Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Feb. 15, 1915, edition 1 / Page 4
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. . VV ILIYlilMl I 1 I JiV IM - I . The - J i .if (i vfiW1' . - - " TAB Published by the WILMINGTON STAR COMPANY, INX, i Wilmington, N. C Entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Wilmington N. C, under . Act ol Congress, March 2nd, 1874, I'LL,!. ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MORNING- STAR, the oldest daily newspaper in North Carouna, is published daily and mailed to subscrib ers outside the county at b pr year, 3 for six months: fi.BO for three months; or served by carrier in the city and i suburbs at Cue per month, or, when paid in advance. $7.00 per year, $3.60 ior six months, $1.75 ior three months.- . TH13 SUNDAY STAR by mail, one year. SI; six months, 50t ceats: three months, 25 cents. , . , AOV iSR'lTSlN G RATES, inay he tad en application, and advertisers may reel assured that through the colurris of this paper they may reach all Wilming ton, ' Eastern Carolina and contiffuoue territory In South Carolina. . ' Obituary sketches, cards of thanKS, communications espousing the cause o a private enterprise or a political can didate and like matter willyb charged at the rate ot 10 cents, per line, to per sons carrying a regular account, or, ii paid cash f n advance, a hair rate will o allowed. Announcements of fai-'S, resti vaia, balls, hops, picnics, excursions, so clety meetings, political meetings, etu, will be charged under the same condi tions, except so much thereof hs may be of news value to the readers of the paper, in the discretion of the editors. TELEPHONES t Business Office, No. 61. Editorial and Local rooms, No. SI. COMMUNICATIONS, unless they, con tain Imuortant news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted; and. if acceptable In every other way, they will invariably be rejected unless the real name of the author accompanies the 6ame, not nec essarily for publication, but as a guar antee of good faith. ALL DRAFTS, checks, express mo ney orders and postal money orders for the paper should be made payable and all communications should be addressed to THE WILMINGTON STAii W. AUTOMOBILE FACTORY FOR CHARLOTTE MONDAY, FEBRUARY, 15 1915. Why don't the skippers fly a white flag when they are scared! 5 After th European war Is over it will take a long time to satisfy the belligerents that we were neutral. We are having a great deal of trouble on account of our efforts to get the belligerents to respect our flag as a neutral. Every question has two sides to it, but each party tries to make out like their side is the front side- and the other is the backside. I : The Austrians are still holding on to the Carpathian passes just as firmly as some legislators hold on to their rail road passes in this part of the moral vineyard. - It is now charged that two women in Kentucky sold their votes in a school election. If it be true, we'll bet they were bought by men who traffic in votes by the wholsale. Charlotte - is- to be congratulated upon the apparently authoritative statement that the Ford Motor Com pany, of Detroit, will establish a branch factory in the North Carolina city and make Charlotte the company's distributing point for the South. It is said that $200,000 will be invested in the factory plant and that it will give employment to 250 hands. Its yearly output is estimated at 10,000 petrol power machines for different purposes. The machines to be made in the North Carolina factory will include high class automobiles as well as other auto ma chines. We are glad to hear it, and hope the report is true. In fact, it came to Sun day's Star in the shape of an announce ment. We don't know but ine. other Southern city so eligibly situated for interior distribution as Charlotte. Be sides that, Charlotte is so situated th'at the Ford people can take care' of a large portion of their' export busi ness from the Charlotte Branch. If Charlotte is to become the center of a great automobile industry, machines can be exported from there by way of Wilmington to all parts of the world. This announcement by the Ford peo ple is one more indication that capi tal is venturing forth for investment. The time for laying low has passed and there is something doing all along the line. Investments are being looked up, and at just such a time as this is the opportunity for Wilmington to get busy. We should never cease to emphasize the great advantages pos sessed by Wilmington for export man ufacturing in particular and all sorts o manufacturing in general. sition IS the cdrrect edeifatic" vleyv'. He does not bey eve in the one man power which asserts itself over the will of a general Assembly r responsible to the people. "Under two flags' That's how the British steamship Lusitanla sails when it suits the captain. On1 her last trip to Liverpool she flew the British flag till she got to the Irish channel. Then it was that the American flag was thrown to the breeze by order of the captain. The master of the ship is Captain Danny Dow, and as the captain is an Irishman, it is safe to say that when he decided what to do he never called for any negative vote. GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP MAY MEAN SELF-DEFENSE " man. Plautius remarked Even centuries afterwards, great poet wrote: "Man's inhumanity to man' makes countless thousands smile". In times of peace the powers had in ternational agreements but so-called diplomats " and statesmen have never seemed to agree on anything that would indicate that they could see 'ahead. Says a story writer: "Percy hurried up the steps to get out of a drenching Tain, and Genevieve saw him trying to dry himself on the piazza." The prob ability is that the piazza was as wet as Percy. Congressman Lewis wants to postal-1 ize the telephone system of this coun try. There is complaint that the tele phone companies charge too much for the service. The New York Public Service Commission Investigated tele phone matters in the metropolis and found out that the New York Tele phone Company earned $27,884,218 last year, while its operating expenses were $15,708,668. That shows a big profit on its face, but it is not stated what the capital stock of the company is. Mr. Edward W. Bemis, an expert, thinks the profits of the company could be scaled $4,000,000 and then there would be a reasonable profit on the investment. He believes the mtes should be reduced sufficiently to. bring a diminuition of profits. Oh the contrary, the cause might be remedied to better advantage by re quiring the company to increase its ex penses by paying " telephone girls enoue'n to live on. A comnanv whose "Man is wolf to .receipts are nearly twice-as much as a ! its expenses oueht to be able to di vide the profits with its faithful and underpaid employes. It is doing business on watered stocks and charging excessive profits to pay ' interest on overcapitalization that is making government ownership an unwelcome but inevitable result. Be tween government ownership and im position and extortion, government ownership becomes the alternative, whether it be called paternalism or not. Governor ownership hasn't got many friends in this country, but it will have if public service corporations do not give their patrons a square deal. An old friend of ours says he be lieves in early marriages for the rea son that if he hadn't married early there would be no chance for hjm now, that his hair looks like a wig made f excelsior. In New York a Public Service Com missioner caused an expense iOf nearly 84,000 in riding ground on . pleasure jaunts in an automobile that belonged to the public. A man may be a pub lic servant but he may act as if he's the public's boss. Just at the present time there is no volcanic eruption anywhere in New York. But if the Republicans begin to talk seriously of letting the Hon. Bill Taft lead them again, phenomena of a loud and disturbing character will occur at Oyster Bay. Patriotism is a sublime y.irtue. There Is a strong and admirable element in a man who stands by his own country, whether it be right or wrong. How many men or women have any use for a man who has a streak of yellow, either visible or under, veneer? The groundhog acted like a calamity bowler. He was afraid there would be six weeks more of winter and went back in his hole when he could have remained outside and enjoyed all this fine spring weather. The groundhog Is a merely psycological myth. Once a man saw a sign over a crack in the ice reading, "Danger' Thin Ice!" He knew what it meant and did not take a skate. Germany has put up the thin ice sign over her newly de fined war zone, and, she has left it to us whether we wish to carry on com nerce where there is danger or whether we shall take our chances. A man was raising a political howl about the increase in the price of bread. He was asked if . he ate one loaf of bread each day, but he replied that he rarely ever ate half a loaf a day. He admitted that he spent 25 cents a day -for cigars, and was surprised when he was shown that if ' he would cut iout one S-cent 'cigar -a day, at the end of a year he would have $14,60 more than the -increase In the price of his bread would amount to, even if he were to eat a loaf a day at a ccost, of one cent a day more than the: former price. Since figures do not lie, the' politician could not dispute the statistician. HELP IN TIME OF NEED That was a touching appeal for the colored poor, made in Sunday's Star by the officers of the United Chari ties (colored). Lack of employment has brought distress and misery to even the willing workers, and those more fortunate, not in close touch with conditions, would be astonished at a situation so deplorable as that which the war depression has caused. The worthy colored population of Wilming ton should not a'ppeal in vain to the generous and able white people of our city. The whole situation as to the unem ployed among all classes of Wilming ton's population should receive the earnest attention of'those who are able to lend a helping hand in such an emergency as this. There are plenty of people who suffer deprivation in silence, only longing to help them selves by employment if they, can get it. Even small pay is better than none till the present depression passes and brings normal relief to people who are the victims of present circumstances. GOVERNOR CRAIG TO FOLLOW A '. BLAZED TRAIL Governor Craig's reply to Represen tative Henry A. Page's appeal con cerning the leasing of State convicts to railroad promoters, and taking more or less worthless stock in payment therefor, shows that the governor is too much of a believer in representa tive government to think- of setting aside the .will of the General' Assem bly. Governor Craig explains that' he is not responsible for this policy on the part of the . State, and since the General Assembly has' twice declared Itself in favor of a continuance, of the policy of contributing convict labor to railroad construction, it is not for him to override the will and acts of the. people's representatives. The Governor is right, however much the General Assembly may be to blame. The Legislature is responsible, .. and since it represents the people it is for the people's representative body to be held responsible to the people. Mr. Page made a strong arraignment of the policy of using the revenues of. the State to assist private corporations, but the Governor takes the position that it is not for l.'-m to decide after the Leg islature has declared its will as the SUBMARINES AND NEUTRALS Interesting View From Leading; New York Commercial Newspaper. . (N. Y. Journal of Commerce.) Whether or not the display of a neu tral flag on merchant vessels of a bel ligerent power in time of war, as a defense against an enemy .within a dan gerous area at sea, is entirely legiti mate, under what is called internation al law or usage, is a technical question for the experts. As far as is yet made clear in the controversy about the ac tion of the Lisitanla on approaching Liverpool, it seems to have no ground for complaint, as it was for the safe ty of cargo and passengers in which it had a greater interest than anybody else.. Whether the display of the Amer ican flag Was ordered Or advised by British authority, or whether there has been a secret order for what the Ger-. man admiralty has characterized as "the misuse of neutral flags" does not matter so much.- as the. question of justification, under the circumstances according to recognized principle and custom. What particularly concerns the neutral nations is not the safety or peril of the merchant vessels of. belligerents, but the security of then owyi rights and the commerce in which they are legitimately engaged. 1 The danger to their rights or the im pairment of their obligations do not seem to be involved in this case, but the safety of their commerce is very much so. That is certainly not endan gered by the use of their flag to save merchant vessels of any nationality, which may be carrying some of their goods or their subjects, from capture at sea by any belligerent. What con cerns them very much more is the as sumption of the right by any belliger entpower to define an area in the chief track of commerce as a "war zone" and to menace with destruction any mer chant ship coming within it,by the use of submarine war vessels and tor pedoes, sneaking out of sight for miles underneath the waves. That Is a meth od of "modern warfare' 'about ahich international authority has had nothing to say, because it is entirely novel. Let it be admitted that Great Britain had 'the right to warn shipping off from the northern route to its ports or to those of the continent on account of mines. Let it be conceded that Germany had a right to declare a war zone all around the British Islands, including the Whole width of the English Channel, and to make it effective by recognized naval operations, if It could. All this does not touch the real question raised by the use that has been made, or threat ened, of the submarine as an engine j of war. The German navy, with the exception j of a few roaming cruisers, has been thus far effectually bottled up in Ger man ports, except for an occasional venturesome raid of a few vessels, which have hastened back ,to their hid ing places. There is no means of main taining a war zone outside except by the use of submarines with their for midablev weapon, the torpedo. This war zone cannot possibly be" made ef fective, but it can be made the means of destroying an occasional vessel, as likely to be a neutral as that of an enemy, with no means of saving pas sengers or crew any more than cargo. Is there any rule or practice or any conceivable principle of civilized war fare, if war has any principle, by which this can be justified or its bar barity extenuated It is acknowledged. that a belligerent may destroy mer chant vessels of its enemies. It may capture merchant vessels of a neutral nation believed or suspected to be car rying contraband to its enemies or rendering them aid; but, having seized them, it is bound to make out a case against them-before destroying or con fiscating them, and in no case is it en titled to sink them and give passengers and crews no chance of escape with their lives. In view of these elementary consid erations, what is to be said of the pre tension of the German admiralty to draw a circle thirty miles wide around the British Islands and along the ad jament coasts of the continent, and threaten with destruction by subma rines the only means at its command any merchant vessels that may enter that forbidden area? The qualification as to neutrals means practically noth ing. The submarine could hardly make and distinction in view of its limited opportunity for observation and the chance of any vessel carrying a neutral flag, whether its right to do so is con ceded or .not. It seems to be assumed that a German submarine would not make any distinction. It could not cap ture or seize. It could not save pas sengers or crew. It could take nothing into port for adjudication. It could only act as a deep-sea pirate intent amy on destruction. It could observe no rule or principle of naval warfare. If it attempted it, the war zone opera tion would be an empty farce. What can Germany expect from announcing to the world this method of fighting against commerce under the pretense of cripling its own-enemies?- The crip pling cannot be accomplished by any such means, and the exasperation will not be limited to Germany's enemies in this coflict. It is rather calculated to leave her without any friends and make harder the terms upon which peace can be restored In the day of reckoning. association Of live stock "breeders will be able to" further boost the movement to produce more beef and pork In the South, and this means greater indepen dence and more money Charlotte News. A possible complication of'the case of the Wilhelmina may arise from the fact that the cargo of the vessel was not taken at sea by naval captors, but was seized by customs Officials in a port where the vessel had taken refuge from stress of weather. A violation of customs regulations cannot be put for ward as a pretext for the seizure; for there was no intention on the part of the shipper to land his lading at Fal mouth or any other British port. It has been claimed that the British Ad miralty Is empowered by immemorial custom to commandeer any! provisions found In the realm as naval stores; but the Wilhelmina's provisions were not In the realm they were afloat and In transit for Hamburg. The right of belligerent capture is so nearly akin to wrong 'that any legal technicalities would be properly employed "to avoid it. Philadelphia Record, v The agricultural forces of the State, as represented by the A. and M. Col lege, the State Department of Agricul ture and the Experiment Station are to be congratulated on their enterprise in enlarging their extension service by the publication of a weekly newspaper to be known as "Extension Farm News." The object of. the publication is to furnish the other newspapers of the State irst-hand news of matters of special interest and value to the farming public. The new publication should have the effect of bringing the agricultural agencies working in the State into a closer and more vital re lation with the people. This is, of course, for every reason to be desired. The need is for more and better farm ing, and what it takes to give the State that the institutions here in Ral eigh, aided by the national department and other forces cna provide. The thing needful is to get the facts before the people. The Farm News, appealing di rectly to the local newspapers, should supply the missing link. Raleigh News and Observer. VrfVlWill XT'iiTT (Ji m a) . 11HEATHH; FHKS11 AIM. NIGHT AND DAY CURRENT COMMENT. Judge Carter read his ultimatum to Solicitor Abernethy (and the court, and the world) and then it was the solicit or's move. Mr. Abernethy read . his manifesto to Judge Carter (and the court, and the .woHd). Then every body adjourned. Greensboro News. A New England exchange, noting the elaim'that the real American is only to be found in the South, bids us observe that the hyphenated Afro-American numbers ten millions' 'now. But will not the estemed Springfield Republi can note in the same connection that the South is net responsible for the presence or existence of the Afro-American? Jacksonville Times-Union: A live - stock association has been formed in this county and The News believes that it will be of great bene fit. The movement among farmers all over-the south to raise more hogs and live stock, is gaining ground rapidly, and low cotton' has-had much to do kwith stimulating ' the movement. By Breathe all the afresh air you can get, night and day. That's what fresh air is for. The fearsome legend about the baleful influences of "night air" is only another of the carefully nursed insani tary bequests from our ancestors, ac cording to Senior Surgeon Bafiks, of the United States Public Health Ser vice. Whence this superstition arose may only be surmised. Perhaps it is a sur vival of the primeval cult of Sun wor ship, which led the ancients to classify anything outside the sphere of solar influence. Our forbears were wont to caution their offspring to "be careful about the night air" or children were ; ordered to "come in out of the night air." It is perhaps fortunate for the children living iii the Arctic circle, where the nights are six months Ions', that the Esquimaux mothers do not en tertain this crude notion about night j air, else their progeny would spend half the year indoors. This idea is generally prevalent and even one of .our well known flowers Is loaded down .with the horrible name of "Deadly Nightshade" as a sort of ver bal relic of this old notion. The low lying mist or fog that sometimes gath ers about the surface of the earth, un der certain atmospheric conditions,-after sunset, was . held, is held, to be "miasmatic" and .pregnant with lethal possibilities. This is worthy of all the respect that should be put to any hoary superstition, but its place is in the spe cimen jars of an archaeological muse um, not in the show room of modern in telligent life. The night air, minus the sun, is no different from the atmosphere of a sun less day. The atmospheric envelope of the earth does not change from be nign to malign in the. twinkling of an eye after sundown. It is still compos ed of oxygen, nitrogen, argon and car bon dioxide in the normal proportions for the given ..locality. The open air treatment of tuberculosis and its kin dred allies had first to combat this ven erable jargon about the deadliness of night air, and only the remarkable re sults of this hygienic aid to its cure brought the superstitious to a realiza tion, of the silliness of their ingrained noctophobia. This generation has witnessed the emancipation of human beings .in re spect to the value of fresh air, wheth er in bulk or in smaller "drafts." From being a people immersed In hermetical ly sealed rooms at night, breathing our own bodily exhalations over and over again, a constantly increasing number of persons are sleeping in tne open, or at least with open windows, summer and winter, to their great benefit. In the morning they are refreshed with the pure oxygen of the air breathed during sleep, not "stewed" nor ."seedy" after eight hours spent in respiring and re-respiring second-hand and shop worn air in a closed bedroom. A story from the trenches in France is that a soldier wrote home to his wife to open her windows at night as he had found that the night air "didn't hurt one'bit." That is the experience of all the advocates of this sensible custom once tried the old custom of sealing one's self in an air-tight bedroom is never renewed. Diseases which in volve the lungs can usually be traced to their beginning in poorly ventilated sleeping apartments, inside rooms that do not have a share of the atmosphere. Nothing can live well or long without oxygen in the air, and it was given to us. for breathing, night and day, nof to be taken in sparingly, as if it were a dangerous potion. Some people are ac tually afraid of ordinary, common air. The emancipated persons who open their windows at night will tell you, unanimously, that they cannot breathe in a chamber unless the window is rais ed, their sense "of, comfort' and Vigor demands the life giving qualities of fresh air. No greater prophylactic ad vice can be promulgated than to breathe all the fresh atmospheric air you can get, night and day. a young man, that Is dependent on charity, parents dea'dj and relatives very poor. - My reply was they did not receive charity patients, but would ad mit the patient provided he could pay one dollar per day. It is impossible for him to nay anything, and he is unable to work and has no means of support. What are we going to do with this class of patients? I was under the impression the Institution was endowed by the State of North Carolina and patients that were un able to pay, were cared for." To this we were obliged to reply as follows: "Your letter of December 15 is re received. The State Sanitorium is not a free institution any more than is the State University and other State in-4- stitutions. The State does make it pos sible for a person to receive sanitorium treatment for about one-third tjhe cost of this treatment elsewhere; that is; at one dollar per day or thirty dol lars per month. The State does not necessarily expect all patients to pay the one dollar a day, but" does expect the towns or counties of which the patients, are citizens to assist their needy and descrying citizens. In many instances needy and deserving cases of consumption have been assisted by so; cial clubs, by churches, and by frater nal orders of which they are members.' "The State gives the Institution only $20,000 a year for maintenance and the indebtedness of the institution when the State board took it over was very great. There are 'thousands of people in North Carolina like the young man In whom you are interested dying sim ply for want of a little financial assist ance either from their State, their town, their county, their church, their fraternal order or friends. It does seem a pity and the pity is all the greater when your people appear to have be come so accustomed to this sort of thing as to take it as a matter" fact." We don't like to have to write such letters. It seems like downright cold blooded statements to say that there are literally thousands of others in the State dying needless deaths from tuberculosis when a little financial as sistance, a dollar a day for six6r eight months would simply make the differ ence between a premature consumptive grave and a useful citizen for many years to come, but such are the facts. What would you do in the case? Come biH and help us rid our fair State of this White plague. It ' must be done. We can do it. Let's put our shoulders to the wheel and see what a combina tion of State, county,- town, community, club church, lodge and, finally your in dividual personal effort will yield" in the death rate'1 in a few years. HOW "IE" HELPS SORE, TOD FEET Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swol len feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight ness, no more limping with, pain or drawing up your face in agony. "TIZ"ia magical, acts right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exuda tions which puff up the feet. Use "TIZ" and for get your , foot misery. Ah! how com fortable your feet f eel. Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now at any druggist or department store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never .swell, never hurt, never get tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed or money refunded. M 111 X-atU Dr. C.L. Pridgen General Practice. DISEASES OF STOMACH AND INTES TINES A SPECIALTY. SOS Market Sx. 'Phone 2085 OFFICE HOURS t 011 A. If. 2304:30 P. M. Reliable evidence is abundant that women are constantly, being restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound The many testimonial letters that we are continually pub. lishing in the newspapers hundreds of them are all genu ine, true ancl unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude for the freedom from suffering that has come to these women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; Y: Money could not buy rior any kind pf influence obtain such recommendations jr. you may depend upon it that any testimonial we publish is honest and true if you have any doubt of this write to the women whose true names and addresses are always given, and learn for yourself. Read this one from Mrs. Waters: Camden, N.J. "I was sick for two years with nervous spells, an my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all the time and used a galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was not able to go to bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and sooii became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his health, and my husband heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and got me some In two months I got relief and now I am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend your medicine to every one and so does my husband."--Mrs. Tillis Waters, 530 Mechanic Street, Camden, N". J. From Hanover, Penn. Hanover, Pa.-"I was a very weak woman and suffered from bearing down pains and -backache. I had .been married over tour years and had no children. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound proved an excellent remedy for it made me a well woman. After taking a few bottles my pains disappeared, and we now have one of the finest boy babies you ever saw?' Mrs. C. A. Rickbodk, R.FJ). 2Jo. 6, Hanover, Pa. Now answer this question if you can. Why should a 'woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that it has saved many others--why should it fail in your case? For 30 years Tjydia E. Pinkhamfs Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe male ills No one sick with woman's ailments does justice to herself if she does not try; this fa mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it has restored so many suffering women to health. f -JWrite to LYDIA E.WNKHAM MEDICI! CO. ( CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. la; 1.YDIA E PiNKHaKT 1 WHO BUILDS YOUR CLOTHES? TIME MATTER . . . THE SANITORTUM'S POSITIOTV Why Every Charity Patient Can Vbt Be Treated Free. (Health Bulletin.) Tn vtew or the fact "that the present Plan, policy and capacity of the State Sanitorium for the Treatment of Tu berculosis does not seem to be fully un derstood throughout the State, we .re produce here a bit Of recent, corre spondence relative to that institution trom this office. We believe this will throw light on the facts as they are and will explain the Sanitorium's posi tion in not being, able to receive char ity patients. . "Some time aero t mmto fho nrn-hty. Carolina Sanitorium for . treatment of will of the people. The Governor's'po-'be accomplished. "'A, Jive and energetic tuberculosis and asked 'them tcadmit SEED e Potatoes Genuine Maine Grown Seed Potatoes, Inspected Four Times. Shipment This Week. Love & Woody Wholesale Grocers 'Phone 809. We Are Pleased to Announce That on Wednesday, Feb. 1 0th, Thursday, Feb. 11th, Friday, 12th, Strouse & Bros will have their Expert Fitter with us, Taking Measures for This Spring and Summer Clothes. We will be Glad to Have You Call In if only to show you through this Great Assortment of Fabrics. J. M. SOLKY & CO. No. 9 North Front Street Phone 617 QUAIL Oyster? on the Half Shell ARE -HESE AtWAVs FIRST AT EVERGLADE CAFE -7113 Prince Street -RUN BV A&UCBJCAJrS. We Need Your Patrenaare at Tata Criiila ot the yvai. SPECIAL MENUS FOK DINNER SUPPER. s Everything: in Season. . Open Day and Night &HBPARD. BR OS Proprietor. ' C T.ateKErroiAN, JRanas-er. . TOM iS FLORIDA CUBA - SOUTH ONLY Through Sleeping Car Between WILMINGTON and ATLANTA DAILY SCHEDULES: , No. 55 No. 51 Lv. Wilmington ... 3:45P.M. 6:25A.M. Ar.Florence ...j 7:30P.M. 3:20A.M. Ar.Atlanta .... ,.. 6:00A.M.. Ar. Montgomery ; .... . 11:30A.M. Ar. New Orleans ...j 8:55P.M.. Lv. Wilmington Lv. Florence Ar. Jacksonville Ar Tampa ... 3:45P.M. 7:55P.M. 7:15A.M. 4:00P.M, 5:25 A.M. 9:40A.M. 7:20P.M. 6:45A.M. Ar. St. Petersburg , 8:30P.M. SOAjl. Ar. Fort Myers ,10:20P.M.12 :05P.M. PULLMAN CARS ON ALL TRAINS. PHONE 160 ATLANTICjCbAST LINE the: standard railroad op the; south THE CANDY OF EXCELLENCE PAGE & SHAW; 1 "'." (Boston) - . - y . We are exclusive agents for this celebrated brand of Chocolate nod Bob-Bom In Wilmington. . Pane A Shaw on a box Of candr means the same as "Sterling'' on piece of silverware. " . A different confection to ulii every taste; and In a wide variety of . package. , . i - L. B. SASSER the mission pharmacy:
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 15, 1915, edition 1
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