Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Dec. 29, 1916, edition 1 / Page 3
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MQVIE STAR! CO Ml NG. 1 - . , . . . i , . . COTTON . - -; Y,:-K. Doc. 29 The cotton 0tk n d steady today at an to 11 points in response I ...,!.; i i h ' t,.- huvins was not ' active. tin" firm cables and cover- sha rp break of yester: lira1' i ion I end list n! t! s or ! points, after the call, ; : oon nrmea up again ;tnd a moderate demand. ;j,S:nu'd to- 17.55 ' 'before .' lh in si tiour, with the . general ; iiout 20 to 24 points net !l i ii Close. 16.99 17.27 17.52 17.57 16.06 Nt W YORK COTTON. Open. i n i o I..,,.,. . ....J.4..1.4 Wilmington spot 16 7-8. , '.. fbarle:non spot ( ). ; Savannah spot IS 1-4. " " vfplk spot 16. SS. ' LIVERPOOL COTTON. Open Close r I Jan-tew. .. I., iM-il 10.37 10.52 jiay-Juno 10.61 Ijuly-Ausi'.i Open steady; close. 10.61 quiet. Sales, 6,000'. Receipts, WILMINGTON NAVAL STORES. Spii'ii? oO. Rosin S'-tJO and $5.35. Tar-?- b0 and 11 cents. Crude $4.00, $4.00 and '$3.00. . ' Receipts. Cotton. , Spirit? . Resin Tar . Crude SAVANNAH NAVAL STORES. Spirits 51. Roe:" -?d.15. CHICAGO MARKETS. Fork $-6.75. Wheat SI . 70 7-S to 5-S. Com :2 1-S7. Oats 53 1-S. Ribs i:i.6o. Lard 15.12 to 10. St. r ! ?'i' ; New York. (Wall; street? , 29. CThe final" session of the year began .with, further, pressure against the gen eral Hst. : United States Steel was thA heaviest J of . itiej prominent issues on its ..first . offering; - of . 3,000 - shares' h at to 1037-8, an extreme decline of 1 ! 1-4 points. .Recessions "of from 1 to 2 point? were recorded in . Union Pacific, Utah-Cper.c::v;ndiastrial AlcohoU Marines, motors and equip ments also .fell Off moderately. Frac tional gains - were; made in . ' - v Central Leather, Atlantic Gulf States and West Indies and Inspiration Copper, with 4 1-2 points for Texas" Company. Allis-Chalmers . .'. v -v'.' .. . . 27 American Beet Sugar Al'V. v, 89 American Can . . . . . . . . . . . . 461-2 American Car , and Foundry . . 64 1-2 American Locomotive ... 76 5-8 American Cotton Oil1 . . . . . American Smelting . I . . . . .104 American Sugar .... . . . . . . 108 1-2 American Tel. & Tel. ..123 3-8 American Tobacco . . .. .. ... Anaconda Copper . . . . . . .. 811-4 10.31 Atchison . . . . 103 7-8 10.43 Atlantic Coast Line .. 117 7-8 10.32 Baldwin Locomotive . . . . .... 5.1 3-4 10.51 Baltimore & Ohio 84 Mid-1 Bethlehem Steel 525 Canadian Pacific 160 1-4 Central Leather . . . . . . . . . . 85 . Chesapeake & Ohio , '.. $5 Chi., Mil. & St. Paul .. .... 91 1-2 Chi., R. 1. & Pac. Ry 34 Colorado Fuel & Iron .... .. . . 44 3-4 Consolidated Gas.. Corn Products 22 3-4 Crucible Steel . . 51 3-8 Cuba Cane Sugar 48 1-8 I Erie .... .. . ., 34 General Electric 167 Great Northern Pfd 1171-2 Great Northern Ore Ctfs 35 1-4 Illinois Central ..1051-8 Inspiration Copper 56 3-4 Int. Merc. Marine Pfd 86 1-8 International Nickel 41 7-8 International Paper 45 Kansas City Southern 25 3-4 Kennecott Copper 45 1-8 Louisville & Nashville Liggett & Myers . Lorillard Co . .... Maxwell Motors . . Mexican Petroleum National Lead r,; LOCAL MARKET8 .?.;.' i - v ' . . .'' !-'',:' . ; ' ' '-;;,,; : ;;;;!. ; Eggs -i .'-" .';:. i ,-4;' .'- . .35c Butter, 1 lb., , Country . . . . . . fc . . 3.0c Spring Chickensapiece V.. 25c to 45c Grown Chickens,: apiece . .60c to 60c Puddle Ducks apiece .. ..iBc Guineas, apiece r. . ,. ... .. .. . .. ..35c JBeet.i. . .1 .. "..9c to 10c Sweet PdtatoeBbtfshei V. Irish Potatoes,' sack . V . ; '.' , . $4,75 N. C. Hains, ib :J24q N.; C. Shoulders: and Ribs. (lb.. .. .22c Orange, Florida.. .. $2.75 Jto $3.00 Bananas, .7-8, hunch . . . . $1.10 to $1.40 Lenaoiis, fancy .. s,x." . .$4X)0 to liO Tangerines . ...... -$4 Celery, bunch ... , ; .$1.30 Apples, barrel .. .. .. $4 to. $4.50 Bell Peppers, bush. -i .. ii.toc Onions, .sack. . ..' . . .. .,$4.50 Cabbage, ;B 1 ..sc to 3 i-2c Pork, lb. . . . . . ; . . . ..116 to .11 l-2c j tjorn, ner sack. . . . . ) Hides, Green, . '.- Peanuts, N. C, .'. . Peanuts, Spanish, . Peahuf, Va.. . . . . Wool . .; .. .. . Beeswax . . . . . . . - Miss Rose apleyv a beautiful mov ie. x screen. ' star, well 'i known in 'f Wil mington; wili ,cpme. : t6".J.ihis city ; on New Year's'' Day r and be the honored guest at a reception ;tb be I'givea at thef Orton Hotel in 'the ' evening by the Howard & "Vrelsls : Amusemont: Com pany to the friends; and - wives of the employes of the company... - -Mr Percy , 7ellsV predent of the North Carolina EJxhibitbrs' League, a rrdhged to hve the moving picture star, yisit this ? cily, while' :hewasK in a,ttendance at the convention of ex hibitors -in Charlotte recently. Miss Tapjey ' is considered by many of her adDrJirefS as being one of the most beautiful women in the world. : . . . .$1 to $1.12 . to ?1.L'U .. . .60c to 70c .: . .soc. .. .. ..27c. Poultry Show Opens in New York. ; . New. -York, Dec. 29.rOver 10,000 songbirds and barnyard fowls of high breeds; were placed on display in Madison Square Garden today at. the Opening - of the twenty-eighth annual exhibition of the New York Poultry and Pigeon Association.:: The exhibi tion is the oldest-and largest of its kind in the United. States amT never fails to attract a large attendance of poultry fanciers from air sections . of the country. Stage of water in Cape Fear river at Fayetteville, N. C. at 8 a. m. yester-; day, 4.9 feet. All Felt Slippers at 1-4 Off Saturday. Wilmington Shoe Co. Advt. . SUNRISE AND SUNSET rrf the MagfhM? 0nce ;:J!g U U U - you tbeginiffl a second nature. ; '' Jg New York Central ...104 N. Y., N. H.,& Hartford .... 50 1-8 Norfolk & Western 134 Northern Pacific 109 3-4 Pennsylvania 56 3-4 Ray Consolidated Copper .... 251-2 Reading .... 101 1-2 Rep. Iron & Steel 77 1-4 S. A. L. 171-2 S. A. L. Pfd. 37 Sloss. Shef. Steel & Iron 613-4 Southern Pacifbs 93-4 Southern Railway 31 7-8 Tenn. Copper Southern Railway Pfd . Texas Co ! 235 1-2 Union Pacific .1471-4! United Fruit .149 . U. S. Rubber 61 j U. S. Smelting & Refining 64 1-4 j U. S. Steel 1061-41 U. S. Steel pfd 117 1-2 Utah Copper 4 ...100 3-4 Va. Car. Chem T. 43 Wabash Pfd B 7 30 1-2 Western Union 961-2 Westinghouse Electric 54 5-8 Saturday. Sun rises Sun sets . .7:17 .5:13 NOTICE The Freight Warehouses of our Com. panies in Wilmington, N. C, will be Closed MONDAY, DECEMBER '25TH, 1916, and MONDAY, JANUARY 1ST, 1917, Except between the hours of 9:00 and 10:00 A. M. for the .delivery .of Perishable Freight. HENRY WHYTE, Agent, Seaboard Air Line Railway Co. A. J. MOORE, JR., Agent, Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an application will , be made to the Governor ' of North Carolina oa Tuesday, January j the 30th, 1917, for the pardon of Andrew I Spicer, convicted of murder in the second degree at the March Term. 1914, of the ; Superior Court of New Hanover County. All persons wishing to file protests must do so before the time above mentioned. This 27th of December 1916. ! ANNA SPICER. EMMETT H. BELLAMY, Attorney. . 12-27-14t-j ' Without a bank account, you are standing &ill in the progress of life: With one- yb'u are paving'your way to success, contentment, respedl. No matter how small your income inay be; let it be your regu lar duty to lay part of it away each pay day. Open an account in this bank. Your savings are protected and earning money for you all the time. REGULAR INTEREST, 0UARTER JANUARY 2nd. The Peoples wmgs Bank 3C O""1 '-".it A.--. 4 ' ? 'XWS yvV A ':-- V 'r.;T..'-- .X'' jJ-''''- . nn n 9 nMM fisJa? fear -.vy Vv---- Wm&FWr , MmB . 0- (F AMf Ell , g C X X 0 D7I A : S Adaptation bFX)LM& TWIST M Mals Pn Pictures ii M 1 " l , ,ni' iT- A- ' . ' . ,t-h Charles v, timo of -Dickens' death, the title role, and that the Cruikshank starred in the title role iri the great re- making a' pferman rTpHE characters which Charles Se lt Aetlt T drawings have been W as the models Vival of the. play at the New Amster- record of the Dickens characters, the II Dickens described in his novels when J or the in building the backgrounds for the ac- dam Theater, in New York, during the Lasky Company before filming one foot have become immortal. Some his d ratings V1 Adventures of OH- tion of the play. iGoing still further Dickens Centenary in 1912neverthe- of this Paramount Picture made A of them are used today as de- original s' cr' inspired Dickens to in their determination to preserve as less the reality of the author's descrip- painstaking study f autWorifative data orrintive adiectives. Fagin, the teacher ver 1XV lnvi ?n it, nresent form, far as possible the spirit of the original, tions of the character depended upon on London at the time of which Dick nf Z S!?1!?,-! the producers have actually reproduced the reader's imaginative powers, the ens wrote and of both the Cruikshank of thievery in j - ' tionaries; This ; cla"s . ' on the screen exact replicas of some -Gruikshank-drawings limned only the drawings and of the earliest available an adjective to the Enghsh dictionary the admirers and supporters of the au gituations which were aepicted high lints of the st0ry, and the stage editions Of the story itself, in addition It will be remembered tnat ai . i - thor. -; ilnlni-'"of cruikshank in the original illustrations, and every productions ceased with the fall of the to Starring Miss Doro,: who had already time of the writing of ".Oliver Twist. Whether the c Jaims of CraiksnanK .n m.making up for 6urta!n.: . With' the tadtton picture-ver created sensation in the sWe ver- which first appeared in Bentley-s Mag- fnl,BJ?;irteelf 'is his or her role has approached as sion of the story the characters are sioh of the play, tne produced engaged azine in 1837 and 183S, George Cruik- Us today, but; r08" nearly as possible the exact lines of brought -to life, and -experience a new two of the best known Aaracteractots shank, the well known ni the drawings. ' ItnmortaUty. ;for once enacted - ef ore to his immortal drawings uj. u.c vu.-. I" . ' Tmba T. taskv Though "Oliver Twist" wm live eter-, the camera they are unchangeable. w ragm hbu oti bi m uio.iw ters which Dickens ,had so marvelous motion Pure ZYo7tte Para- nally as a story And has been a sue- ? Sincerely appreciating the respo described, recall the 1? nsN of TuUy Marshall and UpDiirt Bos- 1 1 "-s There are many vw with Marie Doro in cess as a play--MarH poro nerseir bility which devolved upon them in wortnr respecuv? y, .r Y!2' great '..controversy : which mount Program, -with Mane uoro in . .-.;..:;.--.f: ' ;&JA , . . .- v .Wi ?: :ifMSL . L?L5C. W iXMev V t t ?y'' -
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 29, 1916, edition 1
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