Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Dec. 2, 1918, edition 1 / Page 4
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, THE MORNING STAR WIL IINGTON, N. 0 .; MONDAY, -DECEMBER 2, 1 Star rxwnin CT-m . p. ion. " Pabllahed by tke -WTLiMIlV GTC STAR COMPANY. INC Wilmington, N. C. ftEBTBEB. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication ot all news credited to it or not oinei INDIFFERENT ABOUT NORTH CAR OLINA'S PORT. J "The War Department on Saturday announced that it had designated" New York, Boston, Newport-News, and Charleston as ports of debarkation'for American soldiers returning home from Rnronfl Theodore Tiller, Wash- X, ,a XAfSSerS n ASlWon corespondent of tne Greensboro rights of re-publication of special dis PLUTOCRATIC WHEAT GROWERS fT patches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE l Yr. Six Mo. By mail, postage paid... $6.00 iH" states will return home via Charleston, News, says: "While no orders nave ' been an nounced, indications now are that the troops from the southeastern tier 'or By carrier $ Sunday edition only . h' four selected. The . selection of Dailv bv carrier or mail less than .i wot S. C, as this port is tne nearest of the three months, 60 cents' per month. Charleston also apparently means that Wilmington, N. C, and Savannah Ga., have lost out in their efforts to Business Office . No. 51 ' have at least a part of the southern Edrtonal Kooms Entered as secvnd-class matter at the postoffice in Wilmington. N. .un der the act of congress ot Alarcn i, ia. MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1018. TOP O' THE MORNIVi- We have given our men, our money, and our time to the need ot the country. And perhaps you ask a little wearily. What more In heaven's name can vre givef Well there Is one thing more for us to give, and to give It Indeed in hea ven's name, and that is a great faith and a great hope. MARGARET P. MONTAGUE. Democracy didn't, make the world very safe for the Huns. Suppose it did rain last week we needed every drop of it. Now for schools and good roads. We need them. They are prime necessi ties. About all you can do now is to get ready for Christmas and lay your plans for 1919. So live your life that you can imag ine you have got all the chips right In front of you. "It is charged that Senator Penrose controls the breweries." No wonder the republicans carried the election. War savings and thrift stamps will make the best kind of Christmas pres ents. Most any of us will accept them. North Carolina is a good state but we caa make it a better state by guaranteeing its inhabitants a state of security. When George Creel retires to pri vate life those who have been throw ing fits on account of him are perfect ly willing for him to stay right there. Why look in a last year's birdnest? Be forward looking. There will be something in next year's birdnests. You may as well "about face" for the new year. With eggs at 80 cents a dozen, and chickens selling et 40 cents a pound, how'd you like to have a hen ranch right close to town where they could range on Abruzzi rye and hairy vetch? "History repeats itself" because men never learn anything from the experi ence of others. Because men put their foot in it, that won't keep other men from putting theirs in It the first chance they get. When the devil is caught about the first thing he thinks of is to make out as if it is a clear oase of mistak flen identity in order to create the impression that he's a Holy Joe who just happened to be an innocent bystander. Peace assures us liberty, including the liberty of going right on with our business and pursuing the construc tivities and those activities that are potential in developing our towns, our communities and the incomparable state of North Carolina. We must begin this week to be spar ing with food in order to help feed 300, 000,000 people threatened with famine this winter in Europe and Asia. Aus tralian and South American supplies are now available but still that is not enough. They only help out. troops debarked at these ports respec tively. Both Wilmington and Savan nah have been in the running as de- I barkation ports. . Wilmington asked particularly to have the boys ot tne 30th division sent home through her waters and Savannah desired to stage the debarkation of the Georgia boys, and if posible those from nearby states." It is presumed that the Thirtieth Di vision and other troops to be debark ed at Charleston will proceed from the South Carolina port to Camp Jackson, at Columbia, or to Camp Sevier, at h Greenville, for demobilization. Had the government used Camp Greene, at Charlotte, or Camp Polk at Raleigh, Wilmington might have been selected. Wilmington wanted to be designated as a port of debarkation, but for some reason or other, the esteemed Raleigh Times does not seem to regard the as pirations of North Carolina's port as "legitimate." Then our Raleigh con temporary expresses doubt whether the people of the state would care to see their port made use of by the gov ernment. The Timessays: "We have no objection to seeing any legitimate dream of Wilmington come true; but we are very much in doubt as to whether the people of North Carolina are at all interested in the proposal to have the Thirtieth division, composed of North Carolina and South Carolina, Tennessee, and District of Columbia men who have won the praises of every friend of freedom by their unqualified fighting ability, come to Wilmington to disembark. The Thirtieth has been withdrawn from the battle-front and will be sent home soon. What matter where our boys disembark so long as they are sent home with the greatest possible dis patch? Could speed commensurate with the desire of home-folk to see these boys again be secured at Wil mington? We don't know. But the general impression will be that one of the camps at which our overseas forces were trained would probably discharge the men faster than some place chosen because of its own sentiment. We have been offered the suggestion that i the Thirtieth be sent to Raleigh, and we thought no more of it than we do of the Wilmington project. Neither city could decently care for a divis ion of soldiers for twenty-four hours. It will probably take longer than that to get the, first member of the Thirt ieth ready to. entrain for home after J he had' reacnea nis nnai omciai aesti nation." The main thing, after all, is to get our boys home, but Wilmington craved the honor of receiving the famous Thirtieth Division home from the over seas scene of their triumph. Of course, we are disappointed, but we can't see any reason why a North Carolina pa per or North Carolina people should be so indifferent to their port as not to be 'not at all interested." It is hoped The Times speaks for itself and is only guessing as to the indifference of the people of North Carolina. If, however, there is that indifference toward North Carolina's port, probably it accounts for the fact that other ports are get ting somewhere. Nevertheless, that indifference does not seem to exist at Charlotte, for Colonel Wade Harris says in the Observer: "The War Department has selected four ports for the debarkation of re turning troops Boston, New York, Newport News and Charleston. The troops come in on big transports which require deep water and abund ance of room, and in addition to that ports were selected with a view to "reach" into the interior. The distri bution has been made geographicallly equal along the Atlantic coast and no doubt these' selections will facilitate the distribution of the troops to home points. We had hoped the Wilmington proposition would have appealed to the War Department, but at the same time we were in favor of any plan that would land the boys at the home base quickest. The people do not care so much at which port the ships come in so it is the quickest port home. We are particularly glad that the The Asheville Citizen' says: "The' government decided to utilize a South Citizen believes that many of the fe'ars Atlantic port for debarkation, and we expressed in certain quarters in this country that the Hun will escape with Boft treatment at the forthcoming peace conference are ill-informed." Betcha that's what the Huns think about it, too. Charles Hapsburg, till recently em peror of Austria Hungary, recently in terviewed by a representative of the Associated Press, said he jwould not talk of the past but would consent to speak of the present and future. Of course, a fellow with a past never will consent to give himself away. Don't be a bolshevist without sus pecting it of yourself. A man who has no fixed Idea of or respect for law and order as the best safeguard of society and who is committed to the idea that mob law is a safeguard of society in any particular, has in him the seeds of bolshevikism. Men seem prone to persist in believ ing that they can make liquor with out getting caught. Here is an in stance, furnished by the Rockingham Dispatch. "Sheriff Baldwin has cut the 144th notch on his blockade still record, and by -one more still has clinched his record as the best still de stroyer sheriff' in the state." Sheriff Baldwin has given us a good imitation of a vigilant sheriff. That many at tempts to make booze, in spite of him and the law, certainly must have kept him awake. Seems to us that It is about time for the booze makers to recognize the fact thai Richmond 'COUntv ting b. rul heartily congratulate Charleston. The government has just aoout completed some fine terminals there and the peo ple of the South ought to b gratified that the protentialities of . our ports are being recognized in such a practi cal way as to thir commercial availability. SHEEP MEN REAPING FORTUNES. The farmer who has the right kind of sheep now or who is going to stock his farm with purebread sheep, is lucky during these times of high prices for wool and mutton. A Redding, California, news item in the San Fran cisco Chronicle reads as follows: "Shasta county sheep men are now receiving their government checks for the last spring's wool clip. The ap parently long delay was due to the fact that the government could not pay until after the wool had been graded. A large wool-grower has just received payment for 6,400 pounds, at the rate of 64 1-2 cents a pound. He sold his clip last year at 33 cents and made good money at that figure." Sheep growers in California are mak ing from $2,000 to $5,000 on the side from wool, in addition to their regular farm crops. Sheep husbandry has be come a great industry on the Pacific slope because tlje legislatures have en couraged the industry. That Is what North Carolina expects of her legisla ture when It meets early in January. During the political campaign wes tern farmers were regaled galore with ' the political buncombe that President : had fixed the price of wheat at only . $2:20 a bushel, whenthey wanted $2.50, : and yet refused to fix the prtee of the j cotton of the South. Politicians bitter- 1 ly harrangued the wheat growers and i shrieked it on the stump that this was dicrimination against western! wheat growers, and the newspaper j proclaimed it as "highly unjust to the ' wheat farmers" and that "the govern ment discriminated against the Middle! West in favor of the South," It had its effect, too, for that is said to be the earson why western farmers voted for republican congressional candidates. Western wheat growers claimed that $2.20 wheat would ruin them, but there comes news from Nebraska, one of the great wheat producing states, that the wheat growers are running away with wealth. A dispatch sent out from Omaha a few days ago, boasted that "with a billion dollars in war profits to its credit, half a billion dollars on deposit in its banks and much of the 918 crop of corn and wheat still on the farms, Nebraska is ready for recon struction work of all kinds." That was what $2.20 cents' wheat did for them, yet they knifed the democratic administration that fixed the price. Ne braska farmers used to be glad to get 80 cents to a dollar for wheat, and have even been prosperous when wneat sold as low as 60 cents a bushel. The Baltimore Sun remarks concerning all her war time wheat richness: "Nebraska comes out of the war al. most a "bloted bondholder." She is probably the richest agricultural Ste in the country in proportion to her size, and she no-v rates herself as in the bil lion dollar class. And she is indulging in all the modern comforts and conven iences, she is investing her big surplus in handsomer new public and private buildings and in better roads. Where nearly every man rides in an auto good highways are a necessity. The Ne braska farmer is now a plutocrat, and though he has made his money legiti mately out of wheat and hogs, he may not be Inclined to make so many faces at Wall street hereafter. He may not sympathize with these get-rich-quick gamblers in New York, tut he will know how it feels to be wealthy, and a fellow feeling may make him a little kinder. For the present Nebraska is poor only in labor, and she wants It understood that she has jobs for 75,000 workmen, in addition to the 40.000 Ne braskans who have been helping to cut down the German poison weeds of Kultur." The price of wheat was fixed at more than twice the price it had been sell ing at. Cotton farmers would not have minded that same sort of price fixing for cotton, but those who wanted the price of cotton fixed wanted it done to get lower cotton. The price of wheat was fixed to encourage more wheat pro duction. That was not necessary in the case of cotton, since it was bread the world wanted instead of cotton. It was manufacturers who wanted cheaper cotton, although they are mak ing profits and declaring big dividends based on cotton way above thirty five cents a pound. A few days ago one of the Fall River mills declared a dividend of 35 per cent on its capita' stock, according to a commercial pa per published in New York. By the way, the New, York World calls attention to the fact that now that the war is over, western wheat is selling there at $2.39 1-2 a bushel, while Australian wheat can be laid down there for $1.14 a bushel, plus the freight by ship from "Australia. The Western wheat growers are lucky. Their $2.20 a bushel 1b guaranteed by Uncle Sam. Letters To The Star Brief communication from citi zens on matters of public Inter st -e welcomed fo this column. In rvery case articles must be signed for publ tlon by the real name of the riter. ; . l t CHANGED A GOOD MANY MINDS. through. In the utmost harrhony and good spirit. It was, on the part of the government .an impressive illustra tion of its new policy or building up a j great merchant marine for- this coun try, and in ' decisivness it is strikig. The proceeding wa.s altogether a sound piece of business and it establishes a precedent which will Insure in the fu ture first option to the United States on all American owned shipping which may he for sale by AroerioeCn interests, whether of American or. foreign regis ter. Charleston Post. American casualty LWr To "the Editor of The Star: The writer like many other loyal Americanst thought when he first read that President Wilson was-going to the peace conference, that the president was making a mistake and that more could be accomplished by his remain ing in Washington, but after reading the verv interestinc article in the Star on the 29th "Why President Wilson , Is going to the Peace Council' . I j have changed my mind and I think that our country, should know wnere they stand in this matter before our good people are asked to deny them selves further, food, clothing, etc., that the people of Europe should have more. Every American - should read that article, which is by the managing editor of the Baltimore Sun., . GEO. Y. WATSON. Southport, N. C, Nov. 3(T, 1918. CURRENT COMMENT. BANKHEAD MEN TO CONDUCT TOUR BIRMINGIiAM-BAIiTIMORE It is none too soon to begin planning a welcome for the Old Hickory divis ion. The boys who went through the Hindenburg defenses are coming home and the feast should be made ready. Greensboro News. Asheville gets on the front page of this morning's papers, and all because of the. organization of "the original'; McAdoo-for-President Club. Likewise, Asheville may locate McAdoo as a Summer resident somewhere in the congenial neighborhood of Colonel Bryan. Among other things Asheville knows how to do is the colonization of, ex-Secretaries. Charlocte Observer. Washington, Dec. 1. The Bankhead national highway association will con duct an automobile tour from Birming ham to Baltimore 'for the purpose of participation in the tenth annual con vention of the southern commercial congress December 8-15, it w.s an nounced tonight. The automobiles will leave Birmingham December 2 and will arrive In Atlanta the following day, Charlotte, December 4, Raleigh, De cember 5; Richmond, December 6, and Washington, December 7. The party will remain In Washington December 8 and lea,ve for Baltimore the next day. Entertainment features arranged for the party during Its stay in Washing-., ton Include a reception In the rotunda of the capitol by the southern society of Washington, on arrival, and a so cial function at the University club, i Saturday night. DEMOBILIZATION BEGINS AT ' CHAPEL HILL WEDNESDAY Washington, Dec. 1. The following casualties occurring before cessation of hostilities and reported by the Ameri can commander in France were given out today for publication i Killed In action.. . .' .. 110 Died of -wounds. . . . . . 229 Died of accident and other causes 6 j Died of disease.. .. .. .. .. 440 j Wounded severely 446 I wounaea laegree unaBriBrimuou; o Wounded slightly ... 84 Kaiser tries to mJ" BLAME ON HOMavp. --T 'AGO Copenhangen, Dec. 1 (By . elated Press.) Former EmPe As,4 iLam Ger.many attempted'T the blame of the war to thl to shift weg. former imnAHoi main-Rni, Gottlieb von Jagow, former aficeli: tor. ay of foreign affairs, in a private minlter sation he had with Dr. GeorJ ConvN ner five days before- he fled f We8fc manv. according- t Irom p... terview written for the CoWthe! tung by Dr. Wegener. ene Zei. me emperor told Dr. w.. A 1 - ''P,Bna.i. me government s policy of il ltll We cannot forget that splendid statement of one of Wilmington's best women: "When we have established our "reformatory for boys, and girls, we ought to erect one for the parents of boys and girs. There is our real weak ness." She said it with a degree of earnestness which argued that she had deep convictions on parental responsi bility. Henry W. Grady said: "As goes the home, so goes the nation." We tremble for the nation when we see so little authority in the homes of the people, and so little disposition on the part of childsen to do other than just as they please. What shall we do? Shall we turn the children over to the state for training? Or, shall we de spair of the task before us, and send them to the stern military academies before they have put on long trousers? We shall do neither. We fathers and mothers must wake up to our divinely appointed tasks and perform them in the fear of God and the service of man. We will have the thanks of our chil dren when" they are grown, and we will have the approval of God through all the ages. We parents must do our duty without having to pass through a reformatory. Baptist Go Forward. THE PEACE' .CONFERENCE DELEGATION. King Boris of Bulgarl ruled Just one month, but that is just one month more than some of us will be permit ted to' demand obedience to qur wiM un- The members of the peace confer ence delegation not already in Europe will sail with President Wilson and his party which expects to depart from New York for Europe tomorrow, . as seems quie probable. President Wil son will address congress when it meets to-day, so he can leave for New York to go aboard his ship for his momentous voyage. The peace delegation, including the president, consists of five men three democrats and two republicans. Presi dent Wilson, Secretary Lansing, and Colonel House are the democrats, while General Tasker H. Bliss and the Hon. Henry White are the republicans. Republican papers anticipated that two delegates "would be Republicans eminently representative of a political half of the country," but disappoint ment is expressed in some circles that the two republicans are not typically representative. Nevertheless, Colonel Roosevelt has debarred himself from criticising the appointment of one of them former Ambassador White. In his autobiography, page '388, former President Roosevelt says: "The most useful man in the entire diplomatic service during my Presi dency, and for many years before, was Henry White; and 1 say this, having in mind the high quality of work done by such admirable Ambassadors and Ministers as Bacon, Meyers, Straus, O'Brien. Rockhill and Egan, tq name only a few among many?' This is one tinfe that the -colonel surely will have to agree with Presi dent Wilson. The St. Paul's Messenger says: "Mr. C. W. Bennett killed two hogs this week, one -weighed 350 and one 35. He sold the former 'for $96.60. Money In raising live stock." A half million more hogs next year like that $96.50 porker would mean lnoreased wealth of $4,825,000. North Carolina can easily raise 500,000 more hogs next year. 7 1 North Carolina must finish up her war saving campaign this month. Don't forget to subscribe for war savings and thrift stamps, not only to make up our state's quota but as a capital sav insrs plan for that rainy day The whole community has been sad dened by the accident which resulted in the loss of a fellow-citizen by ap parent recklessness in driving an auto mobile. One onlooker is reported to have testified that the car was going fifty miles an hour. We do not know about this particular car, but we do know that it is not at all unusual for cars to run through the streets of Wilmington at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour. The question we raise is: Why cannot such flagrant viola tions (of the law be detected? An an tomoblle is not so small in size that it cannot be seen, .rather can it move so rapidly as to preclude Its speed be ing measured. This writer drives a car himself, and he has had cars to draw up behind "him on Market street times without number and honk im patiently for him to turn that they might pass, when his own speedomet er showed that he was running close to the limit. And when the street was given, these cars have shot from be hind and passed him like a swift breeze. What we need in Wilmington is a few $25 and $50 fines. And these will be no hardship whatever on speed fiends when compared with the suffer ings of the many who, unless speeding is stopped, must follow winding pro cessings . to the cemetery. The most precious thing we posses is life. Nei ther carelessness nor indifference must be allowed to take it away from us. Baptist Go Forward. v i With wheat worth $2.39 1-2 a bushel in New York City, the price fixed ac cording to law, the Australian gov ernment Is planning under certain con diions to sell 33,000,000 bushels at $1.J4 a bushel. The wisdom of the arrangements of the United States to insure adequate wheat production is revealed in these starting Contrasts In and out of Congress, politicians a few weeks ago bemoaned the plight of the poor farmer- expected to produce wheat at a beggarly $2.20, and were urging legislation to raise the guaran tee. Wijth peace coming the world will gardually go back to normal con ditions. Australian wheat will bring $1.14 or more plus the cost of carriage by a Bwiftly growing merchant marine, and even the bedevilled farmers of Russia may once more be able to raise crops nstead of Hades. But a famished world needs food. For one year longer our farmer, whom competitive con ditions might not now tempt, will try to raise a bumper crop under a gov ernment guarantee of a price more than remunerative in the change con ditions. The difference we can well pay as the cost of insurance. We can better afford It than we could have afforded to see our armies and the Al lies run short of bread if the war had lasted and the surplus here may not be without immediate effect upon world history. The policy of price-fixing for American wheat, and its justness in practice, are amply made good. New York World. - The purchase of the entire fleet of the International Mercantile Marine by the United States government at a price,-, which is variously stated as somewhere between ninetv, and i hun dred and twenty-five million dollars, is riot only one of the greatest, but it must also be accounted one of the most sigjiiflcan deals In merchant shipping into ownership, of the United StaefitU. government ana unaer tne American flag eighty-five vessels, including some of the best known of the great liners, and It removes that number from the British flag, for these ships, although owned largely by American capital, sailed under British registry. The feet was' under option by its former owners to a British syndicate when the United States "government; inter vened And aserted its desire to acquire the whole outfit at . the - figure aerreed upon with the syndicate, whereupdn the negotiations with the foreign inte estf were broken off and sale made to the United States at once. It was in everjf respect a creditable piece of business, and1, anpeara to -have- been carried (Special Star Correspondence.) Chapel Hill, Nov. 30. C,nobilization of the' S. A. T. C. at tne University of North Carolina will begin on Wed nesday, December 4, and continue with the view of completion by the 10th. Most of the students will remain through the 18th, however, in order to stand examination for credit for the terms work. Those who have no intentions of returning to college will probably leave as soon as disbanded. The order of demobilization will be by companies. All" fifen In the S. A. T. C. will be allowed to wear the uni form for four months, according to army regulations. While no definite announcement has been made, indica tions are that the new term will be gin early In January. To Speed Up Casualty Lists. Washington, Dec. 1. Measures to expedite transmission of complete cas- ualt les among the American expedi tionary forces will be discussed at a meeting of the senate military commit tee. Senators in requesting that the meeting be called said they had recevi ed complaints of the delays In report ing casualties to relatives. Total.. 1.65.9 Included in the list are the name's o fthe following men from the Caro- linas: Killed In Action. Privates C. P. Cobb, Pinetop, N. C; V. P. Carran, Fletcner, N. C.; C. D. j Trammell, Whittier, S. C; R. M. Wil son, Great Falls, N. C. Died of Wounds. Privates J. N. Henson, Cam'pobello, S. C.; E. Li. Holyfleld, Rusk. N. C; Johnie Johnson, Springfield, S. C; Douglas W. Pate, Stonewall Hotel, Wilmington, N. C. Died of Disease. Lieut. S. J. Hawes, Belhaven, N- C. Corporal Major Lindley, Williamston, S. C. Cook Billie King, Lancaster, S. C. Privates M, E. Cavanaugh, Rose HilL N. C; Elias Hasel, Georgetown, S. C; Claud L. Hayes, Route 2, Whiteville, N. C; J. C. Elam, Statesvllle, N. C; Benj. Home, Wilson, N. C; Don Anglin, Burnsville, N. C; Hard Times Carder, Route" 4, Chinquapin, ' N. C; William Dillard, Sylva, N. C; H. L. Green, Jack son, N. C; Wl P. Harrell, Colerain, N. C; L. H. Houlston, Windsor, N. C; J. L. Holder, Severn, N. C; John Moore, Cheraw, S. C; Grove;; Role. Fort Mill, S. C; D. J. Williams, Grifton, N. C; S. A. Wilson, Scotland Neck, N. C; R. H. Wright, Ivanhoe. N. C; I. P. Pourch, ' Granite Falls, N. C; Theodore Spires, j Neeses, S. C.; H. N. stagaii, uraper, N. C; A. R. C. Odom, Bolton, N. C. Wounded Severely. Privates G. A. Brandon, Jonesville, S. C.; E. A. Scarborough, Sumter, S. C; J. B. Chapman, Taylorsville, N. C; A. W. Edwards, Raleigh, N. C. Wounded' Slightly. Private Frank Fields, Elm City, N. C. Wounded, Degree Undetermined. Corporal Henry, Warneke, Aiken, S C. Privates Offle Dail, Snow Hill, N. C; R. F. Wilkle, Converse. S. C. weeks before the outbreak of u la nad been carried on by Dr v f mann-Honweg .and Herr von 1 aione. - ae0 mvf muie aDOUt it thai, 4 W1 tb. he declared. ."Against mT sent me to Norway." From the inability of government to secure food for their people grows revolution and chaos. 8.000 till, npw nvnr. ir- 3;000 bu. new crop N r1 nuts. ' 3,000 Bu. White Spanish P., nuts. rea" 2 cars No. 1 'Ilmothy Hav 2 cars Cotton Seed Feed V..i 2 cars White Feed Oats 1 Red Rust. Proof Seed Oats Appier Seed Oats. Burt Seed Oats. Abruzzi Rye. 50 Sacks Good Rice 200 bbls. West Indies' Molass 1,500 kegs Wire Nails en 2' Serv-Us Canned Goods a clalty. SP6' United States Food Admini. tration License No. G-O5437, D. L. Gore Company Strictly Wholesale. WILMINGTON, jy. C. DR. M. BUETTNER Chiropodist The Orton. Private Office. Hours: 8:30 a. m., 6:30 p.m. H ,, fr. 3. i - , , jjAmmMMM ' ' AH Now in Pink Wrappers To save tin foil for Uncle Sam, 0GILIES is' now all wrapped in pink paper and hermetically sealed in wax: 1. The tangey flavor of mint 2. The luscious different flavor 3. The soothing flavor of peppermint All in pink-end packages and all sealed air-tight; Be Sure to get WUKStE because lasts v 1 " . "' .pJ" i.;-. , .. i i ' -B"J '."V '
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Dec. 2, 1918, edition 1
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