Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / Jan. 15, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
PAGE TWO REGITES STORY OF ODD EXPERIENCE A Physician Frankly Telia - : Xs. v'V. ... the Public of His Own ; Betterment - HOW HE OBTAINED :V : RELIEF FROM PAIN :-'j!'.""' PingHamton, N. Y., Doctor 1 Writes A Letter in Which i He Imparts Some Val- uable and Reliable Advice. feature of the introduction of j Peplac in -this city at Bellamy's ana other drug stores, has been the free ofc ' t er!ng of signed statements from men and women, of. hish standing in their 5 respective cities on what the Peplac I treatmeht has done for them. : One' statement that is attracting (considerable attention is that from Dr. John B. Walling, 77 Court street, prom-: f inent physician of Binghamton, New .York. , "Dr. Wallin," explained the Peplac i representative, "is not only a leading ' physician, but a man of honesty ana integrity, and, as his numberless friends know, his word is his bond." j Dr. Waliing's letter follows: "Having suffered for years with acla ; fermentation, nervous dyspepsia at UtoW lasting 14 days with great pam (gastralgia) taking medicine Without relief,' J was asked one day to take Peplac which, in my distress, I was glad to resort to anything. v. "JJueh to my surprise I am relieved na pais in my stomach any more. . "I. an: very grateful and, being a physician, r am glad to recommend Peplac to anyone suffering as I did." i (Signed) . J JOHN B. WALLING, M. D. "No stronger proof," added the Pep. !ac representative, "of Peplac's merit, laineeting the purposes for which it Is Resigned, could be offered than the word of a man of Dr. Waiting's stand ing. His word is professional verifier tion pf the virtues of Peplac and leaves no cause for doubt in the 'winds oi those inclined to be skeptical." I 'The -demand for Peplac is growing rapidly and it is now beng sold at Bei ! lady's drug store and all leading drug stores in Wilmington and neighbor jlng towns. : fo) 1 11 I 1 ! i 1 ! WALLY HELSTON Presents Wills Musical Cor.iGdy Gomp'y : ; v A MODgRNj ST,CECIUI A, . M : A modern St. Cecilia is the type pf woman ' played by Gladys Brockwell in her newest big photoplay for Wil liam Fox, "A Branded1 Soul.-' This picture, full of action and artistry from one end to the other, comes to the Grand theatre on tomorrow. .Mexico is shown in this production. The intimate life of the great (repub lic to the South, forms a picturesque background to a series of incidents which approach their great climax in the burning of an oil field and the de struction of a fortune. Miss Brockwell is Conchita Cordoya', girl of the people. She first attracts the notice of John Rannie, millionaire, by rebelling against his depredations. He has ordered his men to tear up a church-yard, in their search for new oil lands and new wealth. And Con chita defies him to continue the work. Rannie calls 'off his men. Within the next few days be cultivates the ac quaintance which began thus -' inau spiciously. He learns that her lover, flAHOUITECWftK Babs piar 1 1 ? lliiiimimiimmiiiiinii, Coming to the Grand Friday and Saturday. A LOVE FOR-ANIMALS-- Soldiers Become Hardened to Manslaughter, But Ten- 1 der to "Their Pets The Cleanest, Neatest and Most Genteel Musical Comedy Organ r 'zation seen here This Season REAL MUSICAL ; COMEDY PLAYS Company of Twelve Performers. " AH New and Novel Bills SPECIAL SCENERY NjEW BILL TOMORROW Will V lady Minstrels Novel and Gorgeous Produc ,.f.. - duction . Juan Mendoza, is a secret agent in German pay, and he uses this knowl edge to force the girl to meet his terms. At the last moment, however, Ran nie is overcome by the innate purity and piety of this beautiful creature. He, forgoes his evil ways and seeks to marry her. But his wooing is cut short by the hatred of the populace. They have set fire to his oil fields, and when he tries to beat back the flames, they threaten to kill him. Only the pleading of. Qonchita saves this man- from death.. And he seeks pen-1 lLB-uutJ uy uer esiue. ... " - i THE BEST IN MbNTHS. The most genteel and pleasing, as well as the neatest and cleanest and most original' tabloid musical-comedy play ever seen . on the Royal stage, was presented to Royal patrons yes terday by Wally Helston and the , Wills' Musical Comedy Company. I There is no mistaking the fact that it is on an entirely separate plane from the usual musical comedy play seen ' at popular prices. There is an atmos phere of high class about it that will prove an attractive feature to the very best; patronage and no one need hesi tate going this week, for they" will :see a performance that is genteel and strictly high class in every particu lar. J Special scenery two sets, for the ; opening bill in two acts, was an at j tractive feature of the show yester jday that also made a hit. A quick j change of scene while the stage was darkened for just moment, and also a complete change of wardrobe within- ,the same instant, was something sel dom seen in such a show. ' . Wally and Ralph Helston was the J two chief- comedy artists, furnished .plenty of good clean comedy, and jnuxes owus as jteaaing man imniiea his task admirably. Another thing--the chorus with neat costumes, 'was !.the best looking and most genteel seen on the Royal stage in "many day . The bill will be repeated- today and tonight. Paris, Dec. 15. (By Mail) .Though three years of trench-life may havo hardened the poilu's feelings in some respects, his. tenderness for animals Is as deep as ever. The peasant who has learnt to shoot down Germans like rabbits or spike them like reptiles, who has had to harden his heart even towards his comrades', sufferings, will take infinite pains to . preserve the life, of a "trench-pet" or rescue it from Charles Le Gofllc, a well known French writer, recounts bow he met in Brittany two soldiers near an ? am. bulance, where- they, were being treat ed, carrying a couple . of sea-gulls, which they had 'rescued from., the rocks. A ship had been , torpedoed near the coast. Barrels containing coal-tar had been dashed against the rocks, where their contents 1 had trap ped the unsuspecting gulls wnich alighted on the tar-covered crags. ,The cries of the imprisoned birds , : were heard by the two invalid soldiers,-who climbed out at the risk, of being drown ed, to rescue these victims of-German piracy. - " This solicitude for feathered . kind is repaid by trust and confidence on the part of the latter, which seem to make appoint of showing the soldiers that they too can scorn death. When for the first time after war had broken out the swallows return' ed to the Argonne, they were dismay ed to find their old-time haunts bad disappeared, and that instead of cottage-eaves, nothing but blackened rafters and ash-heaps were left. But they were soon reassured when they found their guardian-spirits, the kind ly French peasants, were still there, though no longer plowing and tilling, but burrowinr into the soil like moles. So despite bombardments and gas-attacks, they passed word "Business as before" and made their nests in the men's shelters near the forest. On the Mort-Homme, of sinister fame, all one summer long a front-line trench centred its affections and sym pathies on a quail, which would do "sentry-go" along the trench parapet during the most terrific bombard ments,.as if to taunt the German gun ners. On this same hill,, one of its shell-plowed slopes, a pair of par tridges were observed to lead a care- tree, ducoiic existence. iVfYORKPAy'BY-DAY, 0, O, Mclntyfe.) ; iH (Special Correspondent of The Dis-,-;f . -(patelU i York, Jan; 15. The passing on of "bid Goad-Eye'. Charlie White baa left a y waning hiatus in the sporting life ;f; the city. Charlie White was a complete jpfew. Yorker and an un obstrusive and unself conscious man who was ; one of the city's notables. His profession was prize fight ref efeelg but -at "heart he was an art connoisseur, He ioved old books, old furniture, prints and paintings. Daring his 52 years in the world of "'give and take" he had never giv en:, any -oan or woman cause to put a .Questioning mark against his high hmd shining honor. 'And this was the man who was born, bred and mourn ed by the city streets, wholly a prod uct of what some complacent gentle men are pleased to call the city's alums, .. . Charlie White was born and he passed away in a red brick house in Cherry street in the' furthest Bast side. He knew, gang life, Chinatown and the Bowery but his environment never touched his moral purity. What he was,s he was both because and in spit of Cherry street When surly Jim Jefferies was to fight Corbett at Coney Island and win the world's championship, he wrote to bis New York managers: "My choice of referee is Charlie White. He is a close friend of Corbett and nobody knows better than Corbett that White will give a decision ab solutely free from prejudice." Charlie White loved the company of red-blooded men but he neevr tast ed an alcoholic drink. He made week ly visits to the art musuems and the rest of the time he loafed i with his boyhood friends around Corlear's Hook Park and Manhattan Bridge. He loved the tangy waterfront air, the noise and clamor of tugs and ferries on the river and the teeming cosmo politan life of the East Side. He began life as a newsboy and was mixed up in ward politics and he could have held many offices. But he preferred to live . his Own way and be his own unusual self. V . iKPREMlEBlQJLNDq ; HEADS ITALY'S? EAV t WAR : COMMlTT E fc NOTICE CHANGE IN SCHEDULES. Effective Sunday January 13 follow ing changes will be made in schedules of A. C. h. trains at Wilmington. No. 48 for the north will leave aihm i . to a. m. lasieam oi o:uu a. m. No. 51 "for the south will leave ai 5: 45 a. m. instead of 5:30 a. m. No. 41 from the north will arrive 10:15 a. mi instead of 9:50 a. m. No. 50 from the south will arrive 12:40 mid-night, instead of 12:20. l-12-3t There has been added to the list of uncommon professions in New York that of the -Refined Gentleman Escort. The business of this man is to escort visitors to the theatres or on sightseeing trips. His cards are on the desks of all prominent hotels. His references are excellent and his rates reasonable. If a young lady all alone wishes to dine out she may secure the gentleman escort. He will come in dinner jacket or evening clothes as the occasion demands and he will sit opposite her and point out the celebraties and pay the check -and afterward she may settle with n Can a Pious Woman Transgress ' the. Bounds of Convention and Still Remain Faithful? William Fox Presents Gladys Brockwell In "A BRANDED SOUL" A Photoplay That Will Reach the Heart -of Every Woman For Men Too . ..... Ji ni'i iir -"trr i ' . -.. . '&4!?wf:-:SA ..... "V'"-''"-vx :-::tm$? - 0mm . ... I ? K lf "- Aw- T?r ;; r " r' flORSESHPE.FOr l rnn l--Qno;of the, American Congressmen who visited' tuV LUefield: af ew weeks ago - receiving an emblem of good f ortuno from- a worker in an ordnance aepot. His ratesTun from Jo :.8i. night to $15. a nibt with all expenses to be paid of course, rlThe "Refined" uenUe: man Escort: ia sd W be? a" 'graduate of a big Baterh 'College, working un der a nome d0 plumes He -hag found it more profitable than clerking. And also much Snore pleading. . . S Mi- n Premier Orlando of Italy1 is, to ore side, over the new Italian War Com mittee, which is to consist of "Baron Sonnino, Minister of Foreign Affairs; Signor Meda, Minister of Finance; General Alfieri, Minister of War; Vice Admiral Etelbono, Minister of Marines and another minister to be nominated by the Premier. CHILEAN AMBASSADOR SUES HIS LANDLADY Washington, Jan, 12, Senor Don Aldunate, the Chilean Ambassador is now facing the biggest job of his life. German agents have concentrated their efforts on his country. Chile is to be made the center of German pro paganda in South America as a guarantee against German failure should the Argentine republic succeed in casting out the Teuton workers. Far removed from intense South American politics yet In intimate touch with the situation, the ambas sador has had thrust upon him the job of advising his nation on a po litical course that will alter the coun try's entire history which ever way the decision is made. Ambassador Aldunate -with his numerous staff- have just installed themselves In one of the capitol's palatial residences, at 2223 R. Street. There, in the quiet ness of Sheridan -circle neighborhood, will be decided the tremendous poli cies that effect all western democra cies, unless perchance, the Ambas sador, like American envoys abroad before we entered the war has al ready made up his mind on whether Chile is in the path of the aKiser's world scheme. - z Count Luxburg's messages indicated Chile must be brought to German Bway. A new pastime at City Hall is "clocking" the new Mayor. He fixd 9 o'clock as his own" hour for report ing for duty, circumstances which -ho could not control the --elevated - rail roads made him late for two morn ings. Now City Hall, standees draw their watches when, the Mayor ap pears and wagers of cigars have been made on the 'time "of " his ap pearance. Nearly every paper in town is running a daily box timing each important city . employee's time for reporting for work and leaving. It has been quite embarrassing for some of the new officials. Beachcombers working the sand at Coney Island had a good New Year's week. It is part of the winter work to sift the surface sand to recover Jewelry and coins lost by , the sum mer seashore throng. Sometimes it reuires tons of sifting to produce one ring or diamond, In three days $5,- 000 worth of jewelry was salvaged. It effective la treattaf ecaaturftl dlaahnryeti pa4Bje,noa-polaonoai and will out stricture, Jrwrtwl Pest If dir-rtcelj oryTwtUef Wlk THS EVANS CHISAuEaI, Col, CINCINNATI THE Wilmington, N. C, Wilmington's Best Hotel. American Plan one block from Wrightsville Beach car line. ' F. W. ARMSTRONG, Prop We Specialize Tin the Manufacture of Rubber Stamps LeGwin Printing Co. Srace St. Wilmington, N. C. Annual Tuskegee Conference. Tuskejee, Ala., Jan. 15: ManY Tis iters aire arriving to attend the an nual Tuskegee Negro Conference, which is to hold its sessions tomorrow and Thursday The general topic of discussion this year will be "Meet ing the Needs of the War Situation," and will revolve around the prosper ity tbat has been enjoyed by the ne gro farmers of the South in its rela tion to the problem of how best to make use of this prosperity in the face of present war conditions. Rheumatic Aches JDrive tKem out with Sloan's Liniment; the quiek-actinf ; soothing liniment that penetrates without rubbing and relieves the pain. - So much cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments; it does not stain the skin or clog res. ". Always have a bottle in the" house for the aches and pains of rheumatism, gout, lum bago, strains, sprains, stiff joints ana all muscle soreness, Generous six bottles at il dnixrelsta. 25c, 50c $1.00. ABSOtUXICIY FIREPROOF Hotel Ckelsea West Twenty-Third ySt., at Seventh At., NEW YORK CITY European Plan 500 ROOMS 400 BATHS Room, with adjoining: bath 91.00 and S1.50 Suites, parlor, bedroom and bath $3.00 and upward. Club Breakfast, 3Sc up. . Special Lnncheon, H0e up, Table d'Hote Dinner S1.00 up. Ctk.29 attached. To Beach Hotel Chelsea. From Pennsylvania Station, 7th Avenue car geuth to 23rd streets Grand Central. 4th Avenue car south to 23rd street: Lackawanna, Erie, Reading,' Baltimore " and Ohio, Jersey Central and Lehigh Valley R. R. stations, take 23rd street crosstown car east to Hotel Chelsea. Principal Steamship Piers, Foot West 23rd street, take 23rd street cross town car. . WRITE FOR COLORED MAP OF NEW yoRK Morrcns -ROASTCKS as Southern ounsn me I 1KB tla soft, beaming snnlight of Dixie. tf land, Luzianne brings cheer to meal time tnreakfist, dinner and stipper. Folks who try it once have a genuine affection for H everdter. Luzianne comes to you in clean, sanitary, air-tight tins. Tha flavor stays iflr-Hmpurities stay out. Buy a can of Luzianne, Use the whole can. If you don't honestly believe it is better than any other coffee you ever tasted, tell the grocer to refund your money, 3ut,tryiv cottee "When It Pours, It Reigns" $ Pure Chewing Gum-4 a S tfck a dan keeps 7 L .21 estioii GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER f Has been used for all ailments that 1 are eaused by a disordered stomach and inactive liver, such us Bicfe head ache, constipation, sour stomach, nerv ous Indigestion, fermentation of food, palpitation of the heart caused by gases in the stomaeh. August Flower is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both in stomach and intestines, cleans and sweatens the stomach and alimen tary canal, stimulates the liver to se crete the bile and impurities from the blood, 25 and 75 cent bottles. Sold by Oreen's j)TUE store adv. Wi nston - Savm - More head City-Beaufort Pullman Sleeping Car Line Be. comes Winston-SalenvGoldsboro Sleeping Car Line ! Southern Railway System annoua ces effective with last cars into and out of Beaufort Sunday, Aug. 12th. the Winstqn-Sal em -.Morenead City-Bean-fot Sleeping Car Line will be shorten ed to Winston-Salem-Gojdsboro Line. Car will continue to be handled on , trains Nos. 232-X1? and 111.237. I For further details ask Southern Railway System Agents, or address J. I O, Jones, Traveling Passenger Agent, , Raleigh, N. C. SUBURBAN SCHEDULE IN EJTFEOT NOVEMBER itf, mi. WINTER PARK, WRIGHTSVILLE, WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH KAST HOUND. WESTBOUJfD. l.eTe Center" for Winter P'rfc ! 6:80 A. M x6:S0 .8jo8 IH.00 " 9:00 10 00 " 1I:S0 f n m - visit l .06 .VBO ' S:00 S:30 4:10 .4:30 a4:S0 8:80 xrtjlO 0:40 7:1 8:15 9:15 ,0:18 " 11:15 " . . . . w H for ffr if b Jjeaye "Klectrtc Centre" for Bch !0:KO A. ML : " 8:00 roe Of 00 M 10:00 " 11:80 II 800 F, Jtf. X"l:10 . 1:55 S:90 $;60 " " i'tio" 'V:Si ' " 8tl0 Mo - 715 ;I5 B:5 10:15 11:15 " ' ft llff,,, ft n 9 n i f !;00 A. M.l 10:0 11:80 I lie P. M. "".isoo' p.' m; ""kVpo'p." Vi. Leave Beaea. tor Wilroioston Lay Wrigbtsv'ie for-WiIlgton Leave Winter P'rt Jtor Wilmington 6:1S A, M. '638 A. M. : 17:15 ' !7:t " x7:SO x7:81 7:50 " 801 8:80 " , R41 - 19:15 A. M. :so " ' !8:36 " 19:25 ' $:41 - - 19 1X0 31 10:45 !10:0 n 11:08 " -1115 - J3i35 P. M. 18l8 P. BL H:45 " !i:5?j jj:o - 2?S " :S8 " - SrOO 4 3:11 " , o3:50 :55 4:08 '..f ; o4:80 5:10 5;15 - 5:25 " 5:88 " 6:00 6:11 x:5 .8:56 - .a.....4...,,v 7:10 7:81" . , 745 7:51 " 8:45 " 8:58 i 9:45 " 9:56 " 1 11:45 - 11:58 " SPECIAL FOB SUNDAYS Leave Frentand Princaa atrteta every balf hour rtora 2 to 5 P. Leave Beacn every half botir from 8tt5 P. M. Daily except Sunday. Sunday only. osupercedea by half-bour acbedule tuwiay aftrniona. PHEIOHT SCBSOULB DAILY EICEI'T 8UNDAY.) L,eave Ninth and Orange Street 3: 00 P, M. Freight Depot open from 20 to 3:00 P, M.. n.FVVriPl-rP1 t?1 sb?w" the ttne Ht wblcb train, may be - mSt jiSttjas 9m tue MTeral utton but tiie tri1 and de' READ SPECIALS -J - 1
The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 15, 1918, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75