ec Bitfiff oratory of Democratic speakers, but co . ,nnfo7,DI110 trTiIlff,n (,ttw mine how in the last days of the cam paign, when no man will have an op- ATLANTIC COAST LINE The Standard Railroad of The South EXCURSION FARES $3.50 New Bern, N. C. Account Eastern Carolina Fair. Tick ets include admission to the fair and will be sold Nov. 7, 8, 9 and 10, limited returning until Novell. Special ser vice will be given leaving Wilmington 5:15 A. M. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday; returning leave New Bern 5:00 P. M. $4.30 Raleigh, N. C. Account Farmers' Educational and Co-! operative Union of America. Tivkets ; will be sold Nov. 12, lb ana 14, limited i returning until Nov. 18. $18.35 Atlanta, Ga. Account Southern Medical Association Tickets will be sold November 12, 13 I and 14, limited returning until Novem-! ber 19. j $7.95 Columbia, S. C Account Semi-Annual Meeting South ern Textile Association. Tickets will be sold Nov. 15, 16 and 17, limited re-1. turning until November 20. $38rl0 New Orleans, a Account National Farm and Live ' Stock Show. Tickets will be sold Nov by the patent demonstration of fact. TLey know that the workingmen of , . . A . , I portunity to answer tnem, they may for a little while, but they cannot be j deceptions by whicii they deceived all the time. They know . haye been controm the votea. of just as well as we know that the in- A citizens, dustnes in which the highest protec-j tori was given paid the lowest wages ' "We are trying to reconstruct and thev know that the Highest wages j America along the lines of justice were paid in the least protected in-iand wnich cut very much dostries. That is a matter of record, deeper than any party lines. Demo "Not only that they know that infcrats arc the only persons who have seme of the most highly protected industries the conditions under which the laboring people lived were a dis grace to our civilization. They 3 know that men and women were burning at their hearts the desire to see these things done. There are men without number in the ranks of the other party, even men who are allowing themselves to be misled and ground just as long as they could be ! deceived, who want these things ground and that these gentlemen who done- u was the duty of those who profess American patriotic feeling .represented the Republican party, as for the American laborer were most eager to import laborers from abroad Southern ' MEDICAL ASSOCIATION at ATLANTA, GA. Round Trip Fare From Wilmington $18.35 Tickets will be sold at Atlanta as above by the ATLANTIC COAST LINE. Standard Railroad or the South. . NOVEMBER 12, 13 and 14. it was our duty in this campaign, to expound the real heart of the social necessities and the political exigen cies of America. "Have thery done that? Have they not merely ' said that though th3 right things had been done, no doubt ihey had been done by the wrong per sons? What difference does it make who did them, whether they were goor" looking men or ugiy men, wheth er they were wise men or unwise, whether ihey were schoolmasters or sages? If they were done and were tne rignt things to do, every man Limited returning until midnight of November 19, 1916. Proportionate fares ought to stand by and praise them from all stations on the A. C. L. For further information, schedules, sleeping car accommodations, etc, call on T. C. WHITE, I uen. i'ass. Agr. in io ; 1! : Wllmlnaton. N. C. hone :60. j.v- jo, lutiuai c, jijxiiluu returning until Nov. 21. ! roKECLosi'EE sai.e. a.uu New Bern, N. o. "f,saie. contain,ed a mortgage f made by mean wnat shc says about the world Account Institution Sudan Tenmle Nixon and wife to the Wilmington ... . . . iiniPie . Homestead and Loan Assvation. recorded when the war is over? A. A. U. IN. M. b. llCKetS Will be SOld In P.nnk 72- natre CO. of the records of New "All that we have heard from our ( pponents has been that they be lieved in themselves. That is not what we wanted to know. Do they believe in us also? Do they believe in America also? Do they believe that America by showing in her own r'ace that she means what she says - - - trmj. . . . . By virtue ana m umouance of the power 1 oy nerseir can ne counxea upon lo November 21 and 22, limited returning ' Hanover Connty. the undersigned will sell, until V,V o A - ' " LlJC uiguiM iriuuci, JJUuuu nuiuvu, Until November 24. ; for cash, at the Court House door in Wil- $7.85 Norfolk Va i mington, N. C, on Friday, the 24th day of ,..4. c 4i. ' . , ' ..ovember, 1910 at twelve o'clock m. the account bouthern Commercial Con- j followinffMescribed property in said city : gress. Tickets will bt sold Dec. 8. 9 1 Boulnnins at a point In the western line -in -i-i i- j x ! ! f th street 196 feet south of the southern .IU and ll, limited returning until Dec. I line of Dawson street; runs thence south 13. I along 7th street 35 feet; thence westwardly DDnnnnTmn A-r-r- . !. parallel with Dawson street 165 feet: thence PROPORTIONATE FARES FROM J north parallel with 7th street 35 feet; OTHFR pniMTc rhi tuc i thence eastwardly parallel with Dawson POINTS ON THE street 165 feet the Beginning, and being ATLANTIC COAST LINE, Tart of Lot 4, Block 36. utuA . , J , if ' WILMINGTON HOMESTEAD AND LOAN "Thi Standard Railroad of the Soutft.,, ASSOCIATION. N Dwnwr ihv ' ' Ky John' D. Bellamy & Son", .......... rnuwt iou. ; 10.24-30dys Attorneys. "It amazes me that men calling themselves statesmen should discuss some of the things our epponents have been dwelling upon when the vhole atmosphere of the world was hirid with the blaze, of threatened trouble, men spreading tinder in this country when sparks without number were blowing from this terrible con flagration, men making party sport of unsettled questions, not settled oerf; of "present course of action, not past courses of action, seeking to iecial Cat ,&race no (Grounds i B ffl 1 1 oday ana io: rrow Front and Princess to 17th and CasIe, (Via Princess) Every 10 minutes. . ..t .... : , . , . Tenth and Fanning to 17th and Castle, (Via Tenth street) (Con necting with Red Cross cars at lOtli and Red Cross) Every 30 minutes TODAYThis special service begins when show arrives and continues until 6; 00 P. M. r TOMORROW Service begins at 12:30 P. M. and continues until ways in search of the capital of other countries to assist our investments, depending upon foreign markets for the sale of our : securities, we now have bought-in more than 50 per cent, of those securities, we ihave be come not the debtors, but the cred itors of the world, and the part that other nations used to. play in promot ing industries, which extended as wide as the world itself, we are play ing the guiding part. "We can determine 10 a large ex tent who is to be financed and who is not to be financed. That is the reason I say that the United States will never be again what it has been. So it does not suffice to look as some gentlemen are; ' looking, beck over their shoulders, to suggest that we MALAGA GRAPES, SCHEL PEARS, FLORIDA GRAPE FRUIT, T Dxi A I '1-r-f 'insm it tM.ai.tjes, upies, unions, Canadian Rutabaga Turnips, Oranges, Limes, Lemons, Cocoanuts. Carload Danish Cabbage and Baldwin Apples will arrive about Nov. 2nd. We have fine assortments of Candies in penny goods and pails. BEAR PRODUCE & MERCHANDISE CO., Wilmington, N. C. Phone 323. in the World except out of a vital j world. America cannot reap the har-J vest of her influence unless the soils of the world are kindly and genial j and yield to her influence, and they will yield not to hatred, not to en- mity, ; but to sympathy and coopera tion and the love of only those things ; that are just and right. "For my part I thank God that the era of -the old guard has' gone by. They never conceived or understood an unselfish purpose in their lives. They had as their motto, 'Enlight en ed selfishness.' The only thing! that is enlightened is unselfishness. If I were merely sinister and wanted to fill my pockets as a business man I would be unselfish because I could make more money that way than any other way. "My fellow-citizens, I feel rising in my pulse already, the inspiration and impulse which is to come not only cannot be sure that r judge right, but to the United States, but to the world. I am sure that my heart speaks the it IL 11 a in isrr I . - - Cftk K ! s 7 next Tuesday. I do not identify my self with this. To me has fallen tne unspeakable good fortune of happen ing to be the spokesman of the Amer ican people at this critical and fate ful time. "I do not know what is wise. I hearts to speak. "In the days to conn- ni -v. v. n ;j longer wonder how America i.-, iunj; to work out her destiny, for slit- win have proclaimed to them t licit her destiny is not divided from the i. s tiny of the world, that her purpose is justice and love of mankind." 1 The Seaboard Air Line Is endeavoring to Co-operate with us Here is an ad. appearing in a recent issue of the Man ufacturers' Record and right in line with the constructive articles of Mr. Whitehead and Mr. Chadbourn regarding the Wood Pulp Industry. Presenting the Claims of Wilmington, N. C. For Woodworking industries, Wilmington presents a situation worthy of the most careful consideration of those engaged or about to engage in that business. Already it is the center of a large territory for these plants, and lb arc successful a matter worth consideration. , It is claimed that one hundred million feet of tupelo gum and other hard woods are within a radius of twenty-five miles, and even a great er amount beyond the twenty-6ve mile radius. The supply of raw material is therefore assured. Other advantages are- abundance of labor at low wage scale, good living conditions for labor, good climatic conditions, favorable rates of transportation on raw and finished products. These facts respecting Wilmington, presented by the Progressive Railway of the South, are without selfish motives, as those who know the transportation situation must testify, and is but in line with our policy to help create a systematic development of the Seaboard Southeast, today the Nation's undeveloped asset, and the opportunity for the progressive . Seaboard Air Line Railway "The Progressive" Railway of the South. i! 1 1 until after last shaw. : -,1 ; -:,:n--,yi.:r. ' -- r This Progressive road will advertise us as an all year resort, and faring the tourists too, if we will only provide adequate resort hotels. , Are we doing our part to help ourselves and at tract the moneyed visitor? TRANSIT COM D AMY Developers BEACH LOTS ii ni- " -
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1916, edition 1
12
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