Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 4, 1910, edition 1 / Page 4
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. 4 r. i. t H 11 It- i SI II ii II ii & f if. ii. A "ft " a. 'i' 1 , . . . .... : m. i: KrxumreTOir stab company Zxm-I; : Wilmington, N." C Bntered aa second-class matter at the ? vostofflce at Wilmington, N. G, milder act , ; - . mt Congress. Marco 2nd 1874 ' ? V. itt.t. issoniATKD PRK8J MPOBt. PUBLISHERS' ANN O UN CXMXNT. TOT MOBNiNO.8TAB. taa Wert, newspaper in North Carolina, la published dally except Monday, at $6 per year, W for tx months, 1.50 for three months, 60 centa (or one month, served by carrier In the city or by mail. THK SUNDAY STAR, by mall, one year. $1; alx months, 50 cents; three months, 25 centa. ADVERTISING KATES may be had on application and advertisers may feel assur ed that through the columns of this paper they may reach all Wilmington, Eastern Carolina and contiguous territory In South Carolina. Obituary sketches, cards of thanks, com munications espousing the cause of a pri vate enterprise or a political candidate, and like matter, will be chwrged at the rate or 10 cents per line, or If paid cash in advance, a half rate will be allowed. Announce menta of fairs, .festivals, balls, hops, pic nics, society meetings, political meetings, etc.. will be charged under same conditions except so much thereof as may be . of news value to readers of the paper. Advertltements discontinued before expi ration of contracts are charged transient rates for times actually published. Pay ment for transient advertisements must be cash in advance. Contract advertisers will Dot be allowed to exceed their space at same rates or advertise anything foreign to their regular business without extra charge. Ad vertisements to occupy special place will be charged for according to position de sired. TELEPHONES ; Business Office No.- 51: Editorial and Local rooms No. 6L Call either if the other doesn't answer. COMMUNICATIONS.' unless they contain Important news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real (interest, are not wanted; and If acceptable in every other way, they will be invariably rejected unless the real name of the author accompanies the same, not necessarily for publication but as a guarantee of good faith. Friday. March 4th, 1010. A "DAY DREAM." Rockefeller is to give more millions to a "foundation". If is not as yet announced, what special class of bene ficiaries will be taken care of by this latest effort on the part of the Oil King to die not too indecently rich. The; fields that are obvious have al ready beenj preempted." It is a lan - . guishing! college that -cannot get an "endowmerft" 'if it wants it. It'ls a forsaken town that could not, with proper effort, secure a library. It is .a poorly advertised, disease that can: not interest impatient millions in the work or "stamping it out". It is a speculation with zest to wonder what form the latest Rockefeller donation will take. ' ', Doubtless', the money s6 placed to the eternal credit of Rockefeller will be administered after the manner, of other "foundations". It will have some thing to "promote" or "prevent". Its ' disposition will be subject to the usual red tape of careful investigation. Its gifts will be wisely bestowed in the interests of human progress, the ad vancement of learning, religion, sci ence, or all of these. I As a result, its fate will be like that of all other endowments, foundations, and large public gifts. The cpuntxy -will " talk about Itffor awhile for its novelty, arid tHen absorb it. Its benefits will con tinue, but: they will soon come to be considered in the light of a right in stead of a gift The gift to the na tion will take its place a3 a business detail of a business people. 1 What a pleasing, human sort of .sur prise it "would be - should it turn out that this "foundation" " was its own reward? That it had no particular . "uplift" attached to it? That there were - no ' rules to bind, its charities, no micro scopical business investigations con nected with its distribution? If it were simply put in the hands of trus tees for preservation, and its interest return devoted to personal, even whim sical good works? What a sauce such an institution would add to life an incorporated fairy prince apt at any moment to enter a poverty stricken door and bring happiness as by the touch of a magic jwand! '' The surprises it would be stocked with the expec tations, vague but based on fact, it would arouse . . To leave behind one such a memory of a thousand points as that would 'be to turn "the posses . sion of wealth away from power and place and into the realm of poetry! To think of the startled beggar, his neaa swimming with the sight of gold! The small store-keeper snatch ed from bankruptcy! The dreaming , youngster sent to college! All the thousand and one smaller, more fool ish and more transitory charities that one prodigally dispenses in day dreams of riches! And what a joy for those who, dispensing this fund, would themselves catch the . pipdlgal spirit in which it was bestowed. Of course, this is itself a. day dream There is a haughtiness about great wealth that keeps it constantly think Ing on its "dignity"; that prates about Its "responsibilities" and Its care, for the worthiness of the objects of 'its - bounty, forgetful of the fact that the perfect key to charity is need, and that In the .Heart -Divine there was room for all emotions save one, and that the mixing of love with caution! We shall look with interest for the . 'disclosure of the Rockefeller plans, certain that no "'unworthy" person or institution .shall benefit, and that the - trust will be," administered along the :' lines of the most modern business methods. : At any rate Hit is a pleasure that Pinchot and Secretary Wilson manag ed to diffeir without departing ' from the euphemies of the occasion. i. ' ilffder tW heading; Itk driver for a 'riea, - me rtew io . nwiu i attention "to a bill pending in Con gress, which is designed " to permit the extradition of corporations from one Federal .District, to another. The author of the MIL. Senator Cummins, says that the measure is not directed meeting, at Henderson to start, a po at the press, 'but is designed to reacn litJcal , movement looking to the re- a certain mail order house In Chicago. The New1 York World, in particular, as well as newspapers in general, has good cause to look with suspicion up on legislation of this character. Sub- ect to constitutional mniDiuons wDic.-i . ...... i i X. 1 might prevent it from being effective, ducing editorial, adds this corn such a bill could be used to make ment: . , ' , ' possible what was sought to be done in the Panama case -the dragging of a newspaper to Washington to the Combined with the theory that the presence of a newspaper in a district carries with it the offense originating at its office, the "freedom of the press" would take its place as defi nitely on the shelf as has the doc trine of "State's rights." : J Relative to the passage , of a law for a specific purpose, the World takes the ground which we have several times emphasized in the case of North Carolina statutes: that it is neither within the reason or practice of law that it should not apply generally. It may be true," 'it says, "that jus tice demands some interference by Congress with the local fights of West ern merchandizes, but, if so, care should be taken not to involve most of the newspapers of the country in the inquisition which is to be estab- ished. To use the power of the Unit ed States IiT a small way is almost impossible.'.' ' , '.' It is impossible that any real pow er should be"used in a small way." Examples of 4this truth will, we fear, become numerous in North Carolina unless certain laws passed on the principle actuating the bill Tef errci to. be repealed. Already the ' tre has proceeded iu thisJ State ; to taa nas proceeueu m mw- point where It only needs tbat .th tmiSlilLLU C Mid 11 Uial jU9UU ;lo misdemeanor for any citizen to be com victed thereof and, without indictment or trial by jury, sent by a iolice jusJ tice to xne roaas ror me. it omy. rc quires that a general reputation, mad by police officers, shall be made prima facie .evidence of guilt, to "put away". any citizen who cannot show that he same summary method it, has already been demonstrated at JOOiil sittiuie i BUUiueui xi tausc the indictment of a man of undoubted integrity as a "blind tiger," simply and solely because, in providing for the entertainment of a high Masonic order, he included drinkables Under another statute making It compulsory for a man with liquor in his' posses- sion to disclose the source from which he obtained IV any individual is HableJioms-term convicts, and that lite there-T witnouc notice,' to similar inaictmenxj upon the most unreliable testimony. Advocates of laws of this charac- ter answer criticisnS with the state- ment that "no innocent man will suf- fer." How can they know, and how is it to be hoped that in the passage of time the power to oppress will not find the oppressor to make use of the weapon provided him? HEYBURN INCIDENT BEARING FRUIT. The Heyburn incident continues to bear good fruit In the New York Tri bune, we note. a communication from Past Commander" of a large "G. A. R." Post, who, among other kindly expressions about Confederate veter ans, says : Who better than we learned the proper application of these words -in the bitter school of war? Who more than we have worked for forty-five years past to eliminate such terms as rebel" and 'traitor" from our vocabu ary? Between" the years '1861 and 1865 the men who were In rebellion OOUIU6WU JUDL1J which as opposed to loyalists; when theyAVr- f umcu aBOUl uom.ciues mai laid down, their arms they ceased to be rebels. -We recognized this on the spot, and from the day when they came-Into the .Union camps an over homes, we welcomed them , as ,com rades and shared with them our cloth- i'ng and our food. Since then, through our various posts,, we have fraterniz- M' onn:nrrn aid; them in founding aoldiers homes in their Jand fpr ex-Confederates. We have even suggested that the surplus receipts ior iwemy-iour uuur u plied by the national treasury to the Having caught Senator Jeff Davis building up. and honoring neglected , th t - OT, . graves of those brave fellows who fell ln at of making an accurate state In battle or died In hospitals while ment, that Senate Committee"' wisely wearing the 'gray'. rf. Had the spirit of reconciliation which has all along anl- mated the 'veterans' or the North tow or a,,rvivnrB of th Smith anl- mated the rest of the nation we should not have Jiad to wait for the blowing up of the Maine to- reunite these Unit- ed; Stated as one people;' wnat aoes u maiier ai uua time that this old soldier, and others like him, cling to the outworn distinction of "rebelUon'Vduring war and citizen- ship after It? With equal earnestness the last ex-Confederatevwill contend that he was fighting for a constitution- al right.; ' These' matters be the me- mentoes of .. an . epic struggle saved within the hearts of the men who then contended. :The point is the .present fraternity and good' will--a fraternity that in the'ease of a man like Heyburn unites the surviving, soldiers both North-and South' in a practical resent- ment against the npstart spirit, that would now see to . m L j - A. Jt X. parUes tote but not embittered, .proud 6f their own and respectful of the ota- A TIME FOR RESTRAINT. : The News and Observer quotes' with full approval the recent editorial of this naner uixn the occasion of . the , f th State prohibition law. . , Stating that "the Wilmington Star, which has never advocated State Pn hibition or local prohibition, - voices the sentiment tf thousands of thought- ful men tne Observer,' after repro- -state ' Prohibition "was made the state policy by a majority of more than 42,000 of the sovereign people Or Xonn uarouna. ine.iaw is wua.i lha TMv-.hfVkHirnict nelrorl and it Ollffht , b , f ir trial without agi- tat ion for amendment or repeal and that trial will be given to it. .The Star correctly states the only effects that agitation can now have in North Carolina." ' -. , Our readers will recall that the edi torlal in question criticized, the action of Rev. R. L. Davis, agent of the Anti-Saloon League, equally with Mr Self. The one makes appeals to pro hibitionists to carry a settled issue In to another political fight; the other appeals to anti prohibitionists to join the issue for a contrary purpose. As we see it, both of these appeals are wrong and dangerous, and call upon the sound sense of people of all faiths and parties to discountenance them alike. The News and Observer con sidered prohibition of sufficient virtue to justify the confessedly hurtful ef fects of the agitation necessary to get it; in its present attitude it displays a wisdom under the provocation of the Henderson meeting which shows that its zeal has not run away with its head. There is just one point, however, on which we would like en lightenment fcVlhen: lrf . Self spoke at: Henderson, Lhe'iews and' Observer failed to re- : mMiiig-untiTtwo days h WkVn place, and tnen on after only in tliA' irwwt lvrsnrv" rflatrnpr. ''Tn dis. Unctioa to whic it gave full' space to thV,anllkiw. the Rev:; Davis advocat " , condemns and seekine . . - manner bf strife is ; engaged in .promot- , . iVf. if the ,V- Ohnprver hplipvps that . f he "Star cor is honest by tjVctly -states the .only- effect 'that agi od. In Charlotte i. - -u QuM lraffofd a Inedlum of pub. MUUU.Vuini'W'uac.'iu -mui voiuu- licity to long and nominally official communications seekiag.to bring those evil effects to pass? It is 'explained from Raleigh that. under the operation of laws . permit ting the sentencing of prisoners to the roads, a large majority of the prls- oners in the State penitentiary are fore necessary to send them away from the Institution to work- on co tract in order that the penitentiary may continue self-supporting. " While this is in a way reasonable, it would not seem to justify sending out to work where the chances of escape are many" convicts whose crimes are those Qf violence, or who by their actions or record may be put down as danger-. ous men. Convicts ought,;, of , course. to be kept; if they will escape, let the opportunity to do so be restricted so far as possible to" those who are apt to hurt thev pocket, and '.not the person of society. ' The Charlotte Chronicle calls Wil mington "jealous" because of' a move- ment to build a permanent home for the Chamber of Commerce. There is much about Charlotte to emulate, but where the Jealousy comes imis more than we can fathom. Wilmington, for instance, is not jealous of Charlotte's fire department,) nor does' the necessi- ty of obtaining street lights by'private I rm. i. i . , x. ,.i . either might. well imitate J The Hon. Gussie Gardner expresses the -belief that it is the "uppermos . TJ. , should retire. It is this character of talk that makes the retirement of this tough old citizen the last thine in his nd: When Cannon retires, ; It wil P? feret foremost in. the midst, of the most; gorgeous "Congressional fune lrai? in the experience of the Hons reiuses to permit him to tamner with f a unique sentence mprpiv fnr , . f . ,w . pieasure ot keeping his record straight. llie New York World having prodded the administration into appealing to iuc .supreme tjourt the government's case of fiasco in the Panama' libel matter,.the folly of Roosevelt Vlll be definitely preserved in the precedents. vfe? , . e"er way to "retire" Cannon woum be to 8end him to the -.Senate, where he would have to let them talk, The trouble about putting lowr-tem convJct8 on the roads i8: that they b come short-term "ones ' . f ; ' ' i- .' V CUR'feilNT COMMENT , y . ' havfywlerTomIorrow Judge TaTt will SSJtoSi SSf1 " $Q .Fnlted speeches. u HeTftast0Ae.5 sure; .done., some tew thef lfings5ust as EawAfd ayson Westnn has .done ptner tnings than; walk across thecontinent; But one never, hears of Weston in connec tion with the .other things. Savannah News.'v - , : V . -.-' - Atlanta Policemen, we hear,; .have been advised to shoot the tires of auJ tomoblles caught in the act ot exceed ing the speed limit. But that is a mighty risky ; way of stopping a ma chine. The-Atlanta policemen needn't think that because Capt. Davant of Sa vannah, was able to puncture the tire of Henriot's racing machine with his revolver at the nrst snot tnat any body can dp the trick. Moreover, if it should chance, to be an Innocent by stander and not the tire that was punctured by the shot .of . the Atlanta policeman, how, would tthe innocent by stander's next-of-kin be compensated? Savannah News. . .. .. The'Istate has been ifong .an' advo cate of arbitration, of compulsory , ar bitration, for the settlement of ques tions., .-arising between, employer and employe. ' But arbitration demanded by strikers, after they . and :: their inenq.s,1(nave smaspea one inousana street cars, assaulted passengers, and m - l beaten employes of the car company, s hard to support..; A ney can for peaceful arbitration but have already appealed to the arbitrament of the- bludgeon. And when .force has failed, a sympathetic strike of all labor is or dered, but is held up "to give the workmen time to go to the employers and emphasize the necessity of arbl tration." If arbitration is right the sympathetic strike is utterly indefen sible : Those standing for arbitration can not condone the cruel Injustice, to employer and employe alike, of the sympathetic strike or the sympathetic ock-oUt. Why not appeal to the Leg slature of Pennsylvania for a tempo rary arbitration law? Columbia State. The .Donaldson Military. School, lo cated .on , Haymount In this city, is doing , a. fine work, and , Is every term ncreasing in numbers and usefulness. So great., has been the growth recent ly ibatJ.he faculty have found it nec essary . c take steps -for more and larger buildings and grounds. Actioi. has been ;ta;ken by- the, Chamber ol Commerce and nubjfc spirited citi zens, to, render substantial aid. to the projects, -. The plan , is . to induce tne trustees! of the Donaldson Academy property to sell same for $12,000, loan the mOnyuto the manasement of the military, j scnooi, takmg a nrst mori gageon..the investment of the school In addition 51 leading citizens have pledged themselves to take one $100 six per ,cenL .bond each, same to be secured by a second mortgage on the school property. This neat sum of $17,100 should enable the faculty of Donaldson Military School to set u a modern well-equipped institution. No definite proposition, however, has as yet been submitted to the trustees of the Donaldson property, and conse quently no action has been taken, rayetteville Index. . Referring ta'.the fact that, the State of North. Carolina expended in the enlargement of its asylupis for the. insane at naieign, Morganton ana Goldsboro last year., $447,528.95, Pro- vidlng-accommodauons for 7Z0 pa tients. The Columbia, State says: "The population of North Carolina is less than onethird, 'greater than that of soutn Carolina,, Dut. tnis expenditure pf nearly half-a million dollars which did not include,- the cost or main ten ins the three .JasMtuiions, was anaae without finy letigthy. discussloh or agi tation. The additions cost about one half the "whole estimated requirements for a new, hospital in this State. The need ior, them was plain and jsortn Carolina proceeded ,to make them without ado,",; It is a fact that the last Legislature did great honor to it self andto the State by Its liberality in dealing with State institutions. What It did. However, was only a be ginning..,'. The;79tate. hospitals, are yet snort or tne requirements, Dut tne in dications; are that In the future they will fare better at the hands of the Legislature than they have done in the past Charlotte Chronicle. ; Governor Kitchin's findings after investigation, that seven-tenth3 of all convicts retained under control by the penitentiary are long-term prisoners and that they could not be kept .with in the penitentiary walls without con verting self-support into a heavy de ficit, . seem' to answer recent newspa per comment .upon the 'penitentiary management's policies well enough. The escape which; inspired the criti cism .as .Tathcr, ungual In its nature and, IT sufficient precautions are tak en, teir. Or,.' none of .the kind can ever occur again. At the -', same time it rwould seem best that convicts who have, shdwn ' themselves, both danger ous .and. slippery-r-like Mecklenburg county;s elusive desperado, Will Har risbe .kept within; prison walls. Har ris' escape several years ago excited unfavorable criticism 'chiefly because the penitentiary authorities ; suppress ed .the news,, which "was first convey ed to hfshpme neighborhood by his own revolver. This last error, at least, can always be avoided. All will agree tljat the management of the peniten tiary for many ; years has, generally speaking done the State . excellent service. Charlotte Observer. We hope that Mr. Charles Shel don's play, "The Nigger", will never be brought South. Its manner of pre senting a Southern Governor with ne gro blood in his veins as nothing remarkable is by no means the only or even the worst fault One scene in which a hunted negro crawls from the busheshis hands dripping with a girl's . blood, must be almost unen durable; tO" any normal onlooker. "There "isn4t a lesson in the whole play", j jsays- a' writer in . the Milwau kee Journal, "but it is a fine picture of Sbuthgrn life". Thus we see what manner of . impression' Mr. Sheldon's play" tends" to create among those not familiar with5 Southern 'conditions. This Chicago playwright wrongs, both black and white; he goes, farther than Mr. Thomas " Dixon's "Clansman", without such excuse Of a .purpose in view as ' Mr, Dixon could "make, ; and substituting his falsely, typified pres ent for Mr. Dixon's much truer, past. The New Theatre, dedicated to :, the betterment of the American drannl has been by general consensus a snob bish, and mismanaged, failure, but it will never do anything more discredit able than when it presented "The Nigger." Charlotte Observer. : ' A : number of people ; .who . are op- lfeSTC'' L I Armeriian Hand Crochet Center Tabl Covers and Table Mats Great variety of 'sizes and patterns. Small Mats, 1 0c, 1 5c,' 19c. ; Larger Center Pieces, 29c, 50c, 98c to $3.25. VO-mch wide Linen 5neeting ior. 4,300 yards pure linen Torchon Lace, this week at Luna Lawn, fine sheer fabrics, 38 inches wide, soft, yard. . ...... ... ..... Printed Flaxon, 25 patterns to selecft from, all new, stripes, the yard ....... . . . XHB posed to the State' prohibition law held a meeting in Henderson Satur day and listened to an address by Mr. W. A. Selfj a prominent ' lawyer and forceful orator, who pleaded for a return to the principle of local ap tion. This, is a free country, ; and it is perfectly proper for - people who are opposed to the prohibition - law to give experssion to - their senti ments; but if we were enlisting in a fight for a restoration of the prin ciple of local self government ; styled local option, we should feel a little more confidence in the success and justice of our cause if we followed the leadership of a man who had al ways advocated local option. We take it that the Henderson meeting was attended by good citizens, and we do not doubt ' their earnestness and sincerity of purpose, but - we would advise them that they are wasting their time and energy in pro testing against State prohibition at least, at this stage of the game. It might be said -that the success or failure of prohibition doesn't ; enter into the equation at this time, for the voters of the IState'have given an expression of their will too recently to admit of any reversal of their position-at any time in the near fu ture. Greensboro Patriot. i How to Advertise Southern Lands. (:Savnanah News.) Yesterday we published a contra uni cation from a tourist who has been in vestigating the lands in Southern Georgia. His letter was written from Valdosta. In it he made the sugges ton that the railroads, now engaged in advertising Southern lands with the view of getting them occupied by a thrifty class of farmers, plant winter crops at intervals along their respect ive lines. He suggested the planting of crimson clover, vetch, cow peas and . other, legumes which not , only benefit the land but give it an invit ing appearance. The point the correspondent made. was wis: farmers irom the west, particularly the Northwest, visit the South in the winter season. They see nothing but brown and bare .fields from the wjndows of the railroad coaches; nothing that impresses or pleases them. They expect to see green fields in this climate. They come from a section of ice and snow. They find the sunshine, but they doh't see the green fields and growing, plants of which they have heard so" much. Hence they are not favorably Impress ed, and scores of them never take the trouble to investigate theadvant ages which the. South presents for farming, and particularly'' for stock raising. - Before publishing the letter the Morning News consulted with Prof, Johnson, who has charge of Chatham county's model farm, as: to.' the advisa bility of publishing it He advised its publication by all means. He said that he had thought many times of advising the very thing that was sug gested in the letter His own exper ience, he said, convinced him that many of those who come South to in vestigate the possibilities of Southern lands for farming purposes returned home disappointed, because they 'had seen nowhere.along the lines of travel any evidences of green fields. The railroads are spending thou sands of dollars advertising the lan.ds along their lines. In what' more- ef fective way could they advertise them than by having here and there-at in tervals, fields- planted -in -some' winter forage crop that would present a green appearance all through the winter? The effect would be pleasing and the cost wouldn't be . great. In faqt, the yield of the fields would, much more than -pay .the cost of the planting. The -touring farmers :would be, able to, see for themselves forage crops growing all through. the winter.1 That fact alone would impress thm more than statements sent out by real es tate agents in circulars.;. The ;,sugges tlon is ai$o one that . those who - are the head of the movement -to brine to the wiregrass country a million of people in the next five years could utilize . with . telling, effect Our .lands are all right and are" all that is claim ed for them. The thing is to get the right impression on the minds of those whom we want, to buy and occupy them. . '. ' ... Read Star , Business Locals.' . Sale FIRM TEAT PAYS- YOUR CAR 100 Sacks Red Bliss Potatoes. 100 Saoks White Bliss Potatoes. 200 Sacks Irish Cobblers. .50 Bushels' Yellow Onion sets. 25 Bushels Silver . Skin Onion sets. 300 Sacks White Spring Oats. 5,300 Barrels Flour, bought on to arrive. Purchasers will, therefore, find prices' before buying. J, ffl. Wholesale' Grocer. vvv You Can Save on Your Shoe Purchases Commencing Monday Morning, Feb. 21 Will put on sale the following lots, not old stock but new snappy- , . styles. All $4.00 Men's Pat. Kids and Gunmetals $2.1)5 All $4.00 Ladies' Pat Kids and Gunmetals $2.:i5 AH $3.50 Ladies' Pat Leather Shoes $L(i." All $3.00 Ladies' Pat Leathers and Gunmetals $:'.:: All $3.00 Misses Pat Leather and Gunmetals $2.:;S One lot $3.00 Ladies' Pat. and Vici Kid shoes In narrow widths anl small sizes .. ...... .: $I.'JS Come early and be fitted. No gjods charged at these prices. HEWLETT & PRICE ' .109 MARKET ST. fp W tf rz WW DO YOU DRIFT? Strike out and swim. Make yourself inde pendent. The iirdt essential is a bank account. " We allow 4$) Interest . - ... Atlantic Trust & Banking Co. Matt J. Heyer, President, Southern Building. ; ff 11 tf A full line of Fancy Buggies and Har ness, Stylish Traps and Surreys to suit : any occasion. ::; ' :: :: :: CITY LIVE RY cblUlPAN Y '; : ; ' . v Phone 15. ma 1 tf SULPHUR HAKCOCIt'S Linillll LARGE, $1.00. - SMALL,! - (So (UyUIU Effective for Eceema, Itch? Eing. worm. All -Skin Eruptions, and iScalo Ailments. ' . . Yoo need not go 1 to"'the Sulphur Springs : this grlves you w perfect Sul phur Bath and.. Invigorating . Tonic' Drink.- '- ' :. - 'Hancock Liquid Pnlphiir Col: Baltimore, O 7;c the yard ,5c snowy white, the dainty figures and 25c 18c FARE. -J 500 Tons grades. 100 Tons grades. 50 Tons grades . Navassa Guano, all Armour Guano, all Acme Guano, all 50 Tons Lee's Prepared Lime 1,000 Bales Fancy Rice Straw. 2.000 Sacks Rice, all grades. lowest market, now on hand and it to their advantage to get uiy - Wilmington, N. Milton Calder, Cashier. Opposite Po&office. 4 ' 1 111 SULPHUR COMPOUND niNTMFNT rARGB jah, 50c. small a UiniMtNl Results are surprishi i 'r Hemorrhoids, Piles, Sores, Swelling Imflamed or Chafed Parts. eU Splendid for the completion, k . the skin soft nd removes I in'l'" Blemishes, Blackheads, r'1-, 1 r-v lf Sale hr Druarirldta. Arauid ? Md. Write us for booklet on Siilp'""! o ., ; ' , . ' i .:' ! -'..J..' 'I . ) t ;- 1: - 1 :. 1 "Jt
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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March 4, 1910, edition 1
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