' ' ' THE M STAR, WILMINGTON, N. C. . SUNDAY, JUN PORTION OF THE HANBY ESTATE ay Mine 9 Rain or Shine Frid. P. ML at Sate Takes Place at Greenfield Lake, and Free Special Train of Street Cars Leaves Front and Promptly at 2:30, Get Round Trip Tickets at Our Of fice Free. Princess You have seen the statement that the capacity of the Concrete Yard will be increased. You have seen and heard the Government representatives come to this town and plead with the people to build houses; are you going to respond to your patriotic duty, and to your opportunity to make money? If these houses are built and they must and will be built, you must have the lots on which to put them. Buy one df these lots if the loca cation appeals to you, but regardless of whether you buy at this sale or elsewhere, for heaven s sake, buy a lot somewhere and build a house. We have instructions and authority signed, sealed and delivered to sell these lots regardless of price, and we are going to do it, on easy terms. Those attending the sale will be given souvenirs, but the most important thing is to make your arrangements to buy some property. These lots front the Carolina Beach Boulevard and are highly desirable. nr tut jc8 . UNITED REALTY COMPANY O. T. WALLACE, General Manager V UNCLE SI'S FULL LARDER 1 Br ARTHUR MTARLASE. "Work?" said the Vermont farmer as he hungrily chewed on an oat straw in front of his first hive of bees; "Work? Say, you can see they don't even want to stop at night. Nor I betcheh they wouldn't if they could see in the dark. An that's jest where it is. Gosh blame It when they're wiilin" an' we're willin', so longijt say. ' as they do feel that way about it, wouldn't you think that old Burbank or somebody could find a way to help them out? An' I've got the Idee that mebbe a lot could be done by crossin' them with lightnin' bugs." If you are a producer of food, the word is out, from the department of agriculture and the food - administra tion both to cross yourself with a lightning bug for the duration of the war. We can't possibly produce too much food. Our own need has been doubled by ihe need of the allies and trebled if we begin to count neutrals.. Mil lions of former food producers are now In army camp or war work. And the loss by submarine has been great. "With the best we can do ,the food de mand will still stretch si wider moutjl than the food supply. "Losh, mom," said the old Dundee trawler captain, "there couldna be too much fush!" And with us there can't be "too jnuch fush" of every sort till the kaiser is sitting on some nice wet cold rock off St. Helena trying- to catch his own. : Results on the Way. For months Uncle Sam has been quietly at work at his part of the job. He has been "stimulating an' increas ed production" and in every field there is. In many he can already show re sults. In others he can see them com ing. In one he can be almost certain that the increase will be veritably un exampled. What' firtd Is it? That must come later. But you can make your guess now and learn how far, even after you've been told you can be wronj. ' . . Naturally, because this is America, we think first of wheat. And the gov ernment has surely done much' there. First it fixed a price per bushel throughout tb country an average of almost exactly $2, where the average for the three previous years had been less than 87 cents a price at which every farmer with real wheat land ought to be able to make a profit. A few have kicked. But more, from pure patriotism, have planted wheat even while- knowing tthey were going to make a loss. Next, with the aid of every state agricultural - college and experimental farm, the department of agriculture gave itself to the business of distributing ample quantities - of the best seed wheat. Incidentally and at the same time it dealt with the seed wheat hoarder and profiteer. The problem of harvest labor is still to be met. But it la hoped to have 'a labor army, and one that will move with the ripening graidn all the way. from Kan sas to the Canadian northwest. For local reinforcements, every possible drafted man will be spared from camp, Every threshing gang In the country l being organized and there are 75,- 000 of them while as general assist ants and expert advisers all round, there will" be some 250,000 boys. In iact, most or them will be Boy Scouts, and, as is well known, all Boy Scouts were crossed with lightning bugs at the start. There should be no lack of wheat. But it is not in wheat that that unexampled increase is going to come. Farmer Gets Better Price. Where, up to a year ago, the farmer was receiving 66 1-2 cents for corn, he is now averaging $1.09; for oats he averages 78 2-3 cents where, for the three p revious crops, he i,ot 40 1-2; and for barley nearly $1.32 where he got a little over 64. The government did not make those prices. They were made by the demand for feed stuffs. But they are a stimulation which means that every available acre will be planted with corn and oats and,, barley. There will Joe a smaller potato acreage than there was last year .which was a record planting. But the food administration has done Its stimulating. First by creating a steadily growing demand for potato flour as a wheat; flour substitute and next by planning this year to have cars enough to move the crop to market before that is made impossible by the cold of winter. "There ain't the acreage," says one big potato man, "but we're leavin' it to the Lord. If you've been followin the weather you'll know that' so far He's been with us strong. An' you cart write It down that He's still -the high-up Food Controller." The Lord With TJs. Which offers the best of openings to tell how strong the Lord was with his assistant food controllers when, a fe wmonths ago, in a famous anti- pullet killing order they took tneir first step toward increasing the future supply of eggs. The big poultry hous es of Chicago and New York said that it was a fool and a hara-kari order, and no food administration on earth could stand on it If for three months you forbade the Ifjirmer to kill his pullets simply because during thM time they might lay a few much need ed eggs, by the end of those three months he would be so thoroughly mad that he'd simply clean out his poultry yard and have done for all time to come with eggs and pUllets'both, Like wise .there would be an avalanche of dressed poultry that no cold storage accommodations could take care : of and that not all America could eat. WaII. what really happened was this: Whe nthe Lord had heard about that order, ' almost immediately the weather began to grow warmer. Spring commenced in February. The hens started to lay at once and worked in a way to shame even lightning bugs. They began to brood much earlier than usual. And the result was that not only was the egg supply increased over that of the year before by some 24,900,000 dozen, but every second hen, yound and old, was walking the barn yard with the sort" of fluffy-yellow little following that is the best guar antee of abundant eggs and poultry for the year to come. , "Eating Out of Tin Cans.? - ,Not long-ago on a horse transport one humble observer returned from embattled Europeu ;-: And "Boys," he reported, "there's a hundred billion people over there, ' all hobo'in' it on the roads an' eating out o' tin cans." He exaggerated the number of Eu rope's hobos, military and otherwise. But he was right about the tin cans. Everybody is eating out of them from the babies with their condensed milk to the soldiers with their beans. As our town dumps bear witness, so, very largely are we. In winter almost all our tomatoes and corn, beans and peas come to us in the can. The can ner represents one more food staple. And how long sighted as well as thor ough has been the food stimulator's work may be shown by just one item in that galley. The food administra tion's first step in the case of canned goods was to get the tin plate makers together and make certain that there would be no shortage of the cans themselves; a high probability, as has been shown in 20 other metal indus tries. Then the "F. A." told the can ners to put In their orders early. It had already been guaranteeing prices to the grower of tomatoes and peas and beans. And the result in the can ning field, as forecast by the size of the can orders, will, with the favor of good .weather ,be another unparalleled output. Only It isn't in canned goods, or in poultry or eggs, that the great big in crease of food is going to be. The Little Pig That Stays at Home. When your German general thinks of American industries, he doesn't think of bees and lightning bugs. He has infuriate mental pictures of hogs. And since German militarism insisted upon that brotherly, word, the food administration began some time ago to encourage and stimulate the' hog. It virtually guaranteed the grower of hogs a minimum price, "$15.50 per hundredweight for the average drove in the market at Chicago." And the rest --of that story is a short one. Thoughthe exact figures are lacking, all reports agree that whether it be a matter of the little pig that went to market, or the little pig that stayed at home,1 never were there so many little pigs, and big ones, In the coun try, before. The raising of cattle and sheep re quired no stimulation from the gov ernment. The submarine did that. Be fore the war this country exported to Europe practically no beef and mut ton whatever. All came from the Ar gentine and New Zealand and Austra lia. But as soon as ships began to lack for the long hauls that beef and mutton had to come from us. And rancherc and sheep growers and live stock men set to work to answer the call. With the result that while meat and meat products are how going to Europe at the rate approximately of 20,000 pounds a minute there are also, most probably, more sheep and cattle in the country than ever before. In fact one side Indication is furnished by, the dairy . industry. In the last year milk cows have increased by afcout 390,000. The number of milk condenseries in "Wisconsin alone has increased from 12 tu 50. And where, in March. 1917, there were -15,550,000 pounds of cheese In storage, now there are 41,500,000. There will be a glut, indeed, of both milk and cheese till we can build the tonnage, that can move it. The Consumer' Interest. Not that the consumer Is being for gotten. At the present moment there is a drive on. ,in cheese. By which this is meant.; From every chief cen ter of observation the food adminis tration's observers have sent In fig ures to" show what his cheese has been costing 'the wholesaler or middleman. He was long ago given to know what the government held to be a "reason able profit." And if he is charging the retailer too much, or if the re tailer ia charging you too much, soon both will hear of it from Washington. The word will go out, "Play fair, or we'll close you up." Precisely the same notive has been served upon the canner and the packer. And the gov ernment has the figures on which to say what that "reasonable profit" shall be. For the most part it has already fixed it. The food administration, guarantees that "next fall eggs will reach the public on a fair price basis." To the millers its last word, in the Bulletin for May 10, was "Corn meal and oat meal should be selling now at least 20 per cent below the price of wheat flour and corn flour and barley flour should be selling at least 10 per cent below. The maintenance of high er price levels will require justifica tion to the state and local administra tors." "Justification," as the middle man has already learned ,can be some thing very unpleasant. And if the re tailer, for his part, tries to keep the price up, "wholesalers will-be instruct ed to cease dealing with him." In other words once more the blacklist will be at work. But you will have a chance to watch that for yourself. The urst thing was to produce the food. When that has been done, in general, prices will come down of their own weight. And for the present that must be left to an other story. "Push." Furthermore, there is still a ques tion to be answered and a mystery to be solved. What of that food product that was and is to increase so un exampledly? By now, in fact, since it wasn't wheat or corn, poultry, eggs, or canned goods; since it wasn't even meat and meat products and it was n't you will probably be ready to wear that there ain't no such animile. But there is. It was as it were held under your nose at the very beginning. There is still ."fush." And if there can't be "too much fush," by every present indication Uncle Sam with an army, or a navy, of trusty fishermen, is at least going to get very close to the limit. ' Fish should increase most of all be cause there is the greatest margin for increase in two ways. First, with fields of the sea that are measureless and inexhaustible,- no great maritime country has fewer fishermen per cap ita. And, second, we eat less fish than any other seaboard people. The -Canadian eats his; 29 pounds ,a year the Englishman his 56, the Dane and the Dutchman quantities that the statis ticians have felt it decenter to cbnT ceal from us; but we scarcely con sume a scant 16. And in the case of fish, the fbod administration has set itself to stimulate-andv 'mightily production and consumption both.: It is even allowing the Teuton : to help. In the rice ditches and "mead ows" of the south, German carp are being Introduced, with Instructions to increase and multiply as if for the Vaterland. And in the salmon fisher ies of Alaska Germans and Austrlans are still at work in numbers. Under any strict interpretation of the alien enemy laws none- of them should be within shooting distance of the shore. But from Alaska the swimming Is bad, even across the Pacific. ; The Alaska food administrator,;, one Gun nison by . name, is a grim man who holds not merely that there can't be "too much fush," but that those Teu tons in his demesne have found one of those few places where that , far famed kultur of their land can profit ably be given the very fullest scope; that the more slaughter they commit in the salmon runs and the more atro cities in the cleaning sheds, the bet ter for all concerned; and that so long as he, Gunnison, is in charge, they will get in trouble only if they stop. No More Closed Seasons. But these things are incidentals. In the matter of fish, the food adminis tration has virtually said, "With one hand we'll create the demand, the kind of demand that can be created by putting at least some sort of good eating fish on sale at not more than 10 cents a pound in every fish store within refrigerating t distance. It be lieves it can do it .because practically every fish wholesaler or middleman is getting fish, of some good sort, at from 4 to 6 cents, right now. The rest, is simply a matter of ice and quantity transportation. And the government is arranging to look after that. On the other hand, to create the supply it has done this: At a single sweep it has removed every restriction from salt water fishing that is not abso lutely essential. Not so much as a closed season is left. And it has'said to the fisherman, "You can now fish for a quantity market. Go ahead as if you were producing wheat or eggs or pork. We'll penalize you only if you let anything that is marketable go to waste." There is going to be fish in quanti ties unheard of. The weavers of nets and the builders of trawlers are now working double shifts to get them ready. -Will there be "too much fush?" Not if we do our duty, as the most adaptable nation in the world, and eat them. Meanwhile, whether the thing pro duced -the fish or corn or meat, if you are a producer, the word is still to you. And if at times you should feel like slacking up simply because the hour is late and it would seem to be too dark to work, consider the need, remember the little lightning bug, and keep right on. MICHIGAN IS NOW DRY. And the Bar Rooms Keep Right On Selling "Nigh Stuff. Detroit, Mich., June 15. Cocktail less cabarets, wineless wine rooms, and be'er-less bars are making a de termined play for existence in dry Michigan. k When the amendment to the state constitution prohibiting the sale, im portation or possession of wines, beers or distilled liquors Became effective May 1 it failed to close all the saloons. In Detroit especially the bars continue In business in a majority of cases, the only change .being the substitution of "near" beers and the elimination of drinks prohibited by the amendment. Similar conditions prevail in other cit ies of the state, in the "copper coun try" on Lake Superior. In some cases wine room proprietors have taken advantage of the new re gime to bid for prosperity along tem perance iines. Jazz bands have been retained in some cases have even been augmented. The same taMes the same waiters; the same bars the same bartenders; everything is the same, apparently, excepting the bev erages. - Proprietors in most cases are opti mistic concerning the future. Many believe that with the eliminat'on of alcoholic drinks there will pass a ma jor percentage of the drawbacks of their business. These changes, they hope, will not interfere to any appre ciable degree with their patronage. Some cabaret owners hope to profit by catering to a restaurant trads a more or less perfunctory adjunct of the cabaret of pre-May days. By giv ing additional attention to the cuisine they believe that after all ,the law that threatened to drive them from business may have the more salutary effect of putting their places on a mors stable basis. - Cabarets that before May 1 were classed as "undesirable" are also tak ing a new interest in life and are re sounding with jazz music for" music for dancing arid giving restaurant and soft drink services with the danger .of official interference lessened by the elimination of alcohol. MILITARY POLICE ARE NOT POPLAR OVERSEAS (Continued From Page One.) armbana and the red C. on his arm. Say," said the M. P., "are you officer?" "No," replied the correspondent. : "Then why did you return my ; sa lute?" ' ; "Why did you salute me?" asked the corresponaent. In turn. s 1 "Because I thought you were an of ficer," said the M. P. "I returned it because I thought you were a soldier," remarked the corre spondent. ; '.-..v.; The military police organizations that have arrived recently appear to be made up of an entirely different class oT men. They are courteous, carry out their orders to the letter, do not meddle in things that do not con cern them and for the most part dis play excellent military qualities. It Is said, and undoubtedly with considera ble truth, that the discipline and mor ale of a military organization can . determined by the way Its men salute. Some of these new military police of ours are among the snappiest saluters in France; and that is saying a great deal. . .'. ', Beauty, may be only, skin deep, but that's deep enough if 'a girl has beauty, i COLORADO'S SERVICE TO SELECTED MEN (Continued From Page One.) Light lunches also may be had-for a nominal price. State activities include: Assistance to farmers through pub lic utilities commission to market the crops when transportation., facilities were limited and congested . . Labo. exchanges to meet demands of farmers. " Farmers Induced to greatly enlarge acreage and own their own storage facilities.- Colorado's crop last year was the largest in its history and promises greater this year. Censorship over all solicitation of funds to protect public. '- Census obtained of all women and men with experience in nursing to be ready for federal call. Third regiment of national guard organized to be ready for government call. "" Organization of a state constabu lary force to guard the state and act as peace officers. It may be -said that since the war started not a single dol lar's worth of Colorado property has been destroyed through act of an en emy," and not one soldier has .been., asked by the state to guard its prop erty. This is the only state with this record, it is said here.; Famous In a Day For Her Beautiful Complexion, V. Oatmeal Combination Does It A Free 1 Prescription Does Its Work Overnight You Can Prepare It At Your Home. Now York: It is my own discovery and It takes just one night to get such marvelous' results, says Mae Edna Wilder, when her friends ask her about her wonderful complexion and the im proved appearance of her hands and arms. You can do the same thing if you follow my advice she says: I feel it my duty to tell every girl and wom an what this wonderful prescription did for me. Just think of it. All this change In a single night. I never tire of telling others what brought about such remarkable results. Here is the identical prescription that removed every defect from 'my face, neck, hands and arms. UntU you try it you can form no idea of the marvelous change it will make in Just one application. The prescription which you can prepare at your own home Is as follows: Go to any grocery and get ten cents worth of ordinary oatmeal, and from any drug store a bottle of derwlllo. Pre part the oatmeal as directed in every package of derwillo and apply night and morning. The first application will astonish you. It makes the skin appear transparent, smooth and velvety. I es pecially recommend it for freckles, tan, sun spots, coarse pores, rough skin, ruddiness, wrinkles, and, in fact, every blemish the face,, hands and arms are heir to. If your neck or chest is dis colored from exposure, apply this com bination there and the objectionable defect will disappear as If by magic. It is absolutely harmless and will not prdduce or stimulate a growth of hair. No matter how rough and ungainly the hands and arms, or what abuses: they have had through hard work and expo sure to sun ' and wind, this oatmeal derwillo combination will work a won derful transformation In 12 hours at the most. Thousands who have usednt have had the same results I have had, Note: To get the best effect be sure to follow the complete directions, con tained in every package of derwillo. You have only to get derwillo and oat meal. You need nothing else and it i so simple that anyone can use it; an Is so inexpensive that any girl or wom an can afford It. The manufacturer; and druggists guarantee that there will be a noticeable improvement af ter the first application or they will re fund the money. It is sold in this clt; under a money refund guarantee by al department stores and druggists. In cluding R. R. Bellamy and Ahrens Ere . i