Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Nov. 29, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 - TWO. ua'v -- NOVEMBER 29, ms. WHY PRESIDENT WILSON IS GOING TO PLAt. inuuivM' iSMM DEFEATS DAVIDSON 7 TO 0 I V- - : ' - . : "While the Red Cross ' m this way I ! vaut- Tnt Back From Europe Declares Bpent millions of ddiiara (aM they did ! Baltimore NeWSpaPr . Editor JUSt CaCK rrum 6omef this in France, too) in a . way Oailimop A bol AIHaa is Strained Wll- I not guessed by the people back home Relations Among me ocw- - son Needed in worm crisis the mother r wifeltrihe ;ifcaiftnsof -receiyed aJsova KjSSfflf ' thaf itwas given by tfce:m4r,lcan Red , Cross because her st n 'dr 'husband was at the front fighting valiantly for . -ti nanirsii tn write tms fact to the son or husband Sixths front. i. . llnn nf'AlMl9.r 'lATIA'Uiey , . ' , somef tTis in France, too) in a wW.. 1- r0m not guestseu uj rr , J" ,i,, the statement is flatly made here that way so strengthened the morale of the tr tiiat ili prevented Italy - - i Italian army that it prevented Italy f onmnUtn insurance . i.-u j nrir frm the var. . war makes war of any kind I as for the Portuguese,. they are the af an SiS?ienM; people utterly I iimlt. in April, ""gSl fJr,noBsible This is what they want ;.wera holding a section of the front 5 IVtL U all . they want and their Sllne wlth the British. When .theboche lin'towa?" uss Entirely sincere Jaunche Ms attack the tiw Bortu- j riv . sruese division mrw . - and friendly. . wneiiah 1 f!; !.. it. for the rear, leaving a "Not bo, tne jrteuu. -- throueh Statci fcoliege. ah. Intensely Interesting article in (yesterday's Baltimore. Sun, Frank R. Sent, managing editor of The Sun. and 1 The Evening Sun. just back from En rone! gives a startling picture of re- ,. . ,.;Q with. the unuea v, t5Vt,M. ' and Engnsn anx streaked It tor tne rear, ". - lations oi - Paris seethes I "X "u' Wfco smart under the ob- " in th line of, 4.000 yards, "row t states, ana aetiw" l i tv.t 1noa America sat into which the boche pourea ljxe a wu i with international jealousies ahd sus- viousf ct tta has held all hJch nearly' gave him the .Chan- , picions. and between us and our noble j thw w jame &n "iv 1 i 'P ? l .... , tension and a strain I t car haye been f 0llow ng in - all directions and the only ayin Hinco daneer nas .v,a, t,1ftV couia De koto ws" Xsed the European statesmen chafe ; 'aTn at all was by the British Wfjuj Sder thia situation and some of those lns to feed them except in one plac who have been big figures during the ; Tnls ended their .experience as flrst I see thebmsel?ef sinking into politi- line trt,ops, and iJntjAn they h ve ell obscurity unless as an outcome of been the joke of aU tlie armies in th ' neace conference they can say, , Fran-ce. L T y.avtt this for France.' or 'we got In what' is written J&ow Itaw this for England or 'we got th s lor , tried to give a glimpse- oi Italy The strength of our position is national political current. in Paris at fltr.tther Wilson nor House, nor , this time. It is the gossip of the poli- Georgla Tech -Blanks Anburn 41 to 0 In the Annual Thanksgiving Grid iron Struggle Results o Other Games. OF HON DEEDTULU V One English Prisoner Was Seen Buried Alive. i i that, does not appear on top, but that f ' . i. , i Tinne the less." I ' This situation, he declares, is why President Wilson is going to Europe. " th- uzht of the statement made, ft dis tne mSe easily understandable why the president has determined to go -lo Paris himself, on his precedent emashing" and sensational trip. Mr Kent declares that the censor ' ship 'in Paris and London the past few weeks has been iron clad - Noth ing could be cabled to America save what appeared in French and English papers. An article describ what he declares as wu "" like-the one he wrote for yesterday's Stfn," could not have been sent to mail r by cable. He brought it in his head and wrotfr it after he landed m ew York Tuesday. . J However, he has no doubt of the , ul ' timately satisfactory outcome a peace that will tend towara iuc the possibilities of future wars. His etory in part follows V- "Now, it is praewwi"j 1 the end the peace that a lasting peace based on right and justice and satis- j factory to ourselves and the nations as- j sociated with us will be "tabfished I The enlightened elf-interest of all of us assures this, nd it is clear that the t future of the world depends upon it. There will be no senseless imperilling ,,o v.nr.niness through the apUtting of the nations that won the war. Things will not go that far. Wis dom arM right thinking will prevail, and it can be counted upon that the countries that saved civilization from the menace just ended will stand tor gether to keep it aie m rVv.." But all that does not alter the fact that . for -weeks past under, the sufcface Paris has been simply 'seething with inter,, national jealousies, - friction and feel ing, and that between us and our noble allies aF this time there is a tension and a-etrain that does not appear on the top, but that is very real, none the less. - . ' "Fair words flow in the open, hut when one goes inside quite an amaz ing situation is revealed and it does not augur a lack of sanity or balance to knowledge it. It is this situation -that led an S O S Call for the president from Americans in Paris weeks ago. I know o ftwo strongly worded cables i i-1 .,i,v, thuro nrfiriner the vi- i oy.Aanitv nf his Dresence and laying . DOluro mm "" . . "The truth is, ana -everypoay "1S y-il rinllrr. B fl.. NOV. -28. Glemson defeated Davidson College here in the Thanksgiving gridiron struggle. The score was to v. n. -R& State College. West Raleigh Nov. 28. In a rather loose football game here today Wake ..... ttH rt Forest defeated State College r.AnrtHn iwh Blanks Auburn, Atiota Nov. 28. Georgia Tech ploughed through a, muddy field be re ;;t "neither Wilson nor House, nor thYs time. It is the gossip of the pon-, ploughed through a,muaay fl n nor any other l?ZL that foreshadows the peace , today t0 a 41 to 0 victory over the Tcln desires to say. -We got this conIerence, perhaps the most impor-, xlabama Polytechnic Jnst tute u m lSriCa - America wants nothing gathering of the kind in the his- burn in their annual Thanksgiving day for America. America w . tant gat ner b dQeg not repre- I football srame. Tech took an early for herseii. .r-''r"ft7rnno Vrrt. .Mia.- Nor will ; hl,t 7,ft Plainsmen never stoppea of the world. .It does not repre-t football game. Tech took an w . n XTai txt 111 i . . f- . m Avar ST.nTjTJaa Vh.t vnffland owes us $5,000,uuu,- ent the views or tne peopie. t leaa dui tne riaiunmou ,4, '77" ' tn 00? and FraKwes Tus nearly 53.000,- ! Sir any of it when you get out- , flghtlnff and staged a rally gree goo ana , y. , . - iV i,ni rireie. but it does t ,v.AfrtrA the eame ended that tnrwi- Zse stings for both nalionsT makes i tely represent the feelinand Atlanta alumni. " ft uvelv that we will continue to deal - bought therein. In London. Ameri- . Tech.8 victory . came through six tL rills notwithstanding resentment -SSf sanity and balance removed touchdownB. five dt them achieved by the cards notwiinai b cans oi contftnd that much of laboriously plodding through the mud in,?ai qLte to tll some highly i '"i.atural atmosphere of Paris. and one as tne result of ?n 80-yard Staining news" about the military ; icnas itself most heartily to : from the kick.0ff by Adams suo- S PeStaB he declares, is not ; finical intrigue, and that Americans gtitute quarterbacic. in the second popria w?tbnfhe French nd English tale thii sort of talk piously , period. In all the Gojden Tornad K 'commands. . Their disliketor him ; have influenza of the soul tad L not j mad 24 fl t d ns and the Plains- varv much intelligence. - " 7" , men nve, twu ui mo . T r . . Something in that, but it Is too strong ; lhl through Tech penalties. Hold and too concrete and discussed n too &nd off 8ide play was Sequent on Z?2 nnarters to be thus dismissed. Teoh.8 partf while Auburn rarely in- X ws I No Pity Or Lenleney Slievm Men Sick and IJnable to Work Tkousanas of British Prisoners Have Re turned Home. Tsinv 28.f British ' Wireless) a nfficial statement issued today says that since the armistice was sig- ed 444 British officers and 8. 3tw men oi other ranks, former prisoners, nave arrived at Hull from; Holland and Ger many. 65 officers and 8.216 men of oth er ranks at Dover and 500 at Lrondon. The statement says the protest of the British government with regard to- the ill-treatment ofi British prisoners has been communicated to the German gov ernment and that the German authori ties replied that the German high com- mand was aoing au in up wv liver prisoners, in good condition but tnat the seventy ui. ditions presentea qiniui.co. -The German high command later was . . j .Trnnno would be ac- lniormeu nim - . j Dfiticn cnvArnment ana Uhat full recompense would be exacted for any unnecenoaij 0- British prisoners of war. To this the Germans re.3d that the; Ivould do their utmost to alleviate the condition of prisoners. mv, a hAn a rris- unei aergeaui. nv - - - - oner for seven months soke bitterly . i. ..... V. ! a nontll T A Which? XJUNDREDS of mediciMl products are sold In the iorm cf plain Swkalone they are indistinguishable. Plain white tablets white tablet is :U!SontmIn jMMfa. AsDCrln. JSayT" . " ....... fl,. u. s. pt OS.) is euarntw that the moaoMetloacld- uine Tht Byr Cross SB m is x I."- 1 ' .iA g iLjaaam . i-v, v t- rl?C!TTT .TG i ofAi I Your Guarantee of furity began back in 1917 when afterhaving . . 4 Knnna with agreed to Drigaawig wwb the others, he declared that he would . , i r- tiat th American forces were at the disposal of the al- lu ..... . .t Aoht act a r aid of soldiers, threw out the manage, rwent The funds and books of wi. . - v "" m ii . "Al9.hama Puly- I Arms were seized and a red guard sol. At AtlaurTech. 41. Alabama Puiy , chargg of t6CAhtn kville: Vandertllt. 40; Se- ; manager of the Aerator Motor Com. W AteNew York: Georgetown, 0; Ford ham, 14- lies but that they must, fight as an ,r.r.xrTr' V'S QpiNTENGE American army there would be no:MOOritiX fe oEilN XHiiiv American ami E. v. Mr. mr a -rrT?Ti Trt T.TTTF! more aiwums up , . Kent says Pershing used-the plainest ji ctotAa inneriiajre in tell- sort ox uuinu " f . ing this to Foch' and the others, and CHANGED TO LIFE TERM curred a penalty. Vanderbilt Licks Sewanec. . Nashville, Tenn., Nov. 28. Vander- till 4- nhAil rtVflT tnA TTniversity of the South in their annual Thanksgiv- - . . j .. Kr a senr Lm TTrviversitv of Pitts- burg. 28; Pennsylvania State, t. At Philadelphia Pennsylvania. 21. D 3Si'n?Neb: Nebraska. 0; Notre oner for seven months soKe Ditieny .Dame Q. n of an enforced march after his capture, j , "ijouisville: Camp Sherman. 0. For four days. he. said the prisoners , (mp Taylor, 40-. TT . r . had virtually no solid food and when : At g t0uis: Washington Universi they arrived at camp they were put to . 19 st; Louis University, 0. work burying men wtto had died f rbm j tyAt Villanove. Pa: Villanova. 33. starvation. In one week 15 out of 100 j Drexel institute, 0. -aa died. No pity or leniency was shown , At Chipago4. Chicago. Naval reserves. to men who were unaoiw i 20; Camp" urani, v pany, having scented trouble, succeed ed in having the firm's bank balance transferred. 1 To Cure a Cold in One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUIXINE (Tablets). It stops the Cough and Headache and works off the Cold. E. W. GROVE'S signature on each box. 30c. adv. DON'T SUFFER sort of unitea "V":? fContinued from Page une., , tne. -"--- r . s-ore ine this to Jtvocn anu ujo durin-er a pre- ing uajr e1"0 - thf t he even slipped in several "cuss" 'street in San Francisco during a Although the Sewanee team words where the? would do the most rednesa day" parade there July 22 . reported to be one of the strong-- eood A little later Pershing insisted , p r other8 were Indicted with est in yearSf the Tlgers were complete on a "general allied offensive. He could;""- counts of murder but his ly outclassed by the Commodores. see no sense in waiting for tfre Boche him on ten cou to come on again. His i idea was to case was singled out as an is syraeuse Beat. Columbia. drive them right on. after the Ameri- . b or&aniiations of several coun- syracu8e, N. Y.. Nov. 28. Syracuse cln marines bad stoppea them at ; Strikes were urged various , defJated Columbia at football aV the ciI1 1 . . T v4- that , L . 1 ,.tT-xr and Others were . t hl, oftsrnnnn. 20 to 0. Chateau -rnierry.. it wo.D "" parts oi mo J " a ,.,..'. staaium hcid there weren't troops for an offensive.., J d in other countries as la?J ln the first contest between the two He pointed them to the . Americans. tegts. Mooney-s appeal to 7a ! colleges in 15 years. The battle was They objected that these, were not ; workers not to strike stopped agita- , staged on a fleld an inch deep in mud trained. "Try W said P 'shing. ; tlon for a general st rike .y 1. 1918. in Bpots T, i,r.a that thft offensive t- i,t w son intervened ty asK- i . to men wuu o . . .i nn v hlnws and the tnrougn erun-iicao. usual punishment of half rations were given them. A non-commissioned officer of the royal army medical corps saw i r nraa nsar SolSSOnS. .. T. i -tr r t ft? v m. I.. 0. At noanutic. ...,-.. - --- -At Badison, Wis: Wisconsin, , 7, Michigan Aggies, 6. ' a At Austin, Tex: University of Texas, .7; Taxes A. & M., 0. At OKianoma iiiy. Use Soothing Musterole ...i it... stiim naini) tn sVinntins worst si eh t he saw was neailouiu"". At UKianoma . w"-"- i vvnen f , -"r He was working in a hospital where A. & M.. 0. Mar through your head, when your skull English prisoners weic aciv..., , al uautaoicj, . - - seems as w..., , - from dysentery. While still alive a.shall 6; viettysburg.. 0.- little Musterole on your- templeg and San was put into a coffin and some At' Chattanooga: , Middle Tennessee .UttM out'the inflammation, German soldiers were preparing to Normal (Murfreesboro) 2 ; University nec usually giving r,an t lid of the coffin down. . of Chattanooga. 7. . . ' 60?Hi iT ' Mr. Kent declares that the onensive pre8ldent W us on - f resulted irom fersninso- iuo"'''! jne (ioveraui " , resmwu , . , mK,t vmT ' . . . , t.ui fnr Moonev. He and all tne worm miuwo , i. , ooiain a - - i pened. Americans blocked the road I to j ordered an investigation by a s- Paris and stopped tne nuns; au iu. Americans, two divisions, got in be hind them ana tney Kepi sumB- Techs Beat Cadets. Rnanoke. Va.. Nov. 28. Terrino ordered an investigation by a commis- piunges by Crisp, V. P. I. captain and sion which recommended a rehearnJ: : quarterback, carried the Techs to a 6 lour of tne nve pci d.o , t Q ViCtory over v. jvi. i. anciem v hind tnem ana tney ei)i BunB. were trieu iui - .... . m tne annual, x uoimob" -. i r pno.ianri'B 9A tiftw- i ,s r in va.need May 1 1, in. : , Q nri hiine ud a new xne queauuu ui uu6io.u- - - geniem-cu . . : game uid " " er 'is one oJ the knots of the peace : Warren K. Billings, a shoe clerk, now , reCQrd for the v F I. team of a sea- Admiral Sims believes i afvrvinff his sentence ox lire im- i nt liritiroKen victory. ,;r Honrd on being the ment. Mrs. Rena Herman Moon- --t - . f -, .;, and Tsrael Weill- . . . world's great sea power. " a I ey. mooney C." ,i.V,. wpt vmria b ereai oca u t. . i ey. " - . . i.f - w necButm oi -v - -. -.w TOhrebv' disarmft- v;. mtomobile hus anver, weic Pa Nov. 28. Ur before him certain tacts. , - lf"1,v come down to an rilf,',ttftd on one charge arid now are .B football team's 4 tharing nlernaonarpollce- fleet. Some fore- liberty on bail - other barges , ; "-crossed for the KiL iftKo not love us at all see a certain development of American j of murder. while Edward D. Nolan, a ye&r when tfae Pennsylv) Pittsburgh. Pa.. Nov. 28. University . Tv.t.v,.,.ii'a fnnthaii team s goal charges, .""".l" t; Ti,. flrt time this line was uiuoou Edward D. rxoian, a ; , Tnr,0viv9Tiia state team luuiuc, . . , year wneii mo achinlst. still is awaiting trial. cored a touchdown today, but Pitts- i .lLn-n ootivl tv in a ban i ... Anra rf 28 Mounej b - i huren won tne kuiiio uj -- 57"- ei. warn andine. V - ..I . Francisco street- car ritt c". - The visitors scored af'.er a few -i ,;.niiVins are nossible and! Fi nail the lid of the coffin down. Gf Chattanooga. 7. nan tne .r1 . . "timt . T ,-,i. TTirsitv nf Ten- nuiCK reliel. ... ,auSh.d at and pushed-o one ..axn. tut., 0. -., , PoIorado. dnot 67' ieueu wnu i jii, xju uiudi . . v uiuovu r""-"- " , . . 16; Colorado Aggies, 13. , Many doctors ana nurses irdimiy rec At Denver: Denver University, 16; ommend Musterole for sore throat, bron- Colorado College, 0. rfiitis. croup, stiff neck, asthma, neural. At Berkeley, Cal: Stanford Unlversi- a. congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, ty, u university oi T,1Tnhap:0 oainS ana acnes ui uie vx ut At nronhurir: Citadel. 0; Univer-. lumDago, P" " ,,1 hniisp slty of South Carolina, 0. idugimu their erue Germans oruceeuou " , u '!,. .ftrnrs.rHs informed me tSat the? ha"d Vailed the coffin lid down. with four ana six , , Another man who said he had been ".-. .u mnth9 aero described Sr murder of an officer in a prison camp near the Aisne. "In the camp one day," he said, I saw a British officer being bullied by a German sentry. The German soldier was demanding the officer's boot, but the officer refused to par with them After a little further argument the German soldier shot the .officer and took the boots from him as he lay dy ing on the ground' MISS MAnuyii' " . I'O wuv J id! French. POUticians. are willTfng for lzed by violence, andhis alleged In- Qteg Qf play wften they' obtained TwVe"nlent7 of Englishmen and ! England o Maintain commahl"! ! dustrial Workers or the ball on a poor WWJMr. . . " v,Q anrf Amfiri-! oa nrovided they are aiioweu 10 tions arew bubpiciuu Americans anu - " VJ- i I mn tarv establishment, i i,ta wife. They were arrested nve aays , anflnicion ' toward him and , . . rt--ttii with mud. Line a Amen- - seas pro v men uvuo " ' . fle Hnvn I tne Dan ueiug - - , cans between whom there are the I maintain a big military estaDnsament. hIs wife, uney w - smashing sent captain unger vy cans Detween wnuiu. m ai , r ra toiritnrv Mri; Eurooe oftar thfe exDlosion. at Guernevuie, . vut C. W. Brown failed JT,TLu ill indrt ff.7a poSse8sion.lron,iar They Jheyhadrea hTkick at goal. . . a Mr. Kent goes on to say that "na- i in newspapers max tney I After the play the home team piayeu tions are fnnny tnmgs. iuuivmu ana tney a. v.o.-- ..V... wmn. ' super or lootoaii mruu6uui. - t may fraternise but nations do not they would surrender lJe- . four touchdowns. Davies kicking even when lined up together against of the ten counts of Jirder a&ai"si four KOals. 5V!-PA : He savs England and Mrs. Mooney. Billings, Weinberg and lour Boa. t DavieB Mc. France do not like each .other. j Nolan were dismissed, the state , aa j ia.uvc v . -. " nil ioKfUtHr tr nroeeed on them. A surprising piece ui iicwo w b- mnuus j . - . T o 7r vo. in Paris, what will! Moonev's trial opened January 3, something about races and nations as a whole tnat maxes me k.iuu n..v ship that exists between individuals impossible. Paris these days most beautifully illustrates this. "Now that the war Is over, American observers of experience and with facili ties for observation are 6trongly dis posed to think they discern a disposi tion upon the part of the other powers i loino- inrtuRtrlallsts today drew out TVySit'1 admission tha?t many of die W of Miss Margaret Carnegie , o s 0f..ltl Berlin already are being osweirMillt otthl. cuy. was 'an- 8ymaticaTly terrorized' by the work ?f.?neJS Jin lint Mr. Miller is a son ln& forces. The lafter are demanding nf the late Roswell Miller, of . New , exorbitant wage Increases, snorier forkheanaaChicago. widely known rail- , hours tlffiJ'S "You hear. loo. in Paris, what will Mooney's xnai . oiwiieu uu. , be news T in America, of the serious 1 1917. and ended with his conviction mutiny in the French army in 1917. i February 10. nf ""v .; .1" .ffl,,itv in Bunnrfisalne it. - Prank C. Oxman. a cattleman of t th fitaee against us. At the ' mutiny In the rrencn army i ; Terence some of our views and of the difficulty in suppreinf x ranK v.. f lt - t L ;ar sterns- have " ffSSS My trial that fL'l j. .t. vi fa .mine- tn . anvftd the situation. Neither ingiana -,. - of what we did over there is going to ..... ji...:i 4-V.Ac. rphai,. De,a little amereiu num iuio. .uv... inclination to pik the bones' of Ger many does not exactly fit with our feel ing, and there will be a divergence a very marked divergence upon the In terpretation of those famous phrases 'the freedom of the seas' and 'sea power.' ' "Some disposition to resent anything like American domination or the - speaking of America In a strong voice Jat the peace table is already manifest ing itself in an undercurrent of critic cism of our army staff, and a tendency to, some what minimize our effort in the war. This is true of the politic ians. It is not true of the people. So far as the .latter are concerned, they will be wholly satisfied both in Eng land and France if the peace confer- Laren and Gougler at the start of the last period, putting in xmMuv., Pitler and Horner and Pennsylvania state held their opponents scoreless after that. 1 It.nta Tlnrt nlOUth. . , j . , v : tjo Mfttr 2R Pennsvl-' fnuaaeipum, ... . - . vania and Dartmoutn wanuwc America into the war seems to nave ness, tesnueu m.vu? Ame. .. .. .t-.i tt ! . , th. Mnnnevs. Billings and saved the situation. rieitiici msuu IUJ oan v.. t .-?-,-- . . . . T9nia ana uartmoutn wuu --- nor France have any use for Italy. Weinberg drive -to .he spot where the hra0nuagh a football game here to- txot tn Ttalian trooos nloslon occurred 'and. saw Billings ; sua tnruu ed wUn tere a bitter disappointment, that they I deposit a suitcase supposed to contain j aay ;;anianB 21 to 0. Rain fell They tell you that the Italian troops explosion occurred ana saw A 110 jr lei v . . ... I atmnnAAn to Pnn tain firtt all rieht when things are going the bomb. Subsequently , their way. but they can not be depend- ! torneys charge a mat mn d utT when they are not. and have falsely against Mooney and that be to be stiffened by support whenever a sought to mauce r . . !.?e-v1 ,ry afl that thev were! vine. 111., to do likewise. The Illinois r9a' u "l .: :;: m;7 mnv s ot. Federation of . Labor announced ; wo 7 - ,nterceDted eternaiiy uBiuauuius ...w.. - - i.,..,nMn oi.aiii aowns weiu mo. n . -. . sf ssr to 'carry ' unIesa ""''i." "J3sa. gsyvrffi? st'sarSsbSSs year, an American omciai wuo -"yo, v - ..-- rt avaa v. t?a nrnaa t nim to come here and offered to divide KT HI P K LIiaL Hlt3 ... " I .. . . - J Sim lliruus" wv.. o , . . day and at the end victory rested with the Pennsyivanians. " TT" during the greater part of the con- test and the mua " . certain and the playing anything but high class. n. Two of Pennsylvania s i"'" w--.. BERLIN INDUSTRIAL PLANTS TERRORIZED Workers Making Dtmandi Calculated to Force Employers to Shut Down. Two Plants Seized. Driin winpsdav. Nov. 27. (By'the Associated Press.) Inquiry among the rour louuHuuniioi - of tne unioaKu, iunuo four goals. ltailroad company. Mr. Miller has oen Coach warner toon. uui. tne submarine cnaser oemw. . 1 tVi start nf the I SEf man who at various times serv- ultimately to force the employers to . . . . j I m a n n?ir . BniiT n ow Ti ed as president . au ... -- 1 .. w er , Miw.niroA A St -Paul l The nroi or tne inivB" 1 GROVE'S BABY BOWEL MEDICINE will correct oiuumvu 7 trodbles. Perfectly harmless. See di rections cm the Dottie. aby. lUt aown. . T. TTorl TJftb- Xne prupasanua, - - . . . i 1 4!..tlv vannnfliblA Knecii l uaa uccu u" j - for thd usurpation of two big plants which were boldly seized by the work ing men and are now being operated under their control. At the Piechatzok crane works ana tne imperawr -uauLw Company plant in the northern part of the cityi the factory hands, with the umDag0.pcu- r 7W bruise, SKiVjff to" 1 feef-colds of th chest (it often prevents pneumonia), tt 30c ana ouc jat uv3tw Tkoanrt Temnle. Nov. 29 118. WILMINGTON XOJSGE NO; 319, AT P. & A. M. Emergent commu nication. All mem bers and visiting brothers are cordial ly invited to attend a special meeting ts be held this (Friday) evening at 8 o'clock, fnr- xunrV in the de gree of ; Master Mason. Several candi dates. By. order of the "Master. C. P.GORMAN. Secretary. sxatcD tiiai. vnc .. presented no less than 324,000 Italian families a sum 01 money racisms 50 to 150 lire. The money went only to those families whose sons or hus bands were fighting in the Italian army. When she received the money LIFE OF LABOR LEADER CHARGED WITH MURDER SAVED BY CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR i 11 vri m 1 1 -II ...vtt $ ,11 ! -It MmPW SSSxi vi li 1 fWW MUmr . .- vcm 1 II WW WW' AH I . 'rr-- XI 1 III LU L.Uiilti u " " - with him a portion of a large reward offered ior Mooney's conviction. Ox man was acquitted. It also was charged that three oth ers, two of them women, had peTjured themselves to "railroad" Mooney to the gallows but the charges were not pressed. Mooney appealed to the California supreme court for a new trral and he was supported by a "consent" filed by i the state attorney general, U. S. Webb, -ii , ur D(nirart. rt!atHot nttornev O I let I ico m. iivn - of San Francisco, who prosecuted the . T - . m. n n V. n r. tVtA tln CT Domu muraer gBen, uocu ent" as "irregular and vicious" am . j.j nkA tTD-lsted TOT 4D air ana uuucu yards for a score. In the final period. Pennsylvania, by hard line Ponging, put over another touchdown and in the last minute of play Straus inter cepted a forward pass on the 40-yard r. .xi. io floiri in front of him. line witt. nco.. . v He scored easily. - The home eleven . .iv,. chances to score naa two uiuci b , . , . , but lost the ball each time inside the 10-vard line. uarunuum ----- dangerous. v i AtAn-iifa Tlecker Nashville. Tenn., Nov. 28. Jack Jaw n nn irht defeated -d ' Bbnn e BT of Waha. in an e ht sent" as "irregular and vicious" and Bennie Bacr 01 on It was dismissed. Mooney's" appeal was , round fight. Becker naa fl A.ni Marc 1. 1918. the supreme . Lawler up to the last stats denied MarcTi 1. 1918, the supreme court stipulating it could not consider eviaence outsiae tne .recoru. Mooney appeaiea to governor dib phens for a pardon 'and meantime Mooney's attorneys . appealed to. the irim liu c iui . T..k w . QDeiore us, tne urns buuu eciuum resorted to whereby suUots under the common law could seek reversal of a ineys bh-io au uwioi " w exhausted except this appeal to the i k..i. inn Tii orrHf a tlon was denied OIL HEA" OA - Look for iixe A necessity not a luxury You don't have to endure the chilling terrors of a cold bathroom. COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAIR exhausted except this appeal to the nr1t.ens Beautifully and Re basic law. The application was denied UaTKens ueauiliuuy ,a,rin TOt for Anenst 2S. ctnrpa Tta Natural COlOr ana fej WW WW i Lustre at unce. at San ' Quentin prison '-Since July 17 xne tjaiiioraia Duiiiemo i. ..". .... . t t i nn ' - iii.t tA ea tnis aeniax juiy .f j veaTs after the explosiion- Five days later, exactly two yeatsW-iaftBr his ar Common garden saga .brewed into a. Heavy tea,, yrua suni""' added, will turn gray, streaked and I a Ltjr, e Ji.it. jcjjr .wv js" . . . i auucu, w in vuiu siaji . . rest, Mooney was received to Decern- faded hair beautifully dark and luxuri Der 1 o oy uovefiror, J3"f (uo " i am. ivxi&iiis liic oago j.ct - time ior mm WTTiew i recipe at nome, tnougn, . .... ' " i i . ; i J o.a.aci cnini-Q tyi A t . i i. a 4- Vi k rpflil V -tO Aellon ,01-iub uimeu o i. a. 1.1-0 eu1.u...v j An easier way is -to bci v" Vi .nr-t WnvamhA IX. ClOSinR WIS .IVUB 110a nrona rt.il easier way la lu bi w use preparation improved by the addi . l- 1 ..ji.-i. nnHnr about 50 cents a large bottle, at drug stores, known as 4Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a lot or muss. T , m While gray, faded hair is not sinful, ra nil A nstx. n ..aln 'OUT ' VOUthfUl appearance and-t attractiveness. By darkening ypur hair with Wyeth s Sage ana csuipnur uompouna, nw - because it does it so naturally, so even ly. Ybu just dampen a sponge or soft u., -u ui. i .aiir ti a. through uiuou niiu iv tuu u" ii.ii. vct na Bfnfl.il strand at o fthe foreign minister-in strongly, pro- or twc your hair becomes beautifully testing tO- vnu 6" o . eiuBay, DUjLb .uu .v...-- vian nuLM .-. t rf - . . . 41f ifamflTid IndAmnltlaji fnr I Ro era n nri SiilTViniiTftmnOUnO. :S . ABUUU Ul-lUO TJ.Ud " court, ISovembetf 18, closing he long court ugnt, was in io iuiw, ..."t orandum by Chief Justice White, re- iueing a wm oi-wiuu;' . . . j. i . . . -'..no'.a Tpnrin.Tinn A appeals were made toiabor bodies to act in support or a new -vria. . ubbiu radicals s?araaea : iu 6" made a .-demonstration;. before- th$ American embassy., The American, Fed- t ak. . ia T-ondon trad A eraiwnvi,"'"!'; council" and otherorganisations madie public demands, for afcew .trial for I ra?iTl li JeSLt!?! mi .U1 T-Tvt-i TT.aror ink ffW minutes it? SrP makes the room warm and comfortable even heats li iH 1 T!Mt ' your water for shaving. ' i lljfdml In JarvflVl 1 J?T - E8 to clean and fill smokeless, odorless mex- I Ip1s!m Aiaddm ecurity rc8as-' 1 Buy your Perfection now. liilil! lnlV STANDARD OIL COMPANY i lJif llVt 1 11 WMhintan.D.C Baltimore, Md. Ctrotte. NC. . .Jl llftll I I I Norfolk, Vs. Lle!lfn'r- ALADDIN ' ' ' vlrlt n ' 1 :. T" "rn-ril Hr. : 'VM'iV v . ... .. - !. ,.i.j...t , " . Tt - la Tint If). is (
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 29, 1918, edition 1
2
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