THE MORNING STAR, WILMINGTON, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1914", FOUR .!: i - - - - - : ' - ii n I- a PC hi V! - 3e 4.S l.ts ni ni ef oy oc las ind her t V Stss ' Published by the WILMINGTON STAR COMPANY. INC ' Wilmington, N. C. Entered . as second-class matter at thel postoffice at Wilmington, n. j under Acr z uangxess, Marcs zna, us it. , FUUL ASSOCIATED PRESS KEPOET PCKLISHEBS ANNOUNCEMENT. TBS MORNING STAR, the oldest dally newsDaoer in North Carolina, is Dubllshed " daily exceDt Monday at $6 per year : S3 for '. six months ; $1.50 for three months ; 50. cents for one month, served by carriers in , the city, or by mail. THE SUNDAY STAR, by mail, one year, :. six montns. w cents : tnree montns. cents-. ADVERTISING RATES may be had on ' application, and advertisers may feel as- sa n t a1 that vin crYi rha m una g-f hia ra - per tney may reach an Wilmington, era, Carolina and contiguous territory in eoutn Carolina. Obituary sketches, cards of thanks, com municatious espousing the cause of a pri- vate enterprise or a political candidate ana like matter will be charged at therate ,..10 cents per line, to persons carrying a? regular account, or. lr nam casn in ad vance, a half rate will be allowed. An-fl nouncements of fairs, festivals, balls, hops, picnics, excursions, society meetings, pollt-l; fcal meetings etc., will be charged under! . the paper, in the discretion of the editors. TELEPHONES : Business Office. No. 51: . Editorial and Local rooms, No. 61. Call either, if the other doesn't answer. important news, or discuss briefly anda properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted; and, if acceptable in every other! way, they will invariably be rejected un y ttm juvanauij ue rejeaeu uu - real name of the author accompa - same, not necessarily for publica-l as a guarantee of good faith. less tne real name or the author accompa nies the tion. but AEE "DRAFTS, checks, express money orders and postal money orders for the paper should be made payable, and all communications should be addressed, to THE WIL3VJNGTQN STAR CO. Wednesday, , April 1, 1914. yi' t t : Manj. folks are trying to get even i J;Viwith tnet grocers and others argtry- xill ing to get 'evenj with those they dts- pi " P- It V E . , -T . . -; ' j o jjtate-wide prohibition. That saves m the colonels from viewing the future r i- with undisguised alarm. I'h K'. : If ",lrr,hp Invp nf snmfi ilpvotpd iip.nnle t - ' 1 : " is -tlie same todays tomorrow and day inland day out as every dollar they ? have could testify if it could talk. The lady lecturer who said "men should be allowed to just slosh around once in a while," probably knows how some men feel when they see other men having a high old tinfe. Those who love to do something for the uplift of the undertrod, should hasten to the relief of the Western . candidate , who has suffered defeat in r his eighth attempt to get elected to I ;V Congress. . on? :.' f .; ; t r a (l l Florida counties are disputing each other's claims as to which has the 1 1 best highways and the most mileage I of good roads. Everybody knows a ra county is prosperous when it becomes 11;I Tkna.stfii.l nhnut He fins rnads : : g i.; ; In a week's time former President h. Taft attended five banquets and made fejtj & speech at each of them. He made -iA , - . has not had to call somebody a liar a tor failure to understand exactly what U.& .' 'was said. K-- . : I O T, Tanfrt 1151110 ora nnnnl a y Hnrin - thp el . ; . a : r l , : i v--tle.,tinae. is about here when moth ie balls will hold sway, in towns which , I have no cold storage to take care of I - clothing. Some foreign nations are 'holding up our propositions for peace treaties with them for fear we might insist that there - is nothing in any treaty that we consider binding when we take a notion to repudiate the agreements. i . ini At liberal, Mo.,-a few days ago, a bt . man died at the age of 115 years. He ' J always enjoyed life, but how much nd had only resided in - Wilmington or nqj somewhere in this delightful Dortion yi , .oif. tidal Nnrth .arnlinfl? MB r-r- : ' A Wilmington business man who decided to run a truck farm on the side has been, netting from $300 to atj $425 an acre" from his land. He bought the farm" because it could stand it better than his mercantile interests. It is said W'illiam Randolph Hearst is greatly dissatisfied with the Wilson - administration because Wilson has ig ' nored Hearst's suggestions about how the country's affairs should be admin istered. We thought there was some strange reason why. Wilson's luck keeps up at such a lively clip. A man imagines that if he had a million dollars he would do an im mense amount of charity work. When he gets his million he thinks eyery- . body can make a living as easier as falling off a log. However, Joseph ' Pels bemoaned the fact that the richer the few become the poorer the masses get! V .. , . 5 .JWheh -cake and preserves were put on a table before a boy he showed no - sign of wanting any, it was found out --"that;, he was suffering with "stophy ' loma ;of the cornea." , A doctor ope rated on the boy and it is regarded as a "complete success, as the boy can : ' now" see to get into the pantry and -eat everything: in sight without so much as . waiting for anything to be put on the table. A writer who has made a long study of Indians and spent years among j i J vtuiuus nutjs, - saya uime ucvbi wa . 1 1 1 i . i , ! ijigj an inaian inai aia not nave a iuu head of hair. We are satisfied, how ever, that it is simply because an In dian's hair is coarse and black and to tally unfit for use in the headgear of our lady friends. If .an Indian had hair -that looked good to ..the . white man, he would he chased right into the tall timber and'robbed of his tres- ses-4 We' don't happen" to need anyj CONGRESS TORN BY DEBATE. We presume Star readers are. keep ing up with the cantankerous debate which has been precipitated in the House over the measure to repeal the exemption of the toll clause in the Panama Canal act. Yesterday's Con gressional reports in this paper show ed to what low depths so-called states men can go in debating a question in which the motive with some is not national but one solely of special in terest. President Wilson regards some of the assertions of the Con gressmen as positively insulting. They are more than that -they are unprincipled and venal, with revenge and bounty and subsidy as the motive. jiiast-jioome ol me uijjju.uem. ui lcycoi uii know that they are guilty of delib erate falsehood and unblushing mis representation when they make bare offfaced statements that are absurd if not scandalous in import. Somethin of" the character of the opposition, both in the press and in Congress, may be judged from this extract from an editorial in "Illustrated Shipping, J doubtless the leading maritime jour- nal in the United States: "Only those who know the depths of deeradation which can be reached by venal writers in the pay of spe- cial interests, can comprehend the j hysterical fury with wnicn resident 1 j, hpine- attacked bv scribes Wilson it. pemg attacKea Dy sciiue& incompetent to convey any idea in grammatical ningnsn, yei wiio are .v pert in the art of hurling with most effect the literary sputum supplied in toiler nlate' form by the unclean press bureaus supported by those whose sole object in the canal tolls controversy is to have the- Panama Canal conducted as an eleemosynary institution for the benefit of a ring which occupies toward the waterborne commerce of this country the relative position of barnacles -to a ship. These tricky scribblers who endeavor to arouse public opinion against the Pres- iuciil in ii miesiuu ji i coiwi i"tj . v international repute of our country are compensated f or .. their work as regu larly as the scavengers are paid ior removing offal from the streets. Yet among these men are counted self t styled 'friends of. the people' who prate loudly about what ought to be done for putting an end- to all monopo lies, while practically contriving to subsidize out of the public 'revenue one of the most tyrannical monopolies in existence; namely, the coastwise ship $jng ring. Allied with the dema gtogues who block the way against all attempts to break up the coastwise monopoly are the attorneys in the em ploy of the Ancient Order of Revenue Swindlers who stand pat with any pol icy that affords a chance of evading payment of the full customs duties on imports. The sinew of war is con tributed by gullible enthusiasts who will swallow any lie told by the false patriots that play fast and loose for the sake 6f votes with the national honor.',' . ., . The authoritive maritime journal from which 'we quote, is devoted to American shipping. It favors every legitimate means of encouraging the American merchant marine, but its able and well-posted editor knows all about the free toll deal and jLhe mo tive anid influences sustaining the fight against repeal. Of course, all the opposition is not of the class so mercilessly exposed by "Illustrated Shipping," but it can be said that some of its f Democratic opponents f o,r once have, ' gotten into mighty bad com pany. The one .question, after all, is not about our right to use the canal, as we see fit because we built it, or whether .it is our own business or a question of economy or national right so far as we "are concerned, but- one with every nation on earth regarding free tolls as a violation of our treaty faith and the present effort against repeal as a subterfuge and evasion of a solemn national pledge to other na tions. Opponents of repeal may be right on every question involving the economical and American aide of tne 'question, and even that is extremely doubtful, but they can never be right in repudiating the nation's treaty bonds. President Wilson will win and for the sake of the nation's honorhe bught to win without any opposition, much less the infamous opposition that is being put up by some men and from some subsidized sources. DOWN ON CARNIVALS. A few weeks ago a carnival visited Wilmington, but we don't know what, kind of a show it was. We cannot criticise what we never saw, but the average run of earnivals, as we have seen them in recent years, got so rot ten that they were not worth going to see. Probably a good thing once has been run in the ground now, and the general complaint is that in char acter, influence and nefariousness most carnivals can be classed as nuis ances. We think meritorious shows should be given a chance, but the demoraliz ing, peripetetic aggregation common ly known as a carnival, is a travesty on the name. Doubtless that is the kind against which Kinston has risen up. The Kinston Free Press denounc ed a recent carnival there as a nui sance, and the authorities are consid ering the advisability of forbidding such shows in the city, else levying a prohibitive tax on them. At any rate, a strict censorship should be ex ercised, over thir performances. They carry away , a lot of money but they leave behind a- demoralizing influence, not to say odor. They do not leave any cash behind, and when they are gone it is 'agreed Dy carnival goers that it is "good riddance of bad rub bish." Asheville, Salisbury, High Point, Hickory and other North Carolina cit ies, have put a ban on the visitation of carnival companies, and now the Wilson Times is demanding that Wil son bar put such shows. Kinston got enough of the last carnival there and later Wtilson had an experience that will last her the longest sort of time. It was while carousing at( a . carnival at Wilson that a man shot and killed his nephew. Whiskey, and : carnival mixed seem to have ' been ; the cause ot'&t most distressinhomicidK' when tragedy doubled for the family. There is no wonder that the Wilson Times cries out: , "Some way should be discovered to prevent the visitation of carnivals to our city, whether they shall be con demned as a nuisance, for they are a nuisance in every sense of the word or as a demoralizing factor, for they are this in several ways. Almost eve ry time a religious meeting is held in the city a carnival comes along and interferes, and the good that the meet ing does is largely offset by the dam aging influence of the carnival. Last evening the man who was killed at the carnival was invited by a relative to attend services at tCe Christian church and instead of doing so he pre ferred the carnival and he now lies stiff and cold in death. A carnival is a cover for blind tigers. Whenever they come to Wilson the tiger under the cover of the crowd gets ousy. rne carnival is the cover for gambling and games of chance. With every one there are a lot of fakirs who figure on separating some one from his mon ey. They toil not. in any useful em ployment, the lives they lead are not calculated to rehne or elevate, there is no incentive but to get money and expend it and why should they think of anything except getting money and living a life of revelry and dissipation Usually in the wake of a carnival there follows a bunch of thieves, and if the town looks good from their standpoint they loiter around and robberies result." If that is the character of the aver age carnival, it is time communities were giving them the cold shoulder. Generally, they are induced by some local society or organization to give a show for the benefit of some worthy object, perhaps of a "charitable nature, but charity had better begin at home and not look about for every kind of old carnival. Only high class enter tainment companies should be induced to play for charitable or benevolent purpbses. With a local organization and some study and originality, most any ' town can get up a series of en tertainmentsof its own a really re fined" entertaining martH gras, or real carnival, or something just as good. BACK TO JEFFERSON IAN ISM. It was announced a few days ago that "the, North Carolina, Progressives Want Teddy." That, of course, means those former Republicans who are now affiliated with the so-called Progres sive party. As a matter of fact, the really progressive party is the Demo cratic party, which has several well- defined and unalterable fundamentals, but which readily adjusts itself to ev ery living principle and current issue. One thing that Democrats should be proud of is that in doing so, the party takes its stand for and alongside the people, thus living up to the generic import of its name government : of the people, by the people, for the peo ple. In the main, the Democratic party constantly endeavors to live up to its aim to be the people's party. It has done that more than any other party, and yet in some particulars it has not fulfilled all the ideals upon which it was founded. Under the lead , of Bryan, Wilson and other great inter preters of Jefferson, the party is gravi tating towards those ideals, just as they, were conceived by Thomas Jef ferson, whose cardinal doctrine was the absolute sovereignty of the peo ple. The North Carolina Democracy is moving up on that line, and next Tuesday there will be a conference at Raleigh to discuss and declare for certain "progressive" principles, which truly are but a part of the Jefferson ian principles of old as old as the hills. The advocates of this move ment are called "progressives," though all Democrats are inherently progressives, but not Progressives with a Big P. The Raleigh News and Observer is quite .right when it says: "Don't con fuse Progressives with the progres sives. There is a difference and a big one." Quite true. We are a progressive but not a Progressive. The Democratic party is progressive, but it is only so in the. sense that it is reactionary ' in going back to original principles. We are getting back to the point where Jefferson left off, hence we are making progress towards the complete ideals of Jeffersonian ism. Issues and policies are new, but the fundamentals are the same, with only . the elaboration of the original doctrine being brought into .completer form. We don't see a thing either new or radical in some of those principles which are referred to now as "pro gressive ideas, rney are tne resur rected principles of the party, and it never will be its primitive and orig inal self till it surrenders completely to the will and the wishes of the peo ple, as well as perpetuate itself as the servant of the sovereigns. There can be no dictation to the sovereigns by any democratic party, so the Dem ocratic party is realizing that and is readjusting itself to the Noah's Ark principles which need revival every now and then. "Let the people rule." It is their right. No party has the right to rule except by the consent of the governed. THE SCENERY PART OF THE STATE. News has. been sent out from Le noir, in the mountain region of North Carolina, that Mr. Thomas H. Coffey is at the head of a movement to con struct an electric railroad from Le noir to Blowing Rock and Boone. The line is designed to follow the trans- mountain turnpike in which Mr. Cof fey is largely interested in a financial way. The turnpike is a private en terprise and it has done-much to pop ularize the magnificent . mountain sec tion around Blowing Rock, but an electric line would be the making of that Vesort. " The proposed electric line is not only a feasible project but an attrac tive investment . proposition." There ,s plenty of hydro-electric power for de velopment, if it is Rot already avail able;": and - it is;, ins just such- lines - as Mr. Coffey proposes that tfre -"r"oqn- 100 Silk Petticoats; sell at $1.50 each; all the new colors, including Black,' White and Tango; Spe cial; Opening Sale Price only v $1.00 Fancy Ribbons, 4 to 6-inch wide; sells at 25c to 39c per yard; Opening Sale Price 19c $1.50 Crush Crepet.yGOwns, plain and figures ; made low neck, short, Open ing Sale Price4. ..89c $1.25,. and ' $1.5QV House Dresses; made of best Percale; also of :; line Zephyr Ginghams; made in gvfseverai .different stY-fes;?. Opening,-Sale pMe .; : .$1.00 50c Embroidered Pillow Cases; several designs; Opening Sale Price . .29c est development. It is the Switzer land of America and when the grand eur of our North Carolina mountains is made more available to. the millions of people on this side of the Missis sippi, the magnificent scenery that is so near and yet so far will attract thousands of, sight-seers where t there are hundreds now. ' It is announced that "the political pot is boiling in Georgia," That is so much better than if Georgia were boiling in , the political pot. However, we must not forget to say that Geor gia politics is always in a stew when either Hoke Smith of Joe Brown hasn't got an offce. .As Smith is. Sen ator and has jq occasion to stir up Georgia at rthis time, it is inferred that Brown has taken a notion that there is something he, wants- at the hands of the people. , ' ; ; 7- fr-, . ' The English 'sparrow's of Wilming ton seem to be pulling together. At any rate, they keep in flocks and each one gets out by the crack of day with out depending on a bellboy or an alarm clock. English sparrows are great nuisances, but how much great er nuisance they would 'be if they were about the size of South American parrots. '': CURRENT COMMENT. It will be rememhprprl that cnmo time ago Mr. Clarence Poe published a leuer in rne Observer to the effect that he would by no means become a candidate for Governor Woll Mr Poe writes to remind us of that 'letter ana re-amrms his allegiance to it. so to speak. This, perhaps, because this paper a few days ago addressed him as "Governor.'' Mr Pn snvs that as soon as he gets through with mat mass' meeting he intends to get back into his usual editorial groove and stay there. Charlotte Observer. Tuesday marked tne beginning of the. 94th semi-annual volume of Th'i Morning Star, the oldest daily paper in North Carolina and one with a record for service to its city, county, section and State that will compare with the record of. any . newspaper in the State. Before a, great while the paper will have completed its new home on Chesnut street, and put in an equipment J that will enable it to im prove its service to ' its hefty list of subscribers. In connection with The Star's projected improvements, it -is to be noted that North; Carolina dail ies are rapidly reaching, a point where they compare in size and in patronage with the big dailies anywhere. At Greensboro and at Charlotte they ,are getting out fine papers, their last Sunday's- editions being hummers. And The Raleigh News and Observer has changed to an every-day-in-the-week paper, a distinct improvement at the Capital City. Wilmington Indepen dent News. feels at the occurrence at the Univer- respondent was assaulted because he naa aarea to tell the trutn, is tne font fhnt -it nntc a tarrihlo vveonnn in the hands of those who dislike the University. The -student body at Chapel Hill, taken as a whole, is as honorable and law-abiding set of men as can be found in the State; but it has made the fatal mistake of grant ing personal liberty to men incapable nf nainp' it nrnnorlv and tflfi TPSlllt is that the institution stands branded to day as a school for gammers ana nooa lums. But while it feels sympathy for the many decent and respectable men upony whom this affair has cast a stain of dishonor, this ' paper cannot over tho fnrt that rn.A of Its renresen- tatives has been attacked while en gaged in? the discharge of his duty. The taxpayers of North Carolina sup port the University, and they have a right to know what is' going on tueic, tn such a pass that a newspaper reporter cannot give a truthtul accouni oi-evems,m onhnni on j tno tnwn without running the risk of personal violence, it is high time for an upheaval. -Of the authori ties at- Chapel Hill,- both the "i officers cVmnl ami thf rtfficerS. Of the law, the Daily News demands an im mediate investigation and the punish ment of the' guilty persons: It invites the large majority Of the students and the almuni who have;:the honor or their . Alma - Mater . a heart,: Jto assist In. the detection and 'punishment of; the EASTER not only in the Hat and Suit Department, Dut.Aii uver me Dig oiuic. This Special Offering will bejsrtn Tuesday, and continue" throughout the entire week; Faster Suits st tfH o tn tfiS.oo. Brand new. hieh-class tailoring, In the New Blues,: Tcmo-n wisteria and thp other "Fprvhino- that is rte.w.in Millinp.rv is most becommg, whether for Child, Miss 12 l-2c yard wide fruit of Loom Bleaching, Open sale price .8 1-2c 1.3c yard wide best Lonsdale Cambric, opening sale price 10c 10c yaVd wide Bleaching. Op ening sale price ....7 1-2c $1.25 Wamsutta Sheets, 90x99; full measure guaranteed; Opening Sale Price .. .. .. ..95c 90x81 85c Pepperell Mills Sheets'; Opening Sale . Price ... .69c $1.00 yard-wide Messaline Silks; full range of col ors; best goods; Open ing Sale Price . . . .-89c 27-inch wide Tub Silks, 39c quality; pin stripes; guaranteed to wash; Open ing Sale Price . . . -25c 27-inch wide Fancy Dress Silks, in full assortment of colors; the most Souvenirs During Opening Days scrupulous minority has placed on the name of the school. Greensboro !-KT iew&. PASSING OF THE MULLET. To the Editor of The Star: I would like to express myself in regard to the passing of the mullet in dustry of North Carolina the cause, and I speak from practical knowledge, as I have been handling fish for a. good many years. The mullet is a fish that is different in its habits from any other fish, as it is what may be termed a surface fish, as it swims very near the surface bf the water, and betrays its presence by jumping out of the water, or by the ripple it makes 'on the surface of the water. In view of these facts nature has Kiven it: almost a human- intelligence to protect, itself, for as it swims along and finds any obstruction ahead of it, it at once dashes back the way it came, but if It is a seine sor net, and they find themselves cut off by the net, hemming them in and they find that they are snut in, thej' immediate ly commence jumping out over the cork line and going under the lead line of the net, if the bottom is bad and if the cork line ' is not held up higher than they can jump, and the seine or net gotten out very quickly, very few of them remain in it when it is pulled out on the shore.- It is impossible to exterminate the mullet by ordinary nets and seines in the summer and fall seasons have use of themselves, as we said that nature has given them instincts of self pres ervation, and a large part of them will swim in .where the nets or seines cannot catch them to any extent, ex cept by purse seines, whien ought not be allowed to be fished for them, as they can follow them miles out to sea. Now the time that the mullet ought to be protected the most is in the winter when they ..are numbed by the" cold, and are helpless to protect them selves. Every cold winter when the mullet drops in the deep holes to get out of the cold as much ,as possible, they are hauled out by small mesh nets and seines, by the millions and some of the best are saved, and the balance composted for manure. :Now is this not a criminal waste of valuable food, especially in the face of the present high prices of all meats? The results of : this way of fishing 'is that there is' not one-fourth the mullets caught last season that there was five or six years ago. : Now to show . you the-difference in the protection of the mullet industry, and the criminal neglect of it; in the State of Florida there were more mul lets, caught and more seen last sea son than in five or six years. The State of Flor:'da does not allow small sized nets or seines to be fished. : ... it some measure js not taken to protect them, a valuable industry that, has been worth thousands of dollars to North Carolina 'will be. destroyed. Before the menhaden fisheries were established in the Cape Fear river, mere were lots oi spots or jimmies and bottomfish of every kind, but in two or three years after the purse seines used by the factories were ope rated, spots and blue fish were a thing of the past, and not any have been caught by the local fishermen to amount to anything since, when be fore they cairght them in erreat mwn. tities, and what is better than a nice spot fried brown in North Carolina bacon gjavy? That is a matter which every consumer in the State is con cerned in. D. J. FERGUS. Suit was started yesterday in Su perior Court by W. H. Yopp against Z. J. Carter and W. B. Br ice, trad ing as Carter- & Brice. Ricaud & Jones represent the plaintiff. The complaint was not filed. G RAN 'THEATRE' TODAY ONLY " FROM .10 A. M. TO U P. M. CYRIL SCOT T IN THE DAY OF DAYS Admission: 10c. u SPECIAL NOTICE: ' 1 FRIDAY, APRIL 3rd,' -c- "PROTEA" Feet of FUnr,- With a Thrill:. "In Every Foot. .v. - It is Our Pleasure to Announce that on Tuesday and Wednesday, March '31st and April 1st, we Shall Have Our Second Millinery Opening, Having Received Many New and Novel Hats and Trimmings, and Expect Several Shipments in Monday, Comprising the Latest Ideas in Headwear, and Coat Suits and Dresses. Dunns- the Opening Days, we shall offer' some very Special Bargains, new shades. Made in the latest models:- shown here. You can find or Matron; we have the Hat $1,50 ! Bed SDread. cut. cor ners, with fringe; f '.til sized opening; Sale Price . . . $1-00 10c Colored Border Tow els, Huckaback, 18x36; Opening Sale Price, six for ..45c quality, Opening sale price $1-00 25c Mercerized Poplin, ,28 to 29 inches wide, full range of colors, Opening Sale price 19c 28-inch white Voile, regular 15c material, short lengths 3 to 10 yard pieces, while they last, at only,. , per yard . . . .' ... .5c wanted material now for Dresses; Opening Sale Price . 69c .Yard-wide Wash Silks; . White ground, small, neat figures; sells all the time at $1.00 per yard; Opening Sale Price 79c $1.50 Pomona Bed Spreads all white full size good l IBuJ "The Thief and the E ! L S Big Two-Reel Drama. THE LIE . ; Another Two-Reel Feature. HOW MOTION PICTURES ARE MADE;" - (Taking, you m the rJroncho ,rilm Making Company.) ' r1''' gaga W. D. HALL, J. H. DURHAM, JR, F. M. ROSS, President. Vice President Secretary snd Treasureri ITY 6R0 -205 Market Street Under New Management We solicit a continuance of your,: patronage, and assure you that all orders will have, our' prompt and careful at tention. : ' ' v" '!' ! . ' . ... . I DO'NT BUY A . . ' e HEFRIGERATOR until you have seen our stock. The SEEGER is the BEST made. PECK & Pays Interest on the money you save accepts deposits of 5 cents or more. The place to begin your little boy or girl on the sure, road to success- Northeast corner of Second and Princess St. ALBERT Public Accountant and Auditor ftV-v-:-. :-'-V':'.: AUGUSTA, GAi i r v ' - Established 1908. Systems Installed: ' UF MjM 1JN : J ; iust the Hat you want. TODAY c T7 Book Behind the r Scenes '- smissLii m HOLLO WAY. H. MARSH ' Correspondency ""- solicited.-: I j-j ii T S II !) 4 11