Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / March 27, 1910, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE MORNING STAR, WILMINGTON, SUNDAY MARCH 27, 191ff. .. . .V J , 'ft V 1 C I:' -VV'- WE:;YEt EAT PORK? I HANDS OFF. THE pRES3.j. . wuu I Published by the trlLMINOTOK STAB COMPANT JIkJ ' tyilmlBgtn. x. c. ; . Bnte'red as second-clags matter at the tofflce at Wilmington, N. C mtt act f Congress, March 2nd 187. ICU ASSOCIATED PRESS KXPOBT. PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCEMENT. THIS MORNING STAR, ta oliest ially newBpaper in North Carolina, Is published ally except Monday, at $6 per year, $3 for lx months, f 1.60 for three months, 60 cents for one month, served by carrier in the city or by mail. '"V " the SUNDAY star, by mail, one year, tl ; bIx months, 60 cents ; three months, 25 cents. ADVERTISING RATES may be had OB application and advertisers may feel assur ed that through tbe columns of this paper they may reach all Wilmington, Eastern Carolina and contiguous territory in South Carolina. Obituary sketches, cards of thanks, com munlcatlona espousing the cause of a pri vate enterprise or a political candidate, and like matter, will be charged at the rate or 10 cents per line, or if pnid cash in advance, a half rate will be allowed. Announce ments of fairs, festivals, balls, hops, pic nics, society meetings, political meetings, etc., will be charged under same conditions except so much thereof as may be of news value to readers of tbe paper. Advertisements discontinued before expi ration of contracts are charged transient rates for times actually published. Pay ment for transient advertisements must be cash in advance. Contract advertisers will not be allowed to exceed their space at same rates or advertise anything foreigu to their regular business without extra charge. Ad vertisements to occupy special place will be charged for according to position de ired. TELEPHONES; Business Office No. 61; Editorial and Locnl rooms No. 61. Call either if the other doesn't answer. COMMUNICATIONS, unless they contain Important news, or discuss briefly and properly subjects of real interest, are not wanted; and if acceptable in every other way, they will be invariably rejected unless the real name of the author accompanies the same, not necessarily for publication but as a guarantee of good faith. Sunday, March 27th. 1910. A COUNTERFEIT SOUTHERNER One Leroy Bowers, who claims to have at one time been a Raleigh mer chant (News and Observer please en lighten us) created a sensation in a New York court by requesting the judge to relieve him of service on a jury, the panel of which included a negro. He is reported as saying: "I am a Southerner. I see that there is a negro on the jury. All my educa tion, training and instincts since early childhood have been opposed to recog nizing their equality in social or busi ness affairs. Please excuse me from such association." It would appear that Mr. Bowers is one of that class recently so aptly designated as "professional Southern ers". He would fit in nicely with that well known element of the cafes, which tears down the tables when the band plays "Dixie"; which carries, along with cognomens of European or Israeiitish suggestion, a "front" which runs to slouch hats, weird pronuncia tion and stage-ideals of the Southern character; which, in a swaggering burst of confidence concerning its no tions of honor, its devilish quickness with a gun, its absorbing thirst for Bourbon whiskey, betrays through all the braggadocia of the fire-eating South Carolinian and the grass-green principles of "ole Kentucky" a nasal timbre that would make a Cape Cod Yankee blow his trumpet in sympa thy! The North is full of just such would-be Southerners as this men who grope for an ideal of romance that they have absorbed in part from comic papers and in part from South ern novels by New England authors. The Lord might possibly forfend us and other sections from this type of pompous hypocrisy but, somehow, He never dqes! As to servic? oa a jury, that was Battled at Appomattox, among other things subject always to the privi lege which Southern communities have taken of re-settling such mat ters according to their own convic tions. We might also suggest to Mr. Bowers that, until recent years, and before this matter and others were duly ordered by Southern sentiment, the best men in every Southern com munity properly considered jury duty to be a part of their functions as citi zens "niggers", or not. We and all ether Southern men have seen "mix ed" juries by the score. When in doubt, it was long a practice with lawyers to fill up the box with the. "dead wood" of color. In , the jury room, as elsewhere,' the whites creat ed and enforced their own 'distinc tions. They made no grand stand play over one Of a' hundred distasteful con sequences of a war which they prov ed themselves able to handle, even after it had . gone against them. ;. In New York, a play to .professional Southern sentiment such as. that by which Bowers got in the papers may yet attain its end which is publicity. In the South it would have been fu tile, because it was lacking in com mon sense. If the North .'still insists on negro jurors, it would seem the part of Southern white men resident there to sink their natural distaste in the sense of obligation to do jury service which In the South still remains, in spite of growing shirking, oth strong and pure. In or out of the jury room, the Constitution, may declare, but it re mains yet powerless to enforce) that "social equality" at which Mr. Bow ers makes a counterfeit moue! .' Pole fame, has evidently profited by, .tne lesson okFeary and Cook. He will let his competitor finish his .race be fore he starts-;-r-i---ji; With the action of the Police Court of Raleigh in 'heavily fining Swift and Company arid' its agent for attempt ing 'to expose to public sale'the car cass of a hog that had evidently died after a long and painful illness, we have no quarreL Contrariwise, we only regret that the Beef Trust Is too buxom an entity, too much without body, parts, or passion, to justify a sentence of electrocution against it. (even had .tne law ioreseeu uu provided against such an outrage which it manifestly could not have done. There are crimes even" ot cor porate greed, of which ordinary mor tals, even as honest as legislators,' are powerless to conceive beforehand. All the same, we like our pork, when desire 'bids the menace of extrava gance begone! Indeed; were it possi ble to attain, along with the faith, the virtues of the race, were it riot for the sacrifice of North Carolina ham, of pork chops, of the definite sausage, we might listen to a Jewish mission ary expound his doctrine-1 were there such a thing; among a busy, business people. Wherefore, we cannot but re sent, the vivid, Zolaesque method of one Edward E. Britton, city editor of the News and Observer, in describ ing for us the complication of diseases, the. long drawn sufferings, the Job-like complaints of this particular porker. Hogs, as a rule, are dirty but healthy. So are children. So are dogs. So, other things aside, is an appetite for pig. Why, then, blast our confidence with a medical history of one partic ular hog, who doubtless contracted pneumonia in Kansas, became a con sumptive in Missouri', "struggled pig- ishly with pleurisy in Arkansaw, went into quarantine with smallpox in Texas, took to the hospital with a complication of diseases in Chicago and there dying, the mere feverish and blistered wreck of his former es tate, was thereupon ' sent to the morgue, duly upholstered and stamp ed with the government seal, and final ly shipped to North Carolina to make a Raleigh breakfast! Not only did Mr. Bntton tell iis what others said of this hog, but also what he saw of it. v More, he went on the stand and swore to what he saw, duly reporting himself what ho had not only seen but said. After hearing Mr. Britton's testimony, the only wonder which remains to us is that the court ,did not order the win dows raised, the defendants hanged, the word '"pork" made prima facie evidence of obscene language, and the room fumigated. Never since Job roll ed in the dust and listened to hi3 comforters have we had pictured to us such a complete breakdown of tis sue and vitiation of blood as Mr. Brit ton treats us to in his description of this humble Chicago hog! The "dis eases that man is heir to," when roll ed into one, contrast with his afflic tions as an ordinary distemper. Never was hog so cursed before! However, Spring is here. To the affluent there is Spring lamb. To the near-affluent, there is the healthy and (take it fronf us) the luscious Spring kid. Hereabouts the carts come daily from the water, with resound ing cries of "H'r 'o f'sh!" Spring veg etables are sprouting and growing ti ripeness. We all need the "mineral salts," and they are all on the way. Fruits 'a little way ahead to "cool tha blood." Things of the field ,the gar den patch, the ocean. Poultry will soon no longer be impossible to pov erty. Eggs may be saved from the cold storage. We may yet be fed. And, by the time the first frost shall again whiten the fields, we will have forgotten. That is the finest thing about people that they forget: Their own sins, short-comings; failures, as well as those of others. We may even forget a certain lamented pig". What happened in the Raleigh market may finally fade from our minds. And when the tingle' is fairly in the air again, when the peppers hang in red strings about the market stalls, we may yet pause before a salmon-colored tub of pork sausage and smack our lips. For of such is the inconse quentjial nature which in spite of trusts, poverty, the high cost of liv ing, and the fear of death, in some way avails to keep a man from dyins till the moment when he finds it im possible to longer live. 'Shall we, then, eat some more pork? We think so! Quoting the Star's editorial on what it itself 'called the' two by four habit of Greensboro, The Record says: "This is . a worse 'dose' than this paper had and it should be a lesson at once heeded. It will be recalled that 'this paier was not specific; what was said was in sa general way,; yet - the Star is on to the game equal to a resident of the place. It is a good time to ten der the advice' John Calvin tendered to Luther, when some outsider was uying to stir ip'siriie'; perweem uiem Calvin said Brother, we have all W3 can do to fight, the devil without fight ing each other.'" We protest -that so far from trying to "stir up strife. we had it in mind only to help toward peace by contrasting its former state of concerted action with that ;of pue rile dissension into which Greensboro seems strangely to have fallen. 1 I: Perhaps 1 the. vGreensb'orb Record Is wishful, to have' Baxter Shemwell on hand to help swell the population of GreensbororV-- .--tr- Frorri the anonymous realm of the other end of the telephone spoke a feminine voice in which was the note of a recent feminine tragedy: "Could you not," it said, "suggest that street car conductors refrain from helping ladies off the car?'' At first blush this had an ungra cious sound; it seemed to be a haugh ty rejection of an attention prompted by an Innate courtesy. But, as the man is supposed to say, "There's a reason." The voice went on: "Ladies in white dresses, you know;, it would be better for them their dresses to get off without the help of the conductor, do you not see?" We see. The Springtime is here time of dainty fabric, of immaculate linen, of white gowns of a texture and fineness .that . can retain , their freshness only so long as they are ab solutely free of the touch of mere man or any man. We put this '.'up to" the conductors, certain that they will see the point. Their's is man's work. Inevitably, they accumulate during the day their due allowance of grime as who does not, who works. And so, even in this most well meant cour tesy of all, helpfulness may prove a vice. We confess that it has a dis heartening look this objection to so well-meaning an action. But who will say that it is .not well founded? Know ing no more than the voice which came over the 'phone, we dare swear that at least one .Wilmington woman yesterday suffered practically from (n attention which she could not without boorishness decline. Also, another thing, and this for the company, rather than for the conduc tor. At Hilton the car schedule ne cessitates a short waii. At Fourth and "Red Cross visitors to the ceme tery catch the cars. Frequently, as the cars whiz by, they fail to catch them. If there is to be a wait; "Why not let it be at Fourth and Red Cross; instead of Hilton?" Thus, also, the voice over the 'phone. We are inclined to in a measure 'thank the Lord" that Wilmington is not yet so much" of a city that its conductors are not only willing but ready to assist women passengers to get aboard and to alight. Such action takes the rough edge off the contact of public' service corporations with private patrons. Most people who use the ca'rs know the conductors. We confidently assert that they like them. Once their attention is called to the matter, we are sure that they may be depended upon to properly appraise Lheir women passengers; also, their gowns. All men among us know what a fearful thing" it is to rumple a wo man who has just completed a tri umph of the toilette. As well "muss up' her' hair! The-r-'5'simple white dress" declares its' own beauty: it also declares: "Hands off!" ELECTROCUTION. J We had thought that electrocution had been long enough practiced to es tablish it as the most painless of all unnatural deaths, barring possibly ether and the guillotine. It seems not Says the Columbia Record: "The first legal execution by elec trocution in North Carolina took place last Friday, when a negro murderer was put to death in the electric chair at the State prison in Raleigh: From the description given by the papers it does not appear that, the execution was any more speedy or merciful than is hanging,, since it required four ap plications of the curernt, 1,800 volts each tim, to end the negro's earthly existence. But the plan of having all executions of the death sentence with in the State prison Is wise, no matter the mode of execution." When the first electrocution ; took place. In New York, the advance guard ot yellow journalism made much of the v repeated application of the cur rent and. of-the false signs of life in dicated by purely muscular contrac tion1 and relaxation. It has long been established, however, that oney appli cation of current. Is sufficient, and that loss of. consciousness is instantaneous. Men who have been "struck bjr light ning"? atad recovered will bear out this assertion. Electrocution js applied lightning no more, no less. Compar- ed.,with the bungling accidents too fre quently incidental to hanging,' it is mercy so far as the -taking of life may. in anywise be said to be merciful. v Newspaper headlines do not always opiomjze the story which follows,-but tbColumbia State does just that in its vheading of the dispatch announo in'the naming of Dalzell as chairman of the new rules committee, when it says;, "Shear a Sow, Milk a Bull,iqreat Cry; Little Wool." ' . b :Vv; : . , .,; ? TjH Charlotte New carries ' an ; ac ctounty of an " attempted .burglary, in whM a young ladyU'- discovered intruders ? and "with a shriek of he?oice scared them away." jUst have contended all along; it is onlyecessaryfor a'woman to retain -her'cream to;protect herself against tne -mosr -ctesperate of assailantsi ' Judging by' the way in which many Of the .brethren are dishing out free Advertisements to the TeleposL on. Count of the new, night, letter service of the telegraph companies, some of as suoscribers to the stock oj the concern. - - . rWib?S,Df to aPPear; that when it came t0 dealing the P ttsburg aldermen followed the rule tLfr v,mediCal professI and! based rShepa: i. r : ., -. - .. v..,.v fa- NOi'o&EMTENCES TO ROADS. Respecting' Baxter Shemwell, the Greensboro Record says, how true It Is it does not know, that it. "hears that JGovernor Kitchin says regarding the Shemwell sentence, that it is the only case he ever heard of in thiu State where a defendant was sent to jail for such an offense; that it Is either a fine or a road sentence." Knowing Governor Kitchin's ; abili ties, we are quite certaln'that he nev ef said-any such things It is a mat ter which few people in the State are acquainted with, but 6ne!which is nev ertheless true, that "no's judge ever "sends"' anybody to the lroads".' The senteiifc'eVas Judge1 Long, we think, pointed "out' on a time, is necessarily to jail' with authority to'1 the County Commissioners to assign' the prisoner so sentence'd to work :ujfon the Toads of the -particular countyv' The judge, in otherr,words, may Sentence to the penitentiary or to jail, but not to the roads; - the county commissioners make that "assignment". "The roads" is simply by statute authorized to be substituted by them as a place of safe keeping. Although it has through inadver-r tence often been done,- a sentence sim ply of "sixty days" does not justify the keeping of a prisoner elsewhere than in the county jail. Tjjiat is the place for, prisoners. ,,,.The authority to J the commissioners to kaep them else where must be specific J So-have1 no doubt, therefore, tha't with the, .sentence before him Govern or.Kitchin knew exactly,to what Shem well wassentenced when he, -asked the doctors' for their '-'opinion. The ,mistake06f ; upposing)$at hard labor was involved in it-r-ifi (there was such a mistake was doubtless with the doctors1 0 Arid not with the Governor. Probabfas The' Record suggests, Judge tLpng'.s sente.np"e.was based up on the fact that he foresaw the very basis of application for pardon which is now being stressed, when he failed to give the commissioners the power to put Mr. Shemwell at work, as well as to keep him confined All the above is, of course, largely academic so far as the rights or wrongs of the Shemwell matter are concerned. Without any medical knowledge outside of ordinary exper iences wjth medicines and drug bills, we at th 'same time have an impres sion thaV both .rheumatism and defec tive heart action are-' complaints that are intensified byi exercise. That be ing true.', the jail would seem to be beneficial, as well as apposite. i. r ' . ,, , ; r Speaking of moons, the Easter one in Wilmington ' js more beautiful than any other ! ever - dared to be in l !- . 1 .-!' .ill-. . Charleston, or elsewhere, before the war, or since. , With one accord the feminine popu lation wil) . today agree'that St Paul was eternally right when he said that it was unseemly for women to be in church without their, hats. It appears that money will buy any thing even hookworms. Supply; fol lows demand. . Was there anything that Colonel Roosevelt wished to learn of the Sphynx? " - CURRENT COMMENT. The insurging business in Congress reminds us of the days of Rep Pop fusion in North Carolina, which a', most caused a revolution in this State. There. is nothing in it for the Demo crats except perhaps a little timber for -, the, ;fire . of hope. Newbern Sun. .(oh : ' : - It Is,6tst,ted that.itris possible to dig a hole, through the,, earth and drop from New.York to China in fiveppurs.. Doubtless,, but suppose. you met some body dropping dwon from China about the same time, Charleston News and Courier..,, , -, -u What a shock it must have been to that Pittsburg Grafter-when he found he had been carrying, the price of his aldermanicvote in his hip pocket for a . week unknowingly All this time he was . laboring und n the depressing thought that his vote was not con sidered worth bting. How . humili ating to his otliciai dignity it -nr.JSt lave been, anl then too. he lost the use of that eighty dollars and ten cents for a whole week. Charlotte Observer. The Cherokee News says there are thirteen reasons why it is not "pirut ing" around in- an automobile. But it sees fit to give only one of them that it hasn't the money to buy a ma: chine. No excuse could be poorer in these days . when men are mort gaging their homes ;,.as security , for autos j .bought . . on ; ;; a bred it. - Why doesn't. The . News .tell, the) truth, and say thai'-a .-mortgage,. on. ts.; plant Js hot- considered a , sufficient security. Charlotte Observers .-;- - ; . Senator. Thomas E.; Burton,-of Ohio, said recently, in. stating, his views , at! to , the - -way the v 5'i-deal - newspaper" should be, run: "I.would like to sefe a -paper vpuwished. with.every trace of sensationalism eliminated, the news published just as, Jt is uncolored and based : upon the trathTr-tell the truth no matter who ,is hit.'VNow that would certainly be , at : least, a-; novelty . for . a day or two. ,But the editor would very probably get his spinal column double leaded the very 'first issue. Newbern tS!un. .-, , j ' Poor old Queen, Liliuokalani i s go ing home to die, having given up her effort to obtain .favorable considera tion by this Government to her claim for losses incident .to . the. overthrow of her government in Hawaii, an over throw aided and abetted by the United States, vand ' oy ? which the. United States '.profited;- kQueeu Lil was neith er a' model fin fieri . nor wornari!r httr moraisV; werf siol; lauch-. betterw'than The Shoe " With That Cu&om Look." The Shoe for (comfort and wear. . New Spring styles Kirschbaxim All-wool Spring: ! , SuitS;......... .;..:..V... . ..V.'.V on JL New lot of new Style Shapes in Tuscan Straw and Braid Hats jut received. Also lot of new Rib bon and Flowers. Misses' Hats, trimmed and untrimmed, in great variety. 1 WHITE GOODS IN GREAT SHOWING-Flaxon, the queen of white goods, 3 inches wide, 15c, 18c and 25c. Luna Lawn, 40 inches wtde, 25c. NOVELTIES in NECKWEAR THE iLose of her people, but her claim against this Government was founded in -equity. We have always Relieved ae was harshly treated. But then Queen Lil is not an American citizen, and has no vote in any Congressional district in this country. Columbia Slate. It is noted that Mr. Fitzgerald, the New Ydrk Democrat who was reward ed by Speaker Cannon a few weeks ago with some good committee assign ments because he stood with him and the Republican regulars against the Democratic insurgent forces, turned again the other day and voted against the 'Speaker every time in the memor able contest that resulted in the limi tation, of his power. "'Uncle Joe"' doubtless felt like exclaiming, "Et tu, Brme," when contemplating this lat est evidence of man's ingratitude. Twin City Sentinel. So Prisoner E. E. Powell, sends word to Mr. A. P. Kitchin to come to Hali fax jail and kill him. "When the for mer Is put on trial for the murder of Policeman Dunn, we suppose this per formance will be put in evidence to indicate the defendant's insanity; but how to class such insanity may puzzle his counsel. If it is suicidal mania, he should be trying to take his own life. If it is a mania for committing murder he should have sent word to Messrs. Kitchin and Travis that he still was determined upon their oblit eration. Charlotte Observer. ' Asheville Gazette: "Shorn of its now er the office of Speaker, like the Vice Presidency, is likely to become an other handy shelf upon which to lay a certain class of political lame ducks." How do you know? Is Cannon not shelved? Better wait and see. That news rules' committee is com posed of six Republicans and four Democrats. What is to hinder them from adopting rules to suit old man Joe? Six beats four every pop. On one very sensational occasion seven beat six and named a president of these United States. Of course the Democrats, aided by the Insurgents, can prevent the adoption of rules not to their liking, but how do you know the insugents are going to stand up? Better wait a bit and see what hap pens." Greensboro Record. -t A '., 'We think that the account ; which The Chronicle gives elsewhere; of ex- Governor Glenn's prohibition speech in New York, will appeal to the read ers of The Chronicle, . He speaks from much past experience and therev fore speaks well, but it will be some thing of a shock to some, cf Glenn's admirers in this State to know that he was once such a bad man.' He has never been quite so free in his con fessionol before. He seems to be the sole decent survivor of eight college men. Two of them are dead, three are in insane asylums and two are a disgrace to the name of North Caro lina, all through the demon."- The mantle of .charity covers the: -dead a! ways; the inmates of asylums are safe from public scandal, -but no such pro tection is thrown around the living who are a disgrace to the State. It would be interesting to r know . the names of these two pariahs.. But ac cording to our mind, the feature of Governor .Glenn's address is his-, pro nouncement for local option. He gives local - option the credit for reversing a whiskey majority of 103,000 in 1881 to a prohibition majority, of 45,000 In 1907, and he says that in five years with a local option law, -there w$l not' be a saloon in New, York State; It. is ,hardly probable that, the paper1 has misquoted ..Mr, Glenn;, and the fact ' that he has, developed into a local option, champion is calculated to interest the people of iNorth Carolina hightilyjrCharlotte Chronicle. ; : T v An Awful Eruption of a volcano excites .brief Interest, and your interest in skin eruptions will -be as short, if you use Bucklen's Arnica Salve, their quickest cure.: Even-the worst boils, ulcers, or fever sores are stfon healed by it. . Best for burns, cuts, bruises... sore 'IIds.:. chained hands, chilblains and . piles. Jt givell instant reiier. Z5c at .Robert R. Bella my, Ul was neith- Anythlngan- Cut, F16wer8?v'falk6 s womanj-her beautifulrlineof 0)loominff plantsat r, better.thanmil Rehder.. ; .;; .,v-r-; are now on ay. Clothes FIEM THAT PAYS YOtTR CAR Sir i tt 100 Sacks Red Bliss Potatoes. 100 Saoks White Bliss Potatoes. 200 Sacks Irish Cobblers. .50 Bushels Yellow Onion sets. 25 Bushels Silver Skin Onion sets. -300 Sacks White Spring Oats. 5,300 Barrels Flour, bought on to arrive. Purchasers will, jtherefore, find . prices before buying. WliolesaIe Grocer. s To the Flour Eating Public Owing to the fact that certain flour mills nave been using our Brand Blue Ribbon for their flours, we have changed our brand to that of a Crusader-' Riding Hia'Black Horse. This brand is register ed and we are the sole agents of same. The flour is the same in qual ity. Every barrel Is sold under a guarantee by the mills and our selves. This is the finest flour ever offered on this market. Call on your grocer and have nothing In the flour line but The Cru sader If you want the best ; flour you ever ate. iB. F. EU3DICIH1ELL CO. DISTRIBUTORS. 1 nrv n rt This is to notify our customers (that they can secure this popular brand by sendioft their orders to Petersburg, Va. 4 Dozl Bottles F.iO. B.jPetersb'g, S3.00. 10 Doz. Bottles F. O. B. Petersb'g, $7.50. DARLEY PARK BREWING COMPANY G. tilORGAN KNIGHT. Manager. PETERSBURG. VA. , GA our gasoline f is more volatile than any gasoline "on i the market, containing tme maximum per cent, of POWER PER GALLON; MADE FROM ONE GRADE OF CRUDE, EN .8URING UNIFORMITY IN QUALITY. J2c. peif Gallon in Galvanized Iron Barrels, , . F0. b. Wilmington. For fterfect Lubrication TV!".f fhl' -rwr -; rV Shoes Custom made, slyle and fit guar anteed. fc f O c?o ............. f i A.OXJ NOVELTIES IN BELTS All Sizes and Colors FARE. at 500 Tons Navassa Guano, all grades. . 100 Tons Armour Guano, all grades. 50 Tons Acme Guano, all grades' 50 Tons Lee's Prepared Lime. 1,000 Bales Fancy Rice Straw. 2,000 Sacks Rice, all grades. lowest market, now on hand and it to their advantage to get my . - in Wilmington, N .QjJ .2? P If 55? S0MNE Use THEBEST Auto Oil. th'-'- '' i
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 27, 1910, edition 1
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