Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Dec. 21, 1918, edition 1 / Page 4
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morning star, wxlots-gton; NCvSATURDAYi December gi, ibis. Star i fi III 1 X Published by tke WILMINGTON STAR COMPANY, INC, f ' r; Wilmlngtom. N. C. The . Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication 01 an news icreaitea to xt or noi y - wise creaitea in tnis piim "a,, the local news published herein. All rights of re-publication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. SUBSCRIPTION PRICK l 1 Yr. Six Mo. jjy man, postage pnu. . . $-y" ir-i r By carrier J?-"" Sunday edition only 1.00 .60 Daily by carrier or mail less than uiree mow liis, sv uom-o TELEPHONES I Business Office No. 51 Editorial Rooms i No. tl TCntAi-ari a a Afip.vnd-class matter at SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21,1018. TOP O THE MORNIXt- Have yon any old grudge you'd like to pay, Any wrong laid up from a by-gone day? Gather them all now, and lay taem away When Christmas comes. WILLIAM LYTLE. It is a poor Santa Clauswho can't be knocked down witn a famine hint. Another fellow who can cackle is the one who has laid in his winter wood. The best sort of revenger is not to be like him who did the injury. Mar cus Aurelius. Don't worry long arout the clouds. There are more sunbeams than clouds for those who wait. It takes an artist to ptcture his own vision in such eloquent words that they won't be mistaken for bull. v If you ever saw anybody speechless with Indication, that person was a man. Nobody but a man ever becomes speechless. Those who annoy or worry others can give them something they will ap preciate on Christmas. They can give them a rest. "Bolshevikl invite trouble." Well, trouble has never been known to turn down an invitation. In fact, trouble makes It a regular habit to lie around where fools can put their foot in It. s Individual interest differs very wide ly. Three pretty girls stopped on the pavement and gazed at a $100 cloak on a model. Three soldiers gazed at the girls and were not interested in the least in the cloak that interested the girls. ' The Columbia Record is moved to say: "We are slowly being f6rced to the opinion that it will take something worse than starvation to kill the Bol sheviki." Possibly one disadvantage about starvation is that It is-slower than molasses in icy weather. Many a man who used to take a nip or two on Christmas will have to draw different kind of breath this Christ mas. It will be . because he can't get a thing to drink, but after Cnristmas he will brag about what a wonderful control he has over his. appetite. This is taken from the Book of Old Wisdom: "Don't sell the skin till you have caught the bear." Then, again, never buy the skin or a bear that a fellow expects to catch. The bear ,4night catch the fellow, and if he nev er skins the bear. he is apt to skin you. In order to place the government ownership of wire lines in a better light, Representative Moon, of Tennes see, has shed additional light on the subject, and what he says reflects the views of mny who do not consider the proposition a mere matter of moon shine. About this season of the year most any North Carolina woman would be tickled almost to death to receive a Christmas gift of furs, but there are at least a half dozen men who don't want a thing but judicial ermine as a Christmas offering from Governor Bickett. What Abetter Christmas spirit could any of us have than that which would animate us when we pay a dollar to get on the Christmas roll call of the Red Cross? Membership in that great humanitarian organization , certainly will give us that Christmas feeling, because of the consciousness of hav ing done something for humanity.- . Santa Claus reminds us of Colonel F. H. Fries, of Winston-Salem, state chairman of the war savings cam paign, who is now stirring heaven and earth to complete this month the per capita quota of War savings" and thrift stamps assigned, to North Carolina. Well, Santa Claus ought to take all the war savings stamps he can get, for he ought to know that there are no better investments or' holiday pres ents than war savings stamps. If bought before December 31, 1918, they will pay the purchaser 4.55 per . cent. They mature in four years January 1, 1923 the first government security to do so, and will net the, investor one quarter per cent more - than Liberty bonds. Moreover? the money derived from their sale is employed in bring ing our boys back hqme from the seat of war, so that, in addition to making a safe Investment, a patriotic turn is assured at the same time, r"As a Christ mas present to the .'children, or to the ,Arown-ups, what better gift.- than a WILSON'S MISSION TO SAVE THE WORLD. Europe will sooner or later get stuck on President Wilson's fourteen points, held out as a basis for a peace that will be salve for the healing of the nations. The people who have to fight the wars brought on by na tional greed and the ambition, chau vinism, blacksmithery, incompetence and unwisdom of men in high places in the world's governments, favor the Wilson principles. Governments un der which civilization and Christianity itself is threatened may stand ' aloof but they "will sooner or later have to bend to the will of the real victims of the wars that result from a lamen table lack of real statesmanship. For them '"Tis hard to kick against the President Wilson has given them to understand that he is not after their navies. What he really is after is a Versailles peace treaty that will scrap their militarism and their navalism and their chauvinism. President Wil son is not opposed to say , adequate, inevitable and reasonable punish ment for the nations and people re sponsible for drenching the world with blood and. broadcasting misery and woe throughout the world. They ought to be punished to the uttermost as an example even as a horrible ex ample for all nations and all peoples in the future. Just as guilty men have to suffer penalties, even to the death, so ought guilty nations be made to reap the whirlwinds they sow in their madness and fury. Nations which sow the dragon's teeth ought to be fed to the dragon for the good of humanity. Indeed, some of the world's most pow erful nations have been blotted off the face of the earth for their wicked ness and crimes and certainly the world has been better off without them. President Wilson is too familiar with history not to know that. He is also perfectly familiar with the fact that history repeats itself has only re cently repeated itself more monstrous ly than ever. It has shocked the world. All nations and all races stand aghast at it. People of ordinarily good judgment and -humaneness have been bereft of all the sound reason they ever had. They have been made mad. They are unreasonable and extreme and even ravenous in their opinions. Tolerance has been dethroned. Probably more than half the world is in such a distraught frame of mind that it is irreconcilably bitter and un-compro-mising. There are all sorts of reasons for it, however, and President Wilson knows it, but he is endeavoring to ap peal to what sober judgment is left on earth. He hopes to arouse enough reason to save the world in the future from the havoc created by the hideous dragons among nations. For that reason, the president of the United States is in Europe urging fthe establishment of a league of na tions to enforce peace among nations suficiently brutalized to again plunge their people and others into bloody wars. The people are the innocent by standers when it comes to the sacrifice of blood and limb and life. No doubt there are yet men and nations cap abl of the monster acts that under mine what little civilization there is in the world. They need a strong re straining hand to call them to halt. Lawless men make it necessary for civilized communities to have a sheriff. Lawless and godless nations make it necessary for the world to have an International sheriff about the size of a league of nations more concerned in 1 civilization, humanity and human rights than they are in gaining wealth and power and glory by a holocaust of blood. They do not hestiate to sacrifice the average man to the Moloch of iniquity and commit na tional crimes that brutalizeA debauch, demoralize and pauperize the world's people. We have just been looking on at a monstrous example of it, and there are yet men and nations capable of 'it, either now or in the future. We see before our own eyes an execrable ex ample of it. We behold a terrible wreck of empires the far spreading empire of Russia, the powerful empire of Germany, the etrong empire of Austria, and the abominable Turkish empire. There are survivals of the fittest, but they are burdened with woe and desolation, ravaged and bleed ing, and groaning under monster debts. The dragon nations responsible for it can hardly reap a penalty too severe to fit the crime. They brought re tribution upon themselves. "Germany is ruined for generations, politically, industrially and economically," de clares Dr. Walter Rathenau, one of the powerful captains of industry of the prostrate empire. No wonder! Hohen zollernlsm and militarism, seeking her "place in the sun." made a bed in hell for her. Of the dire result of more than four years of war against civili zation, Dr. Rathenau, one of the larg est employers of labor in Germany, says: "It is the greatest calamity that has happened to any country in 2,000 years. If the indemnities are high we shall have nothing with which to expand our industries and there will be a great tide, of emigration, probably to South America, the far East end certainly to Russia. The result will be the Balkanization of Europe." It is too late for a , league of na tions to eave the Teutonic empire. Its people have to work out their own redemption and pay "a Just tribute to a wounded, and bleeding civilization.. To prevent such another holocaust at Armageddon, President Wilson regies upon a league of nations to enforce peace. If that and a quickned Chris tianity won't do it, how long; will It be till another, deluge of blood and fire shall bring; great nations to- utter ITALY INSISTS ON TERRITORY. Italy's desire to acquire territory conflicts with President Wilson's - of t repeated contention for the self-determination of peoples. That is not a new idea, for it is only another way of re-asserting , the principle that ?'all just government rests on the consent of the governed." All Americans who1 believe in a democratic-republican government believe in that funda mental principle. Otherwise they must believe in forms of government which ignore the consent or self-determination of the people. Italy insists on retaining all the ter ritory wftich she captured from Aus tria. That part of it inhabited by peo ple of Italian blood wants to be at tached to the mother country, but that portion containing 1 a majority of Jugo-Slovaks wants to govern it self, independent of Italy. The people Lot. those races desire to set up a re public and insist on self-determination, according to the American principle. On the other hand, Italy very firmly insists on asserting sovereignty over those people without regard to their consent. She probably means to coerce them, as a Rome dispatch a few days ago stated that although the world war has practically exhausted Italy, she did not propose to demobilize her army till the question of annexations shall have been settled. Of course, Italy now has the military power to carry out her determination, but she may defer to the decision of her Eu ropean allies concerning this matter. Otherwise, she will do violence to the principles for which the allies, includ ing the United States, fought for the liberty, the self-determination of peo ples. - That is an American ideal, generally endorsed, it was believed, by all the allies, but it is not a matter that the United States would attempt to en force on any of the. European countries. We can insist on it at the peace con ference and refuse to consent to forci ble annexations', and then leave such purely European questions to Europe to handle or possibly to flgh trover. At the same time, we can urge in a friend ly spirit full adherence to the self determination principle wherever it is consistent. As to all that, Europe will have to be her own judge, as we don't propose to run around all over the world set ting up little republics among people who may be more bolshevlc than de mocratic. Neither chauvinism or bol shevism in Europe has any semblance to the American democratic ideal. DECEMBER FARM INCOME. With a packing house , at Orange burg offering a. near-by market for all the hogs tfcat can be Talsed in South Carolina, the farmers of the lower por tion of that state are taking advan tage of it to add considerable receipts to their farm income, their hog sales ranging all the way from 3500 to 33, 000 for shipments. This hog Income follows that from cotton, tobacco and other farm crops so peculiar to this section, and it counts at a time of year when things are at a standstill on the average farm. A correspondent writes from Holly Hill that a few farmers of that section are setting a fine example that is worthy of emulation, especial ly as the advent of the cotton boll weevil is imminent in that quarter. As to the farm income n hogs, it stated that Mr. Jno. W. Hart recently shipped to the Orangeburg packing house seventy head of hogs, which netted him 32,200. The larger portion of this lot were only eight months old. Another lot of twelve netted him $500. Mr. Johni L. Wiggins shipped a lot of eighty hogs to the same place which netted him about 33,000., Messrs. Hart and Wiggins are not the. only farmers of their section who have found time to raise hogs for the nearby packing house market. Num bers of other enterprising farmers have launched out on that progressive line. Mention is made of another farm er who raises both hgs and cattle. Mr. M. E. Schuler is devoting his attention to cattle raising and finds profit in the livestock industry at a season when routine farming is at a standstill. He has a fine herd of Hol- steins, and is shipping calves to, dif ferent parts of South Carolina, North Carolina and other states. Those prosperous South Carolina farmers unite in saying that the soon er the farmers generally get into live stock, raising for farm income the bet ter It will be for them and the state. TO DEEPEN THE CAPE FEAR BAR. Representative John H. Small, chair man of the .rivers and harbors com mittee of the house of representatives, makes the gratifying announcement that the committee has retained In the new bill an appropriation of 3398,625 for navigation improvements on the Cape Fear waterway between Wil mington and Southport. " The recommendation of General Wil liam M- Black, chief of the engineer corps, United States army, - specifies that 3803,625 of " the v appropriation shall be utilized in providing a thirty foot channel on the ocean bar at mean low water. The channel will be made 400 feet -wide, and an annual appro priation of $95,000 will be made for the malntenence of the channel from year to year. . 1 ; . This Improvement has been needed for years for the commerce of the port, and the deeper, channel can be easily maintained if a breakwater is con structed out from Bald Head. Gener al W.-H. Btxby, former chief engineer, said when here that a depth of 40 feet on the bar,-is easily 'maintainable as soon as the commerce of the part makes It necessary, The new ship building industry, alone ought to ore- CTOBEtfT COMMENT. MlWon for Shipbuilding. The government has spent 963,300, 000 on the shipyard at-Hog Island, but It was Hog?, Island that threw the big-r gest scare into Gfermany end the, in vestment was-, worth, while. This Is an honest southern comment, made in full knowledge, of the bitterness of the sectional cry raised o'yfer the trailing fact' of the gdvernment's recklessness in spending a. couple of thousand dol lars on a shipyard at Wilmington. Charlotte Observer, The New CongVearaaiu It cost Congressman-elect Samuel M. Brinson something like forty dollars to get the office. - However, this should not be an lmonHvo tn All nedaeros'ueH to enter the race for office with the!Prents at o'clock, In spite of all belief that they can get by with such that could be done by the most skilled a small expense account. Mr. Brinson . medlcal attention and the tenderest at a time when the office was seeking the man Instead of the men seeking the office and hence the fact that he was not . compelled to lay out e large sum of ready cash. Up around Raleigh' the folks are talking about what e fine appearance Brinson will make when he hits theH capital city. A prepossessing appear ance is not his only attribute, either. When it comes down to oratory the, New Bern man compares favorably with some of. the best that this coun- try ever produced and' when in the halls of cone-res he arises to have his say about such and such matters, it can be assured that those within hearing distance will stop to hear him. -New Bern Sun-Journal. YTVMifTnn. f S&a. The United States went to war with Germany over the freedom of the seas, the past several months she had given milj Tenn.; Cecil Eugene Webb, At That wan tviA vital issue between the her all to the various branches of war, ,,. . t,, tuto ".w p That was the vital issue between the two nations. . Had the Imperial Ger- man Government resDected the rule of visit and search; had it refrained from employing its submarines 4n ruthless attacks on merchant ships, enemy and neutral alike: had it respected the paired her. strength to such a degree rights of non-combatants to life and that she fell the more easy victim to property, no legitimate cause of war : the dread malady with which she was would have existed. From the day affected just at the gloripus fruition that the Lusltania was sunk until the . of all the good work that has been day that the president appeared before 1 done by the good women of every com congress to urge a declaration of war , munity. A member of the First Bap against the Imperial German - govern- tlst church, she was also active in the ment, our controversies with the Junk- organizations of the congregation and er autocracy all turned on the free; during the recent most severe epi dom of the seas". Now that the war demlc of influenza in Wilmington, she has been won, now that Germany has . worked almost day and night in car been defeated and Prussian militarism ' rylng forward the great relief work has been obliterated, we are told by that so mitigated the fearful results Senator Knox, Theodore Roosevelt and of the disease here. other distinguished republicans that Ths death of Mrs. Wiley is even a the freedom of the seas has no place greater hardship upon the family be in the peace conference or in the peace cause of the fact that her sister, Miss treaty. The one issue that we must Mamie James Fennell, has also been not deal with and the one principle critically ill and threatened with pneu which we must not assert are the is- 1 monia, though she was somewhat im sue and the principle on which we ' proved yesterday. Friends earnestly went to war. It jjs as if certain emi- hope that the knowledge' of her sis nent statesmen at the close of the : ter's death will have no untoward ef Clvil War had solemnly declared that feet upon her general condition. Be slavery and secession weTe no concern sides her parents, Mrs. Wiley is sur wbatever of the American people. Not . vived by the sister named; her par being a distinguished republican, the ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Fennell, and London Times is unable to take the ad- ' one brother, James G. Fennell.- The vanced position held by the Knoxes ! tenderest sympathy of friends goes out and the Roosevelts. The most influen- I to each and every one of them in the tial of all British and foreign news- : deep affliction which has come to them, papers is more than willing to con- i The large number of callers at the cede that the United vStates is not a 1 saddened home yesterday afternoon British colony' and that It has rights and evening attested the high esteem on the seas both in peace and war in which Mrs. Wiley was held and the which deserve consideration and re- deep sympathy which many friends spect. The legal correspondent of the feel for the sorrowing ones. Times goes so far as to insist that "the 1 Arrangements for the funeral had law of the past has been the same in not been made last evening but the both countries. The prize courts in England and America have followed the same rule. This agreement may te 0f the. city who will attend tne ser continued if there is recognition ot ' vices. the facts as they are, among which are the unique position of England and the scattered, fragmentary character of her empire. That is the view of most thoughtful Englishmen, who desire a complete agreement witn tne unirea States on this question and are wise enpugh to foresee that if such an agreement is not' reached, serious and needless differences are bound to arise in the future between the two coun tries New York World. BONUSES' ALLOWED SEAMEN ARE TO BE DISCONTINUED Washington, Dec. 20 -Bonuses allow ed seamen for entering the once submarine-infested waters of Europe will be discontinued after December 22 the shipping board announced today, li censed deck and engineer officers, how ever, will receive the extra pay until January 1, unless in the meantime-the wage adjustment committee ofthe board iall establish new wages for them. f Allowances heretofore made to all members of ships' companies, except lincensed officers, to cover loss of ef fects as the result of submarine activ ities will be discontinued in the case of all men signing ship's articles on and after December 22. MISS WILSON TO HAKE CONCERT TOUR AT THE FRONT Paris, Dec. 20. Miss Margaret Wil son, daughter of the president, has left Paris for a concert tour ,ot 30 days among the American troops in the vi cinity of Chaumont, where American headquarters is located. She is plan ning to sing on Christmas day at Oondrecourt, in the Department of the Meuse, Jn the same region where the president will dine with the American soldiers on Christmas. 21 $2.00 Quality Crepe de Chine and Mes saline Silks, all col ors, yard . .. .$1.49 Complete Assortment Lowest Prices - Greatest Variety H. : J 615-617-619 North Fourth Street BARGrAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT Toys, Novelties, Shoes, Hats, Men's arid Boys' Suits and Over ; xoats; Ladies' and Children's Suits2 Coats, Dresses, Mattings, Rugs: MRS. CHARLOTTE F. WILEY In the death yesterday afternoon of Mrs. Charlotte Fennell Wiley, wife of William A. Wiley and eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. I Fennell, No. 807 Market street, Wilmington loses one of its most attractive end most charming-young women, her death being a very great shock to the devoted fami ly and to hundreds of friends here and throughout this section of the state. After a lingering' illness of influen za which unfortunately developed Into pneumonia a few days since, Mrs. Wiley passed away at the home of her ; Yesterday morning, after passing a more restful night, her con ditlon seemed somewhat improved, but the rally was only temporary and as the afternoon wore on, she began sinking until the end came, all mem bers her immediate family being with her except Mr. Wiley, who is in the Bervice of his country overseas i and could not be informed even of j Mrs. Wiley's critical illness. It was great satisfaction, "however, a few 'days before her death for Mrs. Wiley to learn that, although in the thick- .est of the fighting during the closing ays of the war, her husband came tnrougn witnout serious injury. jmltb. wiiey was mucn lovea ana ad mired by a host of . friends- here and throughout this section of the state ! where she was well known. During her all to tfte various branches of : work, being exceedingly active in ev ery good work that went on in the community. In fact, it may be said mat curing ner worx ior me various charities in the city, she may have im hour and place will be announced later upon advices from other relatives out CO-OPERATIVE TRUCK GROWERS ' ASSOCIATION ELECTS OFFICERS Wilmington Organization Rounding Out Successful Year. (Carolina Fruit and Truckers Journal) The Wilmington Co-operative Truck Growers' association is rounding out another year's successful operations and at the annual meeting of the board of directors at Wrightsboro Monday night the following officers were elect ed for the ensuing year: J. O. Brown, president; B. VanBa vell, vice-president; Chas F. Setters, Sr., treasurer; E. H. Freeman, secre tary and manager. On this occasion many matters in connection with the past year's opera tions were brought up for review and most satisfactorily handled. The or ganization is in fine shape, the officers being' efficient, painstaking and active in the discharge of all of their, duties, while the members are pleased with what is going on. At the same time and place Manager Freeman reported that he was co-operating heartily with Senators Sim mons and Overman for naving the gov ernment sell the cargoes of nitrate of soda at present stored In Wilmington, sold to the farmers, direct rather than to the highest bidder, which would enable the speculators to profiteer at the expense of the farmers. Reports from our two senators and Represen tative Godwin would indicate that our senators and representatives in con gress' will win out. Notice was also given that the association would pur chase potato grading machines early in the new year. Other matters were taken up arfB discussed and disposed of in the usual style, after which the meeting adjourned. aufcinn w0mi iii : Make Your Christmas Purchases At This Popular Uptown Dept. Store REHDER NEGRO PAYS PENALTY; r PROTESTING INNOCENCE Youar Napoleon. Spencer Electrocuted For Murder of Mr. Harvey Heite. -atWInaton-Salem. Raleigh, Dec' 20. Protesting his in nocence to the last, Napoleon Spencer, 17-year-old negro, of Winston-Salem, was put to death by electrocution at the state penitentiary here this morn ing for the killing of Mrs. Harvey Hester, a white woman, last March. Spencer, was convicted in Surry coun ty and the North Carolina supreme court affirmed the judgment of the lower court. Governor Bickett declin ed to interfere with the execution. Mrs. Hester and her husband were killed at their home, near Wilston-Sa-lem last-spring and Spencer was ar rested charged with the double kill ing. He was tried on a charge of kill ing Mrs. Hester. The evidence against him was circumstantial but in the opinion of the authorities was well connected and a jury found him guilty of her murder. - FIVE ALLEGED VIOLATORS OF REED LAW NABBED ON1 TRAIN Knoxville, Tenn., Dec. 20. Kentucky and Tennessee .agents of the depart ment of justice, co-operating to pre j j tQd made a haul on jgne , -' Nashville traln No. 33. between vent violation of the Reed bone-dry and Nashville train No. 33, between Lexington" and Knoxville. Five men were arrested enroute here and to night are in custody at the federal building awaiting a hearing tomorrow. The prisoners are J. RV Beavers, of Cop- lanta; M. Judge, Macon, Ga.r W. P. Brown, of Asheville, and "Rock Wil- 1iam5 ' Between 150 and 200 quarters were seized and also a number of traveling bags containing ardent spirits, but for which no owners coma De iouna. Airplane Restrictions Canceled. , Washington, Dec. 20. President Wil son today authorized, the revocation of the prohibition of and" restrictions upon private airplane exhibitions contained in his proclamation of January 1, 1918. Throat Mrs." David Martin. 807 S. Front Street, Nashville. Tenn., Writes: I had a very bad cold, some thing like "GRIP," and after ustn? Juniper Tar ! have entirely recovered. Boy It Today, as Colds Lead to Gr: 60 Doses. 30c does stop itching and relieve eczema Many sufferers from eczema or simi lar skin troubles have found Resinol Ointment invaluable in stopping the itch ing, in soothing and cooling tlie irritated skin, 'and in most cases, clearing the trouble away. Its gentle, harmless ingredients make it safe for use on the tenderest skin, and it is so nearly flesh colored that it may be used without hesitation oh ex posed surfaces. Ask your druggist f s ft. CHICHESTER S PILLS TUS VUUQHU iSUAXB. &v Ckt.6ha.tei a Diamond T V Mil- i w.j i , . boxes, sealed with Blua Prnratat. Ask fOTClfi-CrfES-TEK S DIAMOND BRAND FILLS, for ?2 I'm Kta m& Atf hA-M r wM yeaiaknowaaa Best, Safest, Always Reliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE ww lyttfaSiBaSI mi. Ladies Best Quality Kid Gloves. Spe cial, pair $2.19 & GO. JUuiiipe ItakE rl Best ft f IP m' .Influenza, anrl u , ui&eabes start withacold Don't trifle with it At the first shiver sneeze, take cascaraMpuinine Standard cold remedy for 20 yer-4 fcrin -safe, aure.no opiate breakT in 24 hourarelieves grip in 3 back if it fail. The genuine bos hi. n8 with Mr. Kill's oictie. At 7u DS KELLY-DUr4.EXccuM Grinding Mi i V Ann 1.1 1 I PMTkiU. I " " mouurmi. kin v m i r . . . Fow pl.te., (fcjtiJVI enadmir at ttKumnTL? I ekaasr 1 mi-form vrfitdtnar. th S3SS Ktaptvd for Gacoliue Engln!. Write for b ataloi P. C Baldwin, Distributor, Greensboro, N,C See Them On Display At N. JACOBI HARDWARE COMPANY - Wilmington, N. C SMITH HARDWARE COMPANY Goldsboro. N. C. GEORGE T. RHOOES Laurinburg. N. C Mi. 1 Jr. It pumps and carries all the water , No more drudgery, work on the farm for the men folks or 4he women folks. Every I farm home can now be , citified with a Home Water System "Sn.nnn alreadvin use. No hired hand can work as cheap, w a appy Leader farm owneti We are distributors for Leader Iron Works and buy tanks and water systems in car lots. We can furnish from our stock outfits for trasnlirm enerine drive, Volt D. C. current, or 110 Volt A. C. S. P. 60 .cycled rent. ' Plumbers and pump deal ers will be allowed us icrtMinf a Wp are in po31' tion to fill orders prompt for tanks and water m terns. Write us for pn Yours very truly, THE MOTOR COMPANY Distributors, V T UIOIUM 7& , AT YOUR DRUCC1 Aft. Local book X war stamnsf 1 , . . Read. Star Business ruin? At that necessity , ; - i
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Dec. 21, 1918, edition 1
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