Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 12, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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".r,. ;,.;;v 7:.: -'';v 'y - -r.-. :-,r s - : ( THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH, SOfflMiMoRNING, NOVEMBER 12, J9I6. PAGE TWO . , 9 : 1 If Tit! -if! mm Efttf 11 i3 CARtiLfNA TOOK MUL GAME FROM DAVIDSON WOMAN KILLED IN AUTO SMASH-UP Great Gridiron Battle Staged Yesterday in Winston-Salem. Another Likely Fatally Injure 1 When Two Cars Crashed Together. CR0 SHOUT wo- Milford, Conn, Nov. 11. One man dead, another perhaps fatally in jured and two persons less seriously DAVIDSON PUT hurt was the toll tonight of a head-on UP GREAT GAME' ' 0011181011 on the Bridgeport turnpike, . near Liberty Rock, of a Packard Rac- Witnessed The Event. by President Greeted Like a Con quering Hero On His Way Back Home, .Rhine Cliff, N. Y., Nov. 11 Presi- WOT CONCEDE IT OX WILL GEHIlfW' :frrm Points to Mix-up of Reports In California Four Years Ago, . New York, Nov. 11. A chronologic al record of the unofficial count in KEPT THEIR HEAD Outplayed Carolina But Lost. ' car and a Ford- r- i. c: 1 r,.rJ ' The big car, formerly driven Kamn ue faima, tne noiea auiomo- i, .- . . , , :much to give a winner. Due racer, was anveu uy Aieiauuei . -n I Former Governor Martin Glynn, Gordon Murdock, a Yale freshman, j Packey McCabe and Congressman- I TtTl. Itim -nvAw. Virt Vw "V V ft To WOO I . - Winston-Salem, N. C, Nov. 11. Al-j vvitu mui wie mo U1U1-"C1' ,,omoo elsct Lunn, of Scheneetady, gained ad though outplayed by Davidson, Caro-i Gordon Murdoqk, a Yale senior and i mittance to the private car for a few lina won the annual football game to-! joint owner of the car, and two New J minutes at Albany, day by a score of 10 to 6. v . Mmnnairi and Mrs- Wilson appeared at the im- Folger, for Carolina, was the star ; Katherine Risden, who were guests of . J?ant stPs and wa8 cheered of the game, while Black, for David- the brothers at the Yale-Brown foot-jWllson made no speeches. son,. also showed class. All the scor- ban game. The party was enroute for; dent Wilson was greeted like a con-. California four years ago was made quenng hero at the stations between Williamstown and this point tonight. Here he boarded the 'Naval Yacht, Mayflower. At Troy and Albany the crowds fought to get near the pri vate car. Those who failed contented themselves by shouting the approval which " the American public likes so Made No Comment When "Hughes Was Elected," So Have Nothing to Regret. (By William Bayard Hale.) Berlin, Nov. 11. D2spite the false J news sent out by Reutcr, announcing) the election of Hughes, neither the! German government nor tli3 people! were betrayed into any expressions , which they would regret in view of I the latest news announcing th3 prob-!i public today by Chairman Willcox to justify the refusal of the National; Committee formally to concede the re election of President Wilson. This record shows that the exact result was not known until Dscember 4 and from election nieht until that I dav there was a mnstaTit fluctuation I able triumph of Wilson of votes between Roosevelt and Wil son. This record was shown to Mr. Hughes before it was given to the newspapers. It is said that it "con siderably cheered" the Republican j interest, but without an expression of candidate. He had been urging J a particular enthusiasm. The announcement of Hughes' "vic- tory" was received without elation or j disappointment. I have now to re-' mark that the revised result received I 0 20 Market Street ing came in the fourth quarter. A! New York. The Ford car was own- Tijppp"T AMnjc p Ayr fild e-nal bv Cantain Tandv. a touch-' 0 nnli dHvon hv Mrs F Rndtrers. of J UDK-llL L.AlNLID virVVL down by Folger, after a 61-yard run west Haven. With her were threes ROADS HEAVY FINES. through a broken field and a goal friends, residents of West Haven, kick by Tandy netted Carolina 10: crash came near a turn in the points and the game. road and both cars were overturned. A forward pass to Flowers by Law-(Mjss McDonald was instantly killed i violation of the interstate commerce son saved Davidson from a shutout. ian(j Miss Risden probably fatally in- law against four railroads and one Alexander Murdock was ser-; packing company today. Chicago, Nov. 11. Judge assessed fines totalling $171,000 for Lawson made an unsuccessful at- jured. tempt to kick goal. The weather was j0Usly hurt. The Ford occupants all rather warm for football, but one of escaped serious injury, except Mrs. Atkins, who was shaken up and re quired medical attention. the largest crowds that ever attend ed a game here was present. The line-up follows: Carolina JfZ190 iSEA ISLAND COTTON Love' Left End." ' ' I BRINGS FIFTY CENTS Ramsey Shaw, I : Left Tackle. Savannah, Ga., Nov. 11. Sea Island Grimes, Gray, cotton was sold here today at 50 Left Guard. cents a pound, which is the highest believed it will go higher. In most of the cases the charge against the defendant was rebating or shipping less than carload ship ments at car load rates. Those fined were: Elgin, Joliet and Eastern Railway, $20,000 and costs; Pennsylvania Rail road, $20,000 and costs; Pittsburg, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis, $20,000 and costs in one case and $50,000 and costs in another; Swift & Co., $60,000 and costs. Mr. j Chairman Willcox to concede the elec ; tion. The statement of Chairman Willcox follows: "The record of California in 1912 shows that Mr. Wilson was first in the lead; that subsequently this !eadtion t sav with Hamlet Landis-was taken by Colonel Roosevelt and: Rpnpt. tn hr tv.nn ill wo w! ....au, tn uciC6atxun i me cic- tlmn to fly tQ others that we knQW ; toral college from California was div-not o , ided, 2 electors being for Mr. W:l- ' son and 11 for Colonel Roosevelt. j 1 "The results given in California in i SECOND TRIAL FOR i Announces a One W e"ek9s Reduction OS lie If required to give an impression of the German feeling, I would sayj that there is some relief at not being jS oDiiged to struggle witn the pronuncia tion of Hughes' name during the next four years, together with a disposi- Tandy, (Captain) White, B., Center. Harrell Sayad, Right Guard. Tayloe, White, T., (Capt.) Right Tackle. rawiuru, omsiciuii, Cincmnati University 10. Right End. j At Hamilton, N. Y Colgate Jnnson eesier' .Rochester 6. Quarterback. I At "Washington Maryland Aggies Bellamy, Black, 13 Catholic University 9. Left Half At Cambridge Harvard 3, Prince- Folger, Walker, C. ton 0. Right Half j At New Haven Brown 21, Yale 6. Tennant, Burns, . At West point Army 17, Maine 3.i Full Back. j At Pittsburgh TTniversitv of Pitts- Wcst Virginia Wesleyan 0. At Columbus Ohio 46, Indiana 7. At Cincinnati Ohio University 33, 35, GIVEN FOUR MONTHS. Substitutions Carolina : Williams for Johnson; Coleman for Folger; Ranson for Love; Folger for Coleman; Watkins for Tennant; Fitzsimmons for Bellamy; Love for Ramsey; Black for Watkina; Barton for Grimes; Proc tor for Crawford. Davidson Elliot for T.. White; burg 37, Washington and Jefferson 0. At Philadelphia Dartmouth 7j Pennsylvania 7. At South Bethlehem Penasylvania State 7, Lehigh 7. At New York Swarthmore 18, Co lumbus 0. At New York Colby 3, New York Laird for Burns; Flowers for C. Walk-; University 0. er; Lawson for Keesler; King for R. i At Hoboken Stephens 19, Connec- TTT 11 T- - 1 f f ' . . . . ' ticut Aggies J. At Ithaca Cornell 23, Michigan 20. Walker; Paisley for Gray. FOOTBALL RESULTS. At Syracuse Syracuse 42, Susque- hanna 0. At Cleveland Mount Vernon 7, Wash McNeal Convicted of Receiving Stolen Goods. Wash McNeal, colored, was yester day sentenced to serve four months on the county roads, b(y Recorder Empie, on a charge of receiving stolen goods. McNeal was arrested early Friday night by Policeman R. ". Thompson when three packages of whiskey were found -in hir, wagon that were suspected to have been stolen. At police headquarters McNeal claimed that he got the three quarts of booze from George Brooks, a col ored employe at the Elks' Club, and a warrant was immediately awtorn out for that negro. In court yester day morning Brooks stoutly denied knowing anything about the packages of whiskey, except that he knew it to have belonged in lockers at the club rooms. He was granted a nol pros with leave and used as a wit ness. 1912 show precisely why the Republi can National Committee cannot at this time concede the election of Mr. Wil- THOMAS E. WATSON. Maccn, Ga., Nov. 11. Thomas E. i son and must await the official count Watson, publisher of the jeff in this and other states." ANOTHER RAILROAD TESTS THE SUIT Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Balks On The Adamson Bill. efrersonian Magazine, will go on trial for send ing obscene matter through the ! mails in the United States Court or, Augusta, Monday, November 27, ac cording to District Attorney Earl Donaldson, this morning. Mr. Don- ! aldson said the charges pushed. Judge Wallace W. will preside. Ladies 9 Goats and S nits will be Lambdin i. FRENCH VETERAN BULLET PR i ! DOFi i I b i Western Reserve 0. Southern Circuit. At Knoxville Tennessee 10, Van derbilt 6. At Athens Georgia 50, Furman 0. At Jacksonville Auburn 20, Flor ida 0. Eastern Circuit. At Annapolis olina Aggies 0. 19 At Portland, Me. Holy Cross Bowdoin 10. Western Circuit. At Evanston Iowa 13, Northwest-! ern 20. At Vermillion Notre Dame 12,: South Dakota 0. At Lawrence Kansas. 27, Wash-i Navy 50, North Car- i ington 0. j ; At Indianapolis Depauw 13, Wa At New Brunswick Rutgers 0, j bash 26. West Virginia 0. i At Manhattan Kansas Aggies 7 At Williamstown Williams 0, Mas- Missouri 6. sachusetts Aggies 0. I At St. Louis Knox 7, Washington At Washington Georgetown- 47, University 7. Chicago, Nov. 11. A sixth great. railroad filed suit in the United I States District Court today attacking, Jhe constitutionality of the Adamson! eight-hour law. The suit was filed by j the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy! Lroad, asking the court to pass on the i law and agreeing to do anything ! within reason to protect the men' while the case is pending. . ! . The roads which have filed suits ! up to date are the Union Pacific at j Omaha; Atchison, Topeka & Santa I mas, the novelist, but Arthur Isidore Fe, at Kansas ( ity; the Louisville & Nashville at Louisville; the Chicago, Wuunded Many Times Before I inally Killed in Action on Somme Front. JUDGE HARRIS' VOTE. Name Was Omitted When Figures Were Given Out for Publication. Pari Nov. 11. Not Alexandre Du- Great Western , and Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific, in Chicago. PATIENT WAS ARRESTED. u v-n J, JZr Z .iSht V Wfrran' oarginS 3SSaUlt and captured, but managed to es ty was made public for upon a female. McCoy was a pa-! ' j. r- - T . . . . . . . . . . i caDe. When the official vote for New Hanover coun some reason the name cf Justice George Harris, recorder-elect, was omitted and The Dispatch regrets that Judge Harris' name was not included with the other candidates for office. Mr. Harris polled 2,497 votes and will assume the duties of recorder when the other Democratic candidates take office. " .Charged With Assault on Female. Cut by Unknown Party. "The way of the transgressor is hard," and no one can testify to this more readily than Avent McCoy, col-! I ored, who was arrested at the James Walker Memorial Hospital last j of France, who died there at (ho age of 70 years', on August 12", io honored by the name, ' "Duma -. Trench," at Clery. Dumas was wounded ten times and served in various armies forty-nine years. Born in the Pyrenees in IS 16, Du mas enlisted in the Pontifical Zouaves at the age of 19. He received his first wound at Mentana, and three years afterward joined the French army, as a sub-lieutenant of cavalry. He took part in the charge of General Margueritte, when he was wounded VeloW, Broadcloth and Mixture COATS which . . at $7.50 to $20.00 REDUCED to , $5.98 to $17.50 Poplin, Gabardine and Broadcloth SUITS, former price $12.50 to $27.50 REDUCED to $&50 io $22.50 U V Bettu U A T vv 1 aies DRESSES Street, Afternoon and Evening Whenever this establishment has found it possible to reduce a price. The management has decided to increase the quality and leave the price the same tient at the hospital, but the fact that he was suffering with knife wound inflicted by an unknown party was not sufficient to prevent service of the warrant and his transportation to police headquarters where he was given lodging, pending a hearing be fore the recorder. (- The assault is alleged to have ,been committed yesterday afternoon but McCoy succeeded in getting into additional trouble before the warrant could be served and was arrested at the hospital after having been car Tied there for treatment of his injuries. MARKETING WESTERN MUSKMELONS TOLD OF. -You pay for a dress today but if it Because- is Goodman quality it may be worn this season and made over for the New Year. Newness, Promptness GOODMAN'S - -. - .- v -. r. z - Washington, D. C, Nov. 11. Greater co-operation by growers is needed in marketing of the 7,000 carloads of muskmelons shipped from western producing regions, according to mark et specialsists of the U. S- Department of Agriculture. The various methods employed in marketing the melons from the five most important western preduomg points ?n 3915 are outline! in S. Department of AgrJcullute ir.lUtin No. 401, rtcently issued. The earliest of the western musk melon producing sections the Imperial Valley, California, producss the great est number of fcars, 4,722, the bulle t'n hi ows. Shipments begin late in Way ciid extend ast the middle of Ju'y. Practically the total output of I sent to Salonica. melons is shipped through local com-1 of the Orient palled on him and he cape Afterward he serve! v.ilh distinc tion in the French colonies, taking part in campaigns in the extreme south Oran, in Tunis, in the Gaboon, along the ivory coast, in the Soudan and along the Moroccan frontier. Ho was honorably discharged from the French army when he reached the age limit, but he promptly went to South Africa and fought in the Trans vaal. He was wounded there. At the beginning of the present war he hastened to' France to enlist, but he was refused because he was sixty years old. Without waiting to argue the matter, he set out post-haste for Belgium, and there joined King Al bert's heroic little army that was stay ing the advance of the Kaiser's hosts. Almost immediately, in one of ths opening battles of the war near Haelen he was wounded and captur ed. He escaped from tha Germans, however, made his way to Antwerp, returned to Paris and managed to there re-enlist in the French army in the confusion and excitement that at tended Gen. von Kluck's advance to the portals of the French capital. He was with Gen. Gallieni's taxicab army that hurled itself on the German flank at Meaux, and helped win the battle of the Marne. He was wounded six times in that engagement, but he stay ed with his men in the advance to the Aisne. After he recovered from his wounds he was despatched to the Dardanelles and, surviving that catastrophe, was But the inactivity 1 m m mercial distributibutors, who receive a commission, and who help finance the growers by making cash advances on an acreage basis and supplying crate material on credit. Improve ments in distribution contracts and the exercise of a greater degree of per sonal supervision by growers in pick ing, and loading operations are re commended by the specialists. The Salt River Valley, Arizona, is jthe second shipping region for west ern muskmelons in point of time, shipments extending from early July to early August. The volume of ship ments from this district however, is obtained his transfer, to France. , He returned to France in time to be drafted as Captain into the Forty fourth Regiment of Infantry, which was rushed to Verdun in anticipation of the opening of the German Crown Prince's drive. He and his men de fended Bezonvaux, which the Germans surrounded on Feb. 26, and he was wounded there cutting a way of es cape through the circle of enemy troops. . Captain Dumas recovered just in time to be sent to the Somme for the opening of the great offensive on July lt On August 12, the day the French FLORID A ORANGES, MAL AGA GRAPES, FANCY NEW YORK APPLFS, Baldwin Apples, Turnip3. Irish Potatoes Brazil Nuts. Tarro iona A'monds, English Wal nuts, Cocoanuts, Lemons and other Prcducc and Cannes. BEAR PRODUCE & MERCHANDISE CO., M Mil M 1. ' iO -i' , Wilmington, N. C. Phone 323. only about one-tenth that from the Im- J stormed Crery, he received a machine perial Valley. Growers in the Salt River Valley al so ship through distributors and re- ceive cash advances through the grow ing auq snipping seasons, ' gun bullet through tne thigh as he sprang over a trench parapet for the assault. He plunged forward, and was leading his men when a bullet struck him- in the forehead, killing him. Beautiful Bust and Shoulders are possible if you will wear n. scientifically con'-lr" Bien Jolic Brassiere. The dratrginp: weight of an unronfinefl bust fo strcti li-" ' ' supporting muscled that the contour of f lie flsurf i-i sr"'':' ' put t lie bust Kick lief i1 ,M prercnt the full Im' " ic the apperniice m fnr-AM . mi rYi oiness. euminnie tne innr- DKAOOlt.I.t.0ifle((l0hc shoulder tni. -- Rraceful line to the entire upper body. They arts the daintiest and most serviceable carmen?- i?;'1-' nable come in all materials and slylos: ( ro Hac k, ii'1 Front, Surplice, Bandeau, etc. Boned with ' 'nl"li!. 1 ' rustless boning permitting washing without relink ii Have your dealer show you Bien Jolie Brassieres, if not eil, we will gladly send him, prepaid, samples to 0"" BENJAMIN & JOHNES, 51Warren Street. Newark, Kit I 1 I 'A -A 4 t "
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1916, edition 1
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