DRIVE STARTS FRIDAY 20
- AT 9:00 A.M. -
WHERE SMART STYLES MEET MODERATE PRICES
• Is'
Mail Orders Will Be Filled On the
Day Received at Sale Prices
—-~T~-—
i
■ **
Great Drive for 1000
Begins This Morning at 9 6 Clock
HOUR SPECIAL
On the opening hour, 9 to 10,
sell a 65c Zephyr Gingham,
32 inches wide, per yard
we will
19c
A range of pretty plaids and stripes.
First Floor.
Unheard-of Bargains
Will Greet You
HOUR SPECIAL
For one hour this morning, 9 to 10
o’clock, we will sell 85c value figured
voile, all dark patterns; the new sum
mer styles, at, i2|c
per yard . «i.. *i »i» • •>* •
Be On Hand When
the Doors Open
HOUR SPECIAL
Opening hour, 9 to l6 o’clock this morn
ing, we will sell $1.75 value full fash
ioned hose, black, brown and the ne^
■( shades for summer, 4*1 AA
per pair «pl •
(Limit two pairs to a customer)
SOIL OWNERSHIP THE
SOLUTION OF PROBLEM
Senator Giles Preaches Closer
Relations Between the Man
And the Land in Carolina
Xl'W HKRN, April 19.—“Mixing- the
human element in the saiDonly can be
■Kcamplished by soil ownership,” Sen
* tor p. F. Giles, Marion, chairman of
tua plate farm loan commission, de
rlared today in his address before the
Xortli Carolina Drainage ..association.
Eastern North Carolina needs most
,,f all drainage of lands and farm bwt.
prsf- he asserted. “Since the organic
zation of the North Carolina Drainage
Stop Itching Eczema
Penetrating, Antiseptic Zemo
Will Help You.
Never mind how often you have tried
and failed, you can stop burning, itch
ing eczema quickly by applying Zemo
furnished by any druggist for 35c. iSx
tra large bottle $1.00. Healing begins
the moment Zemo is applied. In a
short time usually every trace of Ecze
ma, Tetter. Pimples, Rash, Blackheads
and similar skin diseases will be re-,
moved. . .'
For clearing the skin and making 1t
vigorously healthy, always use Zemo,
the penetrating, antiseptic liquid.
When others fail it Is the one depend
able treatment for skin troubles of all
kinds.—Adv. .
association, more than ten years ago,
we have been .justified in believing it
will ultimately accomplish its purpose.
It is therefore incumbent on some or
ganization to ‘make* the farmer.
"There is such close relations be
tween the man and the soil that pro
duction will continue to increase in
proportion sjo the increase in popula
tion, regardless of the boll weevil or
any other modern plague.
"Butrin order to give the greatest
income that <jan possibly coipe from the
man and the soil combination, we must
put the human element in the soil.
Mixing commercial fertilizer with the
soil is directed by the expert, but the
work can- be dofie by any wage earner.
Mixing the human element in the soil
can only be accomplished by soil own
ership, ^nd this after all is the ulti
mate, purpose! of the North Carolina
Farm Loan commission.
•-“The 240 building and loan associa
tions in North Carolina have done for
the towns and villages just what must
be done for the rural communities.
"Thousands of citizens are peaceful
and law abiding home owners because
of these building and loan associa
tions. When we have erected in North
Carolina an organization by the state
itself that will do for the tenant
farmer in the country, just what the
building and loan associations have
done for the laborers in cities and
towns, we wil lhave put'our state on a
direct line of progress and develop
ment.
“This will ultimately class us with
Dehmark, Sweden and other great agri
cultural countries of western Europe.
That this may be done/ co-operation is
needed from this and similar organiza
tions, laboring i in North Carolina for
our state’s progress .and development.
"The commission in North Carolina
is not interested primarily in the two
factors will.ultimately mean our agri
cultural salvation ' in eastern North
Carolirih.—these two factors' being in
creasing' the yield per acre and re
[ ducing the cost of production.
“Both will come in their proper way
and time if our state will take another
progressive step and create and pro
vide for a strong helping hand for the
tenant farmer of today and tomorrow.”
There are 27 professional baseball
leagues, covering territory from the
Atlyttic to the Pacific, and from the
interior of Canada to the Gulf of Mex
ico. Players number 2200.
A Good Thing—Don’t Miss It.
Send your name and address plainly
written together with S cents (and this i
slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co, Des j
Moines, Iowa, and receive in return a
trial package containing Chamberlain's ;
Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup,
bronchial, "flu," and whooping coughs, ;
and tickling throat; Chamberlain’s ,
Stomach and Liver Tablets for stomach :
troubles, indigestion, gassy pains that i
crowd the heart, biliousness and con- :
stipation; Chamberlain’s Salve, needed
in every family for bums, scalds,
wounds, piles and skin affections; these
valued family medicines for only five .
cents. Don’t miss it.—Adv. |
I SATURDAY ONLY
I V J
MEAI, TICKETS FOR
$4.00
| Number Limited**® M*.
I j
Rose Cafeteria
i
200 N. FRONT ST.
___ —* :
f— —. -
WILMINGTON SHOE COMPANY
You who do not cafe to pay the higher prices will find items listed below that will be
of interest. Not cheap shoe's at cheap prices, but high grade shoes at the pnce of the
cheaper ones. Numbers /that we are closing out or styles that we are overstocked on.
These prices for .Friday and Saturday only.
$6.50 Russia Calf Blucher Oxford,. welt
sole, flat heel, for big girls or ladies that
like the flat heels; special ^
$6.00 Black-Satin one-strap Pumps, turn
sole, flat covered heel, - ^ 05
special at
fit *
$6.50 and $7.60 Patent Leather one and
two strap Pumps, welt and turn soles,
flat heel; special \ . QC|
S7.50 Russia Calf^dne strap Pump, and
two tone Oxfords, welt soles, flat heels,.
assorted sizes and widths;
special at • • >< * • • > • • '• • *
$4.95
$7.50 LaFrance Black Wid one strap Pump ’
medium and Cuban heels, dj 4 QC
assorted widths and sizes, at :
i 9.00 Brown Satin one strap pump, cut out
on sides, Junior Louis heels ; 95
turn soles; special at
$8.50 Black Satin Pumps, one strap, turn
soles, covered Junior Louis. AC
heels; special at '
$8.50 Patent Leather Pumps, fawn-buck
trimmed, turn soles, Junior QC
Louis Heels; speci^f .at.;.. .
-No. 13 Selz $IX-$6.00 Oxfords* for Men—
Three new styles. ^ ^ -
; '*• 'L'J
$9.00 medium light tan calf, one strap
with buckle, Biege Suede, trimmed, cov
ered Cuban heel; QC
special at .... .
/ *■ }
$7.50 Black Satin Colonial Pump, welt sole,
flat leather heel, one of the
newer styles; special at. —.
$6.50 Biege Elk, tan calf trimmed, sport
Oxford, flat heel, rubber heel attach^;
welt sole, very new;
special at .. t... • • •
$5.95
$8.50 Light fawn buck, one strap, brown
- trimmed, low rubber heel, welt sole; one
of our most popular styles; ' *
special at
$5.95
$8.50 LaFrance Black Kid one strap
Pumps, plain toe, Cuban heel,
welt sole; .special at ......
$5.95
$10.50 medium light brown calf, two strap
' Pump, turn soles, covered Junior Louis
heel, popular shade of brown
for, spring; special at
’** :n" ’
. **'h * HOSE SPECIAL ’ ^ jj*
Weldrest Silk and Rollins Silk, plain blade
- and brown, black and brown with heavy
seam In back and black and brown with
thick end thin stripes, sold
« ; for $2 and $2.26; special at *>1*U*J
1' ' ’ ' • _ 1_
WILMINGTON >HOE
. **- ■ Ay.
(Next! to Murchison National Bank)
T
The ear may often deceive
—but the eye is a truthful
servant
CWhen you buy a pair of shoes or a hat from a mail order catalogue you
give rein to your ear, and put your trust in the Goddess of Luck.
CBut when you patronize your local merchant for the same materials you
need no trust—you see and know what you are getting.
Buying
Presents Precisely the Same Parallel
C When you place your business with a newspaper not a member of the Au
dit Bureau of Circulation, you are trusting to the ear and luck.
' ’ ■ •- ‘ '" • • •
,CBut when an accredited paper of the Audit Bureau is used you see and
know what you are getting.
/ ' * ;*• . ■
CThe Audit Bureau of Circulation is the barometer by which the rise and
fall of a paper’s circulation is measured. The circulation records of each
member are audited annually, and every paper not going to. a. bona fide
subscriber is clipped from the list. This record is.official;' The Audit Bu
reau of Circulations is to the newspap er world what Bun' and Bradstreet
« , • - v\, . A-: -rh- • •. yy-:“iy ,r* - ■■—<
are to the realm of finance. . •
. • . ''•••/. . •.... : ■ • t'T"'
’ i':*V - ' ; \ ; '•#! 5 v
- ' ’ dDo you hire a man ;at his own appraisal, or what experience tells you his
> ; worth? - \ ... i-M? ' . A..
■ * , , / . ' ' • • ' / ' ( -4 ■'
/ '» ^ . V v. ? a*.' .v ' • -v ...
. 1: •
,-y
. - . . . • ‘ Vi- J.V * •< •{•. :• ’
■ ' '• • . ' “ , t v >. -• ’ a • i"
Member Audit Bureati of Circulations , f
'^4g^ *'%
existence—in the
meantime, circulation books are open for inspection
NO OTHER LOCAL PAPER IS A MEMBER
•%c i;*.,
'I1*'