Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 15, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 '-SL'.f"i;'.J ."'-.I-' Kit : LAYMEN'S MISSIONARY?: THE BIRD COUNT OF 1915 t n i "ian . - i ii - - . ir r a t U F R FORECAST yy u ii-- - - ,:' . November 15, 1916.? Temperature. H ceo Sac- rp . K H 5. - 1? Ml -.-".n.-i . . cloudy ,. .cloudy j . . rainingj . . rainingj . .cloudy . . . clearj 56 56 76 j 72 : 24 40 78 58 j 56 j 38 76 j 28 j 54 78 -26-1 24 62 f 36 I 16 j .OS .01 .20 Atlanta . . Charleston Charlotte Chicago . 0 0 .01 1.S0 0 0 .02 .50 0 .10 12 Galveston 58 j 34 I 30 j 24 38. 20 j 34 I 4S j IjafkSOllVHie. .iauimB V. Off 8,1:5 x. fork .. Pittsburg . Ralei?!' . . .cloudyj . snowingj . .rainingj . .clearj la Louis . i a i asi'lu1 7 ' h'ilmington ..raining) SUNRISE AND SUNSET -X- ' Stage of water in Cape Fear river at Fayetteville. N. C. at S a. m. yester day, :'..- ieei. Thursday. Sun rises .6:45 ,5:0S Sun sets . PRICES ARE SOARING Cigar Dealers of Other Cities Getting Six Cents for Cigars The advance in tne price of the or dinary nickel cigar tnat is being felt over the Piedmont and western part of the State has not touched Wil mington as yc-J but cigar dealers stat ed this morning that like other things orae time. A number of brands of; I A Y T A V Tf-V 1 A A W V T ix cents each in Greensboro andl other tines or tne state and yester Jav's edition of the Raleieh Times railed attention to the rise in price I a numDer .01 cities. The stores ( ompany stated tnis morning 1 iha headquarters had not yet au-j thorized an advance in price which I means that the Cigar Stores Com- j fanjs lmndreds oi stores, over . the country have not on cigars. Wilmington has not yet felt the ad vance in price of cigars but the con-'sc-nsus of opinion smong local cigar dealers is that they will be obliged to follow in the r.tep-5 of cigar dealers of otner cities. Cows in Old Hotel. Cresson, Pa., Nov. 15. Under the roof of the old Mountain House here, where in bygone years millionaires, notables of national fame and society- bells from many States dined in al most regal splendor, the cows in the dairy herd of Samuel C. Tussey, will soon be contentedly munching their hay, all unaware of their splendid surroundings. A few days ago the contractor will soon start the work old hotel building was sold, and a of making it into a cow shed. ?mv th - ' ' ' 11 1 J JV Mi ! i, "-' - ' " .. - ---i 1 ' ."V V ' :'vii ' ; ' v New York, ; :Noi5.CThere wai heavy realizing in theT ,c6tton market today after the dpening at aN Recline of 4 . to 16, pqintspiivamonths ;soia 15 to IS under last' night's closing ures. Vi.ivei6olr New Orleans buyersf haff - buyttsbrders herb and after ; the V define s prices rallied -to about last nlghrs closing figures, Jan uary selling ufe to 20.02 and May to 20.35; - .-, . . NEW YORK fcOTTON. ' "' Open. December .... .. 19.90 Janua-ry .-. .. .. ....19.98 March ........ ..10.IO May 20.21 July .. 20.20 New York Spot 20.05. Close; 20.08 28.13 -20.23 20.44 20.45 Wilmington cotton 19 3-8 Charleston cotton ...19 3-8 Norfolk cotton 19 3-8 Savannah cotton 19 3-4 . Liverpool Cotton. Open Close January-February 11.71 11.65 Mai-ch-April ... .' .. . .11.S2 11.76 May-June .. .. .. .; 11.93 11.87 July-August 11.94 - 11.87 1-2 Open, steady; close, quiet and steady. Middling 11.80. Sales, 8,000; receipts, 0. . Wilmington Spirits .. . . .. Rosin Naval Stores. 45 1-? ' $5.60 and $5.35 $2.60 and 10 1-2 cents ( ....$4.00 $4.00 $3.00. Tar .. .. Crude . . . Receipts, Cotton ..... .129 Spirits 1 13 uu Tar .. .. . . 59 Crude ........... .16 , Savannah Naval Stores. ' Spirits 46 1-1 Rosin . ..$6.30 Chicago. Pork . . .... $27.22 1-2 Wheat $1,87 1-2 to 1-4 Corn .. 96 1-4 Oats 57 5-8 cigars would have to bring a better J Ribs 14,47 1-2 retail price as they had been paying ; Lard 16.27 1-2 m'ore for the manufactured weed for j . cipars mat nave always sow six tor j LJLAJfNlJtJK. ialiN a quarter are now being retailed at V Lie A rC E A D At I7T5 C T FMirK! j Raleigh, Nov. 15 Dr. H. Q. Alex ander, of Matthews, president; Dr. John M. Tempi eton. of Carv vice nresirlpntr V C TT'flires n A ner- manager of the local branch of the : . ' . 1 uvfu secieiaiy-irasuiei; auu an uiu- '5ai rr officers nf the North Carolina Farmers Union, were reelected at to- day's session of the annual conven - tion being held here. yet raised the Price THANKSGIVING DAY PROCLAMATION Washington, Nov. 15 The Thanks giving proclamation will be issued within the next few days. President Wilson today stated that j he would follow the custom and de- signate month. the last Thursday in the ! Marine News The Standard Oil Company's steam tanker, Vesta, ar rived in port this morning with a cargo of petroleum products to be j discharged at the local distributing ( station. The Chilian transport Mai-1 po,, which has just completed unload ing, a cargo of nitrate of soda at the Coast Line terminals, sailed this morning for Baltimore, via Newport News, Va., to load a cargo. uonKSp?. Our Market help you get your turkey and e other things the feast, direct from the country v , . vf ic Secure your copy from our Agent today, and have ex pressed. you leys Poultry Vegetables Butter Food Rates Low By The Southern "Serve thm ; ,! LOCAL .MARKETS ; t . ' Eggs . . ...... . ; ;n35s Eutter, V lb., country . . . . v.y. .". . . 35e Spring Chickens, apiece . . ; 25c to 46c Grown Chfckens apica J50 td 4Be r rZ.lZr " "iidence in: the heaymess -of rails at Guineas, jipiece .. .. .. .. : . :35c:f j-.-. .-; -j Beef . . m i- S - - In. C. Shoulders'and" Rlb8: m Z -IlSe Oranges 'Car " : - '-s0-ori V.4rtiiifr in rLemrttfsinpv " "iA: Applesy bbl; i r .$S.0fl to 4:00 oeiF Peppers, bush. t:50c Onions; sack ii$3;25 Cabbage, lb . 3c to 3 l-2c Pork, lb . Jl: I2e Corn per sack, V. Hides, G: S., .... Peanuts, N. C. .. Peanuts, Spanish Peanuts, Va . . . . Wool, Beeswax, ........ . ?1.90 to JIM 15 to 16 tents. . . ; . . 80c to 90c .....85c to 95c . . . 66c io 70c 20 to 38 cents. ". 28 cents. ALL CASES CONTINUED. Recorder Empie Had Light This Morning. Docket All of the cases to come before Re - corder B O, Rmnfe this marnimr were continued. William Howard and Charles- Cobb, colored, and William Shaw, white, were up oh charges of firing pistols within tne city; limits. The cases were contiriuedVuntil to- morrow. A case charging j : N. Bryant with resisting an officer was also continued until tomorrow;. IMPORTANT MEETING. Two Interesting Reports to Be Made at Chamber Session. Two important reports will be sub- mitted at the regular monthly meet- 1 ing of the Chamber of Commerce to 1 be held tomorrow afternoon at 4 ! o'clock, it being the day set for the meeting postponed from Thursday of last week. The reports will be from the Industries and Business Enterpris es Committee and the Street and Wharves Committee. Mr. J. C. Williams, member of the firm of Belk-Williams, chairman of the Industries committee, will report on investigations made with regard to getting one or two additional en terprises here. This report is consid ered of vital importance. Mr. H. Lacy Hunt, chairman of the Street j and Wharves committee, will make the report which will have to do with street improvement. This will also be of much interest. Other matters will also be considered at the meet ing. COTTON LETTER. 1 New York, Nov. cotton market today displayed an uncertain price trend, under considerable pres sure at times at receiving good sup port, when the selling seemed ex. hausted. Values moved up and down covering a range within twenty points. The Southern spot situation denotes great strength and there is no cause in our opinion to expect a permanent decline, although for tech nical reasons it appears advisable to buy only on good reducation, which probably will be observed. ORVIS BROS. & CO. Bulletin will you want for Eggs Fruit i Fish Milk Delivered to Door Express Co. Public" . " STOCKS : vm 5 New York (Wa reet), Nov. 15. Oversight i develOEmnts Jn the . rail- j way labor situation ere , again in ev- sopening' a sub Steel, erucfble : Utiitetf' States Igf SSC116 - - .y"-UTfr7! ..vr"-t ""'k Ping shares the ;c6ppftrsi-tiie 'papers, American Caii, tnWitriaV-Alcohbl and1 Steel. Steet, role 4 points. AfsMliners . ' . American Beet Sugar . J . . ' American' Can T. . American Car and Foundry Aanericaiocomotive . . American Cotton ?Ofl . . American Smelting v. . American Sugar . . . . . American Tel & Tel .. .. American Tobacco . . .. .. , Anaconda Copper .... . . A. t clii son ! Atlantic Coast Line (bid) . Baldwin Locomotive . . . . . Baltimore & Ohio .... Bethlehem Steel . . .... . . yv.si 1-2 r. .103 . .. 64 3-4 69 5-3 . . 93 3-Jt ... 53 . ..120 3- : ..1181-21 ....133 3-4 ..224 3 1 ....100 3-S . ..104 1-2 . ..121 . . . 85 1-2 , i648 .171 7-S , 661-4 ,. 921-8 . 313-4 .1351-8 ,. 89 1-4 . 36 , .180 ; Canadian Pacific . . 5 Chesapeake4 Oftfe Chicago, Mil. & St: Paul . . . . Chicago, and Pacific Ry Consolidated aGs .. .. Crucible Steel i . Erie V. ... .. General Electric . . . : . . . Great Northern pfd 116 3-4 Great Northern Ore Ctfs 44 Illinois Central ; 104 3-8 Inter. Merc. Mar. pfd ctfs 121 Kansas City Southern 26 Louisville & Nashville 133 1-4 i Liggett & Myers . . 280 Lorillard Co 225 Maxwell Motors 78 1-2 Mexican Petroleum' 110 13 Missouri, Kans. & Texas, pfd. .18 Missouri Pacific, 91-2 National Lead, 69 34 N. Y. Central, 106 3-4 N. Y., N. H. & Hartford, 57 1-4 N. & W 138 3-4 Northern Pacific 110 1-2 Pennsylvania, 56 3-4 (Reading 106 3-4 Rep. Iron & Steel , 84 3-8 S. A. L., 16 S. A. L., Pfd, 37 3-4 Sloss Shef. Steel & Iron Southern Pacific, 99 - Southern Railway, 26 1-4 Southern Railway, pfd 66 7-8 Studebaker Corp., 127 1-4 Tenn. Copper, 25 Texas Co., 225 Union Pacific, ... , 147 1-8 United Fruit, , 163 IT. S. Rubber, . . , . 159 78 U. S. Smelting & Refining 76 1-4 U. S. Steel, 123 1-8 U. S. Steel, pfd., 121 Va Car. Chem 4", Va. Iron, Coal & Coke 59 3-4 Wabash Pfd. B 28 7-8 Western Union, 101 Westinghouse Electric 64 1-4 Kennecott Copper, - 56 Gulf State 153 American Zinc, '. 58 1-4 Central Leather 10S 1-2 Corn Products 19 BABIES WILL KEEP NIPPLES Berlin, Oct. 15. To make sure that as a result of the rubber shortage in Germany, infants will not have to go without rubber nipples on the milk bottle, the Bundesrat has ordered that the entire available supply within the empire, and all that are imported, shall be turned over to a specially created company that in turn- is ' to have charge of the equal distribution of this small but necessary article. Mothers in the future will be able to procure two nipples per child under one year of age, on presenting birth certificates to prove the age of the children, and then will be able to buy new hippies by turning in the old ones. A maximum price of 35 pfen nigs per nipple has been set formal! that are made in German SALINE MATTER COULD COVER EARTH Washington, Nov: i 15. Saline mat ter fntiie ocean Ms'estiraated at a lit tle more than 4,80t),O00 cubic miles which, according to the United States Geological Survey, is enough to cover the entire surface .of "the United States to adeptfi of 500 feet. CONVICT RETAKEN. Negro Had Served All But One Day of a Year Sentence. . Virgil Nixon, colored, who escaped from the county road force on July 10, 1916, just 'one day prior to the ex piration of a one-year sentence im posed following his conviction on a charge of larceny, has ' been retaken by Mr. Grady Cook, driver of the county auto truck, and'he "will be plac ed on trial within the-next few days on a charge of tjeirig an escaped con vict. Nixon knew his sentence would expire on the ; following day, but -he saw an opportunity toleave and the characteristics of his; race asserted itself and he walked off without once giving a thought to the future. YQrfeiNQv, ,15.r-?Ths Hptel As- tor is ta be the scene, of a notable gath ering tomorrow night. ,wben a dinner will , be5 given in celebration of the teinth : anniversary of fhe Xaymen s Missionary. Movement. The theme of the eentog wilf be "The Advanee of a Decade; a Challenge to th Future." The speakers will include President J. Campbell, White of Wooster College, William B. MfUer, general secretary of the missionary movement, and Robert E.' Spfceri secretary" of rae Board: of Poreig, Misslonr of theFresbyteria& Church. SALE OF FAMOUS BOOK COLLECTION, .r New York, Nov. . 3L5.--Book lovers and collectors Xrom' ; all parts of the country gatnered at tne Anderson Gal leries today to attend the opening of the sale of the James Caleton Young collection of inscribed books, said to1 be one of the most famous libraries of its kind in the world. The collection was made by James Carleton Young, a wealthy Minneapolis man, who travel ed extensively in r Europe and other part of the world to perfect it Tiere are nearly 2,500 volumes in the col lection, each book containing the auto graph 6f its author and in many cases extensive notations from the autohrfs pen. , FURNITURE MEN ELECT OFFICERS High. Point, Nov. 15. C. F. Tomlin son, of High Point, was elected pres ident and J. T. Ryan, alsd of this city, was re-elected secretary-treasurer cf the Southern Furniture Manufactur ers' Association here today, at the concluding session of the annual conr vention of the organization. The 1917 convention also will be held in High Point. FAILED TO OPEN ITS , DOORS THIS MORNING. Williamstown, W. V., Nov. -15 The First National Bank of Williamstown, did hot Open for business today and an announcement was made that an examination of the books was in pro gress. George W. Hunter, former mayor of Williamstown, and for many years cashier of the bank could not be located by bank officials. Mem bers of his family were unable to throw any light upon his whereabouts. I TRIAL OF ALLEGED - SPY POSTPONED J j Washington, Nov. ,15. The prelim- j inary hearing of ,Karl Armgaard 'Graves, self-styled 'International j Spy," charged with trying to extort I $3,000 from Countess von Bern storff, 1 wife of Ambassador von Be'rnstorff, was postponed until December 6th, at the reduest of United States Attor- j neys. j BRITISH SHIP LOSSES COMPARATIVE SMALL London, Nov. 15. Of the total of the steam shipping destroyed of 1,000 tons or" more at the beginning of the war the net loss to September 30, 1916, was 2 1-2 per cent, the financial sec retary of the British admirality told -a questioner today in the House of Com mons. This includes losses from all causes, both war and marine. BIG POTATO CROR ENRICHES ThiE FARMERS Lincoln, Neb. Nov. 15. The sand hill farmers of Western Nebraska are able to ,buy automobiles this year. They have grown a big crop of po tatoes and received the highest price ever realized. They have averaged $1 a bushel and many received from $1.25 to $1.50 a bushel. One large potato district alone shipped out 1,000 cars. Buyers from a half dozen States were after the crdp and competition caused a boom In prices. Most of the large potato growing States have raised very short crops and this, coupled with the unusual demand, has sent prices skyward. In a good season the sandhill farriier is able to raise from 200 to 300 bushels of potatoes per acre. Growers rea lized from $250 to $350 an acre. Some lean years the farmers of the sandhills have been nearly to the edge of starvation because of the drought and have required financial aid. This year they are on easy street with oulgihg bank accounts and with the ability to buy a "gasoline gig" if they want one. RECEPTION LAST NIGHT. 1 The reception given by the ladies of the Sanctuary society at the paro chial residence last- night from to II 11 o'clock in honor of Father Christjo pher Denen, was attended by hun dreds of the priests admirers ' aft friends and for a period it looked k though the residence would prove in adequate to accommodate all who wish ed to attend. The residence -was beau tifully decorated with flowers andJl ver ornaments for the. occasion. ' ' Father Dennen was presented with; a purse, the. presentation pemg by .Mr. M: J. Corbett; aff chairman of the com mittee, who expressed the pleasure that was" his. The purse eanre' frdm the congregation "and Ceroied friends of the priest ' arid was a token of the esteem, 'love - and respect in whieh Fafber Dennen is held". Prisesti febm various cities tn North Carolina, Phil adelphia, " Charleston, and Savannah Were in the fecervthg line at the recep tion, ' 'i T yfOth6am mj-Onk hundred and' twenty-four pairs of birds nest and raise their families on the average farm of 108 acres in the Northeastern; States, according to es timates teased upon the second annual bird count conducted by the Biolog ical Survey of the United States De partment of 'Agriculture. In that part of the Plains region -east of the-100th eridian-- th - counts would- Indicate almost actly , the same density -of bird population, 125 pairs of nesting birds to each 100 acres; In the South ern States, where the counts were limited to the part of the farm sur rounding the home, which naturally supports more birds than tilled areas, there seems to be on the farms where counts were taken 131 pairs of nest ing birds to ' each 100 acres. The counts so far received,, however, from these sections do not furnish a suffi cient basis for estimating the birds on the remainder of the farm. In the Northeastern States it was estimated that the average bird pop ulation of each 1C0 acres of isolated) woodland under observation was 199 pairs, while the average bird popula tion for each 100 acres of the area covered was 125 pairs. The reports from the Rocky Mountain States in dicate that the bird population is smaller in this section. Three 80-acre tracts in New Mexico indicated 17 pairs to 80 acres, or 21 pairs to each 100 acres. Still farther west in the irrigated district of West ern Colorado two reports indicated that Irrigated ,land in orchard and in fields Of grain and root crops support ed a bird population of 66 pairs per 100 acres, but on contiguous non-irrigated land the bird life shrank only a few houses, and for the most part covered with desert shrubs, showed a bird popualtion of 50 pairs of 26 species, of which 22 were insectivor: ous. A semi-desert tract of the same size, covered with brush mostly less than 6 feet high, showed 31 pairs of 16 species. In the mountains of Ari zona, near Flagstaff, a tract of 70 acres covered' with yellow pine and Gambel oak supported a bird popu lation of 31 pairs of 18 species. In California 20 acres of the campus of the University of California show ed 87 pairs of 23 species. A tract near Gilroy, CaU containing 30 acres of fruits and about -8 acres of pasture and creek bottom, gave the unusual figure of 176 pairs of 34 species oh 38 acres. A similarly dense, though less varied, bird population was found in a 52-acre peach orchard near Port Clinton, Ohio. This showed 108 pairs! of command farm birds, 36 pairs of Winter Likely to Increase Death ;" 3 Rate - A bulletin from the State Board $f BTealth puts us in mind again that as. our windows go down and say down this winter, our death rate will go up and stay up. The diseases mentioned as those whose spread and severity are most affected by foul air and indoor living are tuberculosis, diphtheria, measles, scarlet fever, whooping cough, pneumonia, influen za and all sorts of infectious colds. So dependent are these diseases for their spread upon foul air that they have been named the foul air dis eases. And yet says the bulletin, these diseases are not to be the common fate of all during the winter months, no more than was typhoid or malarial fever the lot of all during the summer i People know how to prevent them. They know that living a shut-in life, without exercise or fresh air, or with- nnf nhecrvino1 Tomnoroto livinfl' Vlflh- its as to eating, sleeping, exercising and- bathing predisposes one to any of these diseases. They know also, that these diseases, one and all, are directed by sneezing, coughing and J Health and Hygiene spitting and that to avoid the dis-' "D " D" ease is to avoid the careless sneezer, state In contributions tothe Wil cougher or spiter. In addition to I n fund; and the editors of the three fhis, it is urged that sunshine and' Atlanta papers James R, Gray, of fresh air be admitted-into the home, particularly into the sleeping, work- ir onH u:nr imnmfl The universal remedy for foul air diseases is fresh air day and night. TTJF ATfJCQ rrrn ilrtlirvtD UVL T rriJ IN THE SOU I H , : Atlanta, :Ga.t Nov. 15. Not only lanta but other Southern cities are rapidly coming to the front as con-j tenders for "the best there is" in the way of theatrical amusements, ac cording to J. J.. Murdock, general man ager of the United Booking Office in New York, who fs here ons a winter vacation in the south. The same vaudeville acts that play iu the Palace theatre in New -York are sent to the Forsyth in Atlanta and to other-Southern cities, Mr. Murdock states, and sputhern dramatic houses also -enjoy the reputation of demand ing the very best. This season's booking at the At lanta theatres andTttie first-class dra? mafic houses Itf ttitf large cities of . the Jt south "are among" the best in years. and already the season bids fair to fulfill the - prophecy, : which- has at tracted 'much, attention,, in theatrical circles of late, that the public Is turn ing from the movies to the speaklng.j stage for another taste of old-time drama. -1 ;iirile''WirUna, ahdv6 paftsJf English sparrows, a total of 150 pairs of 29 species. In the South the counts showed an average of "77 pairs of 20 species and ,5 pairs of English sparrows on 83 acres In Florida; in Louisiana an av erage of 95 pairs of 29 species on 53 acres; and the counts from Texas in dicate an average of 91 pairs of birds of 21 species on 60 acres. The aver age of all counts received from the Southern States Is 76 pairs of birds of 23 species on a farm of 58 acres. On the 256 acres on the Corntll University campus at Ithaca, N. Y., a very careful study indicated 573 pairs of nesting birds, an average of 166 pairs of native nesting birds per 100 acres, and 56 nesting birds of English sparrows per 100 acres, or a total of 225 nesting birds per 100 acres. A similar count made near Rhinebeck, N. Y in a 210-acre sec tion indicated 54 different kinds rep resenting 366 pairs, nearly the same per acre as shown at Cornell Unlveri ty. The results of the 1915 bird count 1 just published by the Biological Sur vey indicated an average of 8 pairs of robins and 6 pairs of English spar rows on each farm of 108 acres where the count was made In the Northeas- ( era States. The average of all re ! nnrta for two ven.r show 7 nnlrn of Wm and 5 h2 palrg of Engl,sh spar. rows for each farm covered in this section. MUSHROOM PRICES HAVE ADVANCED Berlin, Nov. 15. For no explain able except speculation mushrooms have soared in prices to such a height that the authorities are being called on to step in, establish maximum prices, or take some similar measures to keep them within reach of the common people. This season mushrooms are so plentiful that the price paid by the wholesaler to those who gather them ranges from 30 to 40 pfennings a pound. Even at this low rate, fam ilies fuming the summer made from 80 to 100 marks a day by making excursions into the country and pick ing as many mushrooms as they could carry. Notwithstanding,- this; superabun- dance of the plants has not tended In the slightest to keep the retail prices down. .Today mushrooms sell at. re- tail for from 110 to 123 pfennings pound. a III BIG PARADE Atlanta Celebrated Democratic Victory in Torch Light Procession. Alanta, Ga., Nov. 15. Woodrow Wilson's victory in the presidential election was celebrated' in' Atlanta Monday night with a monster street parade in which Democrats of Fulton county and the state at large partic ipated. United States Senators Hoke Smith and Thomas W. Hardwick headed the procession, followed by. Congressman William Schley Howard and W. C. Adamson; W. J. Harris of the Federal Trade Commission, who Is mentioned as a candidate for the United States senate to succeed Senator Hardwick; Governor Nat E. Harris, who strongly supported President Wilson; Governor-Elect Hugh M. Dorsey, who par- tldipated for the first time In a Wil son demonstration,' although several times invited prior to the election; John D. Walker, of Sparta, chairman the; Democratic campaign in Geor- a ne journai, wuo wa uuuiou.'ii yeurgm ueteBituU w i convenuon ; uiarK noweu, of The Constitution, who has been Demo cratic national committeeman from Georgia for more than twenty years, land James B. Nevin, of The Georgian. I Besides these notables, Mayor Jas. : g. Woodward and Mayor-Elect Asa 1 G. Candler, together with the mem- At-iberB & the city, council of Atlanta, , marched In line. The marchers assembled at 6 p. m. ! at the Henry W. Grady monument and paraded through .the principal busi ness streets with brass bands, red fire and a steam calliope and other par aphernalia of - enthusiastic celebra tion. GOMPERS RESPONDS TO THE BIG WELCOME. Baltimore, Md., Nov. 15 At today's session of the convention of the Amer ican Federation Of -Labor, President Samuel Gompers responded to the ad- dresses made yesterday by the fra ternal delegates from -Great. Britain, Canada, and Japan. . " After receiving the' report, of the committee on rules and order 'it was planned to" adjourn until " tomorrow to permit the committee to consider the 100 :or more resoltttlonsvbefore them. MANY NOTABLES 1 ' - 9 J. 4! .4 Ii! 1 P ! J '3 ii I . -.t In: 'I-, P 3 f ;5 ,( t 9 1 .-.I 1 ; 1 1.; 111 hi 1-i i (! ' ' ' r it : f :!!( ... M ' ! 1 ; i' 'ii . ''Vf-''-'11'.' i. - - .: . .:..j-,v1I."-Ji4f.. - : . , .1 1 ., '.. 'J ."V. -T' f :
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 15, 1916, edition 1
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