Newspapers / The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, … / April 30, 1918, edition 1 / Page 1
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,wl. S V WEATHER. North and South Car olina: Probably 0Cal rainS tonight; Wednes day. fair anc' coo'er if if FULL VOL XXIV. No. 111. WILMINGTON. NORTH. CAROLINA. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 30, 1918. PRICE FIVE CENTS EVER DEFEAT 011 TODAY'S HEWS TODAY GERMANS SUFFERED A , l-t - '' ONBATS mW.A FOR Entente Again Shows Ability ; to Stop Enemy When it i is Necessary GERMANS SUFFERED j A SEVERE DEFEAT Thirteen Divisions Used, Only to be Held in Their Tracks. French Hold Every Part of Their Position Today's reports from the Flanders fcattlefront only serve to emphasize the completeness of the victory won by the Anglo-French forces yesterday m withstanding the tremendous as sault by which the Germans hoped to break into the Allied hill positions Southwest of Ypres and begin cut ting their way on toward the channel ports. The situation seems to have been one of the Entente high, command deciding once more to make a stand after having forced the Germans to use tip tens of thousands of men in fzhting their way desperately forward a? far as they have. The decision made, the stand was taken, and the Germans were stopped, as they have t?en previously on other fields since tl'.e great offensive opened on March 21. The enemy, it Is estimated, threw e? many as 13 divisions or about 175", fit men into the attack on this 12 nile front, but despite continued fu- ou3 assaults was held almost- in-bis trades c?very.here. few -points there was a alight enemy penetration n the 'Une vas largely rectified late yterday. --During last night the j i i x : FYnch. in dashing counter blows,! nrwo Rermans from thp rpmain- der of the small stretches of ground they had gained in their inifial drives of thp day A most welcome feature of the cur - rent news from the front is the an - nouncement that the French, on the crucial part of the line, at Locre, have rot lost any part of their hold on this tlominating ground. They now have rndisputed possession of Locre itself, for the first time in several days, and apparently have killed off all the en fmy efforts to edge In around that place and force its abandonment. The importance of Locre lies in the fact that it guards the approach to Mount Rouge, one of the most valu ?ble hills of the defensive line, which rannot be taken in flank as long as J.ocre remains in Allied hands. Simi larly, the Allied troops have stopped thQ drive towards Scherpenberg by hiding at La Clyte. while the Bel gians dealt with them successfully ppri prpvented any breach in the line foard the sea. Al! the evidence points to the prob ?'nill?y that the Germans suffered "11 nigh the heaviest casualties of ; ny day of the fighting on the North r'.n front, as wave after wave of the attacking forces was mowed down by f itillery ?nd infantry fire. They were exhausted by their fruitless efforts that ihey remained virtually inactive -';! night, while no reports have conv r'. rough today, indicating any resump tion of major activities on their part. South, on the Somme front, the Brit ish ' arriod out a local operation last lik'ht. further improving their posi tion hpfore Amiens by advancing their !i:.' somewhat East of Villers-Breton- Throwing in thousands of new '"oops the Germans are making ' a 'Asperate effort to drive back the Allied lines in Flanders and capture Vprcs and the hill . positions in the Southwest. Many attacks in strong aided by powerful artillery fire, haP been futile and the Allied sol- v" : are standing firm while inflict inS severe losses on the enemy: A sains, the British around Voor Tr.rzppie an(1 tne French in the region r f Locre. the Germans are making their heaviest strokes, but each as 'ilt has been thrown back brilliant ly. Especially bitter is the fighting In and around the villages of Voor Tzrip and Locre, which are still hp'd by the British and, French. From the 12-mile front between Baiiieni and Zillebeke the enemy has tended h:;: attacks to the North of M'I'k; ;';ainst the Belgians along the Hut he is meeting with no n-o-P sur-ross lu-re "than elsewhere in nandf-rs. the Belgians hurling the rrnuns from positions they had oc c"piefh hv counter attacks. ipres is yet to be attacked directly "0m the East, but from the intensity "t thp enemy assaults South and -outhwest, it is evidently the Ger- ans' desire most to take the hill ' ; --'tions West of Mont Kemmel. To th hilp would not only men- ' the eatiro Ai0d jjositioa In Flan ETE ANGLO - "BRITISH CASUALTIES FOR APRIL. London, April 30. British cas ualties reported in April reached a total of 52,475, divided as follows: Killed or died of wounds: Offi cers, 1,621; men, 7,723. Wounded or missing: Officers, 7,447; men, 35,684. Although the complete reports of casualties sustained in the re cent heavy fighting in France and Belgium apparently have not yet been made, a marked increase is shown in the April figures. The total in March was 14,090, the smallest in several months. HOLLAND AND GERMAN NOT YET FULLY AGREED Germany Demands Right to Send War Materials Over Limbourg Railway Amsterdam, April 30. Germany Je mands from Holland, says the Vos sische Zeitung of Berlin, the right to send war material over the Limbourg Railway to Antwerp, the right to' send foodstuffs for shipment from .Antwerp and "thevrMiftwalf real6?: relaJin to the importation iof sanjj and. gravel. "As Holland," the newspaper adds. "recently yielded to Anglo-American - pressure, she must grant these con- ', ditions to redress the balance." , , x . , I From the above dispatch it i:- ap- ; parent that Holland and Germany .have not. vet reached an agreement concerning transport through Hoi land. A dispatch from The Hague to the London Daily Mail on Monday re ported that Holland had yielded to Germany's demands concerning trans ports and the suply of sand and grav-j , , , , , . . . m o! Tt was flHriPf! that. it. was under- . .7 . . r7 Iiner oy me .oiary vJiud inursaay at stood tnat tne amotrat or sana ananoon a committee having already power for good in the community. , m scnooi tne Duimings were oveniow- - " ' " ' , ,L. Lancaster, Edmood P. Leronx, gravel, would be limited and woul be been named to meet his traIn and erJ Wilmington has never had a bright- - ing. If this condition does obtain he rell, L. T. Moore, H. B. Branch, John F Lindgay( Charles A. McDon for non-military purposes only. There range for the affah. in his honor The er future than she has today, nor The was unable to see why additional . George Honnett. W. W. Love, E. G. aid, Max Markman, Shelby A. Miller, has been no official -confirmation ofidinner wi1 be gerved in the banquet. Dispatch a greater prospect, and we ; school buildings were not needed. ;Hancock and William struthers, Jr., i Roger J. Nolfi, John R. O'Brien, Ed the reported agreement. hall of the Y. M. C. A. bespeak for the new owners the . President Williams was inclined toj ofin.. q tn . 3VP j ward J. Parker, Arthur Pickup, Wal- GONTRACTS FOR ARMY I SHOES ARE AWARDED of his lecture is three days prior to . the opening of the Chautauqua pro Washington, April 30. Contracts gram. Announcement of his coming have been let for the manufacture of j was made by Mr. Hicks, a member of 3,500,000 pairs of metallic fastened field shoes for overseas use at an av erage price per pair -of approximate ly $7.75, and for the manufacture of 2.000,000 pairs of. "field weltshoes at $6.50. : ' ders and Eastward toward Dunkirk, but would virtually compel the evac uation of Ypres. German progress Westward from Voormezeele would, if curried to any depth, outflank the hill positions West of Mont Kemmel, -which must be tak en separately. The attacks against the French at Locre are an 'attempt to get between; Scherpenberg and Mont Rouge, but these also have been disastrous. On the Picardy battlefield, where American, British and French troops await the next enemy move, only the artillery has been active." - The Ger mans have not repeated their local attacks against the French at Han gard. Declaring that rumors of a change of government in Russia "do not sound altogether improbable," the Berlin foreign office has asked the German ambassador at Moscow to re pcrt concerning disorders in Petro grad and the alleged monarchist res toration. According to reports re ceived in Berlin, the Russian.- Consti tutional Democratic leaders-Milukoff, Guchkoff and Rodzlenkoff and Gen eral Alexieff, former Russian commander-in-chief, are in Petrograd, aid ing in the restoration movement. Fur ther reports on conditions In Russia are lacking. Viborg, 75 miles Northwest of Pe trograd, and the last stronghold of the Finnish rebels, has been captured by the government forces, presufnably aided by the Germans who occupied Helsingfors some ays agto. Tile Red Guards, who have had the Ss-sista-ne of the Russian Bolsheyik gov pmniiaftt, resisted; desperately- and it is d5nar?4 tnat neariy the ; entire ,()00 . rebels . wai - Jthe l&hite Guardi. VICTORY FRENCH BLOODIEST DEFEAT Attack After Attack of the En emy Smashed by British and French London, April 30. The correspon dents 'with the British army agree that the. enemv yebieruay sunerea i nothing less than a disastrous defeat, j It was the first phase of the battle i in his. desperate attempt to capture the line of hills lipid hv tViA AIHpss which endanger his oossession of Mont Kemmpl ThP fipnnanc h,Vp probably used 13 divisions from the East of Ypres. Southward on the line of battle, with two more Northward, and the violence of the gunfire was never greater or more unceasing at any period of the war. The successful Allied defense made the day the Woodiest yet experienced by the enemy, as attack after attack was smashed by artillery and infan- try fire. The Germans had already suffered heavily .on Sunday, when their concentrations of troops were GERMANS SUFFER THEIR caught and shattered by gunfire. in the Dispatch Publishing Company while evincing no surprise at the in Their waves yesterday were mow- to Messrs. Parker R. Anderson. Sid-,crease in Price of these materials he ed down and the British wings and ney Bieber and Frank P. Morse, of, wanted to know If education was go French genter neither bent nor broke. Washington, D. C. These gentlemen in to be allowed to remain at a 1 ; , .,- SPEAK HERE THURSDAY Address Will be Delivered at the Academy Will' Use the War as His Theme 0 Frank Mulholland, a former presi- dent of the International Rotary Club. 1 who speaks at the Academy of Music on Thursday nitrht 9f 8 nVinir rm . - A K v. J A v. -. V, j ' l V 11 w 11 ( tu0 win ortaWalnaj of . " I " "1 lVy II ' I CL Villi , A. , , , , , Mr. ' Mulholland comes here to speak on the war under the direction j r nf t Vin Phantfliinii'i oItIiam o- lnt ! the Chautauqua force now in the city at the Tuesday afternoon special meeting of the Rotary club, which he attended as an invited guest. OF STARTS JUffiE MOVE This Latest Effort is Directed to Italy, Says a Basel Dispatch Stockholm, April 30. The Catholic International Press Agency an nounces, a dispatch from Basel says, that Emperor Charles of Austria is making a fresh peace offer, appealing to Italy to consider it in her own in terests. Although it has been predicted fre quently that if the present German campaign should fail a "peace offen sive" would be inaugurated by the central powers, there has been no pre vious intimation that a new move of this nature was being made. Unless confirmatory advices are received through the usual channel of news from Switzerland this dispatch may be accepted with reserve. Ordinarily news originated in Switzerland is for warded to this country by way df Ptaris. EIGHT THOUSAND MEN REACH CAMP JACKSON Columbia, S. C, April 30. Over 8,000 selectmen have arrived at Camp Jackson during the past four days as part of the movement of nearly 10,000 men scheduled to arrive hereduring the five-day period which commenced last Friday. . .: EMPEROR A A WASHINGTON MEN BUY CONTROL OF EVENING DISPATCH Parker R. Anderson and Asso ciates Purchase Majority of Stock CHANGE BECAME EFFECTIVE TODAY W. B. Cooper, T. E. Cooper, 1 J. O. Reilly and T. W. Davis Sell to P. R. Anderson, S. Bieber and F. P. Morse The controlling interest in the Dis- patch Publishing Company was pur-! 1 UA PortQ, D J : . i-imocu wua; n. auucisuu, c n:0i,or o n h tvonir r vt ! J-"'Jt 1 1 1 muiociai me luesaay anernoon special 1 of Washington, D. C. The stock meeting of the club, held at the Y. i bought today was the holding of Thos. m. C. A. in the form of a luncheon it? w n nnnr,- t w: t,-j 1 w uu . James - Reilly. i At a meetinS the stockholders the following officers were elected: j Parker Anderson, president and manager; Sidney Bieber, sprrpta rv- treasurer, and Frank P. Morse, vice- . president. After the sale was con- summated the following statement was issued by the former owners of the paper: ' To The Dispatch Readers: We have sold our entire interest ,nre experienced newspaper and busi-; npss:mpn. Air AiuierRon rtenier well j throu Bieber is a well-kn.wn business man of Washington, D CI, and ; Mx Morse is well known to the-newspaper field i in Washington, beine Sunday Editor cf the Washington Post. It .s pardonable pride that we sar that since taking charge of The Dispatch the circulation has been in - creased from approximately two - thousand to approximately fifty-five hundred, and we have hieh hope of seeing the paper continue until its cir- eulrtien will be ten thousand. Since purchasing The Dispatch we have made special endeavor to push the Droeress of thp citv and improve the 'naner tr n nnint whorp it. is now he- ' K x f " ' 7 j j i j j jvu enmeiuiii ,i6 uiu ia good will of the community and the success of the enterprise THOS. W. DAVIS, W. B. COOPER, JAS. OWEN REILLY, THOS. E. COOPER. E TO SUM DORTGH This Will Be Urged in Event Dortch Resigns to Run for Congress The Dispatch learns today that friends of George E. Bellamy, of Newj Brunswick county, have written Sen ators Simmons and Overman indors ing Mr. Bellamy for appointment to succeed Col. W. T. Dortch, of Golds boro, as United States Marshal, should the latter resign to run for Congress in the Third Congresisonal district. Mr. Bellamy admitted to a Dispatch reporter this afternoon that his friends had asked him to become a candidate for the place and that he was willing to accept the honor If the two Senators decided to recommend his appointment, Mr. Bellamy Is in Wilmington, where he is looking af ter the income tax returns. For the past six months he has been serving in this capacity. He is a staunch Democrat and one-of the best knowi men in Eastern North Carolina. It is not known whether Col. Dorte will . resign his position, but it is un derstood from Washington that he must tender his resignation if he defi nitely decides to -.riiaie the race for Congress. The only other man men tioned so far to succeed Col. Dortch is Allan J. Maxwell, of Raleigh, now, serving as chief clerk to the corpora tion commission. Some of Mr. Max well's friends" say he does- not want the place,: preferring to remain on his present work, where it iirknown he Is serving his State, to ; the entire satis faction of bis superior officers. o ncXedUh: the state- s;hout l.'Ht ia rolina. and Mr. m$m that her was going to stand with BELLAMY Nora SHARP DIVISION 111' ROTARY CLUB ON SCHOOL BONDS President J. C. Williams Fav-; ors Issue and Will Support Bonds OTHER MEMBERS ARE VERY MUCH OPPOSED Matter Was Discussed From Every Angle at Special Meeting of Club Tuesday Afternoon Rotary is divided on the school bond question. The matter was dis-' . cussea irom every conceivaoie angle , , , r. , -, . . . . . . . i ana argument ror and against pas - , sage of the bonds offered, accompan-' ied by statements from the individ-; Ual member as to how he would vote. rtf Perhaps . the strongest address u- e j.t i n :J j. llie aiLCluuuI1 tuat ol ni, J wuiiams, wno conciuaea wiTn,gains yesterday. The Cleveland dis- the statement that he was , opposed ; to the club taking any stand today; n tne Question unless it can comply t with1 the request of the Board of Edu-; 'cation and support the measure. He- admitted that he knew nothing about lumber, cement, lime ana nails and i standstill tor tne next ten years oe -ys ! tfte Board of Education on the ques- ton because they were specialists in tbeta lines and knew what was need- e-- ne was inclined to tninK mat tne club had had entirely too much to say concerning taxation and what the : eauuaung oi tne yiB&ent gcuciauuu ! was going to cost, and too little to ; say about what this means to the present and future generations. "I ana afraid we are fixing to paint a black eve on the city this afternoon that, will stand for a long time to come, he said. - Continuing, lie stressed tne iact tnai there are 8.000 school children in this . .A. - , , I Hiatrirt nnrl that with K.OfVO of them " . .. . ... . " .V " " tninK tne argument onerea o jLfr Rnirpr Mnnrp In nnnosition to the bond e materials naa auvancea in i issue was misleading. He stated that of the thil"d Liberty Loan campaign. I Mr. Newcomb. member of the board,'0 De inaugurated Wednesday after ihad specifically stated that no effort ;noon and continued throughout the (would be made to build a high school remainder of the week, at the Tuc3- building at this time and he failed to day meeting of the central commit jsee why argument as to the advances tee, held just before noon in the di of prices of material to go into the 1 rectors' room of the People's' Sav jhigh school building should enter into ings bank. The names of the team I the argument. workers will be announced Wednes- j Vice President Marsden Bellamy ex .day. Ipresfeed himself as opposed to the! The whirlwind finish of the cam ' sctf&Sl bond issue and similar stands paign will be inaugurated Wednesday jwere taken by Messrs. Roger and afternoon and there will be njJet-up ! Louis T. Moore, Mr. C. C. Covington until" New Hanover county has gons ' and others. Their principal objection over the top. Members of the cen- wns hnsed nn thp grounds that this is not the proper time to shoulder ad- ditional burdens. Mr. Louis Moore feeling that the Gary plan (holding afternoon school sessions) could be termined to market the county's quo adopted here with the desired results, ta of bonds. The honor roll will be Mr. Bellamy stated that he expected published a little later in the week, to vote for the special 10-cent tax on showing who has and who' has not the $100 to provide Increased salaries bought bonds. for teachers, but that he would vote against the school bond issue. Quoting Captain Thomas D. Meares, Mr. Louis T. Moore, secretary of the club, stated that the necessary in crease of taxes after June 1 would ap proximate 40 cents and that it might go to 50, This, he said, was in order to meet the increase in salaries de manded by the street hands, police and firemen and to increase these de partments to take care of the in creased population. Mr. Roger Moore would afvor a 20-cent tax levy in or der to provide proper salaries for the teachers, but Is opposing the bond issue. Mr. Roger Moore was inclined to think that the government will take care of the influx of laborers so far as housing and school facilities are concerned but digressed from the sub ject to say that he thought a big cor poration' should e formed here to build houses to -take care of the workmen that are coming. . Season Opens Saturday. The City Baseball League will open the season with a double header Sat urday afternoon at the Robert Strange Playgrounds. TJhe Initial game will be played early in the afternoon and the second immediately afterwards. - No admission Is charged and all are in vited to witness tbi exhibitions. INCREASE SHOWN IN SUBSCRIPTIONS TO LIBERTY LOAN Monday's Intensive Canvass ing Boosted the total Amount to $2,403,442,400 UNUSUAL GAINS WERE RECORDED YESTERDAY Atlanta, Which Has Stood Lowest, Made an Increase of $20,000,000 Chicago Most Subscribers Washington, April 30. Intensive canvassing or tne final week of ther."Dk W,U lA-hcr-r T . - - """-' touiyaigu was leueciea j tnAav 5t v. -. t..-, i n Liic icyun ui 03,442,400 total subscriptions, an in- crease since last night's report of $1 9n 1 d.n r.c -ruir. , i - a V"vem only Part of yesterday's business. j The Atlanta district which has stood lowest in the percentage column showed .a sudden increase of about $20,'000,000. Gther distrcts corded unusual trict reported a gain of $26,000,000. ln the Kansas City district, tdtal subscriptions now are 10 per cent, above the district's quota. The Chicago district leads all oth- exs in number of individual subscri- bers. New York Subscribes $587,700,000 New York, April 30. A total of $587,700,000 had been subscribed 4to the Third Liberty loan in the second reserve;,distict, the .committee fth iKwneed LHtodyr - -'Thfe -over&ight 'gaiH was $23,510,'000. ' NAME TEAM CAPTAINS FOR WHIRLWIND DRIVE Will be Inaugurated Wednes- . . XT t day Afternoon No Let- r r j - v l up tor Kemainder Week J. B. Rice, A. O. Schuster. C. L. ninV1nnn r. Van invn t a nr. i - . . were namea as ; active charge of the whilwind finis: tral committee and Liberty Loan workers in general are plainly dis-' : couraged over the response made to their efforts thus far but they are de- THREE OF CREW KILLED BY SUBMARINE FIRE The American Steamer Chin cha Fought Off U-boat January 1 8 Washington, April 30. Three mem ters of the crew of the American steamer Chincha were killed, the Navy Department announced today in the ship's fight with a submarine, March 21. Previous rvorts said several men were injured, but made no mention of any being killed. The Chincha beat off the, submer sible after firing about 30 shots. One shot from the submarine struck the Chincha aft, killing Seaman A. S. Ed wards, of Augusta, Ga., and two oth ers not named. On January 18 the Chincha escaped from a submarine and the armed guard was commended by Secretary Daniels, for its excellent work at the timA. . . LTY LIST OF TO-DAY CONTAINED THE NAMES OF 58 Two Killed in Action, Two Died of Wounds, Six of Disease . i 3 AMONG THE DEAD ARE TWO CAPTAINS Cepatin Jett Killed in Action and Captain Chambers Died of Pneumonia 3 Lieu tenants Wounded Z$ Washington, April 30. The casual- V a3 IUI1UW3. Killed in action 2 2 6 5 42 , .-juiea or acciaent . Died of disease .. wunded severely vvounaea sugnuy Mlsslng in action x Captain Richard Laurence Jett was reported killed In action. Captain Charles A. Chambers died of pneumo nia and Lieutenants Robert D. Coys, Rufus B. Craln and Francis Worthing ton Hine were slightly wounded. In issuing the list the department announced that Lieutenant Thomas X Mooney was' previously reported as having died from accident, due to ao error in cabling. Lieutenant John. W, Morris, previously reported wounded severely, reported a prisoner and ua wounded. The list" follows: Killed in action: Captain Richard ! Laurence 'Jett, Private Herbert O. Raymond. - Died of accident: Privates Elrldg Cope, William W. Washington. ,. Died, of diseasejCaptaiii XJharlea A. Chambers, Privates "Orris Pearl Mttd gett, Preston Noel, Clarence Everett Brown, James Bates, Ray L. Sieber. Severely wounded: Sergeant Thomas J. Curtln, Gerald S. Patton, Privates Michael F. Davis, Leonard F. Sylvia, John Levi Smith. Slightly wounded: Lieutenants RoV ert D. Coye, Rufus B. Crain, Francis Worthlngton Hine ; Corporals Frank . M. Gannon, Burpee Weet, Jr., Georgs Zebroskv: Waeoners William Brown- Thomas E. Parris; Privates Albert O. I Abraham, John R. Barrett, Charles ;R. Clinkenbeard, Thomas J. Corrigan, i George W. Currier, Lloyd B. Devel, ; George H. Dustin, John F. Egan, Wll- i fred T. Foster, Gordon E. Fuller, Don- ! aid M. Hair, Eugene Joubert, Henry W. Kennedy, John M. Kenney, Guy , Iter L. Redden, Louis E. Shaver, Jere- miah F. Sheehan, Vaughn H. Silva, Charles Webb, Louis J. Wolfe, Philip Wright, Morton C. Higgins. Missing in action: Private Arseno Bergeron. Private Jesse M. King, previously reported died of gunshot wounds, now reported slightly. ' Report Shows That Receipt for Past Four Year's Total $2,335,144 Atlanta, Ga,, April 30. The Boara of Church Extension, one of the prin cipal agencies of the Southern Metho dist church, met here today to put the final touches to its report, to be presented to the quadrennial confer ence of the church, which opens on Thursday. According to the Rev. W. F. McMurray, of Louisville, Ky., cor-' responding secretary of the board, to tal receipts for the past four yeare amounted to $2,335,144, a gain over the preceding quadrennium of $563, 919. The loan fund capital had been nearly doubled and amounted to $1,106,326. It was pointed out thai the total increase has almost equalled the entire loan fund capital gathered' during the entire preceding 40 years, The board aided in building 1,244 churches during the quadrennium, in vesting in these buildings $1,357,396, It also aided in building 566 parson ages. t At its meeting today the board had before it applications for loans to churches and parsonages amounting to $458,221 and applications for dona tions to churches and parsonage! amounting to $226,030. It had at ltfl disposal for appropriations $424,966. It was stated that Bishops Jamet H. McCoy, of Birmingham, and Jbsepn 6. Key, of Sherman, Texas, would b unable to attend the conference;., Jt majority of the other members of th college t)f bishops already hT.. riviuL rv CASUA METHODIST EXTENSION BOARD IN SESSION hh - i in ' Sac?-:' r.B .t - - V "J- J. J .1 -3 ' j V4 .--I-Jl Pi I t-f ,1 'i ! 1 - l t t - ill 1 E-.a m-- a ' : 4 i 1 t ' :'-:'.'t". '.5 lb: Hi lit ill': f r m -, I -ff ; . A - . 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The Wilmington Dispatch (Wilmington, N.C.)
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April 30, 1918, edition 1
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