Newspapers / Cape Fear News (Fayetteville, … / Oct. 13, 1916, edition 1 / Page 2
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER JS, 1916- PAGE TWO CAPE KEJLR NEWS CAPE FEAR NEWS Published every morning ia tbe week, except Morally. " X. M- MOORE. , Sditor and Ua aer. Ofioeu 221 Hay SttwC Tulrjhe Ne, MS. SVWCHPTION PIUCEt Om Tear . Mi The News cull to be cvra asKauva t us mi Jul asMl la imng this, thejr are given free' meom to taeei ooiosaay. Entered as Mcond-class mat ter December 24, 191S. at the aeet office at Fayatoseille, Koxth Carolina, under the act of March t, 1878. Address all cnmmiinifatifw t the Cape Fear News, Fay aterille, N. C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1316. The average blind tiger figures that inr ought to win tine out of five chan ce. These are the solicitor,, the judRe. the jury, the supreme court, acd the last resort when all is lost cave criminal intentions is the Gover nor There are always well-meaning but misguided and credulous , folks -h' are willing; to take the side of a jrtind tiger if he promises to reform. 'The Governor is appealed to upon ertmental grounds, the prisoner is .-iiwharged and nearly always goes .tack to his old haunts of vice and , rrin.eiality. I r. ier these circumstances it is dis jcuurajtinfr to officers tfwho want to en force the law and there are other -har.ces that every person must take n consideration when dealing with rii.d tigers and kindred subjects. T.e.-e are cf criminals of this kind jir ! they rarely tail to use them. Many an honorable man and good ..'fficer has fa!le a victim to these of fec?ive arid detersive wayfarers. komm; the tigers. Vp in Durham Jim Bar bee ( a youngr ;jd-riea.:led lawyer has been elected Sol ;ci tor "of tbe Recorders court. Dur ham iff n , of the count U-s that pave ft fat (re 1 majority against prohibition several of this majority are not ,3H-rr?e to laying or sailing liquor. j m Weak 0r amtn ia Ck cUy) M Sr, ttarbee procured the services ofjty's rim fy.r was opened here today tfetcvtive, who denned the guru .pf j with a iai ire nurr.Uer of persons pres- m wintry r-;n-, secure-, an oid mule j enl;. anfl a wau-on a MneraL,!e for atre and j The exhibits of livestock and aprri iroiw.ed to pe-Jdle cabbage .toJna- 'cultural prducU were la: ire and of 7 ties aiid othor j-riiu-e. Inr identaiiy he rner;tior t i refre-hrr-nt- x ftll (iver r.herri.-eivfr t, r rre v&rer to th" ',r-r-. L-ruf!Tf7Tfcn. When tbt: his desire d the timers! t:e.r, it ere ro'.: b I mi tbe rui"fit-i :ne pre the . f Virif c -'..Mrt'rn.'tn t d.-tfi-tiw i :( tti and ; r-.-m v. horn j Lat Mon- j e the Rec- i a vrv liv o -id t.-!! 1 ,!y :V. to fa ,iay Ut a! w ere c - enced. :: crowd 'ht-re were trs wh.e name iS a ,y .m f r tittv.-me ar.d fTen &fTH:r,fft the pr.hsb:ti n las. At U-a- or-e wa a crippled n(rro rhn ha n-en efiVivt-d 'n several oc- rei nr. I enr ty r-.. 1 scvfral r through the frf.vrn tl; -tir.uisheri law firm (f (..T to ref .TTt, h e hi thi? netrro war.ti rds. and d. i b-jt lis tHM-xe '.;;.-, '.-';3:t d as he vas fre It ,.dd Ptury -d r, ",- - rr. H r'ftt.rn.e4 - ia'T If i-if.' T s-- :it nearly every rnie'i as s.rV ffi'iirw J rr; !'-; ''-e - e-.np;e arid Ci 1u V ;ild an a Jud-e P. C Oti&.Hm. tfct-re wtH ri--t he so manv hr,S rr if the Governor wuuM fctip rr i-'iii.-if the rrimrfwis v. hen HENRY FORD ON PROSPERITY. The Republican parry has farmed, out to a few rich and influential indi viduals the ritrht to collect graft by reason of the tariff until these robber barons have felt it a divine right and every little radical in the land has been taught that Americans were not the equal of other nations and that it was necessary to build a tariff wall to protect the Rockefeller's Vander bilts and other plutocrats from the little European manufacturers or as they termed it "pauper labor." Until it is real refreshing: to see one Ameri can manufacturer who thinks that an American free man is as good as a European Peasant, and can compete successfully with him. Henry Ford the great automobile manufacturer, himself a life-long Re publican speaking along this line says: "Republicans are arguing that when the war ,ends all our prosperity will cease unless we have a Repub lican in the White House. "1 deny first that war is responsible for the present prosperity. The Ford company has not taken a , dollar of war contracts has refused them time after time and yet our busi ness has grown constantly and we are now 200,000 ar$ behind orders. "The business of the United States today has a momentum that no man l or group, of men can stop. . "As for the tariff, which Republi- "ana insist milEt. rsviaail tft 'English newspapers are not permitti. 3 sae our prosperitv after the war, I J to pnnt. want to say that the tariff is nothing! , . . . , "The principal purpose of cense r- but a hothouse remedy. It may make I . . . shlD. as WA understand it. ia tn nrn. business sprout for a little while, butt its effect is artificial and" it can never produce a hardy, permanent business plant. "If we cannot compete on even terms with any country on earth, then we oupht it quit. There is abso lutely no necessity for hard times. There ia enouph in this world to do for everybody, and this country al ways will find enough to do if the in terests and Wall .Street will keep hands off and not roto the many to en rich the few." HOKE COUNTY'S FIRST FAIR DECIDED SUCCESS Lare Exhibits of Livestock and Farm Products. School Children Attend. (Special to THE NEWS.) Raeford, Oct tier 12. Hoke -coun- 1 a character that represented provrressie and thriving peujtle. the planters in this county. nke trills of,' Ail schools wore sus-pendeii andini8ns rer.t-i.MAinrrt nvm-er of chiidier. were in! The capture of Otend by the Ten evidence everywhere. ThiiV exhibits ui-it; cxree. Mir .iy prat:t y.ng and hi.e that the yourger generation .-f th- cuut ly had tiiei.ts heretofore ur.khdut.. ( Hokt's hp-i ujrnruiT.il flul was ail in ail a de-M-ied .uee-,s and it ' is hoj.ed su:h will 'be mate an annual S.l CCS? i ; Polish Patriot Founds Chicago History Chair (By International NVwt Serf ir f'hicajro, ")foljT 12. A chair for teaehmu of the history of Poland is to be estabhsht-.l at the Cniversity of thrrtWh a irift hv Wilfred M.'al News Service a letter with fVl de de V.,yhi..h, famous Polish scholar of '-i.ttnaon. inecnair win te maintained as Th- j-nmo , ;iKjn(r a period of three years. Mr. t irr-iuv: 'itr : d Voynith. a r,jttL:rii!ized British sub 'he law fr a ie t, a lm iri Lithuania and edu ated at the I'mverity of Warsaw. arrested when 20 years old i I.irticipaur.nr in the polish nation- ' al'moveme'nt and aent -to Siberia, ha Je--atel in 1M0 and mad hi way to , Kaiand, where he has attained note as a Idhlioiapher and writer of scitn- tific articles. The Interna ServiceHrst With News New York, October 12. The En glish censors have been threatening for many months to deny the Inter national Kewa Service the privilege of the mails and cables because the International News Service did not print the kind of news that the En glish desired to have printed in this country. So the British government Tuesday night issued a statement that it ha 1 denied the use of the mails and cable - to the International News Service. The International News Service ha defied the English government an i will publish the news as it occurs. Even English papers admit that the British suppress the news. On December 1, 1914 The London Times said: "The present position is that the whole world is acquainted with news which England is not officially per mitted to know; and the ridicul feature of the situation is that a very large number of individuals in these Islands know it quite well. American . " ,. . ' juiio ciiKUin newspaper omces wnicn ' ' -5 r " " . the PuW'"tion f wttA.ha. resumed selling paper,, his occu- win of service to the enemy. If the enemy knows the news, its publi cation in this country can not be of service to them. Yet our office are littered with German newspapers con taining news we are forbidden to publish-" lnder date of November 30, The London r.ily New? and Leader pub lished the following under the head- Nine. '"Darkening Counsel:' "Rumors of an event of very great interest to the British public have leen circulating for a long time now in this country. Very fuU accounts of the event in question have now been published in the Swedish, the Dutch, the American and finally the German papers. Th e re . is wa reel y an i m port a nt public in the world, that is to say, which has not now received a full re port of the alleged occurrence, except that one vhich is mot directly af fected by it.", The only nme committed by tha International News Service is that it published the news before the gow.-rn-ment wished it given out. Here are Home of it. triumphs over ai! :h?r er vice : ( On August 25. 1914, the Inte na tional News Service sent out th: de- mot'fmitf. statement th; t Antwerp w -uIJ The city as fail 'withtn a taken three days biter by the 'ier- w reportvA on OcVMer 1 by 48 jrs. a!l tish , f1 ' ' ' in a,ivaRC wf 8,1 oXhvT : The greatest beat of the war, i ; probability was S'-vred by the In' j tional News Sei-. e in beir.tr the -o of the inking; of the- fi ! surerdreadnoUiih Audacious in vemher, l'.'l 1. "'ht hours at" man-of-war vent down off Sw-iHy, the northernmost point of Ire land, the Internationa! News Ft r.-ire, knew of the disaster. It was the first to send it out. The cahle came from Paris, reaching that city by wireless. Two travelers on the steamer Olympic witnessed the loss of the Audacious. (Ine was a skilled Canadian newspap er writer and the other was a pho- toprapher One ient the lnterna'.km- i tails of the ainkinir, and the thel jrave to ine wn-i, huwuk" - i w natifnal News Service, the first pic tjre of the Audacious jfoinif i(. a. . NMvemler ,2V, 4, the Iriterna tion.xl News Fervue primal rlt- ' sivety the news that AM- cond had been deposed as Khedive of Kyypt and that i'i.tat il.i-.iu. vu his succeasur - . . . , , On Decern .er 11, the Intentional News Service declared Great Ei itain would annex Egypt, This was done Jonalfiews officially on December 17. The International News Service was first with the news that the Kaian would disavow the sinking of the Ara bio by a German submarine. It also gave the first news of riots ia British concentration camps and of Zeppelin raids over Paris in March of 1915. The first news that Italy would go to the aid of Serbia came from the International Nest Service. The New York Times printed the aame news a day later. Last May the International News Service had a 24-hour beat on the re signation of the Italian Cabinet. Victoria Cross Man Sells Papers on Street j " (By International News Service.) Edinburgh, Scotland, October 12. Private Gortre Wilson, of the High land Liht Infantry, who won the Victoria Cross for frreat gallantry, on September 4, 1914, ia now selling newspapers on the streets here with the much coveted decoration pinned to his vest. He has a pension of $4 a week, which includes l a week for winning the "V. C." but Wilson said today this is not enough to live on. He therefore ( nation before joining th colors. "The army has taken the bt out ff me," h said. "Since being gassed and wounded at Loos I am not so fit for work as I used to be. The official pazette descrild Wil son's deed of valor which brought him his decoration as follows: "For most conspicuous gallantry on September 14 near Vernuil in attack ing' a hostile machine pun, accom panied only by one man. When the latter was killed he went alone and shot the officer and six men working the pun, which he captured." FAVETTEVILLE MARKETS Produce. Revised by W. J. Byrd, successor to L. C. W'ooten. Cot (on. Best cotton Turkey Fodder Eggs N. T Sides Roosters' Hens Peas, white .. Peas, stuck Chickens, broilers ' Hay Corn Shoulders flams, old Tallow Sweet Potatoes K..87 1-2 ..-.13c to l"c $I((0 to I25 30c .'i()c Vi 3oc 45c to 5oc .: $2.5o -ji.25 to ii.nu . . 3 c to 4.V ... 75c to 9ic . $1.00 T 18c , 23c to 25c -4: fi5c OUR ADVERTISERS Capitrd Department Stor. - A dis tinctive h'iwiuK of Vi.jrue Hats pat'e 3 Standard Hardware Co., Inc. HeaJter.- page 4. ' The Fashion Parlor Here I am atrain with (rood news page 1. H. M. Perabertt-n'i Music House, Victor-Vic trolas pa gre 2. L. Levin Ra&rB pae 2. Stein Brothers Shop of Quality page 3. A. H. MacRae and Co. Fire Insu rance paire 8. Dixie Theatre pajre 4. The Gas Company What Happens page 4. rii-," Lyric-Theatre papre 4. The National Rank Money to Lend pare 4. E. A. Poe Brick Company Brick, Lime, Cement, Plaster Coal page 4- Professional Cards, Jiyhu A, MacKethaa M. D-- -pae Frank N. Evans Veterinary Phy sician and Surgeon page 4. Rose and Ross Attorney page 4. Here I am Again to You With Good News Am sure it will be a sur prise to you all that I had to leave again Tues day at noon for the nor thern markets. My go ing was not for joy, nor for pleasure, but to buy again the very newest creations out in Coat Suits, Coats and Dresses Watch our daily arrivals, sure ly they will be interesting. Yours for service, B. SYKES The Fashion Parlor Take your pick of these Victor- ietrolas IV , vi vin $1S $25 $40 $50 It isn't n.c-ssary for you tri have one f tVi ;ii.r: expensive VictorA'u trnl.is to have aitrss tu all '.lie wontlerful variety f.f ii lur music. " Any instniBU;titJi"i mi tin.- 'ii torA'iciro'a IV at Sl5 to tin: $200 'o1-V7ictrola XVI will play tvi ry r-'cord in the Victor catalog.. Select the instrument that is best sniicd to your home and start in t-jemVy tlw.iausic ttiiU fun. Come i: and see us about it. today. H. M. PEMBERTON S Music House HORTUAGE SALE Default having been made in pay ing the mortgage recorded in Btok N". No. 8, Page . 37 of Cumberland County by Charles A. Jackson, the undersigned mortgage will sell at pub lic auction at the Court House door in Fayetteville. N. C, at 12 o'clock cuoo Tuesday JLhe 14th of November 1!M, the land in said mrotgage dr scriiteo lying in Cross Creek Town ship, lying at the intersection of Bridge street and Third street in Fay etteville, N. C, fronting 50 feet on Bridtre street with a depth of 05 feet. For an accurate description see Ieed Book, N'. No. 8, page 37, being a part of the Talbot property. This October 11th, 1916. R. W. WINSTON, 10-13-4-Fri. Mortgage. RAGS! RAGS! RAGS! HIGHEST CASH .PRICES PAID FOR OLD RAGS 2 Outs Per Peand Sav Your Old Rags and Make Money L' LEVIN HAY STREET The Original and Reliable Junk Man. Tbe world knows what w are worth, not by what we say but by what we do. Wilfred T. GrenfelL
Cape Fear News (Fayetteville, N.C.)
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Oct. 13, 1916, edition 1
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