Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Nov. 8, 1917, edition 1 / Page 4
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V v..v - ; ' 'i .v i-f .J, THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH, THURSDAY AFTERNOON; NOVEMBER frI 9 f 7: JAGE FOUR - J lift; I 11 Ho-. IF'-: !9- it 1 HEW1LMINGT0N DISPATCH Published DAILY AND SUNDAY BY DISPATCH PUBLISHING CO TELEPHONES: General Manager's Office Advertising Department Circulation Department Managing Editor . City Editor 44 .205 FULL LEASED WIRE SERVICE. MIMBRR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively enti tled to "ie use for republicatioa of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also (he local news published herein. Ail rignis i re- ... " ,. i . I 1, X H. w ' - - - BY MAIL: Daily and Sunday Daily and Sunday. Six Months Daily and Sunday, 3 Months.. .$6.00 .$3.00 .$1.50 Sunday Only, One Year DELIVERED BY CARRIER Dailv and Sunday, per week .$2.00, jloc Or When Paid in Advance at Office. Daily and Sunday, One Year. .. .$7.00 Daily and Sunday, Six Months. . .$3.o0 Daily and Sundayfi 3 Months $1.73 pusncsitiim ni spcciiu mspainics n.-n.-iu aia.ucu mu.w Sunday Only, Que Year 2-00jthe beginning of arrive which would Entered at th Postoffice in Wilming'Sely end in forcing the Germans ton, C. as-Second Class Matter. Foreign Representatives: Frost, Green & Kohn, Inc., 225 Fifth Avenue, New York; Advertising Bvilding, Chicago. . - - Member Audit Bureau of Circulations. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1917. The U-boats seem to have moreen" with them. Furthermore, before terrors for German sailors than for, such point had been reached Germany those of their enemies. The Governors of the two Carolinas ... lUo... - but it is said tney saw no spirits. Food may get scarce, but there 1 seems to be no probability of war poetry, or rather, what some folks consider to be war poetry, giving out. Yesterday's press dispatches stated , that the German mode of fighting was I new to the Italians Recent events , in Northern ,ta,y prove the correct- ness of that assertion. That knitting in the Denver church during services is a useless, if not os tentatious, display of patriotism. We venture the assertion that very few of those women devote as much timejnlzfe thg fact with thege surmises to knitting out of church as they do,co and dnrimr the services 1 . .,iiae,.gop,a people, of .Chatham coun-jton ty should bestir themselves. They are about to' lose their mononolv in' imrwnt i, f ci f i one important line of food supply to the outside world. Kansans are slaughtermg and shipping to market by thousands the heretofore despised h.t jack rabbits. The Aslieville Times has taken ad vantage of war times to resurrect the old-time fight of dog versus sheep. J It is leading a forlorne hope on North) Carolina legislators in a fight against the cur dog. The legislators are elect ed by the people and more of the dear people sheep. own worthless curs than TTT1 , . , . . j . , -fimerica nave tu kivu iu uiuw aiiica should be given to Italy and it should be given as quickly as possible. Rus sia should wait till this greater dan ger is over. That country needs as- sistance, but she brougnt her present i deplorable condition on herself. That mav hp no reason for the Allies to , . . ... ,, .pithing sure, they would not let any- hold back aid which would serve to , . . . . . T. . thing stand in the way of accomplish- help their own cause, but the Italians, J , . certainly are much more deserving of ' ment of any undertaking. We bet, assistance than Russia, and it is just for instanCe they would find a way to rid the country of the thousands of iiw vv vjl i-txi. niuic xmui Laiiu i w inuou who will give the aid. Motorists through several sections I of the State complain that the statute j rpnilirin? rnimtv fnmmisinneTa tr put up sign' boards at road crossings and forks of roads is a dead letter. They say that in many of the coun ties no attention whatever is paid to the law. This was an enactment of j the last! Legislature. It did not leave! -putting 'up Jthe signs to the discretion of v the boards of the several counties. It was a mandatory act. The com-' missions who have failed to perform this duty are indictable and their ne glect should be called to the atten-l tion of the; grand juries. .SOme of the newspapers are dis - u .g the question as to whether her part, btitffr Wt giving the ,the,Brtish,Lffeet should have gone toAllies the assistance'Vo much needed V the((aid., of , the . Russians at the time at present. It is men ' and guns the ' teck ;1ye German warships. Allies need today and hot good inten : . Of course nobody outside the British tions, and it looks like Mr. Kerehsky's - admirality ' knows what were the rea- administration, can deliver none other X'. Ty'- thatassistance was not giv- than the latter. .No doubt that Rus . . en. : The British navy is not . in . the sia, after awhll withassistance of ;:; habit :pf;famne, in. ..its duty or ne- the kind she is - asking for. will be meeting proper occasion tor activity agaln?t a enemy- 11 could have gotten into the Gulf of Riga at that time Germany would have lost more of her warships than the few sunk by the Russians.", but we suppose the - - . . 7i.7-J ;,x:-,r-t- "., .nf um-ao .ww---aTrir"r -- '"wj"'.i"u ev uc"i w,. regain ma Jieaim.za ana o- THE WARlOUTkOOK.; m. nn.inn Pmnrn VriTra aooma x lie uavanau vivi. - i 1, V n trln rr aa "h'arA flt'tlmA tn find ftl iu uc uayug o . i suitable strategic, position as is me Imperial; Crown R?ie. 1 His forces are unable to stand the onslaughts of the British soldiers, especially the of the people of this country. To the nna tnat tnere 13 but llUre law DreaR . 44'Canadians, who generally get aiiGer- contraryf it is all the more reason for in.g in Proess within the city limits. .176' man position they go after. When Americans to enter ;4ntb'tthe war with-New Bern Sun- " 1I?ithe British reach Roulers- which they ' are likely to do in a f &v Cays, the enemy's submarine bases on the, ! North sea will be almost, if not en- 'tirely untenable. The direct line of communication to the interior will be cut and if they are still held the ef- fectivenegs of submarine war on ai- I ftATYlTTl Orna III IIU ITMIIIV I ruin.- . i i j . on n mrv Hi ri i iu tv n t . uauxxx j r , - - . tain that if the British advance much further the Crown Fnnce or tsavana .mi v wifhnM- Mc no to siich w distance that both Ostend and zee- ibrugge would have to be abandoned. jBruges would also fall into the hands e Ames This would give the Allies great ad-j vantage over the enemy. It would be back upon their own territory. Such victory would be equal in importance made by automobilists and others who to those of the Marne and the Somme'ave had occasion to travel more or and its moral effect would be far greater. There is ho calculating the splendid effect such success would have on the soldiers or the allied ar mies. They would become irresist ible, and it would then be "on to Ber- would have withdrawn . her forces which are now forcing the Italians Jback Qn Venice Gennany would I forego her conquest of Italy in order I to try to prevent invasion of her own torego ner conquest 01 uaiy in oruer 'territory and leave the Austrians to Icope alone with their enemy on the made that Washington is the only na 1 , , , . iA tional capital m the world which en- soutn, wmcn iney coum uu xiu uene.' 1 ? j.1 t J J LA11-H than formerly. bition. What an enviable distinction General Haig's brilliant work on that of leading the world in banish the Bulgarian front may be the turn- in's 1Iuor from ita limits- ms mui m wtI- ne Ilt& luei 1 x 1 11 TT V.n 1 ' German army on the aefensive and . . th. rrencn, luriuer uuwu iue iiutr, bib pushing back that wing or the ne- American participation in the war and emy so persistently that the army in one week it looks as though the AI front of the British cannot expect any. lies have them on the run while the reinforcements from it. inese tnings majce it iook Drignter for the Allies, thou eh all must recoe- perate fighting ahead of the Allies. You can always count on Wilming-.war boys making good. The.promo- tion of Mr. Benjamin Bell, Jr., is the ... . lustration or mat iact. ne has just Deen raised to night editor f The Ricnmond Times-Dispatch, on whIch r he has ben employed fnr. 0Q, voorc Tf mat 1 for several years. It is a well ment- ed promotion. We were not surprip- ery term there are quite as many ed to hear the news, for we knew' cases. It is a fact that people ill mat- Ben" would not stand on a dead lev- cd have orry old time but some- iow or other when innocent people el in any newspaper Office. ItuFer from these RenarnHnns it rij That was a splendid showing the (woman's Liberty loan committee of North Carolina made. Its chairman reports that $4,974,000 worth of bonds' were secured by. her committee. The. members of that committee did vali ant work. They went into the fight determined to raise a large sum to 1 r Vi flfnTrornniont rvnf orvrl trior enP. 'liciy 1.11; few v uuiuu i- uui emit mcj o iv ceeded, as the women always do; wnen tney unoertaKe a tasK, no mat ter how difficult a one. Sometimes we are inclined to the idea that, in- stead of men opposing suffrage to! agement of public affair over tol mem. it sucn were cione mere is one German agents and spies and put a.anxioug tQ meet A1 McCoyf soldier stop to strikes all over the country that are so injuriously affecting the government s war preparations. it miSht be well to give the women a trial. RUSSIA AND AMERICA. It looks as if the Uaited States must take Russia's place in war activ ities. Mr. Kerensky may be correct when he says that Russia is doing all she can at present. But that is of such insignificance that Germany felt it safe to withdraw a larger part of her forces heretofore pitted against the Russians and send them south to crush the Italians. Mr. Kerensky and his faction no doubt, are perfectly sin cere .in their declarations of fealty to 1' ' ' : 2. "-- to remain activelvlin the war an da cble to come backhand be of aid "to the Allies. It Is ;Vight now, however, hat such aid is needed. The Russians . reixdered . much; need- .ed service and her" men did splendid j fighting on " the "eiisjenf . 'front i while ,i. f. ...t present they1 are ; too, much taken , up with politics and enjoying their new- j i jt- a - ' iv acuuiieu inseuuui. It .... S..i... in'.,.i '4T.X j DWttUSC , nuooia in uui ui lue v ai for tne Presentvand America is to take heP place is no reason for lukewarm- neS3 or faintheartedness on: -the part greater determination to do their part The above was put in type before eceipt of the Petrograd dispatch, to be found in another column of this is - gue Qf The DiSpatch, announcing that ' the Maxamausts nad gained control ... . 1 anfl 00 propose immediate peace. . i i Thig Qf C0urs0j complicates matters oveT. nnn n,,, u mnr . ... -. .. . obligatory on the United States to ex-;to succeed Judge Edward B. .Cline, of oVerv enerev in DreDaration foriHickorv. who recently announced . . . - . 7 .' WITH THE EDITORS. 4. 4. Winston Sentinel From remarks ieSs through the State recently, it .would seem that in more than one county there has been neglect in the matter of putting into effect a law passed by the last Legislature. We refer t th t Droviding for the erec jtkm Qf guide posts in the forks and f ih n..h1i. hie-hwnv in several counties of the State. The officials of any county who have not ?et dne so s5uld hia, mat" visions are carried out to the letter. Concord Tribune The statement is invs thp Hiatinrtion rtf having- nrnhi- Rocky Mount Telegram In this war game it looks as though it is much - tb. m. ' , - . .. . . . it is uaiit casi. ou 11 lias ueeii siuue Inext finds the situation entirely in 'favor of the German cause. At any rate we are in this war to win and win we must, and it isn't how it looks or when it looks that way we must put all shoulders to the wheel and do our part every one of us. The soon er we get on a war basis the better off we will be and the sooner will the be over, Greensboro Record The fellow who ees to get a divorce possibly thinks it his business, and possibly it is so ,ong ag lawg aMow SiVOrce In Su. Perior Court this week there are sev- en divorce cases heading the docket, and PerhaPs severi divorces are not manyj Dut it is noticed that most ev- .look like there should be a national divorce law, and the process of ob- aining divorce made harder than it is iow by law. y winning tha Facific Coast league pennant thi3 scasan San Fran cisco annexed its third championship since the league was organized in 1903. The complete list of coast champions is as follows: 1903, Los Angeles; 1904. Tacoma; 1905, Los An geles; 1906, Portland; 1907, Los An geles; ,1908, Los Angeles; 1909, San Francisco: 1910, Portland; 1911, Port land; 1912, Oakland: 1913, Portland; 1914, Portland; 1915. San Francisco; 1916 Los Angeles; 1917, San Francis- : The Harvard-Y?le freshman football 6uc moutuui iwicmuci n promises to be the big show in grid iron warfare at Harvard this year. Mike O'Dowd is out to make a clean up among the middleweights. The St. Paul battler has been granted a short fnrlnne'h frnm fh nrmv nnrl is Bartfield and George Chip. Coach Zuppke, of the University of Illinois football squad, drills his men at night by electric light. The Illinois tutor believes that the over time practice, for his men keeps them on edge for their gridiron battles. Fred Mitchell is scouting for a scout. According to the Cubs' man- ager a rea four-ply scout wko can dig up promising talent is one of the greatest needs of the Cubs i SUNDAY TRIP TO THE FORT. A; Sunday trip down the Cape Fear on the crowded ' steamer Wilmington: with , returning soldiers from their ! day's leave of absence, relatives, friend's,.' acquaintances and others, mostly oh their way to. Fort Caswell for the few - hours that the Sunday grants, presents various types of hu- man nature that affect the casual ob- , preparation is a delightful toilet re server. 'Even with war far away to qui site and not a medicine. It is not most persons, it does not seem the .intended for the Cure, mitigation or same remoteness .to fields of blood prevention of diseases. -Adv. and all the terribletess of . war when . , rf nnt.fts flip nhnsiiaifi vrWh tRl6! noar. ; nes3 of the soldier gives, however Bnerue r,.. A . gay he may appear on -his trips to BOSCH EE'S GERMAN SYRUP. j and frdm his quarters' ; tx Fort'" 'Cas'-'"y...v6e rrdinnry ceugh remedies, V "well. . , 'when Boschee's Germany Syrup has Sunday, the ever home . , day, stiU been used; so successf uliy for fifty-one appears irresistible, no matter if its years in all parts' of the United States bid time associations may become for coughs, -bronchitis, colds settled hf ; somewhat; disconnected through out- the throat, especially lung troubles", side work.awayfrom the circle which It gives the patient -a good night's rest, is the dearest on-earth.- So it is to free from coughing, with easy expec the mother whose "boy" is in, the toration in the morning, gives nature army. He cannot be at home, so she a chanc.e to sooth'e the inflamed parts. ii i. """.."iuugu ue.uma Da -STATE NEWS. .v. w. i . - ; .,- 4 . . . '..-fr if, f 4 -v "t "Things" in police circles are rath- er siaCK mese days antl tne omcOTB About the best thing that could hap pen for High 'Point was forecasted 1 yesterday afternoon when it was an- kaounced that the chances were: very ie-nnfl fnr the SnntViprn far ComDanv resuming operations. By the way, the i $1,000,000 government contract is the first real war work alloted a local concern High Point Enterprise. , Mr chat r rnropth of Wilkes- zoro. law partner of ex-Congressman R. N. Hackett, has announced his can didacy for the Democratic nomination itor judge or tne I7tn jumciai mstucw that he would not be a candidate for 7removed. Miss Whichard has expe- prt his candidacy recently ana as mi. Gilreath now comes out, Wilkes coun ty has two candidates in the field. Winston Sentinel. Some time ago. Miss Juanita Which ard in an automobile accident had the misfortune to fall through the wind shield cutting her foreheaa iwner se verely. On reaching home she had the wound sewed up and in a few davs in had healed perfectly. During the Kinston fair she went over from Goldsboro for the day, and wore a hat all the while. The pressure on her forehead caused her some little pain, That night she was very much sur prised to find that a small piece of glass had worked out of tner wound in her forehead 'She went immediately to a physician who found it necessary to open the wound and on doing so a re-election. Mr. T. B. Finley announc removed. Michh Whichard has expe rienced no more trouble and her fore head healed fof the second time. Greenville Reflector. THE PRICE GERMANY IS PAYING. (Virginia Pilot.) There are two recent statenu-nts emanating from different sources, which are noteworthy as emphasizing the heavy price which Germany has already been called upon to pay for the Kaiser's lust for world dominion Speaking in the Reichstag the other day Herr Ledebour, independent So cialist, said: "We have had 1,500.000 dead and 3,000,000 or 4,0000,000 wound ed, of whom 500,000 are-crinnled for life and 2,000,000 absolutely invalided. Altogether ' 6,000,000 men have been lost during three years." Almost at the same time the British chancellor of the exchequerer issued a statement of the war credits voted by the Reichstag, which are shown to amount, exclusive of leans to allies, to" 94,000,000.0000 mark'. Ada to this the pre-war debt of 5,000. 000,00' marks and the total comes within 1,000 00 ), 000 marks of (the 'figure whicp Herr Raverstein ' p'residC Lei' the I'mpr rial Bank of Germany, declared a year aero would mean bankruptcy for the' em pire. With the flower of German man hood destroyed or maimed for life and the nation on the verge of financial ruin, it is easy to understand the Hohenzollern's longing for a peace which would not alone leave him un- whipped of justice, but constitute only a breathing spell in which to recoup his strength for revival of the Teu tonic scheme for enslavement of the world. But therb can be and will be no peace until the menare to liberty, civilization, humanity and all that makes life worth living constituted by German militarism and German auto cracy, has been reduced to a condition where it will be impossible for future harm. That is the goal vhich the na tions arrayed against th? Teutonic league Tiave set for themselves; to stop anywhere short of its full attain ment would mean that the countless treasure expended and the rivers of blood spilled will both alike' have been wasted. EASY TO DARKE You can Bring Back Color and Lustre with Sage Tea and Sulphur. When you darken your hair ith Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's done so naturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though at homes is mussy and trouble some. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready-to-use prep aration, improved by the addition of other ingredients, called 'Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." You t just dampen a sponge or soft brush j with it and draw this through yourj hair, taking one small strand at a s time. By . morning all gray hair di appears. - and, jafter another applica- tion or two, your hair becomes beauti- fully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. Gray, faded hair, though np dins-race is a sign of old age, and as we all de-! sire a youthful and attractive appear- ance, get busy at once with Wyeth'i j Sage and Sulphur Compound and looli j years younger. This ready to-use. mrow otr tne sease, helping, the pa- N HAIR YOUR GRAY MAJOR PETERSON FURNISHES BOND Gives Bond of $10,000 . for Appearance at Next Term Wake Court. ; (Special to The Dispatch) Raleigh, N. C, Nov. 8 Maj. Geo. L. Peterson yesterday furnished the $10,000 bond required of him. by the State for his appearance at Wake county Superior Court, which opens here November 26 to answer the charge of embazzlement preferred against him because of an-alleged shortage of $7,600 which it is alleged occurred in his accounts while'holding the office of disbursing officer of the North Carolina national guard. Maj or Peterson has returned to Green ville, S. C, where he has a position on the quartermaster's staff of the Thirtieth North Carolina regiment, at Camp Sevier. Among the Clinton friends of Maj or Peterson, who signed his bonds were L. A. Bethune, Howard McKin non and H. E. Faison. Tuesday night W. B. Drake, Jr., that banking genius of a dozen States, saved the major from spending one night in prison by going on the bond while friends came to his rescue. Mr. Drake is not one of the major's friends, perhaps hardly an acquain tance.' ' Me stood at the behest of friends, ' treated the major as ' the banker does many a poor devil who must lean on the banks. Henry A. Grady, representing the army officer, could have raised the bond among Raleigh friends, doubt less, but chose to have the Clinton nponlo show their faith in him still. It came as a surprise when Gov1- ernor Asicuett ano juage siues order ed the arrest of the major. Sampson friend were on the way as soon as they got the word. The long time feeling between Adjutant General Laurence Young and Mayor Peterson appears not to have figured in this episode. Friends J of General. Young have always cred ited the defeat of General Young's ambition to hold high commission in the reguar army now m France to rMajor Peterson, and friends of the major lay the turn of present events to General Young, but it didn't hap pen that way. Whatever General Young suffered at the hands of Major Peterson, the audit of the books thaL lisclosed the shortage was incidental to turning over of the office after General Young, returned from service on the border. The effort to get the one-time friends,, now the implacable enemies, together failed. General Young is said to have insisted that - all conference between them be public and so they were. TERRY HAS NO HOPE OF COMMUTATION (Fpofial to Tlie Dispatch) Rileigh, N. C, Nov. 8. J. A. Terry, Gu'lford countv Driscner under sen tence of death for the murder of John R. Stewart, will be electrocuted Fri-here, Clarence, the four year old son day, November 9. Qf Capt. Don. C. Gray, was killed, as Governor Bickett has set this datejthe result of being kicked on the head and he does not see his way-.. . , clear to ffive Terrv n. longer Vpsnitrv The Guilford man "was peculiarly" un - fArtnnnto in hovino -rts friArlc- o t-. LJ X lulilll V I -J. II U 1 i.1 3 lildlUO UsJ Up " . f uvr I! yi U pear for him and everybody appears visiting at the liozne of the child's to have been opposed to the petition ; grandfather, saying "goodbye", as for a life sentence. Such help as was ;CaPtain Gray was preparing to leave offered him in the shape of expert jin a few days for the Canal Zone opinion that he was not rtyaponsible wnere he is to serve on a government when he killed Mr. Stewart was stop-j steamer, Clarence had gone out to the ped by testimony that Terry is and I wagon which was ready to carry the has been always a man of violent j folks away. WhjJe the colored driv temper who neglected self control and.ei" was re-fastening the girth on the doubtless killed Stewart in a rage. Earlier in the week a rumor came to Raleigh that Greensboro people might seek at least a short respite for Terry, especially since the Supreme Court left a suggestion in its opinion that the -plea of insanity miht hae! something of merit. Then tne iora people understood that Dr. Albert; Anderson, of the State hospital, was! inclined to think Terry irresponsible No fight has been made for him and at this, writing he is without hope. Last season the' Giants made th fewest and the Cubs the largest num- Der oi errors in tne mtionai League.! McGraw s men foozled 205 times as . Ifornia are talking of forming a mili agamst 271 flueys for the Chicagoans. J tary unit. . . r LD KILLED 6? MULE'S KICK Little Son of Capt. and Mrs. Don C. Grav Killed Near I Southport. tSriefat-4f-';ttie TT3pa tMi) " ' ,; SoutllDort. N. C. Nov S--Whilo via. iting at the home of its grandfather, : That's the "Gets-It" way, the only yesterday morning, a few miles from y j According to report brought back t)V t h P fulfil RT JinH TTinthpl' wTlrt Worn mule, the little boy came up behind tne animal, which, resisting the tight ening up, kicked out, striking the boy on the head with his hoof a blow and from which he never recovered. Last night the parents with their other children, returned here with the ' Guil-ibody of the dead boy. Today the fu-! The Wisconsin boxing commission has fixed November 12 as a date for a hearing on the recent Fulton-Devore hout in Milwaukee. According to some ring experts the fight was a com edy. The co-eds of the Universitv nf Cat. re-inforced head loaded with Dupont, Dead Shot, .:NewE. C. Powders. "NIGH; GUN'A higKade Smokeless Shells loaded QUAUTY COUN TS THEY WIN! Agents. i Sitery Outfit Should include Jfew Numerous are the occa ( sions that really demand a suit as well as the oc casions for which, while a suit is not actually de manded, it is very ap propriate. No woman who desires a COM PLETE wardrobe should overlook this important item. Our present stocjes, replenished by many recent ar rivals which faithfully portray every new desirable fea ture, are complete in every detail and afford excellent latitude for choice. Beetroot, Taupe, Brown, Navy and black ar the most popular colors. Have your suit fitted today. Remember, we feature Suits that sell for . . . .$25.00 Other beautiful Models, in stylish materials; priced at ..... .$15.00 to $65.00 (Incorporated) neral services were held and burial took place. This entire community sympathizes deeply with Captain and Mrs. Gray in this distressing death which has overtaken their little boy. For a Corn-Peeling Picnic, Use "Gefs-lt Pain Eases at Once, Corn Just Pies! Io your corn-ridding easily, witl; .way, your corn or caiius comes oil complete as though it were glad to Set. off. Don't Travel ArouDil the World In Corn Agony, Use Geta-It." "Gets-It" has cured more corns than all other remedies combined. It's as sure as the sunrise, and as safe as water. Used by millions. rvnt take a chance with your feet, you . can't afford to experiment with unknown mixtures when you know "Gets-It" never fails. "Get3-It" will remove any corn or callus. Wear those new, stylish, shoes or pumps if you want to, go ahead and dance. Demand "Gets-It," throw substitutes back on the counter! 25c is all you need pay at. any drug store, or it will w sent direct by B. iLawrence & Co., Chicago, 111. Sold in Wilmington and recommended the world's best corn remedy by R. K. Bcl" lamy, Green's Drug Store, Mission Plim macy, Elvington Pramacy, Smitb Drug Store. Advt. la w iw 20 LEAGUE" A superior Black Pow der Shell. REFEREE" The famous "Referee Shell loaded with Semi-Smokeless , Powdef is in a class by itself . A high grade Smokeless Shell with steel with Infallible and Ballistite Dense , Powders. .. . CO. I Wilmington, N. C : jX::;. ytfvr? ..,;: - t
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1917, edition 1
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