Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / Jan. 17, 1921, edition 1 / Page 5
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4, THE M0R3STENG . STAR, WILMINGTON, )N, C, MONDAY; JANUARY 17, 1921. f FIVE At mmM Small town life palled ,( on -Harriet Field Her longed for opportunity to visit the great bustling metropolis of Kew York finally came, r She ,was at tracted to the famous Bohemian quar- n ardent de-votee of free and' ul- came 'advances of Royal Blondin. a - f f man leading . f handsom a 1ndolce at . the of -..ItiVHtPfl a rich aunt. He easily convinced he'r thatxonv ention was a useless code-fol- lowed oiinuiJ vllJ ".j -.' uoimis.juv Ined and, agreeing to his proposal ot a Jree love marriage, went through the V , - ' SNITA STEWApT HARRIET ANt THE PIPER OPEMNO AT TUB ROYAL- TODAY empty ceremony with him." Elondin,s "Hvan county,'wid6w of Senator J. Parks former contract wife,; known-as-the .Worley. has filed Jier candidacy :f or the "Tam-O-Shanter Girl," witnessed the, senate ln the. Second senatorial dis "wedding" her first knowledge jof the trict," which includes Sullivan and Haw-v fact that her love-affair with "Blondin 1 was ended. In revenge she sent an anonymous letter to Blondin's;, aunt telling her of his romance with- Har riet. ' " - ' Like to hear the balance? vIts the start of Kathleen Norris'. celebrated utory, "Harriet and the-Piper," tn which Aflita Stewart opens at .the . Royal to day her greatest First National attrac tion. . ' :': ' GRAND TUESDAY . T '. Andrew Robson, who "plays" "Mr. Jamison" in the Goldwyn picture "Stop ! Thief!" starring Tom Moore, "under the direction of Harry Beaumont, haa the listinctlon of having played, ona cerX ain part 1,000 times.' He was born and educated In. Toronto, Canada, v and played his. first role on the stage.4nl889 in a road company which touredVCan ida. He also supported, Nance O'Nell, ind James O'Neil, and was1 starred : in 'The Royal Box," "Pretty Peggy,"" and "Richard Carvel" the , latter part be ing the one which he played a thousand times. He started in pictures, km '"LiOthT ario" in "Mlgfhon" in lSX.or. tne Cali fornia,' Motion Ptcturercijmpahy ;rt San Rafael, California. He continued? witH' that same company for four years play ing characters. - Amon the Goldwyii pictures In which he has been seen are: 'Scratch My Back," "The -.Great Ac cident" with Tdm Mo.ore; . and "Cupid, the Cowpuncher.," . with. . Will., Bogera. . "Stop Thief!" comes to the Qra,nd to morrow for a two-day ruif. . x" ' ROYAli TttURSDAT ' George Melford, the veteran" producer, has scored another ten-strike in his production of "Behold 34y "Wife!" from Sir Gilbert Parker's famous novel.' The Mcture, which will be" shown at " the Royal theater next Tfeursday opening a three-day run, Is" the! story of the transformation of an Indian" maiden of the Canadian northwest, married in -a (It of drunken rage- by an, aristocratic young Englishman to Bplte his family; into a beautiful and cultured young voman. Milton Sills and Ann Forrest "e also in the cast. She Fell in Love with Jier very own husband! H ' : Scandalous? ;Certainly! . ' ' At least all the neighbors thought that she was.. a'.. disgrace to the town -that she should be tarred and feathered! Certainly lliey had a reason there's. a reason for everything. They knew her husband had - left her, and that she Was entertaining two mcnj-. unchaperoned! And when Tabitha (named frorf! "Tabby," the cat) - came at dead o night to investi- 1 gate Oh, it's a shame! He looked at her from under- ' neath this charming widow's own bed! h, it s a roar 7; all the way through !-a.nd; one; of ;the best.jcJf the .? career of -.. ;. :. , '.',":.". -1' . ' .' . ." : - "'. B I L In thin pleaslna; little nle taken from the stage play, "BILLETED" "THE WIDOW" Directed ly one of the best directors. John S. Robert Hon, with tftn exeeptionall'y brilliant " cast, including; .-j- r JAMES L. It' the hlKh light In the a r e e r of Ulllie Burke Screen Magazine, Too today; -:....:, A i.-ll I ' W " III : Royal : Grand GRAND of '' tlle 7nst 'i delightful screen flon atT;eVoer puc & the aura mi8 tand theater, today, when Knrwi'v" mr5 Pict"re,. starring Billie th? - 'i "1 be shown- Miaa Burke has married and latn riot c w,:a. - 4 .wmiu vxi Ife house m a'little, New - 'lTS.. "uase-: Lionel Preedy.S a YZ?S at the Taradine house. Bettv tv sieged y creditors; and, short of funds, atincea. hat :;her; usband "has died wv- Auwa, so mat she can coj lftct his life insurance. Comnltrratinna vv-ur wen 5ipra.m Ttymill, the Colo-1 " ouu iiieuu. arrives ann nrnvpa l.to Vbe none Other than the 'dea.d" hua. band.; How matters are finally adjusted forms the.' clrJr of the storv. whinh i ideally suited tt the whimsical urt of! 'Eddie Polo s'.jriaster' serial achieve pnent, ;'King!Hof tha Gircs. carries more punch tta'the' square-;inch than anything that - has ' 4ver before been" unraveled on" the screens of. America, ,'. and ach Monday' has brought an in creasef over 400 people over ; the I pr&vlous Monday, since .this serial ..be ; gan its run,five weeks ago Todaylthe sixth thrilling" chapter is on the bill, and" preparations are beins made to "handle one.: of ,'ihe biggest crowds An , the history of that theater; "Kin -of the Circus? IS losricaifit possesses. the thrills that are demanded in a serial, . and more, but the story- is logical. In ; fact ' a greater part, of its. plot- is true , to life. : .. . : ' . .r A bis. comedy treat, another one of . those Supreme screams,Ms an added at : traction on' the Bijou's bill today. .. t -V 5 ' AVOMAN CAIVDIIIATE FILES HER -PAI'BHS FOR SEAT IK, SEJfATE KNOXVIL.L"G, Tenn., Jan. ,16. Mrs: Anna Keys Worley, of Bluff City, Sul- Kins counties. Mrs. worley win oe op- posed by S. M. McNeil, Republican, of KIngsportr. The snedal election will be held January 25. . , A Punch! Jess ' Willard Nor Jack . ' . '.. .' .Dempsey. Ever Carried The Punch Of ? EDDIE POLO ; Jn the . Sensational Univer- ." ',.' :l . - fsal Serial iiallThc Which is i urnishing thou sands of patrons a regular ,1 Monday Treat TRY TO GET IN TODAY ! - - . ' ' - There's Also a Big Comedy ; .. ' . Treat S f L IE CRAN Gif MISIiEADINGr TOMORROW and WEDNES DAY, TOM MOORE and on ex tra large cant in the big: Co han & - .'Harris - stagre play, "STOP ' ' 'THlEKr'V' s " ..See w- Itl ! : ?l : "Home of Perfect iU . Pictures" ' , . , .--. ' ' 1 1 . ; V .'.J .j"-" . 1 1 -II - r-- J lsSSHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSMSJSSSSSSnB HONOR 'ROLL RECORDS BROKEN AT UNIVERSITY Honor Students Increase 40 Per Cent Two JVilraington v - , Students : on List (SpeciaL to .The Star) s CHAPEli HILL, lan. 16. The largest number of .... honor. . roll vstu4Ents ever recorded; at . the UntveTsity of North Carolina is. Jisted, by Dr. - T." J. Wilson, Jr.j . registrar, in checking' "over . the grades made during ..the past all and the registrar concludes therefrom that from the point of -view of scholarship the - fall was one of th'evbVst quarters the university has -ever kijjwn. .. At. any rate, something like a 40 per cent increase is noted in '.the number of; studchts, .men : and-N women, who uiaue.Kraaes .or.su.per cent and bettfcr. "Men. and women" is good, because :of the; total of 137, students who steppred into,, the. honor class, 14 were women. some -departments of the . .university which do notj. grade in : percentage- are not- includefl,, but roughly, the figures mean-, that x approximately 10 per '-cent of the men made honor grades and ap proximately 30-per. cent of the women. Blind MJin On list . One of the university's blind students, B. B. Worsham, of Reithbend, Va., who cannot see; the -Light of la"y, is on th'e list; as well as a'numner of outstanding campus leaders, including F. C. Shep ardy of .Wilmington, .captain o the bas ketball team; T. C. TaylHr, of Sparta, inter-collegiate' dehaterT and editor of the Carolina Magazine;-A. JL. Purring "t6n, of Scotland Neck, hurdler on the track ' team; C. T. Boyd, of Gastonia, and C. X. Beers, of Asheyilleboth in tercollegiate debaters; and yES. Lind sey,' of Tryon, a leading figure in glee club activities.. .. At the top even of the honor list are 15 men and two women who made the highest possible srade on every study they took, the all "1" students, a "1" being 95 per Cent and above. They are E. W, .Atkins, of Canyon, Tex., J. L. Aycock; Raleigh; J. S. Babb,, Hertford; D. A. Brown, Jamesvllle; P: R:' Dawson, "Weat. Springfield, Mass.; T,', H. Hamil ton, Des Moines; S. A. Johnson, Golds boro; H. Latshaw, Chapel Hill) E. S. Lindsey,, Tryort;JLi. D. - W. Martin, Suf folk," Va.; C. L. Moore, Burgaw;,G.- E. Newby, Jr., Hertford; C. I Silin, Chapel Hill; I. W. Smithey, Wilkesboro; E. P. Willard, Jr., Wilmington; apd Miss Louise Venable, Chanel Hill, and Miss M. T. Yellott, Bel Air, Md. A remarkable feature of the list is the high record of Chapel Hill. Sev enteen Of the total list claim Chapel Hill as their home, with Charlotte com ing next with five honor students. The Chapel Hill list includes' several grad uate students and instructors, who have lived elsewhere, but call Chapel Hill their home now. Five of the honor Chapel Hillians are sons and daughters Of, university- professors; Miss Mary Cobb, daughter of Prof. Collier Cobb; Miss Louise Venable, daughter of Dr. F. P. Venable; Miss Dorothy Greenlaw, daughter 'of Dr..EdwW Greenlaw; How ard Patterson; son of Prof. A. H Pat terson, and W. C. Wheeler, son of Dr. A. S. Wheeler. ,. - Two Wilmington Men ; The Wilmington students on the hon or roll are F.' CiShepard,' of the senior class, and E.'TP. Willard, Jr., of the sophomore class! Of the 17 attaining highest rank three are ' freshmen, two are sopho mores, one is a junior, there are no seniors, 10 are . graduate" students, rand one s 'a special-student. Of the othsr honor students wh.q madeabpv.e 90 cent therei are. 36 frqsamen, 18 sopno-morea,- 19 Juniors, 24 settlors, 19 grad uates, t.wo special graduates, and two pharmacy , students. .'The1 number of freshmen is unusually high. A partial list follows: ' , J. McR. Bethea, Dillon, S. C; O. H. Boettcher, Elizabeth City; B. B. Dal ton, BLed ' Springs; C. V, Davis, Southport; H, . M. DaVis, Tarboro; J. O. . Ellington. Clayton; A. P. Elliott, Suffolk, Va.; H. S. Everett, Rockingham; M. L. Farrior, Rose Hill; P. K. Green, Lillington; W. B. Harrell, Moyock; W. H., Harrell, Ma mie; ,E. H, Hartsell, Stanfield; W. H. Holderness, Tarboro; , W. E. Horner, Durhana; Miss . Ai E. Hughes. Render son; J. Y, Kerr,Warrenton; B. L. Malr pass, Goldsboro; C.. I. Matthews, Cl'ln tOn ; . R. J. Morton, Jacksonville D. Naiman, Kinston; S. J. Parham, Louis borg; P. F. Parshley, Clinton; Miss R. Penny, Wendaell; E. J. Petteway, Jack sonville;' A. L. Purrineton, Jr., Scotland Neck; A. F. Rar, Welcome; v G. F. Seyffert, Elizabeth City; F. C, Shepard, WUmington; J, A. Shoulars, JJich Squar; C. G. Smith, Siler City; Miss M. J. Spruill, Littleton; Earle H. Thomp? son. Kenansville; Franklin Thompson, Jacksonville; R, Aj Tillmah; Kinston; J. H. Wall, Chester, S. C.; Abram Weil, G'olds boro ;.S. M. Whedbee, Hertford; J. "A, "White. - Whitakers; W. D. White, Bea.ufort; W. E. , Wiles, Furches; W. T. .Young,iW.ilson; , J, H. Zollicoffer, Hen derson.:.. ; ; . . .. ' . f 10 . GUARDSMEN - TAKEN f IN A LYNCHING CASE Members Company M, Alabama v .Troops', Under Suspicion v BlRiriNGHAM, Jan. 1 6. Ten -members of Company ,M," Alabama National Guard, - ' were "ordered " arrested and brought to the Jefferson county jail tonight; by Judge Horace Wilkinson, special solicitor; who is conducting an Investigation' into the lynching of Wil liam Baird, a miner, at Jasper, Thurs day morning. , - t"'- " " Cqmpany M' was ordered to its home barracks at Tuscaloosa from Townley, near the scene of the lynching, immedi ately after Baifd.was taken from the Walker county jail by masked men and shot to death.' Baird was held in connection. -wttli the, killing , of Pri vate James Morrison, -of Company M, on the night of, December 23. . ' Two non-commissioned officers have been placed under arrest. . . The entire personnel of , Company1 M Will be taken to Jasper tomorrow under ,guard.' to a-ppear . at the f coroner's; investigation, It Was stated; ,! x -: IN MEMORY OP DR. WOLFE. (Special to TUe Star) -.TRINITY COLLEGE, Durham, Jan. 16. Tribute to .the memory of the late Dr. Jamea J, -Wolfe, for 17 years head Of the department iOf biology , here, and a nationally known authority .on the subject, iwill be patd by the creation" of a. memorJal fund to. bemused in providing tin his' name current periodicals dealing with the subject of : biology for the library, pr. "VVolfe died suddenly on the' eve. of commencement last year. GITOS vBLOOD TO SAVE LIFE ' . , OF WOMiAJf UNKXOAVTV TO IIIMJ ' SOUTH BENB, Ind., Jan. 16v Hartley Anderson, a member o the Notre Dame university football team, yesterday sac rificed some of his Wood- that a young woman,-' unknown, to him-.might live. it Was learned here . today.- .Doctors said . the,J transfusion, was. successful The. girl is Miss Agnes Luther,' of Cas sopolis, Mich.. " , v - NORTH CAROLINA GETS MOST TOBACCO MONEY Notwithstanding Lower .Prices; State Runs 27 '-Millions - - Ahead of Others (Special to The Sta : RALEIGH, Jan, 16. The . Decemhor I crop estimates show some very inter esting comparisons in North Carolina's ' 1920 tobacco crop. The production of 384,120,000 - pounds: showed, a 58,812,000' tound increase compared ; with the re-1 vised estimates for the 1919 crop of 325,248,000- pounds, "The value of the 1920"crop at December 1 price s ba sis, places this state 527,062,000 ahead of all others, ' notwithstanding the re markable decline "In the. market prices. A year &50 the season's producers sales amounted 295,963,922 pounds, it an average "prieeiof $51.63 per hundred. The same period in 1920 showed .284,- cio.aui "uunus or aoout.su per cent sold of the. 1920 crop. ,The 1920 tobacco has averaged $22.26 or ' $29.37- per hundred less than in 1919. There remain's, about, 20 per cent, of the crop to be marketed, though many of the Smaller" markets 1 have Closed. The" average prices during the season were as follows: July $21.35, and August $26.42, both of the South Carolina belt; September $19.21, October $24,20, November $24.7irandiDecember $17.27. There was sold' on the Wilson market to January 1, 1920, 33,398,382 pounds-at an average of $22.15J The Winston-Salem market sold 28,443,216 pounds at $23i.3ff.per hundred. During December, there were 55,6.22, 063 pounds sold at an average of $17.?7 per hundred, as compared with 32, 474, 298 at $53.94, the year previous. The total sales for the month including? re sales were 61,511,279 pounds. The Wil son market showed the heaviest sales during the month averaging $17.28. .per hundred pounds. The markets paying the highest prices during December were Mebane $29.32, Roxboro $27.86, J Apex $27.18, Burlington $22.42, and Durham "$21.19. The lowest prices paid on four markets during the month were less than nine cents iet pound. The total present season's production of tobacco in the United States was 1, 508,064,000 poundB compared with ? t 454,725,000 pourids in 1919. ' The 1,894, 400 acres showed a reduction, from 1919 of 16,400 afcreBT The totaltvalue of the crop was $318,859,000.- The smaller crop of 1919 sold for $566,709, 000 or 54 per cent more than the 1920 crop. The reported large stocks brought 1 over irom a year agro means mat a reduction in the 1921 production is lad visable. : 4 .-...; .' '. ' ' ' -V" '". ' KID ELLIS TO BEGKX TRAIXIJTG t HERE . EARLY "THIS WEEK ""The first of the Hanson-Ellis thou sand doDai series of finish matches for the championship of the south will be wrestJed at the Academy of Music on Friday night. Til- match will bel two falls out of three, as will each of the two Out of .three matches arr ranged. .Ringsld.6 tickets will be .placed on;, sale at Newman's ; cafe, today and remembering the : strangler "' Lewis match, fans will do well to secure tlckr ets early. ; ' - , ' . - Every match of th. series will be wrestled in ."Vllmlngton, one each week until the completion of the series. Ellis and Hanson will not .meet on foreign ground during the run-off of the series and it Is doubtful Is either will' Wrestle-,, anyone , else during .thisd time . since , so. very Tmucn aepenus . on the l dou;s. arran,gedt J: " ' .. ' i . BNisr. w. has registered two" wins over... Hanson, in , their tw.o last en counters, will arrive here early in the week ; and .! set up- training - quarters. He expects to devote almost his entire time to road work with "the object of improving his wind.- Hanson is work ing out daily. a-t tha.'Y" . with Harry Fales, Nick Verdus and Murray Grant and is rapidly rOuttding into top con dition. v""?1-' : ; '; -"' The series, in - addition to being f6r a purse of $l,000f vwiH determine" the championship : of the tfuth, sinctT the Kid and Friti. areV a4mittedly ,.the two best middiewelghts south of the. Mason and Dixon line.'-- - TOBACCO PRICES IMPROVED AV LITTLE BIT tS KIXSTOX (Special to The Stirr) . KINSTON, Jan. 16. Tobacco . prices here imnroved during the first week of the post-Christmas season, ending yes terday, according, to warehousemen who kept close watch' on the situation, in the hope that conditions would bei come better. ... -L In some, Instances good graces were uo five to eiglit cents a pound at the close of the week's sales, according to one observer, The certainty that the eastern Carolina growers wilt reduce the acreage sharply this spring, that the local poduct is preferred lor cer- ? tain -iisesi , and tnav traae conauions everywhere, are, gradually improving Is stimulating the marketit !s.1elieved. ' OfflcialB of the farmers? organizations do .not , expect any marked price ad vance before - the 'close of ; thi present season, however.. If a material advancei should come: the plantars should"ht be' deterred from- their determination to reduce the acreage 50 ,to 60 per cent., . they declare. Higher prices will un doubtedly come next fall with a sjnaller crop of better -quality,, they say. ' ' ' ; ' EAT LESS EAT f IF BACK HURTS Take a Glass of -Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladderbtliers ;! yois Drink .lots ibf 1 water . ' . ' -: - - Eating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble, in j3ome. form or others says a well known, authority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked get sluggish; clog 'up and .cause all' sdrtsof distress,-particularly backache and misery, in the kidney .region;, rheumatic- twinges,, severe ..headaches, acid stomach,-: .constipation, " torpid liver, sleeplessnesa,bladderand urinary" Ir- .. The moment your back hurts Or kid neys arenjt acting - right, .or it Madder: bothers ,yo'u, . get about f our . ounces' of ; Jad ; Salts from v any. - good ; p-harmacjf; take a tablespoonful in a glass of wa ter before breakfast' for a" few; days and your; kidneys win. .then A act fine. This famous salts : is made 'from-the acid of g rapes, and Jetaon juLce.v com bined With lithia, , and has been used forx geheratidhs ,:to . flush" clogged, kid--neys ' ana ; stimulate them to normal activity, ' also toV neutralize the. acids in. the ' iirirre- ad Sit- 316. ionger- irritates, Lthus ending bladder'; disorders;.-.:.-;i,-- ' makes a delightful effervescent-, lithia,r water drink ,which millions of men and j women i take now and 'then to ' keep th.e'1 kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kidjevj disease. Advt ff -ft" v-.-i.- ' Jill I rti-rlffii II Km TOD ART COLLECTION AT FLORA MACDONALD Twenty-Five Thousand Dollar Paintings Are Exhibited (Special to The Star tRED SPRINGS, Jan. 16. The $2,5,000 art collection, the eift of J. Kennedy Tpd ' of New York, recently presented to Flora Macdonald college was placed on exhibition yesterday in the college gym. The paintings, 37 ; in number, consisting yof landscapes, portraiture and marines are . the work of . well known , artists. Outstanding pictures in the collection - , are . : Woolf ord's "Edinburgh" and Lenbach's "Portrait of Bismark.M"- . v Mr Tod is ' d.' native of Clasgow, re ceiving his , education at the Glasgow academy and 'weir known throughout Great Britain and Ireland as a- former f ootball player;, having, many times pnraented Scotland in the Interna tiohai r games with England, Ireland fand Wales. Soon after leaving school he came td tjiis country, entered the banking house of an uncle 4b New .York'; and j later founded the firm of J. Kennedy, Tod and company, well known in busi ness and financial circles. . ,He has taken an : active part in the reorgani zation of railroad properties and; was (associated with the readjustment jof the fi . - - m-tOVe'mf -ii,f - An Enthraning Journey Through The Nlllnhemia ' .W-;,; Colony -:'fMf5 ' - - V ' : ;"'- '" - ' - . ' LOUIS B. MAYER , i V ' XJ m:m . ' Presents .; '; : ' ' J fl t -.,.- , toH: v" JL-j :-A.-7mJ: :'-m,i. mni4, rjVi ' '.; :rm, rr:mm : m':J:- :f , 'mmm , m . , : IN':'- . - , - I w! mm" mmmmmmmmim& : . - - . . . , .- , . m m . :: i - . mm lll'y ? -i mimtmmmmmm : .- j. . .. . - ...... - A-' V'--' -V ' . I '. ; :V-.' L- . -Sir .y, v', . . . . V m s i ; JANUARY CLEARANCE OP MEN'S.- 1 WOMENS AND CHILDREN'S ; V ' fine shpesj - x - "Men's maliogany calf' snoes, ,Goody ear welts k,: v Wingfoot rubber heels, English or blucher , ' ' styles, $10.00 values, ' ; " Jg ' ; Men's Ralston's shoes in tan Lotus calf, and ; . . gun metal, English or.blucher, (JjrT HJT :- . a pair . ........ 3) I $ tJ c Men's Ralston's shoes, kangaroo, full Enghsh styles and combhia. - ;l ': tion last, a pair ; T ; f V- rj fT-;;; -r. v only ... . . ; i . . f O v ' - Men's Bion F. ReynoldsV fine shoes for- men, ; :t ' . Russia calf, vici kid, Englishand combinaV;-L tion last, a pair , , ' x ; -i KA i r only ... . . . i i ,.r. ,.. . . M'ixiOU r ... Boys' all solid leather; shoes, gun metal calf .- ..-: I sizes 2i2 to 514, ' ' ; . O'.'TC ' ' K a pair ; . .V., $sWo.'0;I:'r Boys' .nne Holland shoes, gmu metal ;alf,: English or blucher a pair ... .......... Misses' lied Goose shoes, giin - metal calf, Misses' Red Goose shoes; gun metal 7 'calf, sizes IIV2 to 2, v, (JyjWP a pair . . , .V.:. . I tJ Boys' fine all-leather shoes in tan and - gun ; "metal, sizes 2V to ?'''''i'f;-:r?' '''0'"'' Children's shoes, brown kid, sizes (j0 AP ; 8 to .11,; a pair ..... . . . ; .00; Children's shoes, gun metal calf, sizes 2 to oii;..,..,::..:mv $3.00:5 ; Misses' shoes, gun metal calf, English lace, sizes 8 to 10, f'-OC a pair . ....... ...... . . tPOotl Godman's women's shoes, all solid leather, , formerly sold at $6.50 to $7.50 a pairj sizes 2 12 to 8, l QPI a pair JJ)tcO0 Belk's Special-made shoes for women, black kid, formerly sold at $9.25, d (( . now, a . pair . . ; . . :V.Z. 9)p5y. :J Holter's high-grade women's shoes, -"black v kid, full Louis heels,! ' '" OPC ' a pair . . . tj) O 3. . Holter's high-grade women's shoes, extra v fine quality of kid, new military (J A O pj heels, a pair . ........ ... Dorothy Dodd women's shoes, fine quality Havana brown kid lace boot,' full Louis .a.pai.r....X..r...'.. $10.00 Dorothy Dodd woman's fine shoes, black kid, full Louis heels, a pair affairs of the .Philadelphia and Read ing, the Norfolk and Western, the Baltimore and Ohio and other roads, v . He is -chairman of the board of trus tees of the Provident Loan society of New York, a director of the American Cotton Oil company and of the In demnity. Fire Insurance company, a iitr.i'oer of numerous clubs and a past president of the St; Andrew . society of New York. GROWING DEAF WITH r HEAD NOISES? TRY THIS .If you are growing hard of hearing and fear Catarrhal! Deafness, or if you have roaring, rumbling, hissing nOises in. your ears, go to your druggist and get one ounce of Parmjnt (double strength), and add to It "one-quarter .pint of hot water and a little gr&nu- latea sugar. xaKe one taoiespooniui four times a day . '. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. ("logged nostrils should open, breathing becomes easy and the mucus stop1 dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs littre and is pleasant to talye. 1 Anyone who is threatened witli Catarrhal Deafness or who has headnoises should give this prescription-a trial. Advt. Russia calf and glaze styles, r d K ff . '. ;$8.00 r.-: , .. .. Harry Eyanson's KRAZY KATS K0MPANY A Show That Ha Stood The Test Here Before : 4 Exceptional Special- 4 Vaudeville Acts The Best Trained Dancing And Singing Chorus Of the' Season. L Victoria 5 I i 9 1 . : fill Ml; .;)).: i ' MM. .1 ? . mm h 'Mm. ;' S-l'i-t; . - ,-5. ... 11 mm ?:i.Vl..i .' ; ' ! S I' I I ' f : 1 mm mm m '.I mm . n.I"'S mm
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Jan. 17, 1921, edition 1
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