1 ' " "J THE MORNING STAR, WILMINGTON, N. C., TUESDAY: MARCH 9, 19 15. THREE HER ATTEMPT TO IN ALL TEN BLACK WHITE TAW WRECK TRAM 110. 42 LANGUAGES OF EUROPE Cross Tie Found on Track North of Mt. Olive atNight American' Minister to Ruman ia in Peculiar Position. Found J"sl Be5"ond "'" 1 Curve a Pew Minutes Before Northbound Coast Line Passenger Train Wm Une Saturday Night. . Associated Press Correspondent De- "c11" Visit to Charles J. Vopika in His Palatial Residence Whether the Shoes be Black, White or Tan 2 in 1 Gives the Shine that Won't Come Off on the Clothes Brilliant- Lasting.- The "Easy-Opening" Box, 10c. ' THE F. P. DALLEY CO. Ltd.. BaniLo. lt. r uiuiiTnif. at Bucharest. - - - m m mm a m a M & INOI WRESTUHG Special Star' Correspondence.) iloMnt Olive, March, $. The engineer .irfA of a southbound freiirht n - that took the siding here Sat- irday night to allow A. u. x.. passen ger train No. 42 to pass, reported! the discovery of a cross-tie on the track ,v0 miles north of here, which, it is believed, was placed there for the pur se of wrecking1 the passenger train; , which -ould no doubt have wreck- id the freislit train, had not the en .zir.e bee equipped with the modern brilliant -electric neaaiigm, ana ; tne rack straitT"1 AUI seveiai miiea norm jf where -the tie was placed. - - Two nules north of here, the - track ,Krves rather sharply to the north,nd jBSt at the north end of this curve "is ffi,ere the cross-tie was placed, which means that the engineer In charge : of lie passenger train, northbound, would iiave been unable to see the obstruc tion until within, a few yards of it oo late to prevent the engine's coming into contact with same, Xo clue as to the identity of the guilty parties has been discovered. Three men were seen standing , at a rounty road crossing of the railroad a short distance north of where the tie was found, but their dentity is not known, nor is it known , if they : had any knowledge of the fact that the tie jail been placed on the , track. Several atempts have been made within the last four or five years to wreck this same train, which passes here at 9:06 p. m., made up of some six or eight cars baggage car, day coaches and Pullmans, and one of the Coast Line's most important trains on this road. The last attempt occurred some six or eight months ago, be Ifreen here and Calypso. .. : ANARCHISTS CAUGHT IN ST. PATRICK'S PLEAD NOT GUILTY Held Inder Bond of $25,000 for Trial May Withdraw Pleas. Xew York, March 8. Frank Abarno, the young anarchist arrested in St. Patrick's cathedral last Tuesday after detectives had stamped out a lighted bomb which imperilled the lives of 800 worshippers, pleaded not guilty today to the charge of .attempting to explode the bomb,' a felony punishable by 25 years' punishment. Carmine Carbone, the 18-year-old boy arrested as the maker of the missile, entered a similar piea. Both were neia m $Z5,000 bail for trial. , Justice Swann allowed the men until next Thursday to withdraw or change their pleas. The courttook under jad. visemenf m6( ion To al Io wfh e i r "c'oun sef to inspect tne minutes of the grand jury which indicted them. The proceedings were - brief. ( The charge made by the prisoners that the police had instigated the plot . and that ten two men simply followed the sug gested the Amedio Polignani, a detec tive who posed as an anarchist, ws not touched upon. Abarno and Carbone faced the court smilingly. The far-reaching plot, which me ponce claim existed among anarch ists to take the lives of Andrew Car negie, the Rockefellers, Cornelius Van derbilt and other rich men, to blow up ranks and inaugurate a reign of terror in Xew York city, did not come before the court today. INFORMATION AS TO UNFAIR COMPETITION ACCUMULATING Trade Commission Will Have Many Letters to Begin With. Washington, March 8. When the federal Trade Commission organizes here next week it probably will fall Mir to a mass of first hand informa tion about business plans of corpora tions, Which involvA the niiffstintl of unfair methods of competition. The "wmation is in the hands of the De partment of Justice, in the form of otters from pfirnfiPoHnria -Pfrkm .throughout the country. - ' ine letters began to reach the de partment shortly after the trade com mission act went into effct. General ly .ey seek to obtain advice as to aether prospective business moves are r I laW- In eaCh CaSe the an" Zl f been tnat the-department can- --tuniisn the desired advice. -' There nTme, qnestion als. whether , the 4e colmmission has authority to kive vn anticipatory advice. -o so-called trusts or organizations 'g business have written. ' ! SEARCH OF TSE-NE-GAT. ,- GM'al Scott Begins 140-Mlle Over- - land Journey. ; "enver. Coin Momk o tnitii 7. '-KULl- cnier of staff of the united Static i.j- . "ile n 7 iuuay uegan-a xw- auntrvTf"5 journey into the desert of m - . '""icaiiieru u La.ii in searcn bv v a Piute Ifidianr-wanted ch&nrl Auiaormes on a murder ''Slstin "--ioi .is ueiiig., aiueu in Poll - cature by;, hia father," "Old Genpr o dI,a OI renegade -flutes. isstnn 1 was sent, from Wash- thro",10 seek out the fugitives, and 1aflucrVi'SMUrances of fair" treatment o the i v lo surrender Tse-Ne-Gat "al u autnorities. --The gen- Kobcrt r. ptI,ieu y nis aide, coi. t. ilichie, and an orderly. sEMTOu phelan returns. Dominican Republic to IMiKate an to Sullivan. i. pCI ' lgton- March 8. Senator Jas: W;:ian' of California, returned : to Wini'n,today frm his trip to' the w. "-cui i r Mi i u 1 1 ""ssioner , 1 ullt aB a special com lt!vestl . of th State Department to "van ntness or James M. Sul 8"nounL'iV"ster to the republic. -He no further formal Hfobabh' be held and that -he ie . 0ulf make his report within -ll ro weeks. Ow1"' " MILLINERY SHOP! "t-.. luesday. March 9 th. WARNING. fhj ' ' X I" afaniliU',:v' or Parties wlvo: have, been ;L?dl3er from No. 307 North Fifth toteL a"! hereby warnert aerninat trsn. f this ;:riher. warned that disregard !iJu'ZH Places them in danger of i9J"'- J-JLFARIjET., . (Correspondence of Associated Press.) Bucharest, Rumania, Feb. 25. Chas. J. Vopika, of Chicago, the American minister to Rumania, Serbia and Bul garia, has found himself "in a peculiar position as a result of the war. . The demands upon him have been such that when, an Associated Press correspon dent visited him at his palatial home in Bucharest, .tthe American minister was wrestlingv with bookkeeping and correspondence in all the ten languages of Central Europe. He was sitting behind a large desk strewn with letters, . each containing either a'; request for information as to the fate' of some missing soldier from Austria-Hungary, Germany, Serbia or Russia, or a money order for some pris oner ofAwar.- "This is the second, of our five daily mail deliveries," said he, "and so far I have received 102 letters. My small staff is so overworked that I am oblig-! ed to lend a hand. I thought this would be only until somebody could be found to do the work. But such peo ple are extremely scarce in Rumania; So I started in to keep books and rec-i ords and what not; act as mail clerki and about the only thing I have not done so far is to take my letters to the postofflce." In private life Mr. Vopika is a wealthy Chicago banker. "I have come to like the work," he said, after telling how he spent from 12 -to 16 hours in bookkeeping each day, "Each little effort in behalf of these poor men means not only comfort for them, , but reassurance for some poor soul at liome. I re-transmit mon ey from persons In Austria-Hungary, Germany, Serbia and Russia to prison ers of war held in the enemy's country. "Some of the amounts . transmitted are humble mites for prisoners whose relatives 'had to save hard to spare even the little" they send. The remit tances to officers are larger as a rule. Some of the Austrian prisoners held by the Serbs are wealthy men who receive money from home in thousands. "I must deal here in German marks, Austro-Hungarian kronen, Serbian francs Russian rubles and Rumanian lei. I am glad that I had at least a lit tle experience as banker, for otherwise my predicament would be greater than it is.'! ' : , A few weeks ago the American min ister made a trip to Serbia to inquire into' the treatment of the Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war. He reported that the men were well treated. , -They are given 1 three substantial meals ? a day.jand. few, of them complained. , ;l ! -Mr-. Vopickw- said -that Dr. 'Edward W. -Ryan, who- is in charge of the American Red Cross unit in Serbia, was now in control of all the Serbian mili tary hospitals and that his efforts were " greatly appreciated by the Serb ian government. Dr. Ryan :'f otind a' woeful disregard tor the essentials in hospital sanitation and. started in by insisting that, all the hospital floors be scrubbed once a day in the morning. At 'first he had great difficulty enforc ing this. Now, however, clean! floors have become a habit with which even the : Serbs are loath to part. During the bombardment of Belgrade a shell hit one of the hospitals under Dr. Ry an's control, killing one nurse and wounding an American nurse slightly. ' : Much Grain Stored. '"Nearly 46,000 carloads of grain, most ly .wheat and rye, are stored at the Rumanian railroad stations awaiting transfer to Germany and AUstria-Hun-gary. About half of : the quantity is consigned to "German millers. A lack of rolling stock. has operated against prompt, transfers but Germany has now met this problem with an agreement to send into Rumania daily 300 box cars -which areto be used in transporting .the grain. . The first of these: have arrived. With Austria-Hun . . . , yeT bltrsha oT"t graln ww a npvkA Aim An t noo n a Ari Tnarncan u ing shipped out as rapidly as the nunv ber of cars available, permits, 'it is said here' that in lieu of cer tain concessions, Germany will in the future observe a more liberal commer cial policy with Rumania. What these concessions are, however, could not be ascertained. . WOULD- CALL1 OUT "MILITIA TO QUELL WRANGLING LAWYERS The Threat of Judge in Went Virginia i J Court Proves Effective. " Charleston, W. Va., March 8. The threats by the presiding judge to call out the militia to maintain order, quell ed heated exchanges today between op nosine attorneys arguing in Circuit Court a writ of prohibition sought by A. Leo Weil, of Pittsburgh, to prevent the prosecuting-attorney or Kanawna county from'., proceeding with Indict ments charging him with attempting to bribe .members of the West Virginia Public Service Commission. .. The 'court Te'cessed until tomorrow, ! with arguments uncompleted. ."LAW NOT ENFORCEABLE YET. Alabama Papers Can Advertise Liquor Until Prohibition Law Is" Effective. ; Birmingham, "Alar., March 8. Judge Miller, of the city court, today held that the new state law prohibiting cifT culati.on of jjeriodicals bearing liquor advertisements is not enforceable un til after July 1, when the state-wide prohibition statute becomes operative. The' decree dissolved a temporary" inV Junction restraining a local news deal er from circulating such periodicals. An appeal was noted. - , 1 JARVIS FOLKS HAVEN'T QUIT Mass . Meeting at Dnnn Saturday for - ' Laying' Further Plans. (Special Star Correspondence.) Dunn, N. March 8. A nass meet ing of citizens within the' territory em braced by the proposed Jarvis county has been called;for Saturday afternoon, March 13, for the purpose of getting the various committees composing the Jarvis- County club to begin active work, 'soliciting - funds and members. gait Laker City, Utah, March 7. '- A telegram received today by Sheriff Cor less, '.from Nogales, , Ariz., announced the capture bf Ralphal-Lopez, . Mexican bandit, who more than a year ago ter rorized BihgMam, Utah? killinrsix dep- L,utvsheriffs before his escape, - - - - r THE A TR ICAL George M. Cohan's steadily advanc ing stagecraft is very markedly illus trated in "Seven Keys to Baldpate," . .. ...vu io UC 11C9CUI.CU ni IU AWUC liny of Music. Saturdav: matin a a anil night, March 13. The play is said to be a very cleverly constructed farce picturing with agree able satire the possibilities of "best seller" writing. The piece is on lines quite at variance with previous Cohan P&ys, being in many respects the most legitimate contribution to the stage f rpm our. foremost fashioner of con temporary farce. It contains little slang and less Broadway, and altogeth er is described as being a very skilful farcical fabrication. Mr. Cohan has taken wie original Biggers' (that really is his name; he used to be a Boston dramatic critic and he signed his name to reviews with no recorded injury) plot and adapted it quite as cleverly to. his theatrical uses as he did the even more diffuse "Wallingford" yarns. Baldpate Inn is that lonesomest of spots, a mountain summer , hotel in the, dead of . winter. Here . comes a novelist who has Just wagered a friend that he can turn out a story of 10,000 words in 24 hours (not so considerable a feat, however, as it seems many a newspaper man has turned out that much copy in less time on a pinch). The writer, appar ently, believes, that he has the only key to the hotel and that he will be able to work uninterruptedly to a suc cessful conclusion of his wager. The gentleman of the second ' part in the wager is the owner of the Inn. He commends the novelist to the kind at tention of the caretaker and his wife and arrangements are ' made for the writer's comfort. Hardly has he begun to write when the curtain rises on an other scene. A man arrives, also the possessor of a key.'and deposits a roll of bills in the Inn safe, telephoning a confederate to come and get the money in, the, morning, , The . nervous novelist creeps fe'ebly to the balcony above the lobby and hears all this, then tremb lingly comes down and demands, of the stranger what Jhe is doing in the hotel. The other man bluntly asks the same question, nipping the situation with gunware eloquence. But the novelist wooes the harsh visitor to his room and then slams and locks the. door. No sooner is this done than the Inn door is unlocked again and a young woman enters.; And so on until . seven keys are employed to admit more or less eccentric characters. At the end you know but this cannot be told, even in this column, for it would mar the en joyment of this greatest of Cohan suc cesses. ' It is, as Mr. Cohan terms it, a mys tery farce. The author daringly tricks his audience and then finishes with a whimsical turn which gives mystery another turn. It is all clever writing, with a bit of satire not only on the writers of "best sellers," but on au dience as well. "Runaway June" Today. "Runaway June" at the New Grand today. That announcement will be re ceived by all Wilmington theatre-goers with keen-delight. It is a day they have been looking forward to with B-reat pacornpss for weeks and indica rri - 'w - "ons are that they are going to turn out en masse to witness the inaugura tion at Wilmington's handsomest thea tre today of this great society drama that has set all of New York talking and that is only being offered by the biggest , and best theatres of the coun try. This, of course, includes the New Grand; hence, . Wilmington's lucky chance to see this wonderful, gripping film while it is fresh. The New Grand will run the big film sensation every Tuesday and every movie devotee should be rein to be on hand today, so as to start right at the beginning. The first episode, to be flashed on the screen today, shows what happens on June's wedding day and brings to the front the tall, handsome, black Van dyked stranger, a character that caus ed the entire fiction public of this coun try to "sit up and take notice." Sus pense and thrills begin as soon as the film is flashed on the screen and before the end of the big two reels of the first episode the onlookers will be impa tient to behold the next and will be guessing how it is all going to end. , "Runaway June" is a great, superb feature alofte, and yet this is not all the New Grand is going to offer today. In fact, this is going to be a Red Let ter day in every way. In addition to "Runaway June" the -New Grand will present the Vitagraph's stpdendous three-reel success (get 'that) "Under neath the Paint," . and ' this sensational film triumph comes direct to the Jfew Grand . from the Vitagraph Theatre, New York. "Threads of Fate." Bijou. Do you. enjoy .a supremely sweet love story? Do you know how lovely Pauline Bush can be when . a great opportunity , comes to her? .Are you thrilled by the romantic love making of handsome William Dowlin? Then don't fail- to see this unusual heart drama, "Threads of Fate," featuring today's bill at the home of "the In comparable Movies," and be thrilled with the tangled plot woven by the intricate threads of fate. It tells the great;human interest story of two kin dred souls, who, becoming tired of the sham of an artificial existence, elope and court death rather return,, and lovely, beautiful Pauline Bush is at her very best in the portrayal of an emotional role ' such as this two-reel feature calls for. V" " . - ."Their Last Haul" is the title of a great . L-Ko ; comedy ; feature .that 1 is undoubtedly entitled to second place on the bill. It features that great fun maker, Hank Mann, who enjoys the reputation, with Billie Ritchie, of -being one of the greatest . comedians on the screen It's a" full - reel of ' roar ing, thrilling,- tumbling: . farce-comedy. and Alice Howell features in the lead with Hank. If you want to see the desperate chances taken by movie ac tors to entertain you, don't fail to see this. "Shadows and Sunshine" is a full reel Mutual drama of an exceptional kind, starring the famous Thannhouser twins, Medallne and Marion Fairbanks. Then there's another notable Mutual, "In Wildman's Land,' 'a wierd and, terrible tale of Savage cave men, in a full reel. The rousing six-reel bill ends up with a seemingly ludicrous Keystone comedy, "Hogan's Wild Oats," featur ing those inimitable Keystone comedy stars you like so well. ; And don't for get "The Exploits of Elaine," - starts Friday. SPORTS WAKE FOREST SCHEDULE List of Baseball Games to Be Played This Spring Announced. (Special Star Correspondence.) Wake Forest, N. C, March 8. Man ager W. A. Riddick has announced the following schedule of baseball games for the Wake Forest nine this spring: March 18, Oak Ridge at Wake For est. March 24, open. March 26, Bingham (Mebane) at Wake Forest. March 29, University' of North Caro lina at Wake Forest. March 31, Liberty Piedmont Institute at Wake Forest. : April 3, A. & M. at Wake Forest. April 5, A. & M. (Easter Monday) Raleigh. April 8, Trinity at Durham. ' April 9, Durham League at Dur ham. April 10, Elon at Burlington. April 13, University . of North Car olina at Raleigh, h . . April 15, Raleigh League at Raleigh. April 17, t Trinity at Wake , Potest. April 19, ' University of South Caro lina at Columbia. 1 April 20,. University of South Car olina at Columbia. April 22, University of South Caro lina at Wake :" Forest. April 23, Trinity at Durham (Pend ing.) April 24, Davidson at Davidson. April 25, University of North Caro lina at Chapel Hill. April 29, Elon at Wake Forest. May 1, Guilford at Wake Forest. May 4, A. & M. at Wake Forest (Pending.) EVERY OPPORTUNITY TO PROTECT ITS FRANCHISE i - Was Given Kansas City Clnb, Says Fed eral League Counsel In Court. Chicago, March 8. Argument was begun in Circuit Court today on a mo tion to dissolve the temporary injunc tion restraining the Federal League t from transferring its Kansas City club franchise to Newark, N. J. "We gave the Kansas City club every oppoTtunr ity to protect its franchise," said E. E. Gates, Federal League counsel. "It was agreed that the club should raise $100,000 by' December 10. If it "had raised this money it could have re deemed the franchise." John M. Zane, for the Kansas City club, argued that ''the action which put out the Kansas City club, was the ac tion of an executive committee and not the action of the league itself." In concluding his argument asking for a permanent injunction restraining the league from transferring the fran chise, Mr. Zane said: . ' , "At the beginning of the 1914 season the Kansas City club paid , a large sum of money to the league. The mon ey was never returned nor was an ac counting made. The league advanced money at various times to the Kansas City club, but at the same time the league received the gate receipts of the club.. No accounting has ever been made." - JOHNSON AND WILLARD TO FIGHT AT HAVANA APRIL 3. Last Obstacle . Removed and Heavy- Weight Bout Seems Certain. Havana, March 8. Jack Johnson and Jess Willard will fight for the world's heavy-weight . pugilistic . cham pionship at Havana Saturday, April 3. The last obstacle was removed today when Jack Curley, . who endeavored .to have the men meet at Juarez, Mexico, March 6th,, received a cable from Wil lard saying he would start immediate ly for Havana, arriving here March 15. The fight terms are identical . with those arranged , previously. Curley will act as the chief promoter. Johnson began training today. Wil lard probably will have training quar ters at Mariano. '.-; . San Francisco March 8.: The open ing game of the Universal Polo Tour nament - will be played here Tuesday, March 16th. Play will be for the open championship cup and the teams prob ably will be those of Cooperstown, N. Y., and San Mateo. , , ..- Birmingham, Ala., March 8. Robert H. Baugh, president of . the Birming ham club, was elected president .of the Southern Baseball Association at a meeting of the directors here todays He succeeds the late W. M, Kavanaugh. , Washington, - March : 8. Secretary Lane began public hearings today on the disposition of , thousands of acres of rich oil and gas lands on the Osage Indian - Reservation ; in- Oklahoma, at the . expiration s next;. year of the so called' Fostdr : lease ; under which '" the property now!' is held by the Indian territory illuminating oil company. ' GERMANS PLEAD GUILTY Of Conspiring to Secure False Ameri can Passports. . . New Tork, - March 8. -Carl Ruroede, a German -Amer lean, and four German reservists, brought to trial in Federal court today, on charges of conspiring- to obtain false American ' pass ports, withdrew their previous pleas of not guilty and pleaded guilty. v Ruroede, accused of opening a bu reau of issuance of false passports, was sentenced to three years in the At lanta penitentiary. The others, Ar thur Wilhelm, Heinrich I Sachsse, a re serve lieutenant in the i German army, Walter Mueller, August Myer and Herman Wagener were fined $200 each. A sixth man, Hans Adam von Wed dell, also indicted and a fugitive from justice, and described by District At torney Marshall as the chief conspire ator in the case, has been apprehend ed in Scotland. Negotiations for his extradition are under stood to be un derway. IN , EFFORT TO WIPE OUT GAMBLING AT PALM BEACH Grand Jury Subpoenas Issued for Sev eral Prominent Men. Palm Beach, Fla., March 8. Grand jury subpoenaes have been issued for a number of men prominent ' in . va rious parts of the country, in connec tion with an effort to wipe out gam gllng at' this fashionable winter re sort. Some of those already subpoe naed as witnesses are John F. Fitz fierald, former mayor of Boston, and his brother, H. S. Fitzgerald; James M. Schoonmaker, vice president of . the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie railroad; Chas. I. Cragin, banker, of Philadelphia; H. S. Black, of New York; Thomas D. Shevlin, Minneapolis, former Yale foot ball star, and Peter and Thomas Vree denburgh, of Bridgeport, Con. Anniston, Ala., March ! 8. The bod ies of J. A. Cooper, his wife, and their son, L. A. Cooper, were discovered in the Cooper home near here early today. The positions of the bodies indicated that the son had shot his parent as they lay in bed, and then had committed sui cide. A shot gun was found beside young Cooper's body. J. A. Cooper at one time was editor of the Monticello (Georgia) .Times.-- r.- Washington, March 8. The Supreme court today granted the application of the State of Virginia i for permission to sue J. P. Morgan for the return of the will of Martha Washington. , BLUE PRINTS 5 or 6 Dosos 666 will break any aasa of Chills and Fewer, COLDS & LaGRIPPE JAMES B. LYNCH :: architect :: 60-61 Trust Building: Phone 885 WILMINGTON, N. C. J.F.LEITNER ARCHITECT TT, 28, 29 Garrell Building. V J. B. McCABE Certified Public Accountant Room S15 Blurch. Nat. Bank Bldg. Phone 906 WILMINGTON, W. C. "Who steals my purse steals trash. ' ; I- " But he that filches , from me my good name Robs me " Etc. The ONLY ORIGINAL and ap pointed - "QUALITY DRUG STORE" in Wilmington IS The J. Hicks Bunting Drug Co., Front and Grace Sts. , - Belle, Mead Sweets The purest and best candies on the market. The ONLY candies which passed the censorship of the State Board , of Health of Massachusetts, and received the endorsement of Dr. Wiley. ' :;V;J. The Parker Fountain Pen We have the largest assortment iri . the city. Ely's Cream Balm. Bunting's Catarrh Cream the best ever. Mercollzed Wax. Saxolite. - Samose the Flesh Producer. -We are, the sole agents. Also Howard's Specific. Parisian Sage Sage and Sul phur. Walnutta Har Stain.. ' J, HICKS BUNTING DRUG COMPANY A'. The QUALITY; Drug Storo. a Southern A M64 Company 1 WaM Tests made onsix Iiigh grade Wall Boards show that Cerf qfn-f ee d is the strocg est and that it resists dampness and water better than any other Wall Board. It can be used in houses, offices, factories, etc Permanent and 'temporary booths can be quickly and inexpensively built with Certain tied WoS Board. It can be applied by any careful workman who follows directions. Our Certanvteej roofings are known and save made good all over tho.worM. . For sab by dealer eocrywhere, v . at reasonable price General Roofing Mfg. Company World's laroext manufacturer of Moojing and Building Paper Kev York City Bsstea Ckieaze Fftalmrti PUhaclpkia Aumata- Clerehaa Detroit St LeaU Cseiaaati KaaiasCtty MbiaeapoBs SssFf sbes Saanfar Loaaaa Bambint SHaay You'll see quite a variety of good models in suits for young men this Spring artpdiaii Varsity style? are the particular choice of most of the young men. iJ- . . ! shown in them; new lapels, new shaped backs, new col lar effects; and a number of new things in waistcoats. If you're going to dress just right, you must see these; especially 'Varsity 5 and 64. You'll be surprised at the values you'll get for $20 and up. The A. Dayid Company , The home of Hart Schaffner. & Marx clothes OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS u Oliver Plows Have Been the Standard for Three Generations More Than 2,500,000 in Actual Use. They stand first and foremost for excellence, durability, fine finish, long wearing and perfect scouring and turning qualities,,; Sold by good merchants. W E. SPRINGER & CO.' District Purcell Building. Notice to Kerosene Engine Owners We have a limited quantity of discolored 1 50 deg. Oil we offer you at a Bargain. Pay you to Ask for Prices. ( CAPE FEAR OIL CO. ., - V I WILMINGTON, R C' . - If you want a wall board that will gnre jrou the best service at the lowest cost one that keeps the rooms warmer in winter and cooler in summer ask your dealer about A 1 c At each of our big mills we make the .fol lowing products : , ' . Asphalt Roofing Slate Surfaced Sbinzlea Asphalt Felt Deadening Felt Tarrad Felts Boildinc Papers Insulating-Papars Wall Boards Plastic Roofias Ceaaaot Asphalt Cement Roof Coating Metal Paints Out -door Paints Shingle Stains Refined Coal Tr TarCoatins Boaird TP n There are some very interesting style ideas agents. . ! Wilmington, N. C. : " v.: ' S '