Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 23, 1914, edition 1 / Page 2
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) !ryyy-m PAltE TWO -. 'i:?r , f , - -.ww y , , ...... . ... I' 1 - It" ft t: V i Iti I St I; 7: . t . -i . 4 Hi 'II Ifl 1 J'l - 11.' V, Vt H 1 if , - I!- ;-y i t:' ' - f? y MUTT CERTAINLY FOOTSAUC HARVARD r (jyOOt-D UK. TO PAMOP- Washington, Nov. 23. The prog- , ress of the government's work for the study, protection and safety of children made necessary the enlarge ment of the Children's Bureau and Washington is welcoming Miss Emma O. Lundberg, of Wisconsin, an expert on social service, and Dr. Grace L. Meigs, of Chicago, expert on sanita tion. Miss Julia C. Lathrop, chie? of the bureau looks for excellent re sults of the work this year. The omission of the New Year's reception at the White House, is regretted' in social circles, but the wishes of the President and his daughter, Miss Margaret Wilson, are to have sway. Washington is entertaining a nota ble woman painter, Mme. la Marquise de Wentworth, who painted President Taft. San Francisco, Nov. 23. Mrs. David Morrison, who lives an isolat ed life on a Pacific island with hpr husband, has just finished a tcur of' America, and is returning to her lone ly home on Midway Island. Every few months a vessel touches at the little island to leave supplies. Oklahoma City, Okla., Nov. 23. A systematic plot to rob Indians of Oklahoma cf more than $200,000,000 worth of coal lands at the hands of an organized clique of grafters oper ating in Oklahoma and Washington, is charged by Kate Barnard, State Commissioner of Charities of Okla homa, in an article in The Survey. "I am in this fight to a finish," she writes. . 'f I Hot Springs, Va., Nov. 23. Miss Gladys Ingalls, daughter of the late Melville E. Ingalls, of the Big Four Railroad, is to marry Frederick T. Murphy, of New York. No date has been set. Mrs. Ingalls and her daughter are recovering from the ef fects of a motor accident. The late Mr. Ingalls died last July, and had been prominent in transportation af fairs in the Middle West. Chicago, 111., Nov. 23. There are 7,879 women on the citys payroll in Chicago-, and they draw annual sal aries totalling $9,015,000. Miss Hie-Ding Lin, Chinese student at: the University of Illinois, recently entertained the members of the Wo men's Trade Union League, in a talk on 1 China. Among other remarkable things, she told of the hardships of .widows there, for when, a Chinese ) . byeverrmember of herTamily as a woman--who has incurred the wrath T-i - , . A. new .Philanthropic club has been formed - by Chicago women, with Mrs. Daniel Munro as president. The ODjeci is iu ,iitise a iuna to estaoiisn 1 1 m.r.i- J : 1 a.cuam .okfcsi mm recreauon rooms for business women . tlons of the city. in various sec New York, Nov. 23. Miss Antion Tette Vonaaek, the only licensed wo man fireman in . the city, refuses to ybe discahrged . by the Board of Edu ction. . whicn f earg her clothing may WOMN of the week HAS A NASTY DISPOSITION Gotta, Sck& ; w&VT -Hovj HOVM X GOT (CM catch fire. She has appealed to the courts. An agreement fixing the width at i the extreme bottom at 66 inches, and the flounce two yards wide, has been made between the manufacturers and buyers of petticoats. Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 23. Th Board of Education has decided tojig a national m0Vement having for its change the name of the old Hughes : 4 th prevention of tuberculosis, mgn ociioui to uie naruei ceecuei , Stowe School, as a memorial to the I famous authoress of "Uncle Tom's Cabin.", Boston, Npv. 23. Dr. Ida Scudder, who conducts a remarkable hospital at Vellore, in India, is a visitor here. Every Wednesday she starts out in her automobile, which she has fit ted up as a traveling dispensary. The sick congregate at cross-roads, and her coming is a great event. They humbly offer one cent for her ser vices, and bring garlands and bou quets. When she returns at night her motcr car is 'filled with flowers. In one day she has treated 300 cases among the poor., Subscribe to Tiic Evening Dispatch chapter8 o matrimoniaMurbulaace, 1 Mrs. Albert G weler. Jr., formerly Claudia Carsledt, of stage fame, has ) been served, according to - process , servers, with Dat)ers in a suit for ' aDt,olute diVOrce brought by her hus- , baud who is a Son of. the elderly hi f caen millionairft nf thfi same name. - ;an(i from whom she obtained a sepa- fation-in.l910. The couple were mar ried in 1898, When Miss Carlstedtwas at the height of her stage career. The separation suit was followed by sever al other actions in which Mr. Gwheel er endeavored tohave, his -wife's ali- mon of ?10,000 reduced. . 7. I. IGHT CfSRJRN WTGR ?PCi. Health and Hygiene WHAT TUBERCULOIS DAY Should Mean to North Carolinians. i Rrnadlv sneakine Tuberculosis Day h t Hirertlv sneakine. it is a Der- gonal responsibility. To us of North i Carolina it comes as a grave responsi ' bility, imposed by the 6000 needless deaths annually in our state from this disease. While the plan of Tuberculosis Day is an educational campaign against tuberculosis, its ultimate aim is pre vention, for knowledge is power. With this in view the preachers and the churches have been called on to pre vent to their congregations the nature and methods of prevention of tuber culosis, or some feature pertaining thereto. The movement is undenom inational and nonsectarian. Its aim is to reach Jew and Gentile, Protestant and Cathqlic. Furthermore it aims through the church, through its mes sage and presentation, to reach lodges schools and various social and civic bodies of the country. At the State Sanatorium for the Treatment of Tuberculosis where there is space for only sixty patients, but where ninety or more are crowded in and hundreds are waiting for en trance, is a most crying need that should have a heart-appeal to the va rious lodges, orders, clubs, organiza tions and individuals,, of our . State. Here is afforded them an opportunity by which they could take care of the tubercular sick of their own mepabers or those within their midst. Here is a means by which they could render humanity an invaluable service ' and the way by which they could help the State protect and save her . unfortu nates and control the scourge of tu berculosis. The responsibility is upon them. One of the school days should be observed by the schools as Tubercu losis Day. The pupils on this ; day should study or become informed as to- the cause, nature and prevehfcten of' tuberculosis. Perhaps for the first time some child wilt know that it is positively preventable and . possibly Mil Individuals have a responsibility .Vv,ud3 being their brother's keeper Mn.v must also be keepers.-of them-stl.es-tlij first law of health as well a -taiurc;. Ucs A Bale Of Cotton. Atlanta Constitution.- A splendid and profitable slogan at this period in the history of the south and the nation is -"Use a bale of cotton Jt has the advantage of practicabil ity and sure return. -The one way to materialize the slo san is to increase the commercial uses of cotton. Oneof the best ways to do that is to encourage the substitution of cotton for jute and other wrappings in com inerce. , ine process must begin, at home mat is, it must begin by the southern larmer wrapping his bale In cotton Cloth rather than' jute e can not, with consistency, appeal to other people to extend their use of V You , ,ro 133 Feel ...... .- r Grouchy a It U not your fault it . U yoiur; liver. No one ' can be in good spirits wi&u their system is mr.c&rryingr off the waste? products. . Tiltt's Pills -. - - : .... T regulate the bil ducts and put you in a good humor with yourself and the World. At your druggist sugar coated or plain. his principal product, when that prod uct itself goes to the market clad in jute. Fortunately, cotton bagging is as secure and can be made as cheap as jute bagging. If all the cqpimercial wrappings that now are made of jute and other substances such as wrapping for corn and other farm products the products of food factories, etc., were made of cotton instead, it is estimated the ab sorbing 'power of the cotton market would be increased by 1,000 bales. That is not to consider twine, yarn, tlireai,' rope, clothes lines, etc., v.'hich would largely increase the total. FOREST NOTES. Forbach, Germany, is said to have the , most profitable town forest known; it yields an annual net gain of $12.14 an ace. The State School of forestry at Bot tineau, North Dakota, announces that it will have one million trees for dis tribution to the citizens of the State during 1915. Apple wood, used almost exclusive ly for saw handles, also furnishes the material for many so-called brier wood pipes and particularly for the large wooden type used in printing signs arid posters. One of the -most expensive woods used regularly in an estabiished indus try1 in the-United States, is boxwood, the favorite material for wood en graving. It has been quoted at four cents a cubic inch, and about $1,300 by the thousand board feet. ! ; What-is supposed to be record speed in getting men to a forest fire is re ported from Oregon, where on one of the national forests, a ranger went to town, hired ten men, and got this force to the fire twelve miles away within 48 minutes after he was noti fied by telephone. Misinterpreted. Kansas: City Star. - - -An-jelderiy farmer drove into town one day and hitched his team to-a telegraph post. . ; "Here! explained ; the burley police man, "yoii can't hitch there." en "Well, why-have you got a sign 'upt,'Ffoe for. Hitching'? y & OUC4 Mp THAT Irrtlfi'- 3 PT"r3 The Three Big Events ot the 1914 Urand r v n5 trf"a-f-' - American Handicap V TnavToefbhlot at W mm Championship jayi.uij, vuiu. j double targets. WERE ALL WON WITH PETERS LOADED SHELLS No Such Record was ever before made by any, make of Ammunition. It indicates the Superior Shooting Quality of the Peters Brand, insuring satisfaction and results to the user. Loaded in all Guages and makes of powders. The Last word has been &id Send Your Orders to II. JACOB! HARDWARE COMPANY 10 AND 12 SOUTH FRrNT STREET: ' W European Nations are now warring one another, , Fljrhtlnr for principles they aver sacred. Manufacturers. In this Country have lour fought for principles, And their -battle still , continues, especially in the Peed business. j Xhe Quaker Oats Co. and Edjar-Morgan Co., iManafacturers of 'GKK.ICN CHOS&". ana "OLD BSGK" Molass es Feeds, haYO Fought a Winnlnc Battle; their names surmount all others I n the list of. Those, produclnr Feeds that are absolutely devoid of Adultera tion ; Feeds composed of everytblnx essen . tial to the np-kecp of HOUSES, MULES AND CATTia5s ; WILMINGTON GkAIN & P ROVISION GO. (local Distributors of CROSS" AND OM BECK.") . ; is;' . - .. .. . . . 'FHOXB 641. NEW NEW STOCK! NEW STOCK1 Just from New York Markets, Fresh Thanksgiving goodies. Call or Telephone 253. Best qualities and Best Price. - - - - : - . ' . . Special Fruits, Groceries, etc W.; M ATKINSON, '- '. Successor to Holmes & Atkinson. BYiBUbWlSHER 1 FGttoOv-T V' it N OT ' A THING ! LOADED SHELLS THE GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT IN TRAP-SHOOTING HISTORY ffnu Jmntumi Phnmninnehih A NO ZM. SOUTH FBONT STREET. 1314 GrandAmericanHandiGap R sToeic MAKES HMD .WORK Elj O'CfOHH IPS AID PUIS hard-to-gc-at places. Cape Fear Hardware Co, txciusive Accnts DR. L. C ALLEN OSTEOPATH 47-448 TRUST BUI1DIq OAn Hott Ottlcc Thon, j;,, 9 to 1: 8 to 5. RcKiiieiice r;lllr ?fl Beauti v 1J i ou may uuu years to yoi lire if your teeth are in condi .. i . ion 10 properiy masucrue yotri food. Then consider the added satisfaction of good appear ance that nice even teeth bring, If your teeth are irregular. broken and dark I can make them like new and use painless methods. Satisfaction guaranteed POPULAR PRICES Dr. Edward Green Garrell Building. Cor. Princess and Second Sty Phone 894-J. Reference American National Bank. You Can't Beat It An unexcelled Reduction at a tin hour. We will sell our Water last P Overcoats Brought over from son at a Reduction of , T.'.,r!lC0t urr ineir regular price. rtf n "inn nor r on t" n o t f f'V material " you can buy of this seasons maWJl it Is a bargain you want no chance. j. M. Solky & Co NO. 9 NORTH FRONT STREgT' , PHONE NO. C17. ml Teeth my 20 x n y, ... .. IT-' "
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 23, 1914, edition 1
2
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