THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH, FRIDAY AFTERNOON; OCTOBER 12,1917. I I. PAGE FOUR 1 I - I" in-;; 3 if. N : 11 i 'i- ,: 'I ' n 1 U' i -4 w fi i ! 4 i i V hi st'. iV - IS hi 1 1 M ;i''i u f i 1 IX HEtff.1l NSTON DISPATCH 4ya. Published DAILY AND SUNDAY BY DISPATCH PUBLISHING CO. TELEPHONES: 1 Manaeer's Office ; Advertising Department 176 'rMtwilotirm Tlpnartment I16 .. 44 205 "Circulation Department Managing Editor City Editor .... FULL LBASED WIRE SERVICE. HEMBKB OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. TIi- Assmiated Press is exclusively enti tled to ie use for republication or all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this oapr and also the local news publish ed borein.. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. BY MAIL: Daily and Sunday . . 56.00 Daily and Sunday, Six Months. . .$3.00 Daily and Sunday, 3 Months .. ..$1.50 Sunday Only, One Year . . $2.90 DELIVERED BY CARRIER: Daily and Sunday, per week 15c Or When Paid in Advance at Office. Daily and Sunday, One Year $7.00 Daily and Sunday, Sis Months ... $3.50 Daily and Sunday, 3 Months $1.75 Sunday only, One Year $2.00 Wilmington has not the reputation of making much fuss over nothing, so the big fuss it is making 'over the coming Corn Show down there indi cates it is going to be an exhibition of the first magnitude, says The Blad en Journal. JUght,7m are, and we want all Bladen county to be on hand. It is to be Bladen's fair as much as that of any one of the ten counties composing the. district participating. Wilmington is taking the lead in get ting up the fair, aV it is to be held here; but when the fair is opened this city wili turn i footer to the people of the ten counties and it wili be their fair. And it is going to be a big thing, too, and the farmers are go ing to be so entnusea over it tnat they will start right away getting ready for next year's, with determina tion to make it a bigger and better one. We are glad to note the great in terest throughout the district being taken in this fair, indicating not only a large attendance but what is much better a plentiful entering of farm products and farm stdek. What is wanted is that farmers enter their best raisings of agricultural products, stock and poultry so that it can be seen what up-to-date farming will pro duce in this section. Such exhibits, with the farmers present, viewing, examining, talking over ways and . a 1 1 If vou will tell us when the millen- means OI terming anu resuus, is ot rrrive then we can say vas benefit and, in addition, there is . - - -. - . .- ' . : , - - r. . ivt ir - -v.... ... .. ' . '.' " . , ,. ,. a. -! ... . . , STATE NEW8. r , ' Evangelist John W. Ham, who ex pected to begin evangelistic meeting Lin the Court House at Elizabethtown November 10, has accepted the pas torate of a church in Atlanta, Ga., and willlbe unable to hold the meeting. Duplin Journal. The average season for sowing wheat in this secation is fromOct. Mthto Nov. 20th. If the weather continues favorable, the acreage will be the largest ever sown in Chatham. The $2.20 guaranteed for the crop is stimulating the farmers to sow every available acre consistent with prudent farming. Siler City Grit. Entered at the Postoffics in Wilming ton, N. C, as Second-CIs:. Matter. Foreian Representatives: Lorenzen, Green & Kohn, 225 Fifth Avenue, New York; Advertising Building, Chi;ago. Member Audit Bureau of Circulations. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1917. mum is to definitely when universal ment will take place. disarma- Kerensky deserves success in his effort to make something out of the Russians, but whether or not he will succeed is another question. the social side to such gatherings which is worth much to the people who attend. We look for gratifying results to flow from this and the following an nual fairs of this association. A dozen Charlotte bankers put on overalls and got to work on the .streets, posting Liberty loan posters. That's the way to do it. Those bank ers mean business. s upward, but if Mr. may be properly looked after Gover-, farmers are sitting back with There will be a howl over revising those coal price Garfield found the operators could not mine the coal at the price he first fixed what else could he do? REMARKABLE NEGLECT. You may rest assured that the pub lic generally are taking the measure of every man during these trying days, and the public remembers. It will mark the man who takes his stand against his country at this time and will not soon fdrget how he acted when the flag which protected him was attacked by a foreign foe. Wadesboro Ansonian. guy a Albert y gond ffowJbday, and Jfelp the goys at the front Ohey are (jiving Coheir toes tSurely ide Can Jfelp With Money for United States onds at & per. cent. (Incorporated) Quality merchandise for iOomen It is reported that there were sold at Wagram, Friday, October 5, 351 bales of cotton, aggregating about fiftfy two thousand dollars. "This," says a Wagram citizen, "is a sample of the business transacted in the lit tle town these days." Wagram is making giant strides and in the near future may distance some of her neighbors, if they do not look to their fences. Laurinburg Exchange. 7he ig &rive Jhis Sideek Js on $Z5 Jailor ed Juits Jtfev) Merchandise Keeps Pouring Jfn Ifew ines of Cjood (foods Added .Daily w ' 4 WITH THE EDITORS. Kinston Free Press. Noting that Premier Kerensky is again reorganiz ing his cabinet leads us to conclude that cabinet material in Russia seems to be practically unlimited. n nun mi tl-iunuuL l Bin Ami AIU M Many men called for examination under the selective draft who suppos ed themselves to be perfectly sound Charlotte Observer Wonder if the German government ever seriously seeks for the reason why they turn over one after another on the side of the Allies and none of them on the side of Prussianism. New Bern Sun-Journal. Cotton is now being sold in this section of the physically have been told by the phy- j State for 25c. per pound and there is sicians that they have incipient tu- every indication that it will go to 30c before many moons nave vaxea .'and waned and, in the meantime, the FORGES 10 S ATON County Superintendents Serve Under Page and McAllister. to 1 as berculosis. In order that these men Michaelis knew that if the Kaiser's order for every seventh man of those mutinying sailors to be shot was car--ried out Germany would soon be hunting for another Chancellor. People have been told to eat smok ed menhaden and shark steak for ec onomy's :-ake. The next economic nor Bickett has requested the county exemption boards to report all such cases to Dr. McBrayer, of the State Sanatorium. It is a remarkable, as well as deplorable, fact that only twenty-nine boards have made full re turns. To show how important it is that all these boards should make full reports, the twenty-nine reporting state that they examined 14,923 draft ed men and found that 372 of that number were affected with the dis ease. It is strange that in a matter of so great importance both to the a con tented smile on their faces waiting for their dream of fortune to mate-rilize. a little shy but plenty still to make the crop a money producer. The early season that was so wet as to threaten the destruction of the great wheat crop after it had been , made, destroyed about 500 acres of the i corn and somewhat disappointed the prison board on the general result, j The figures have not been given out as the corn is yet to be gathered and the prisoners are in the midst of the cotton picking. Thirty nine of the 73 Reserve militia companies, irreverently known ! "home guards," have been ordered or-! Raleigh.. K C.. Oct. 12 One hundred ganized and the proposal to recruit; 'county school superintendents have ' these companies to a possible 5,000' oeen given to tne organizations or a. ; men is meeting satisfactory response W. McAllister of Greensboro, who is 1 from every quarter Federal Fuel Administrator of North j The companies vary in size of course, Carolina and to Henry A. Page who is b h aggregate will approximate directing the food administration for 5 0Q0 menee Raleigh.s company js now tne government. on duty aiding the State in the pro State Superintendent James . Joy- tection of a Wake count prisoner.1 ner m an address to the supennten-J The war department has detailed dents urges the fullest co-operation or c D Linder to North Carolina to ake the schools with the campaign for the . inventory of federal pr0perty with a conservation of food and fuel in North yipw tQ gendi ,t t gucn Iaces ag Carolina. Mr Page, who is a member thc government may, designate, of the legislature, has not tried to dis guise his desire for the aid of the' rl o crhnnl mtiriino Tn ffanaral ac semblies of the older day Mr. Page has RON ZED PW LEADS ALL REMEDIES NUX for NERVES IRON for BLOOD PAW-PAW For the STOMACH 3 Powerful Forces in 1 delicacy may be gar broth, a term used to designate the most loathsome jmen afflicted and to the great many dish that oculd be imagined. The Crown Prince seems to be very much afraid the French on the Verdun front are going to push his back across the German border. He is making desperate efforts to check the enemy's steady gains. others endangered bjr coming in con tact with them physicians on the ex amining boards should neglect to do what would seem to any one to be forces an act of humanity and an imperative duty to the, public generally. Greensboro News. Professional German optimists will find extreme difficulty in gleaning comfort from any of the recent developments in ; ascribed to the State superintendent 1 . m 4 mi. I . - . I tne great game or war. ineir pnuus- pnenomenal powers. 1 none ne has ophy is now rudely disturbed by the even mdre than I thought he did la.st ' declaration of Great Britain of an ab-1 winter," Mr. Page declared when, he I A Guaranteed Remedy That Has Stood polute embargo on exports to Sweden, learned that Mr. Joyner would throw , the Test of Time. Norway, Denmark and tne isetner- j the force of all his organizations into NO MORE CATARRH lands, known as the northern group of European neutrals. Again German diplomacy has proven a conspicuous failure, for press dispatches indicate that Great Britain's embargo was largely the result of an insistent clamor of the British neonle that it People in Charlotte have found great relief from stomach trouble, nervous ness, weakness and general debility. Ironized Paw-Paw builds up the body and strengthens it, clears the blood of impurities, stimulates the liver into healthy action, corrects constipation and steadies the nerves. Daily and hourly the demand is increasing, giv ing universal satisfaction. Ironized Paw-Paw does all and more than is claimed for it. If your food distress you, if you are constipated, have headaches, dizzy spells, are nervous and get the bluea, the campaign for food and fuel savins. 1 Catarrh cures come and catarrh Mr. Page's first big organization was I cures go, but Hyomei continues to heal just get a taste of Ironized Paw-Paw. formed of-the schools when he went j catarrh and abolish its disgusting 1 You'll find all the disagreeable feeling to them for his great October regis-j symptoms whether civilization exists, j passing away before you leave the tration by which he hopes to place the ) Every year the already enormous ' store. Do as scores of your neighbors food of the" Stete am! to know just i sales of this really scientific cure for Tare doing get a bottle of Ironized what thre':ion hand. The -school catarrh grow greater, and the present ! Paw-Paw and bid your liver and stom- be proclaimed, following the recent ; house will be about the most formida- year should show all records broken, disclosures concerning Luxburg's ; ble allv that the government has. and it If you breathe Hyomei daily as di- messages conveyed to Berlin through s Dr. Joycer's purpose to have every rect?d it will end your catarrh, or it teacher in the several counties to unite won t cost you a cent. in this camDaign and he gives the idea. If you have a hard rubber Hyomei in the Swedish foreign office in Buenos Aire3 A CONGLOMERATE HOST. It is said a man will fight quicker for his religion and his dog than any-1 thing else. And some men will argue louder and longer over a measly little game of baseball than the most mo mentous question in the nation's life. Congratulations to The Journal, of Clarkton, on entrance up on its ninth year of entertainment of and usefulness to the people of its town and county. May it have many more birthdays and increasing prosperity. I It is said that in the training of our troops in the cantonments they are " receiving no instructions on course 1 to be pursued in case of retreat. Ag-J- gressive fighting is the only line of instruction in use. Our soldiers are - not supposed to know anything about "-' falling back. J - All illiteracy eradicated years is the slogan of the Buncombe V County Board of Education. Why not every county in the State adopt the r same? The interest of the State will ' be much better served by attention to ' this class of education than to col lege, high school and the like. It is " ; more important that every man and woman in the State should know how y.to read and write than that the rising J generation should be instructed in the "f-higher branches. There never was in the world's his tory such an army assembled as will be the hosts gathered in France when the full contingent of the United States has assembled. On the side Bladen ! every quarter of the globe and of nearly every race. There will be the Anglo-Saxon and the Latin of Europe, the Anglo-Saxon of Great Britain's possessions In Asia, Africa and Aus tralasia, with native Africans, Malays and Asiatics, natives from French pos sessions south of the Mediterranean, Anglo-Saxon, negroes and Indians from North America. All these and perhaps others will be gathered there representatives of the five great divisions of the human race -(the white, the yellow, the brown, the red and the black. There is as great di versity of creed as there is of races Christian, Mohammedan, Buddhist, in three Wor8bipers of the Great Spirit of Am erican forest and plane, Pagans of all sects. Truly it can be said that the nations of the earth will be gathered there for the sole purpose of protect ing themselves against the over weening ambition of one man. BLADENITES IN. SOUTHWEST. ach ailments good-bye. I want every chronic dyspeptic to come in and try this remedy. I want the man or worn- tar, who can't sleep and is despondent to come in and try this remedy. You'll KENNY'S CHEON TEA 50c Lb. The Best Tea on Earth Penny's High Grade Coffee 25c lb CD. Kenny Go. Phone 679. 16 So. Front Souvenirs Saturdays (G P. Sutton in Bladen Journal.) On my annual vacation I went to ! ng Mr. McAllister shares equally with haler somewhere around the house, get .never go back to the old-fashioned med- Mr. Page in this organization and has it out and start at once to forever rid , icines. Lots of business and profes this much as a starter in a tremendous yourself of catarrh. J sional men find Tronized Paw-Paw cn- camoaiKn which he is iust now launch-! K- R- Bellamy, or any other good ; ables them to do more and better druggist, will sell you a bottle of Hyo- Caldwell Texas There I stopped ! governor cicKeu ana nis ivix oppo- i inyuiu; iui a. ic culo, oiau itu xf-' iarnaa" t Raovq vhn If ft inent for governor have accepted invi-! breathe it and notice how quickly it Pvnrp ' rrppir M C November I tat ions to open the Wilkes County fair, ' clears out the air passages and makes ! 1854, with his parents for Texas, and October 26. j the entire head feel hue. has resided there ever since. Other . The-.e peaking articles, each going. Hyomei used regularly will cure ca Cypress Creek people there were Mr. his way last year and storming the tarrh coughs colds, bronchitis or asth-V--L--... iLf n State in everv ouarter. did not meet) ma. A complete outfit, including a iNem uruiuani auu &iici, .-no. , . 1 i ak,. i ki faM 011 ie same piairorm last year. DUt Iltxl u 1 u"u-' puvr-i, ninaici a.uU uuuic they do this time. The Wilkes coun- 01 nyuiuei, cosis uui mue. io siuin- tv oeoDle who did their best to elect ach dosing; just breathe it. It kills ! Mr. Linney weTe quite willing to have ! the germs, soothes and heals the in ns PTnr1 a friemrt ne Hnvcrnnr RiVlrtt flamed membrane. Advt. At Rosebud, Texas, I stopped with to sr,pak with hini flml hpv p-n-A nnnri 1 Iver. Sunday evening at the well Presbyterian church I listened to a very interesting sermon by Rev Mr. Hines, of North Carolina. work. It seems to energize every fibre, tissue and bone. Begin on Ironized Paw-Paw today so you can join the army of converts next week. Your jdruggist probablv keeps it, but if he j doesn't come to Elvington's Pharmacy. Ironized Paw-Paw. price $1.00. Form ula on every bottle. Mail orders promptly attended to. Interstate Drug Co., Inc., New York. Advt. ffhe family of the late Wiley Atkin son, brother of Mr. Alfred Atkinson, of White Oak, N. C. At Goose Creek Oil Fields, Texas, I stopped with Mr.' L. I. Smith, a Cypress Creek boy. I rounded up a bunch of Sugar Loaf boys at Vinton, La. Wiley Branch and Jas. G. Sutton, all living on Easy street, made famous in rice and oil. We went to see David B. Sutton, but learned he had gone to Texas on very important business, but from the looks of things Dave is no bad farm er. He had the best rice I saw. All the Bladen people that I met are making good and it makes me proud that I am a Bladenite. At Chipley, Fla., I met a Sugar Loaf girl, Mrs. Annie Sutton McNeill, whoH married and left North Carolina 26 years ago and has a large family of boys and girls all doing well. The Charlotte Observer has done an exceedingly thoughtful thing. In WANTED TO KNOW. A sergeant was drilling an awk- Lward squad. "Company. Attention, company; lift un vour left leg and hold it straight fact it amounts to a real charity. It ' out in front of you." has established a Pacific Coast news! One of the squad held up his rtebt fleg by mistake. Tins orougnt nis Tight-hand companion's left leg and indeed. . The death a few days ago of Tom Benson, of Bladen county, was pitiful Bitten last summer by a cat, s he took the Pasteur treatment. Of C.Jate he began to imagine he had hy- drophobia. Accompanied by his wife .. ,y,he started to " Raleigh for second V treatment, but his condition became such that at . Elizabethtown he was V) taken from -the train and put in jail, If the Rt Rev aul JoneSj bighop where he died the second day after. lof utah, has been dabbling in politics jreopie wno saw mm on tne irain were of the opinion that the unfortu- nate man had brooded over being bit 'p'ten by a cat which wa declared to have hydrophobia until he had be- department in its Sunday and Wed nesuay issues, mis gives all the inwhig OWI1 right leg close together. The portant local news from that section, 'officer, seeing this, exclaimed angrily: It is for the benefit of the soldiers in "And wno is that DIoomin' galoot training at fanin nMnn . 4-u I u,cl mcic "-f " States. Those issues of The Observ er will -be almost as welcome to the soldiers as letters from home. There are quite a number of soldiers at Camp Greene from that far away sec tion of the country. in a way unbecoming a man in his position, especially' of the pro-Gerfitan quality, we hope he can be forced to resign his bishoprec or be deposed by some oneafls. If the charges come convinced that he had that against him are substantiated his jifearful disease. The question for ex- usefulness in the ministry will be at i:;perts in such cases is, what caused an end If the offense" is not one for ,his death? Had the Pasteur treat- Which he can .be disrobed,-, he. should -iment failed to prevent the disease at- h Riionoo h ,nnrt nf the church irdues- Mst - Vv; - ' -.t, wul : - ....... averred that the whole neichborhohd t- 1, inn r 11 1 1 iii w x ."4 iis4iii 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 1 am-i a - - - a 11 tti qti in 1 . . ' - - , v . - ' ,uu hh a, -warjuiuattii .Mtiici; i ruaine in lor a "wee bit of a 'Olt'to quiet the nerves after a recent raid. Chicago News. WANTS IRON HAND FOR THE MUNITIONS (By Associated Press.) Amsterdam, Oct. 12 .Those guilty of complicity in the plot to paralyze the German navy through mutinies should be handled with iron severity, says the . Rheinische Westfalische Zeitung, of Essen. It adds; "They are liable to the death pen alty. Thank God Liebknecht (the German, Socialist leader now in pris on) was properly dealt with, and in the present case there can only be similar action." both. Each has accepted and they ; will draw a big crowd. Tom Finley. R. Don Laws, Presley E. Brown and J. F. Mulligan, all big folks in Wilkes county, were down here this week and Mr. Finlej7 presented the invitation. Don Daws would have been i agreeable to it, but he was here in the interest of the Boone Trail high way which is to hook North Wilkes- boro to the most important points ;q j Tennessee. And when that link is complete the mountain city will hav.. j j a good road all the way across the con tinent. The Wilkersboro men had an inter view with local road magnates and went back in fine humor. Mr. Laws who runs papers with Hearst circula- j tions, was as interested as any of them in the road The State prison board meeting here in regular session found its corn crop A Woman's Duty Rubber Stamps Made to order on Short SYctrct We make Rubber Stamps that gives, the maximum of service and Satisfaction. Promptness with every order. Send us your order. LeGW'N PRINTING CO. 8 Grar? ? .rect. Phone 220. COAST LINE HOTEL CAFE. Rooms by the day, week 01 month at reasonable rates. Meals at any hour. Fresh Oysters, Fish and Shrimps. 208 North Front street. Phone 208-W. ..5-2-lm FORECLOSURE SALE. By virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain mortgage deed executed by Charles Nixon and his wife Martha Nixon, recorded in Book No. 82, page, 345, at sen., in the office of the Register of DeedsTIf New Hanover County, the undersigned at torney for the mortgagee, "Mechanics' I Home Association", will on Monday, the ' 22nd day of October, 1917, at 12 o'clock m.. at the Court House door of the County of New Hanover, sell at public auction for cash, to the highest bidder, the following lost of land and premises: Beginning in the western line of Twelfth street at a point one hundred and sixty-six (1GG) feet south of the intersection of said street with the "southern line of Dawson street and from thence running in a south ern course along the said line of Twelfth street thirty (30) feet, thence westwardlv and parallel with said line of Dawson street one hundred and sixty-live (165) feet, thence northwardly and parallel with said line of Twelfth treet,,thirty (30) feet, and thence eastwardly and parallel with said line of Dawson street one hundred and sixty-five (165) feet to the point of begin ning, same being part of southeast quarter of lot 3 in. Block 41 in the plan of the City of Wilmington, N. C, together with all the apnartenances jthereto belonging. The said ,-oarties aforesaid -having de faulted in the payments according to the terms and provisions of the said mortgage. September 22, 1917. W. B. McKQY, Attornpy for the Mechanics' Home Ass'n. 9-22-30t tfBYPTOK JL. GLASSES k GLASSES THE INVISIBLE BIFOCALS Afford a comfort which is appf eciated by those who want near or far vision in one pair of glasses. They keep your eyes young in looks as well as in usefulness. No line, seam or hump to blur the vision. EYES TESTED FREE. f. Uineberg SEABOARD AIR LINE: RAILWAY The Progressive Railway of the South. Effective Nov. 12th, 1916. -DEPARTURE OF TRAINS FROM WILMINGTON. . No. 133 :55, P. m Train for Charlotte and Intermediate Points PULLMAN PAR LOR CAR, WILMINGTON TO CHAK LOTTK. No. 195 :00 A. M. Train for Charlotte ind Intermediate Points. SLEEPING CAB BETWEEN WILMINGTON AND CHAR LOTTE. Open at 10:00 P. M. for Passen gers. ARRIVAL OF TRAINS AT WILMINGTON No. 1412:30 P. M. Train from Charlottt and Intermediate Points. PULLMAN PARLOR CAR BETWEEN CHARLOTTE .- AND WILMINGTON; Ho. 2012:10 A. M. Train from Charlotte and Intermediate Points. SLEEPING CAR BETWEEN CHARLOTTE AS WILMINGTON. PASSENGERS MAj REMAIN IN . SLEEPER UNTIL 7:30 A. M. ''.. -For detailed information and reserva tions, call on City Ticket Agent. Ortoa Hotel Building. 'Phone ri8. R. S. KOONCE, T. P. A. Wilmington. N. C. JOHN T. WEST, D. P. A., Raleigh, N. C Air Raids Boom Bar Business London, Sept. 10. (By Mail)--A'ir-raids act as trade stimulants to some iraues. An East F.nH salnnn-lroanor mental strain? the ministry ot like inclination. Since the beginning of time, it has been woman's sphere in life to rear the future generation. Three generations of expectant mothers have aided nature by the regular use of the time-honored ex ternal application, "Mother's Friend". This safeand reliable emollient softens the skin of the abdomen; the muscles ex pand easUy and more naturally when baby is born, and this liniment is the greatest contribution of science to a hap py motherhood. "Mother's Friend" is the prescription of a famous physician who prescribed it in 'his obstetrical practice for over forty years, and is of such a helpful and nat ural nature as to be In every way neces sary to the expectant mother. All reliable druggists supply "Mother's Friend". Apply it yourself to the abdomen and breasts night and morning. Write the Bradfield Regulator Co., Dept. L, 200 Lamar Build ing, Atlanta, Ga., and they will send you a little book brimful of scientifically pre pared information, without charge. Write ' for It by all means, and do not fall to aid nature by the use, of "Mother's Friend". Ask for a bottle of "Mother's Friend" at your druggist's today; MM 35 To Enter the Contest, Fill Out this Nominating Ballot, Counting 5,000 Votes To the Wilmington Dispatch, Wilmington, N. C, T hereby nominate as a cai chelate in your Grand Prize Voting Contest1 Miss, or Mrs. . . , .House No Street Town or City ........ L ....... .j. Business Address. . . ... , ; . . ...... ; . . . . .... Signed . . ... ... ........ .Address ....... ,". ONLY ONE NOMINATION WILL BE ALLOWED T OEACH CONTESTANT CUT OUT FILL WH BRING, SEND OR MAIL, TODAY. DO .IT NOW 'J. 1 A,. 5 ' 1 "I .if,- i ! i- 'i , - ' . Jl N ' r - - V"' r" . ':" y ..... . 7

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