Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / June 19, 1915, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 f -pAGETWO - ' y . " " TEVENINDIS -f"- SC? rf2?L Vff 4 QJ4 -v 1 11. 1.7 IT . 1 a 23 North 2nd Street, I W ch fn Annnnnrf! to the DUbllC ttiat 1 am JLOCatea at IMO. E 3 KB ft 3 Si Eo REAL ESTATE AND jMI ' ' W" fj t j. k 4 Conducting a Real Estate Brokerage and JKehtiitg Attention Will be Given to All Ag eilcy. prompt and Careful Business Entrusted to pile. " Tr- : : : - -f . r j . -,-ir: ::- :--t --. . lr iK'-S5v Vij--li4'Sitra.lx i!gHEaataa unit tmWi frtii t-aav : s s s 2 s : : s s s uav HBRNVGIIRHG UP FAT HI EDS I OONT CARE WHAT YOU VAvtiT TO Do -IT StJHKT VANTYOO TO DO - l ihtrr on Too doiNc TO THE OPERA TONIGHT a im r a. t k.i . . . CN, TO STAT IN ' 7f ALL- RICHI ME LOVE - u KNOW ANf TH)Nq AQOUT nc uKhKA - ME WIFE THINGS t'M THERE TO itu have to tell nt-K AOOOT IT - TOUR.E A LVJCKX CUX-THE OPERA HOObE BURNED DOWN, SO THERE 'XANSHOW: 7 I'LL eORti THE EDGE OF ME HAT AN' TELL HEP WHAT A NARROW, ESCAPE -) HAD! 5 : WELL -TELL VHX YOU'RE bbt SO' LATEL! THE OFERA DOVri ANO JUtT ESCAPED I STATED THEREJ HELPIN' THE BREMEN -I THOUGHT IT riY DUTY J SO TOO THNK YOU CAM ET fWAY WITH THAT-OOTOU? L:OOK AT THE PAPER. - THAT HftE OCCORED BEFORE YOU WERE OP-TH1S HORNNi I GOLF BOXING BASEBALL Basketball PORT RACING FISHING SWIMMING Other Games NATIONAL LEAGUE j AMERICAN LEAGuF) ASKS FOB HALF OF MAILABLES (What Lord Kitchener Wants For His Big New Army STANDING OF THE CLUBS. W. L. Pet. W. L. Pet. Chicago 28 21 .571 Chicago 34 20 .630 Philadelphia . 27 22 .551 Detroit 34 22 .607 St. Louis 30 26 .536 Boston 28 18 .609 Boston 24 26 .480 New York 26 23 .531 Pittsburg 24 25 .490 Washington 24 23 .611 Brooklyn 24 27 .471 Cleveland 20 29 .408 New York 21 25 .457 St. Louis 19 33 .365 Cincinnati 20 26 .435 ' RESULTS YESTERDAY. At Pittsburg 7, New York 5. At Cincinnati-Philadelphia, rain. At Chicago-Brooklyn, rain. At St. Louis 3,, Boston 2. FEDERAL LEAGUE STANDING OF THE CLUES. W. L. Pet. Kansas City .-34 22 .607 St. Louis 29 21 .586 Pittsburg 28 24 .538 Chicago 30 26 .536 Brooklyn -.27 26 .509 Newark 26 27 .491 Baltimore 20 32 ,385 Buffalo 20 37 .351 Results Yesterday . SOUTHERN LEAGUE At' Memphis 7, Chattanooga 3. At Atlanta 7, Mobile 8. At Birmingham 5, New Orleans 4. Little Rock-Nashville, not scheduled. RESULTS YESTERDAY. At Brooklyn 4, Pittsburg 9. At Newark 2, St. Louis 12. At Buffalo 0, Chicago 8. At Baltimore 17, Kansas City 10. QUAKERS CONTRIBUTE - -MEN TO THE ARMY 4 ' London, June 19. The Quakers not withstanding their peaceful tradition iave contributed 215 men to the Brit ish army and navy and 43 to the ar Biy medical corps. In addition, 43 tiave joined the home guards and 15 re serving on recruiting committees, t These figures are taken fronf the Annual meeting of . the Society of Friends. The society's, book of dis cipline declares its members must jfaaintain an "unequivocal testimony ttgainst war,". This is a.yital princi ple of Quakerism. Accordingly aoul 5ft of those enlisting sent in Jielr" resignations but only thirty of these were accepted. ; i Besides the soldiers, tfee, parents of tjhe soldiers openly sympathize with the war. These may all be proper ly expelledTbut the feeling among the STANDING OF THE CLUBS. London, June 19. Lord Kitchener has asked for half of the available re cruiting material of the United King dom for his newest army. He wants to raise an additional 300,000 and an analysis of census statistics indicates, there are not over 600,000 men left in i the United Kingdom to : draw on, if f i Y fnlllotrlnl r Al -v l n. rtAimtmr RESULTS YESTERDAY. "Z X S L 1, a tit 4. o c are taken into consideration. At Washington 3, Detroit 5. At Boston 3, St. Louis 1. j Army estimates for February pro At Philadelphia 4, Chicago 11. ) vided for 3,000,000 men. These, and At New York-Cleveland, Postponed. J Perhaps more, are serving. According 1 to. The Daily News, it would take an- j other million to cover the navy, the armed auxiliary vessels, the mine sweepers and applicants to the army rejected as physically unfit. Lloyd George is authority for the statement that 2,000.000 civilians are employed in the manufacture of equipment and munitions and in their transport. An other 1,500,000 comprising policemen, firemen, officials, seamen, miners and laborers, keep the civil life of the country going. Great Britain, there fore, is employing a grand total of 7,500,000 men. The last census gave the United' Kingdom 8,100,000 men of military age, which is between the years of 18 and 40. Deducting the soldiers and sailors now serving and those previously re jected,, together with the necessary civilian war , and ; industrial -workers,., theje are, .only 600,000 men of military; age left out of which to raise the new army , of 300,000. The advocates of the volunteer sys tem say this can he done. Conscript tiohlsts are "as yet -a small, if noisy,' minority- . . Kitchener has been severely criti cised at times for his recruiting meth ods, bttt.rln pne instance at least he knew more, about his business than ! the public; When In the earlv davJ of the. war he raised the physical j standard irom 5 feet 4 inches to 5.6, newspaper critics told him that this' was ; an age of science and not of brawn, and the little man proved the' best fighter by reason of being able tcUive on less food and to take cover easier in, action. But Kitchener was then facing the problem of clothing equipping, feeding, quartering and': drilling,. the new. men. From n ';;t I peace issue of 245,000 pair 0f shoes a year to the British army, the order was immediately jumped up to 6,500, 000 pairs; suits of woolen under clothes from 114,000 to 7.0000",000; 250 uniforms to 5,250,000 and other sup plies in proportion. Besides, train ing grounds and quarters had to be prepared and officers found to drill the men. To shut down on the supply of re cruits until those accepted could be cared for, Kitchener raised the size limit, which he has gradually reduced to 5 feet 2 inches for the bantam bat talions. The fact that England has managed to accomplish all this without con scription is the chief argument of the upholders of the volunteer system. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. At Jersey City 4, Providence 5. At Montreal 4, Rochester 1. At Toronto 4, Buffalo 2. At Richmond 2, Newark 4. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Louisville 7, Cleveland 2. At Kansas City 2, Minneapolis 9. At Milwaukee-St. Paul, rain. At Indianapolis-Columbus, advanced to Sunday. SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE. At Columbus 8, Charleston 1. At Albany 5, August 3. At Jacksonville 9. Columbia 2. CAROLINA LEAGUE. At Raleigh-Greensboro, rain. At Asheville 5, Charlotte 6. At Winston-Salem-Durham, rain. VIRGINIA LEAGUE. At Newport News 4, Rocky Mount 3. At Petersburg. 2, Portsmouth 5. At Norfolk 3, Suffolk. 4L . ' Drink. Mlnt-coia; nealthful and In vigorating. Advertisement, taking severe members is against measures. Opinion on the subject of war waal much divided at - the. ahpujaJ njeeting.jl Dut discussion was avymwu. rr.-.-.- ,-r:rT-.?.-:Tr-.-t-T-T-r-w Human Factors m Teleph one Service IT takes a lot of people working together intelligently and har- momously with the best telephone equipment to give good tele phone service. ' The information operator the engineer who plans for your fu ture heeds, the line tester, and the accountant who, makes out yQUrJbills for, telephone service are a few of the many kinds of telephone worker whaxo-operate to make the Bell system the most efrident in the world. , . , , The telephone service you receive daily is a part of the unequaled sece oiF the vast BeU systeim It has the beist thought of a trained organization workuig together with the besH equipment and fttaArdizedm to provide universal service for the American nation ai, a wlibie. j , . : , .,t . .;" . . . ,. . To realize such ideals your co-operation is necessary when you deal with telephone employes or with other telephone subscribers. Wherever You Go, REGALS ARE RIGHT At home or abroad on Market street or on the Board Walks at Wrightsville Beach wherever you are you want your shoes to be irre proachable in style and you demand, besides the maximum of service and comfort. GEO. S. NEVENS, Shoes and Gent's Furnishing. 121 Market; Street. Fidelity Private Detective Bureau Commercial, Domestic, Criminal & Stf-ret Cases investigated. Correspondence i.'unn dentlal. Only legitimate work snli.-itcd. Moderate Fees. Kooin No. 24 Atlantic I rust Bank Building. P. O. Box J1L'2. Ju 1( I"10 NOTiuis or rOKKCLOSURE SAI-K. By virtue of the power vesto.i lu me un der an order rendered at the April J''rm; 115, of Le Superior Court of New Hanmef County, In an action entitled '"City of Wil mington 'vs. Kutny Jones, Sam .loiies, , 1 will offer for sale to the hlpn. st itiiifl" for cash at the 'COurt House door, m mlngton, Nortb Carolina, on Monday. Ilin 21st, 1915, at 12 o'clock, M., the f"n(n"!"; piece, parcel or lot of land, located in m City of Wilmington, to-wit : Beginning in tne northern line of ..u street 2 feet and (i inches west of tlie fti em line of Dickinson stre K and runs tu westwardly along the said line of u street, 82 feet and inches; tlieixe ucr " wardly and parallel with lh kinsoii s r m ti feet; tlience eastwardly and parallel " Uwynn Street 82 feet and C in.-lies; ii''1 southwardly and parallel with "1k"' ' Street, 6 feet to the beginning. "im- "lu part, of the eastern half of Lot " ; . Block 22, according to the otii-'ial pinn the City of Wilmington, said M ".lis the same as conveyed to Huthy '""'y,' John A. Taylor, by deed duly record Book BBB, Page 13, Kecords ot New iu over Coonty. J . , , t The terms of sale are cash, sunr" the approval of the Court. Dated thte ISth day of May l ... ma 1 at ( onmiissioiif SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY - S. D. fcUCAS, Di&Mct Matiajrer By virtue of the power of sa le ;;"J1. July Hi'P 01 iu a t-eriaiu uiurignBc . i,r fin 'I'piior 'rfj no nr T 1 ! Ml iu wJtlAh aai1 nst era era hpfirs ln 1912, and is duly recorded m Hie ' , the Kegister of Deeds of Ne , B County in Book No. tt at pape 1.- ' " r. having been made tiicreunoei . " rt( nn '1-h.lT-a.lllV the is! ".I July, 1915,-at 12 o clock. M. t ";.1)(,?er, tlouse door ot tne eouniy i , tba oeliby public auction, for as' . uigae.se ouiuer mi unt inmiHH or parcel of land lying, being and si ''aNw the City of Wilmington, v.unt , ', ' n(i Hanover and State of ?ortli a'"" bounded ami described as follows. lM Beginning at the lntersecioii w Southern line of Walnut Hireet wi', inif eastern line of Third street art ! thenee eastwardly along said w M nut street 121 feet, thence sontn. I; with Third street. CO feet Uei withv.Walnut stret eastern line of Tiura north alonf said line feet .to tbeJBeginning, being p. ' ; , in' Block 'fkl according to t he oin 1 . of the aforesaid City of Mlmn : to Ject, to, an. easement ana lmmeliat the owner of the tract of in, t jy adjoining tne same - fprn through and ovpr the extreme e-ir ff,f feet of said tract, which said righ J begins 111 feet rrom 1 uiru r(jiy east 10 feet, and extends souther teet. ! . This tto-aggSirtgrt- ma si to Jly 1 thence so...... . r. feet, thence w.- . I treet, 121 f'"1 pnff d street and tnj fl ,e of Third stnt ?, being .art f
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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June 19, 1915, edition 1
2
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