Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 13, 1918, edition 1 / Page 6
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THE MORNING STAR, WILMINGTON, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1918 i J'! h 1- :' . Tl O G I .All and lJ PERSONAL i RECESSIONAL, i II . . 1 1 God of our fathers, known of old y'Lord of our far-flung, battle line eheath whose awful hand we hold ) Dominion over palm and pine Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, --Lest we forget lest we forget! The tumult and the shouting dies I -The captains and the kings depart Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice, fl An humble and a contrite heart. "Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet 'Lest we forget lest we forget! Far called, our navies melt away 4: 6n dune and headland sinks the rr- fire J Its, nil mir nomt of yesterday i -. i x ' : . . n A Pvrat if is one wun .mhbvcu mu 'judge of the Nations, spare us yet, ; Lest we forget lest we iorgei: If,- drunk with sight of power, we loose --Wild tongues that have not Thee in - - awe Such boastings as the Gentiles use, .Or lesser breeds without the law Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, - Lest we forget lest we' forget! For heathen heart that puts her trust In reekfng tube and iron shard All valiant dust that builds on dust, .- And. guarding, call not Thee to j guard, For frantic boast and foolish word , Thy mercy on Thy people, Lord. KIPLING. ,1 vMIss Annie Moss of Wilson, who has been spending some time here wun friends, returned home yesterday. "Mts. L. B. Ingram left yesterday af ternoon for Greensboro, Ge., where She will visit with friends and rela tives. I - Miss Florence Westbrook. of Rocky Point, is spending some time here with her sister, Mrs. H. S. Hale, on North Third street. I Circle No. 3 of Fifth avenue Metho dist church meets this afternoon et 3:30 o'clock at the residence of Mrs. JL W. Howell, 723 South Fifth street. Miss Nellie Doolejs, registered nurse, has returned from Rockingham where ooirr-ol ixraolra rtnin? relief OllC Ovil ( O V. V V- 1 r. m nursing influenza and pneumonia pa tients. Miss Florence Jeffress, the county home demonstration agent recently ( elected, will be with her sister. Mrs. W. W. Whaley, at 16 North Fourth A Street, during the winter. i The Junior Missionary society of Trinity Methodist church will meet at the, .church this afternoon at 4 o'clock. All., children of the church are urged o be preesnt at 'the meeting. . The Woman's Bible class of Trinity Methodist church will hold its regular business and social meeting Thursday evening at 8 o'clock in the home of Mrs. W. P. McGlaughon, 105 North 15th street. Friends in the city will learn with regret that Miss Smith, sister of Mrs. M. T. Plyler, and four of Rev. Mr. Ply lers children are ill with la grippe at the family residence, 401 North Sec ond street. i-v ivfThe board of directors of the Wil mington Red Cross meets at rtoon to day in the assembly hall of the cham- ,f ber of commerce. Important business Will be transacted at the meeting and I a full attendance is urged. i. ; i. Major Milnor will deliver an address t to the members of the Red Cross mo- -.ivi'. vujifl) a l li.ou a uiuck loaay in room 402, Murchison Bank building. Major Milnor recently returned to this coun-I try from overseas and will speak of1. k f Via -nrf-hl! o nn r - 1 i r. I w A T x l r a ! ; Cfoss motor corps abroad. Miss Phelps, Chairmen of the Red Cross relief co.m inittee, will be present at the meetipg. BICKETT ISSUES CALL UPON THE MINISTERS fXiTgem Them to. Rally Their Congrresa- Iai. C.Mnv Y7a.- cr n .4 ' and Thanksg-ivingr. (Special Star Correspondence.) Raleieh. Nov. 12. anv&mnr matt - issued a call today upon all ministers of I the gospel to rally their congregations ; ,ior special prayer and thanksgiving ' Sunday all over North Carolina. The r call to the ministers and the people to ; hold these services and for general re- sumption of church following the epi ? demic has a striking note of gratitude v. and rejoicing bpth for the victory that 1 ' has attended American and allied arms i . and for the passing of the terrible epi- demic. The address of the governor to 4 . 'all ministers of the Gospel" follows: pv-h "Today our hearts leap with joy; our ; eyes shine -with gladness- arid our lips 2 are full of nraise. I. " "God in His Heaven, All's iirrV U u tir J ... ,; "For many weeks our churches have ybeen closed. On next Sunday they will ' t) opened again; threore,. I devoutly . titge that every service be one of pray ; r and thanksgiving. Let all the peo le assemble in their places of worship ' and lift up their hearts in praise of the Ixrd of Hosts for his mighty deliver- i v. ance ana in prayer mat in our day of I '.triumph he wiU keep us just and gentle Btill." r : PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS 'J. H. Rehder. hnm mles r iiwu4VlltH J .uy-treasurer oi me uniiea juutneran svnod ifi ot the south, left last night for New lorK cuy as a aeiegate to the Lutheran I V.. merger convehing there. r 'v: - : : ard on Wirt GRANDMA'S Powdered Soap just drives the dirt .out but it won't harm the finest silks or injure your hands. It's mate. Saves soap, coo, necause measure out just rhax you need. jtnHtmviH'r WuiAsWMkaS lllIHIIUIilH O ' TOS IM Wltk GfUdSM SlSSWMMMMi Powdered SO A P V ; Ask Your Grocer For li TTTT Picked Up Around Town Ceremonial In January. It has been announced that the an nual ceremonial and business session of Sepa Grotto will be held here Janu ary 31. The meeting will be featured by a big parade, participated in by the Sepa Grotto patrol and drum corps, and social functions, which will in clude a supper to be served for ladies. People of Ourrie Celebrate. . A large number of patriotic citizens of Currie and vicinity gathered at the old Moore's Creek battle grounds Monday and celebrated the return ,of peace. It was only a few minutes after the peace message was received that word was sent in every direction, by rejoicing citizens, to hasten to the battle grounds and join in the cele brating. Everybody showed a fieelfng of happiness over the news f peace, and it was well on toward night when the crowd began to leave. Receives Pythian Expression. .Capt. Thomas D. Meares, supreme master of the exchequer, Knights of Pythias, yesterday received the fol lowing expression from Fred E. Weat on, of Minneapolis, Minn., supreme keeper of records and seal: "Pythian knighthood rejoices with a world re deemed from a ruthless autocracy. God grant that lasting peace, now assured, may bind human hearts stronger and stronger in the bonds of democracy and fraternity. May your grand domain fashion new aspirations in the fulfill ment of. Pythian destiny." Funeral of Capt. Carroll. Capt. Thomas B. Carroll, known to citizens in Wilmington as Dr. Carroll, was laid to rest yesterday morning at 10 o'clock in Oakdale cemetery, the body having .arrived in the city Mon day evening irom Camp Bragg, Fay etteville, where Dr. Carroll died sud denly Sunday afternoon. The funeral service was conducted from St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral by Rev. Father .Christo pher Dennen, and was largely attend ed by sorrowing friends. Those acting as honorary pall bearers were Captain Blount and Lieutenant Ford, the mili tary escort accompanying the body from Fayetteville. The active pall bearers were U. A. Underwood, J. J. Allen, Martin O'Brien W. A. McGirt, Samuel King and Guy Love. NEWS OF THE SOLDIERS. Mrs. Meredith has received the fol lowing interesting letter from her hus band, Lieut. L. J. Meredith, who vol unteered in the medical department more than a year ago, and who sailed for France with the 30th division. Be fore entering the service he practiced dentistry in this cityt "It has been a week since I've writ ten you and haven't had a minute since. Have been up at an advanced dressing station. Hundreds of wounded were cared for and sent back to the base hospitals. German wounded were treat ed also. When I would go with a squad of stretcher bearers I would never stop a minute. Worker hard with artillery fire raining all about; I haven't had my clothes off for many days. Will tell you aft about the sights later, but hope to forget all about some of them. "After leaving Flanders, where our boys did some hard fighting, I stopped three or four times on my way to Cam brai. At the 'first place we stopped I was billeted in a picturesque chateau. My room was on the third floor and I could see for miles around. After leav ing there we arrived at Another town, whert I spent a whole ,day from. 7 in the morning until 9 that night. The remainder of the journey, except '11 miles, was made by rail. ' -We travel in a hurry "over here." I had a 'ide door Pullman,' a box car previously used for transporting horses. I sat iri the door with my feet hanging out all the way so I could get a view of the country. I visited the cathedral at Amiens while I was there, and it is a grand old place. It has been damaged by shell fire to some extent, but most of the beautiful works of art have been removed and the-rest covered with sand bags. "Our next move put us right at the front around Cambrai. On the way down I passed' many ruined towns, places the size of Wilmington, with not even a green thing in sight. This is certainly a battle ridden country here no, house is left anywhere, trees torn up and cut down, telephone 'poles are down and the ground is a plain of holes and mounds. There are holes up under every little bank, and the sol diers live in them reminds me of field rats or prairie dogs. There are a few huts around in spots that -we built and some the Germans 5eft I'm in one now. I have a fire burning in a Ger man stove and using some coal they, left. "The boys are some fighters. Whew! Fritz thought the Hindenbur. line was impregnable, but we went tlfrough it like a circular saw. We had some losses but we expected that. Hate . so. much that Hargrove Beljamy is missing! You know he was a lieutenant and married just after we were. "I am expecting to be home pretty soon. The way the enemy is weaken ing it can't last long. Bulgaria is out. Turkey must fall, and then Austria comes next. Germany is One the run all along the front. Our boys are kept busy keeping up with the advance and we medical men nearly run our tongues out keeping up to care for the wound ed. What is most horrible about the whole thing rs hat the German's car ry all the young ahd ahle-Todied men and women with thern." You 'should see how grateful and. happy the civilians left in the cities we capture are to see the Americans. I can't begin to write about all the things I see, but will tell you about them in the near future" COLrONEL HOUSE AND BRITISH" PREMIER EXCHANGE' MESSAGES London, Nov. 12 (British Wireless Service) Col. Edward M. House, the special representative 'of "the ' Ignited States government, sent the' folio wing message yesterday f ronVFaris to David Lloyd-George, the British prime .min ister, on the cessation of hostilities: "Sincere congratulations.. No one has done more to bring about this splendid victory than you.". To this the-minister replied: "Many thanks for your generous telegram. Nothing contributed more to the vic tory than the prompt response of the president to the appeal I made to him for American help in tt-ose--critical days'." . . . v i-f, v -S,v '--V V': Amsterdam. Nov. c 12. Ten .'thousand railway" y. CoV ave -'deelae'i decided",- to maintain BELGIUM DEMANDS , FULL INDEPENDENCE Will Not Submit to Status of 'Guaranteed Neutrality." A Return to Status Quo of 1914 Would Entail a Perpetual Intrusion by Germany, Declares Official 'Statement. Washington, Nov. "12; :The . Belgian legation, in an official ; statement to day, announced that Belgiurii will no longer submit to a status of "guaran teed neutrality" like that 'which ex isted 'before the war.: It aspires to "complete independence; to 'the rights common to all free peoples." A return to the status quo of 1914 will entail a perpetual inrtu-sion by Germany on, the domestic life of the nation and create a situation "intoler able to public opinion and cert-ain to cause serious difficulties." '"The note of December 24, 1917," said the stateemnt, "addressed, by the Belgian government to the pope in reply to the pontifical message ' ad vances as one of the indispensable con ditions of a just peace as far as Bel gium is concerned. Political, econom ic and military Independence without condition or restriction: "These words are explicit. The Bel gian government is opposed to the re establishment, of ' obligatory, perma nent neutralization which would fet ter its freedom of action without in suring peace to the nation. It aspires to complete independence; to the rights common to all free peoples. "Belgium must be allowed freedom to determine her own destiny; she must be free to adopt of her own voli tion a policy which shall keep her out side of the greet international compe titions and permit her, if some new danger should threaten to take any necessary measures to defeat the hos tile designs directed against her." LANDOWNERS TAKE SETTLEMENT PLANS (Continued from Page One.) the unsurpassed advantages of the southern country for such purposes, and the organization above mentioned propose to do whatever is essential to co-operate with others in the south for the advancement of the entire southern country, and, "Whereas, we recognize that it is only by effective , organization and combined effort that full success can be attained, and acting upon sugges tions made by representatives of the interior department who have outlin ed the plans mentioned, that a means of collective action should beevolved by those who wish to co-operate, and, "Whereas, the existence of the aforementioned associations, with a membership of 3.000, and representing over 25,000,000 acres of land, consti tute practically all of the effective large .organizations of land owners in the southern country, has been largely due to tlfe years of untiring work of the Southern Settlement and Ievelop ment Organization of Baltimore, in its- broad -policy for the development of the entire southern country; "Be it therefore resolved: That the aforesaid land associations shall take over the Southern Settlement and De velopment Organization. under the suggestions of the officers of that or ganization, as a clearing house and medium through which to givo col lective expression to the desires of the ! land owners of the south, to tho end that all sections of the southern coun try may be benefitted by the move ment to be put in force by the secre tary of the interior, arid, "Be it further resolved:. That we extend to the visiting delegates from the states of Virginia, South Carolina, Louisiana, Texas and Arkansas, and those who have attended this congress, an invitation to co-operate with us and act with us as individuals until state organizations shall have been effected in their respective states, and we further invite such associations when organized or at present existing ti' accept membership in the Southern Settlement and Development Organiza tion on the same basis and with the same voice in its management that we may have, "Resolved,i That copies of these reso lutions be forwarded to the governors of the southern states and other in Governor Bickett sfoke in p-art as fallows: "There is a wde spread belief that a man never accomplishes much in a new field' of endeavor until his con victions deepen into an obsession, and men say he is crazy on the subject. Certain it is that in the prow of ev ery canoe that pushes its nose into untried waters sits a fanatic. In a way such a fanatic is responsible for the glorious finish of the world war. For just the other day I saw a car toon representing the kaiser standing with clinched fist before a statute of Christopher Columbus and hissing through his "teeth: 'Yes, durn you. if you hadn't turned fool and discovered America, I'd a won this war.' "Up. in North Carolina it is known from Cepe Hatteras to the Smolcy Mountains that I live under the despot ism of a conviction that the only way to build up' a wholesome and stable civilization is to afford every citizen a decent chance to sleep under.his own roof and till his own soil. r ? "The most fatal monopoly that could grip this country would be a monopo ly of the land, for there can be !jio government ' of the many while the lands are in the hands of the few. All history shows that the fruits of such a monopoly are, first, autocracy with its oppressions and cruelties, , and then mobocracy with its carnival of destruction. "For a half century Jas. J. Hill was the most picturesque figure of , the northwest. In' him' Were blended: the dreamer and the doer, the prophet'and the man' of affairs A fe"w 'years be fore, his death he said: ' '"Land withbut population is a wild erness, ' population- without land, is; a mob.' Russia and ' Mexico are tragic examples of the truth of Hill's epi gram. The men who have made Mexi co -intolerable and" who hav'e; turned crimson all the snows - of Russia are landless -men.- There 4 will neveV.be an orderly, stable government in' these sorely afflicted countries until, the men who cultivate the . land' are 'given a fai rchance to own it. "At all times it is -wise and profitable to encourage the largest nlumber of citizens to become home - owners, Jiut at the J present time ' such i a -policy , Js the one sure guaranty of our .. national safety and. peace. ". When' the Germans I started ..their -great 1 ,- offensive . - last To fully apnreciate the delicious -fla-.. or vor JBlue Kiboon ..vHii''At . use it in J.'ja.vuseiiii'in.. I March Lloyd George . said: 'The race is between Hindenburg and Wilson.' Today the ends of the earth know, and knowing rejoice, that Woodrow Wil son won that great Olympic. But peace brings with it the very gravest prob lems and solutions of these will be offered &s plentiful and as pestiferous as the frogs that came up on the land of Egypt. The sane reformer, the Utoptan dreamer, the red handed revo lutionist wili each bid high for the ' allegiance of a people intoxicated with a new birth of freedom. Our surest bulwark against the excesses of bol shevism and an its kindred insanities is. the citizen standing in the doorway of his own home. "Hence every consideration of safe ty and progress urges us to take un usual 'Steps to multiply these defend ers of our land from foes without and from fanaticism within. The secre tary of the interior sees Iclearly the obligations and the opportunities of the hour, and is taxing all his energies to devise plans for giving to every returning soldier something more than a fair chance to acquire a.- vine and fig tree of his own. Both economically and sociologically the plans are sound. They are bottomed on the eternal verities and the fruitage will be rich and full after many years. "Mr. Secretary, North Carolina pledges to you lively support and loving sympathy in the prosecution of this noble work. You have the plans, the South Atlantic states have the lands. From Virginia to Florida mil lions of acres, now a wilderness, are waiting to become a paradise at your t,ouc?h. It is my judgment that in the state of North Carolina alone can be found desirable homesteads for at least half the returning soldiers who will feel inclined to take advantage of the opportunity the government af fords. And these are no barren wastes but fertile lands capable of producing everything for the comfort of man and beast. A few years ago a newspaper in the tidewater section of Virginia published that a truck farmer in that section had gathered three pecks of potatoes out of a single hill. A north Carolina, paper rejoined that on the North Carolina side of the line w(e grew potatoes so large that it took three hills to hold a single potato. "Some time ago I was down in Cur rituck, the extreme northeastern coun ty -of the state, and I said to one of the natives, 'What do you people raise down here?' He replied, 'ducks and democrats, hell and sweet potatoes.' Mr. Secretary, I commend to your con sideration a soil that contributes to the world four of its greatest staples. "And we not only have the soil, but the climate as well. The growing sea sons are so long that all through the coastal plain four money crops may be made in a single year, and cattle can be grazed without housing the I year round. Recently the state of i North Carolina has had a proposition to lease some of its swamp lands to cattle growers of Texas who are think ing of shipping thousands of cattle to our fine natural "pastures for the win ter. "In hundreds of cases tenant farm ers pay all their expenses, including rents, out of the proceeds of vege tables and peanuts, and have their to bacco, cotton and corn left as a net profit. On the MacRae colonies near Wilmington whole families are today living and prospering on ten acres of land. Some years ago a little book was published with the title. 'Is Ten Acres Enough?' That question has been definitely answered in the affirma tive by the Wilmington farm settle ments. "We not only have a fertile soil and a salubrious climate on arid in which we can produce anything from three pecks of potatoes to the hill to a presi dent of the United States, but in the language of the eunuch to Philip,' Be h6ld here is water." Candor forces the confession that there is too much wa ter. A farmer, once praying for the Qn blessings of the harvest, said, Lord, let there be a great harvest; let J there be barrels of wheat and barrels j of corn, and barrels of pork and bar- j rels of pepper Oh hell, that's too i much pepper.' I "We have too much water, but it is entirely feasible to eliminate this ob- ! jection at reasonable expense. . The ! Wilkinson development of seventeen 1 thousand acres of .swamp lands in ) Beaufort county is a magnificent dem onstration of the possibilities of these lands. The lands were thoroughly drained and sold to settlers for ?20 per acre, and today $100 per acre is the prevailing price. Mark Potter, president of the C. & O. railroad is developing fifty thousand acres that promise to duplicate the Wilkinson success. "I do not know about the arid lands of the west -that require irrigation, but I am satisfied that they would not ap peal to the soldiers from the Atlantic seaboard states. If these soldiers shall desire to take advantage of the plans proposed I am sure they would prefer to settle where they already know the conditions under which they would have to live. "Mr. Secretary and Gentlemen, I in vite you all to come to Carolina, once the Rip Van Winkle of the union, but now the land of 'Dreams Come True.' Council Takes Over Fortress. Amsterdam, Nov. 12. The fortress of Posen is in the hands of the work ers and soldiers and the military au thorities have placed themselves at the disposal of the council. e FUR NECK PIECES A shipment of very hand some fur neck pieces arriv ed yesterday and are on sale - Better see moriiing', for out BR QSfifS Give Eissfential Gifts For Christmas. ? ;; . 1 '...' .:. - . - . ... .; few jfrrivals of Wixthmor Waists lu the Last lay of - . . . Our Sale of $6.50 to $8.50 Bon March Trimmed Millinery Waists tfiat Would Represent Good Values at $1.50 Are Still Priced Here at $lS)0. All lines of reputable Blouses that formerly sold at $1.00, with one notable exception, have long since, because of advancing material and labor costs, advance their prices to $1.50. That one exception is the Wirthmor. Back of the Wirthmor name stands a high ideal of Blouse making, , that insists on giving to the customer the very ultimate in genuine value. It is that icfeal, that never failing policy that still enables you to buy these wonderful Blouses at $1.00, when the materials and labor entering into their construction have ad vanced so exorbitantly as to warrant a price of fully $1.50. When the makers' present stock of materials is exhausted, an advance in the price of these splendid Waists will be inevitable. Until that time arrives the price will remain at $1.00, permitting our patrons to share in the large savings that come as a result of the economies of the Wirthmor Plan. fabric Jandbags J"he Vogue Velvet is employed in many of the new bags which vary in size and shade. Many beaded styles are also favored by the women of fashion. Here you'll find excellent as sortments of the newest style from which selections will be a genuine pleasure. Although should your fancy be a leather bag, you will find our stock replete in every detail, and are priced at $1.50 up to $8.50, beautifully lined and equipped with necessities found in. high-grade Hand Bags. DEMOBILIZATION IS NOW BEING STUDIED (Continued Vrom Page One), struction and manufacturing, held up and restricted because of war work, and that thousands of skilled labor ers soon will be needed in all parts of the country for this work. Secretary Baker said today that every phase of demobilization of the army is being carefully studied by war department agencies, but as yet no plans have been finally formulated. The question of the number of American troops to be retained in France or elsewhere in Europe is be ing studied on that side, Mr. Baker said, while the general staffis pre paring recommendations as to the number to be kept under arms in this country. The problem in Europe re- I mains one of joint operations with The Sunrise of. Comes with the monyng cup of Maxwell House COFFEE It starts the day right Served by best hotels. Sold by best grocers. CHEEK-NEAL COFFEE CO. flashville, Houston, Jacksonville, Richmond 3C 2 them" this they wilK go V ;.S V,; .i 5. ' 3- 'Wrm 1 the allied nations in after the war guarding and other work to be done by the military forces and no conclus ions on this point can yet be made. Mr. Baker said several factors will govern the order .in which the men will be released from the army. It is obvious, he said, that as a matter of justice men who had been longest in the service should be released first but the industrial situation arid the special, need for men of a certain call- ing probably will modify the principle of making length of service a guider to order of muster out. ST. JOHN'S LODGE NO. 1. A. P. & A. M. Emergent commu nication this (Wed nesday) evening at 7:45 o'clock for the purpose of conferring the degree of J . a I ah in em oera ana visiting master Ma sons are cordially invited to meet with us. By order of the Master. A. S. HOLDEN, Secretary. ft Ask Those IOBEUT R. BELLAMY f jj NOTICE! Effective Tuesday, November 12th, our present daily city delivery ser vice will be curtailed for the winter, as follows: RETAIL WAGONS will make one delivery north of Market street and east of Tenth street on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. South of Mar ket street and west of Tenth street on Tuesday, Thursday and Satur day. , Service to stores and offices in business districts will be maintained daily, except Sunday, as far as possible. , WHOLESALE WAGONS will serve north of Market street on Tues day, Thursday and Saturday. South of Market on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Special service will be rendered customers handling perishables in bulk, such as fish, meat, etc., upon reasonable notice of requirements. There will "be no increase in prices for the present, and we hope not at all. This depends -upon the success of our efforts to reduce exces sive delivery service ''and cost. The present minimum wholesale deiiv ery will, however, be increased from 1,500 pounds to 2,100 popunds. That is, customers must buy .2,100 or more pounds for one delivery in ord. r to get the benefit of ttie wholesale price. These' changes, are made in order to conserve man power, mule feed, gasoline and wear and tear, in accord with the wishes of the War in dustries BdaTd.' The co-operation of the public is earnestly requested. Please" try to help us by having your ice box ready when wagors v-i. have proper change or ticket ready "for quantity wanted, and see thru proper weights are delivered. Generally speaking, our drivers are od reliable men but it is not now possible to carry experienced ice men on wagon at all times. Worthy complaints are welcomed. They help us to maintain good service. , -' i PLATE ICE .COMPANY - Phone 695 and 696. Ho. 9 Orange Street. Sailor Middy Smblems Have arrived. All best colors in sets at 1.65 and $2.15. Also separate pieces 15c to $1.50 START RIGHT WITH NOVEMBER Correct price Correct Goods FRANK M. ROSS. i j t Groceries For Less HALL & DURHAM. IXC. Phones 7 and 8. 205 Market St. .For "Her" Birthday or ', Wedding Anniversary v SAY IT with Flowers Don't forget Mrs. Louisa P. Fowler, Fifth Avenue Florist Phone 1125 Who Use It 9 I The showing of models for immediate and winter wear is calculated to be the most artistic of any yet exhibited. Prices Most Moderate. Taylor-: Ladies' Hatter your aesserwv f-1 : i; r.auwayf
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1918, edition 1
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