Newspapers / Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, … / April 7, 1910, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR.' ;-!V V':. THE MOANING STAR YTILIITON, ffHIffiSDtAPitll. &flttO fi ll Ji ) 5- i ,) ft !. if : i : V I'J i ! r. , , I r iBirr&iMiiifriiiiiiMr,' -av f Published by th mUIIlfGTON STAB COMPAHZ IXmJ Wilmington, N. 0. ntMui vnnA-clnna matter at tha aoatofflce at Wilmington, N. CL, madae ct l Congress, March 2nd 1874. mil ASSOCIATED PBESS KXFOXT. PUBLISHERS' ANNOUNCKMXST. THS MORNING STAB, tat oliect an newspaper In Norta Carolina, la published tally except Monday, at $6 per year, 3 for lx months, 1.50 for three months, 60 cents for one month, served by. carrier In the city or by mail. THE SUNDAY STAB, by mall, one year, fl ; alx months, 60! cents ; three months, 16 cents. J ADVERTISING kATES may be had on application and advertisers may feel assur ed that through the columns of this paper they .may reach all Wilmington, Eastern Carolina, and contiguous territory La South Carolina. Obituary sketches, cards of thanks, com munications espousing the cause of a pri vate enterprise or a political candidate, and like matter, will be charged at the rate of ftp cents per line, or If paid cash In advance, f 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 the 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 foreign to their regular business without extra charge. Ad vertisements to occupy special place will he charged for according to position de Sired. . TELEPHONES ; Business Office No. 61; Editorial and Local 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 gurtse of good faith. Thursday, April 7th. LET US FLY. Just by way of keeping cool in the midst of the cheering, we suppose, the Asheville Citizen of last Friday con tained an editorial entitled "Beating the Air", in which it undertook to say that the "science of aviation has yield ed nothing but a harvest of death". It proceeded to 'subscribe to the opin ion that this generation will not see the perfection of the flying machine", and to declare its disbelief that it would "ever come up to practical use for . commercial purposes." Whereup on The Citizen dismissed the matter thuswise: "We base our views on the assump tion that if the Almighty had ever in tended man to fly he would have put wings on him. He (many was placed on the earth to stay thereon and walk. Some there are who assert that at on time he walked on all fours like the rest of the animals, but there are no records to show that he ever disputed the right-of-way with the birds." And 'then, in the very next issue, the worthy Citizen proceeds to write , a laudatory editorial concerning the automobile, and in view of an ap proaching visit of a body of Shriners suggests that the owners of machines , In and about Asheville turn out in a body, take charge of their guests and carry them forth for a tour of the city! "The parade of autos'V'it says, "would make a favorable impression, and our guests would leaye wtah the convic- ) tion that here in Asheville, as else where, the autoist is one of the most public spirited of men". Upori which it perorates to declare: "What do you say gentlemen? Shall we give the knights of the fez a ride that they will remember "pleasantly long after they leave us?" For a paper that had the day before declared that "he (man) was placed on the earth to stay, thereon and walk", this advice looks pretty "stout". Nothing could be further from this original design-than to put the feet of man iii he stirrups of a saddle, to put him to beff'on an' express train Tun ning sixty miles an hour, to send him across seas by steam driven ships, and up and dowjn mountains in cars 'that are almost asfles negotiating a ver tical wall. . And surely the "plan" is out -pf Joint When one may jump' into an upholstered y mass of.-, glistening steel and, to a tattle of musketry-fire, a blaze of flame'and a cloud of smoke; disappear into'ihe chiaroscuro what ever that may mean almost before the "stench of the gasoline is out of the nostrils of the man on the side-walk, living (with envy in his heart) accord ing to what The- Citizen would have us to believe to be God's desire. And surely such means of travel are not without their dangers. The auto with its happy party sometimes finishes its comet's course with blood; the train goes off the track, the ship tejnks, the horse runs away. Also, the citizen stumps his toe, and breaks his lieck, even as sometimes does the aeroplanist. But what boots it? Tra vel of all sort, over the ground, the teea, . or under either, takes toll in life and Umb,- as, well as in coinV Before ' long' it will i&fr' even, be -safe,' by rea son of the passing aeroplanes, to sit istlll and dream. And to ;ilie of a pop bottle, carelessly tossed from an aerial 3oy party were a disgraceful demise id "one to whose feet mother earth was & magnet if not a snare! " "Andrew Carnegie said the other iflay that "Joe" Cannon looked and act-jed-.like Lincoln. Now Mr. Cannon says Congressman Cushman looks 'and acts like Lincoln. The main asset of Shelby M. Cullom for years was that helook d like Lincoln. Isn't .It remarkable ihowmany Lincoln post-types there are?" Savannah News. Ifes, and re jnarkable, also, how all the post-types are comic post:carts'. yg MANr WHO. "BETTERS :HIMSELF : 'A common example of mind working on matter is that of the weak 'and frail woman suddenly endowed under the stress of emotional excitement with the strength of a powerful man. In such cases the nervous energy of a delicate organism wastes itself, as it were, in a few moments of eruption. Afterwards, almost Instantaneously, the woman who has exhibited the phe nomenon is prostrated , with exhausr tion. ' v Men have this quality in a lesser degree than women, possibly because they more habitually exert their forces in the direction of their, capacity. They - are of cooler mind, stronger bodies, less intense emotions. The ef fort of men is steadier, more' sustain ed the gulf between the ultimate of exertion and the average of perform ance is not so wide. Yet even with men the mind holds the reserve, at times instantly transported to the fir ing line. To see a man rise, above himself in an emergency is a specta cle .making for a faith and glory m humanity. We find point for these trite ob servations in a few sentences taken from the current issue of the Tar Heel, the Athletic publication of the University of North Carolina, in com ment upon a recent athletic meet between the track teams of the Uni versity and Wake Forest College: "The first exciting contest of the meet was the high jump. When the bar was placed at 5 feet 2 inches, it seemed as if Williams, Carolina's on ly remaining representative, would fall out. But the captain of the track team had his . nerve with him. His ! record' in practice was 5-3. He won' the high jump in 5 feet 6 inches. Car olina's fighting spirit was what boost ed him that extra 3 inches. To understand the significance of the above, it must be recalled that the bar of the high jump was no dbubt raised several times between 5 feet 2 and 5 feet C inches, the height at which Williams finally cleared it. In long practice, the utmost of his exer tions had lifted him 5 feet 3 inches. That was his "record" the exception al performance. But it was in prac tice. Then he was jumping against himself. He was testing, even strain ing, his own powers. But when it came to competition; when it came to facing arrival, to representing his cause, instead of flickering, instead of being weighed down by his respon sibilities, he iresponded and equalled his own record. When the bar was raised, instead of "dropping out," he went magnificently at the apparently impossible and achieved it. When it was raised again, the spirit of the man once more called on his body as a jockey "lifts" .a horse across the wire. Again it was raised, and again the merciless mind plied whip and spur. Once more! No doubt the eyes measured .the height ; and - sent back word of defeat to the brain and the spirit said "nonsense" to brain and eyes and legs. And the man went over three inches winner over his own record, and winner of the event , be side! - . Here was no hectic flush of energy called into being by great emotional stress. When he equalled his own rec ord, the jumper had "done his best." That was all that any one coiild have required of him. When he exceeded it, he had added honor to achievement. But when 'he exceeded it again, and again, and thereby exceeded himself, he showed the quality- of" the true heroism the steadfast, consistent, un reasoning courage and confidence that in case of need will make men do or let them die. Turn over this situation In . your minds, who are accustomed to talk of college boys, "wasting their time" on athletics. Peel off the husk and get to the core. - Look at the question In the light of the; spirit and the nerve and the . unbeatable faith that mako up its essence and then, if you have the nerve, continue to waste tears over a broken, bone here and there : as against the formation of , mental ' and spiritual bone and character; .not- r in one instance, but In ten thousand. . For Williams glory to hia grit! was not an 'exception, but a type. WHAT OF THE DUTCH? "Speaking of Dutch settlers, what has become of that ripe scholar and very pleasant gentleman, Dr. Van Ed en, who last Fall came to Wilmington with plans for placing intensive Dutch horticulturists and gardeners on the very suitable lauds for such purposes between Wilmington and Wrightsville" We confess to having caught the con tagion of the worthy Doctor's own en thusiasm. Others 'were similarly af fected. He and his plan were met Jn a broad spirit' and the necessary finan cial assistance ;pledged; . But where are the Dutch and the ' rose gardens? Where are these high-class people who were; comingo make the practical object lesson -of the use of a climate thajt is. unexcelled, a soil -that Is f deal; and conditions-that are;superb for the purpose contemplated ? ., , . ,.( . "We ask these questions in no spirit of fault finding, or even of doubt, but merely in an impatience made strong er by a recognition of a need which several months ago seemed in a fair way to being filled. ' Maude Adams, as Chantecler, will be in worse sort than a crowing hen. Is legislation J&y the: Speakerto : give Jway to leSlation(byrMbel.sui.. . i.-.irA' NEW. "RULING NEEDED .' ; The Savannah News refers, editorial ly to ah" account In the New YorK Com mercial of the landing at New ; York of twenty-one Holland families, bound for Minnesota, xwhere they will settle and devote themselves to agriculture: "The party numbered about 250 per sons. Each adult male in the party brought with him cash to an amount of not less than $300 -while several had more than $1,000 'and one had $10,000. The newcomers will take up farming lands in blocks of ten to 160 acres. They left Holland .because con ditions there did not offer them as bright an outlook as they desired and they were persuaded to go to MInne-. sota by Bishop McGolrick,: of Duluth, (they are Catholics), who was able to give them conclusive proof that Min-, nesota lands will yield large crops and immediate-profits on their investments and activities." ' ' Commenting upon the well known thrifty and industrious character of the Dutch, the . News, says that "here in lies a tip for our Southern 'progres sives'. Minnesota interests send out and gather up these thrifty European farmer-folk and bring them within her fold and to the ultimate advan tage and profit of both. The South, with her almost limitless agricultural and industrial resources, should 'go out and do likewise. Somebody in whom they had confidence told these Dutch farmers what can be done in our West. There should be a thous and such 'somebodies' working for im migration to the South today," and continues: "The mere compiling and printing of statistical literature, setting forth the South's offerings will not suffice. The most desirable classes of immigrants wish to be told, directly and person ally if possible, by some one in whom they have confidence, what they may certainly expect to find in the new country. One such active agent in the field is worth more than thousands of circulars distributed. There is noth ing like personal contact for creating assurance and securing results." True as is all that is said about the character of immigrants needed and the methods necessary to gain them, we think that the News is either mistaken in its facts or is advising the practically impossible. As the im migration law is now construed, "in terests" are not permitted to "send out and gather up" immigrants, how ever desirable they .may be to this country. If Minnesota "interests" did this, they violated a law which the government has heretofore taken vig orous action to have enforced. The immigrants who are made the text of its editorial were possibly secured by the individual action of a good Catholic priest. Minnesota was sim ply lucky in this instance, instead of enterprising. lender the law referred to and the ruling thereon of Attorney General Bonaparte, the solicitation of immi grants by interests desiring to place or use them for their own as well as the immigrants' good Is prohibited". A State, however, may -solicit immigra tion, but it cannot accept the aid and financial assistance in doing so of pri vate interests. In the Legislature of 1907 agricultural interests headed, by gentlemen from this section secured the passage of a law under which the State appropriated $10,000, the under standing being that the interests con cerned would advance other funds and materially aid the proejet. The mat ter fell through, by reason of the very decision referred to. For many reasons State solicitation of foreign immigrants is unpopular. if not Impractical. The commitment of a State to the principle, together with reasonable appropriation and the right to appoint as its agents financial interests themselves practically concerned- in the result, is another mat ter."'Considering the temperamental and mental differences between Taft and Roosevelt, Wickersham and Bona parte, jwould' it not be worth while for Southern States to seek a reversal of the j harsh "rule laid down by the" for mer administration? Messrs. Taft andj Wickersham .did not hesitate to over fule .their-.. distinguished predecessors on thej: question. "What is whiskey V Might they, not be preyailed upon to do likewise in the case of what is legiti mate Jo secure .desirable immigrants? . iA MASTER OF STAGE-CRAFT. Colonel Roosevelt certainly did not let his, zeal for natural history cause him to forget his political learning. In the Roman incident, 'he -prepared the whole matter of his relations with the Pope, so manipulating .the situation that, whatever happened, he himself would get full credit. And then, hav ing set the Catholic and Methodist worlds at each others', throats, he seiz ed upon the Tipple denunciation of the. Papacy- as an opportunity to sideswipe-the Methodists for the sake of Catholic applause. ; Regrettable as the', entire incident 13 and much; to be deplored as are the results of renewed and Widened strife betencitoman and rotestant faiths, it cannot j.be denied ih the Colonel treadiVaerene wavlHustified at a. ery" turn and in every? aspect. Of tfjoursa ihfere wiUbei those to say Ithat two great religious forces are iin properly used as machinery to the making of a Roman - holiday for a Rough-riding statesman but stage carpentry;, must at any rate be includ ed In the list of accomplishments of a Jack-of-all-trades so successful as to almost deserve to be counted original in the role! ; ; - rvThef Colonel - certainly was the cen- ker of-the tfece .when thiTeTfireT )urn- ed brightest and, ; bettectilL: he PfS$ j tiated his curtain call without trlppihir 71 Mil DEMOCRATIC INDIANA The Indiana! convention, marked as much by the significant silence of the platform on the tariff bill as it was by Senator Beveridge's denunciation of the measure, is an added indication that all things are now turning toward Democratic success in the Fall elec tions. " Six years ago Indiana gave Roose velt i a majority ' of", something like a hundred ! thousand votes over Parker; Two" years ago, it 'gave Taft a' bare ten nb,usahd majority byer , ; Bryan, splitting. jthe State-omces peiweeu mo two parties.: : - ' 1 ; Since that time '"Insurgent senti ment" has been growing, dissatisf ac tion V;"yMh $h.e administration has be come: intensified. Th& future is the morevimibrtant because the Legisla ture ilije: called upo'h to name a suc cessor ' ito.Veyeridge.Tlie broadside which the latter fired at the law, the confession of its inadequacy by the convention, show beyond a doubt the sentiment in the State among Republi cans. To cater to this sentiment is Bever idge's task, to win the State to Re- publjcanism by attacking .the admin istration, and to do this in the face of a strong party element that is led by Fairbanks, that is "regular", and that, at heart, would as soon see a Demo crat in Beveridge'a seat as to see him there. It is Beveridgfe' or a Democrat, Insurgency" or "Democracy. In this' .case, he' is," a poor prognos- tician who cannot forecast the result. ' r Hurrahing for " Senator Simmons practical vjl achievements is becoming slightly. 'monotonous, if always pleas ant. H$s latest accompnsnment, tne direction to the War Department to purchase the private canal leading from the'orth Carpliha to the Chesa peake sounds makes the Inland Water way a certainty. In this all the State may rejoice. It is but one of a num ber of things that' Senator Simmons has done recently, which show that the senior Senator from North Caro lina has "arrived." The Chicago professor -who declares that a laborer who received eight cents a day in the year 1300 was more fortunate than the workingman of to day who' receives1 from $2.50 to $6.00 a day ! was right with one Important exception -that no. laborer of the year 1300 received eight cents a day. 7 The crime record that is making in the State indicates an increase in rheumatism that is alarming. The News i and i Observer's Robeson county edition is almost as big as the county.'-? .0 A ... : .';' .:, . OUKEEflT ' COMMENT. , The admiration that the average man has for a dashing personality is. shown in- the contrast between the fervent popular1 comment, favorable or unfavorable, on Mr. Roosevelt's clash with the Vatican 'and the mild interest excited by Mr; Fairbanks' similar ex perienced Columbia Record. We lament a defection from the cause of aerial navigation in the Asheville Citizen's person. The Citi zen, because several fatal accidents have taken place recently, thinks that man, when he attempt to fly, is mere ly "beating the air." And yet The Citi zen will almost surely live to see round trips made between Charlotte and Asheville within the morning hours before noon. Charlotte Obser ver. " The Twentieth Century Magazine announces as a special feature of its forthcoming May1 number an article entitled. "New Light on Jbsen," by Dr. Archibald 'Henderson, of the Universi ty of vN6rth Carolina, whom it very truly terms "one of the ablest and most discriminating of present-day. literary critics, nowhere more at home than wtfen considering the writings of those great veritist thihkers such as Ibsen,1 Suderman; Hauptmann and Shaw, who have so profoundly influ enced the world during the past 50 years.--Charlotte- Observer. An appeal for"' '"Executive ' clemency is to be made for "a 17-year-old boy convicted of holding up a private bank and murdering the banker. The appeal is based on the youthful age of the criminal, but that ought not to be an argument in his favor. Mercy is misplaced when it ' turns loose upon society a criminal of 'stich' desperate impulse and capacity. He will always be a menace to the community, and even if he should reform he would not be worth enough to the world to warrant tbe risk of the experiment Petersburg Index-Appeal. On several occasions in the past there has' been s6me 'talk of building a Jewish synagogue '.in Charlotte and some effort has be'eV made in .that directions The effort ;f has, been re newed ? under an ' organized plan ' and it is to be hopd that the Jewish con gregation In Charlotte, quite a large one, and embracing some of the most estimable of its citizenship, will soon have its own house' of worship.' r.We feel quite certain "that if a call should be decjUpon-:,the people ;of charlotte for assistance, theresponse would be cordial X':. and , , gen$rous.-Charlotte Chronicle.,; . C,', t : ' We. are inclined to think,, that Col onel Roosevelt took the proper view of Rev. Mr. Tipple's remarks on the papal incident The tone ot, .Mr. Tip ple's remarks goes to explain the ex cessive enmity of the Pope toward the Methodists 4n Rome, n Mr. Tipple would hardly seem qualified to speak of the Pope's intolerance, for he is playing a pretty good hand at the game himself. A Catholic soul Is as precious . in: the sight of the Lord as that of a Protestant. We know Cath- MoA every day we receive new white goods al ways the : bet and mo wanted fabrics. Among the mot popular are the Batiifte; Sheer Linen, fine Sheer Dimities, Wash Chiffons, Persian Lawns French Lawnsi Flaxonsi Luna Lawns, Likelinen, and Fancy Madras. ' 3,000 yards very fine Mer cerized Batiste, 38 inches ' wide, 25c values,: spec! al; the yard- ..19c 2,500 yards striped white corded Lfwnr 28 inches wide, 10c values, -the y ard- . .. . .".. . . ... :.'.7c 5,000 yards 36-inch -wide Flaxon fine Sheer quali ty special, the yard 14c 90-inch wide Linen round thread, pure flax, speciaJ the yard ......85c 90-Inch wide Linen, flat thread, the yard, spe cial ..75c Sheer so New Idea Paper Patterns, all sizes , 10 Cents. 'fig, II 1 THE np (i at olics with whom we would be quite willing to swap our chances for salva tion. In this enlightened age religious wars are out of place ,but the Pope's position is not to be commended any more than is that of Mr. Tipple. For us, the Gospel of -. LovelT-rQharlotte Chronicle. Massachusetts will probably pass a law forbidding the use ot common drinking cups in public places for tho reason that they are a menace to the public health. In Pennsylvania some of the public authorities and certain large corporations are starting a movement for the same purpose. There i3 no doubt that the common drinking cup or glass is a carrier of disease germs and a public danger. It will probably soon be outlawed every where. Columbia State. The report comes from Berlin that a German inventor has succeeded in making a substitute for rubber that is actually better in wearing qualities than the genuine article, while the post is less than one-half that of rub ber. His process is, of course, a se cret, though the understanding is that cotton seed oil enters into it. Some years back a Savannah scientist, C. B. Warrand, now dead, conducted exten sive experiments to the end of making a rubber substitute from crude cotton seed oil, and he was firmly convinced that it was only a question of time when he would perfect his process, Mr. Warrancl, however, was handicapped by lack of capital,, so that death came to him before he had worked out his problem. The world needs a substi tute for rubber about as badly as any other one thing. The great demand for automobiles has sent the price of rub ber sky-high, and the rubber trust is in absolute control of- the situation. Savannah News. A Rough Rider in Rome. (Columbia State.) How the news agencies are buncoed by this man playing for sensational publicity! Former President Roosevelt wrote to Rome to ask for an invitation to meet the Pope; he did so after know ing the Pope had recently taken the position, in the case of Former Vice President Fairbanks, that he would not accord an audience to any one who, during the same visit to the Papal capital, fraternized with the Methodist church of Rome, which .is waging war, on the Vatican: Colonel Roosevelt knew the precedent was es tablished"; he knew it was the .Pope's privilege -to impose any conditions, he pleased; he knew s the answer to his request before the request was made. The - Pope imposed the same - condi tions -for. Roosevelt that-he made for Fairbanks. That condition was in evitable. - Straightaway the Rough Rider makes . public all1 the correspon- aence,vwnich might have very properly been- considered a purely, personal and private matter. - Then, having given the Protestants in America in. gen eral, and the Methodists inyparticular, au uppun.uuii.jr io unite in applauding the Defender of the Faith, he makes a loud bid for commendation from Catholics in America, by- cabling to layman AODott and giving- his mes sage to all. the newspaper -corresuon- dents in Rome begging that the inci dent be not made occasion for bitter ness or recriminations. He voluntari ly sets fire to the woods: then hones there will be no damage done;' and throws, a bucket of water on the fire. 'ami' 1 Ifrr it v Swiss, 45-inch wide embroidered flouncings, popular now for dresses, special, yard.. 98c aw MJjiMiwt, FIRM THAT PAYS TOUR CAR No Stooping No Bending Adding another to the already long lisT: of conveniences in Cooking with Gas Everything about this sl:ove within easy reach, including the price and terms. Ask our representative. , fsifli Srt al Fein f00 Sacks Red Bliss Potatoes. 100 Sacks Wnite Bliss Potatoes. 200 Sacks Irish Cobblers. .50 Bushels Yellow Onion sets. 25 Bushels Silver Skin Onion sets.- 300 Sacks Wnite Spring Oats. 5,300 Barrels Flour, bought on to arrive. Purchasers will, therefore, find prices before buying. J. W. IBKOOKS Wholesale Grocer. V GAS0LINE OUR GASOLINE 18 MORE VOLATILE THAN ANY GASOLINE ON THE MARKET,' CONTAINING THE MAXIMUM PER CENT. OF POWER PER GALLON; MADE FROM ONE GRADE OF CRUDE, EN SURING UNIFORMITY IN QUALITY. 12c per Gallon in Galvanized Iron Barrels, F. 0. B. Wilmington. For Perfect Lubrication Use THEBEST Auto Oil. Gape IFeair OSD Co- X THONE 873. v Crusader Flour i-M-: a- To the Ladies Crusader Flour ' Our fine Crusader Flour which can be bought from the leading Groc ery Stores of. our City, will make the finest Bread, Biscuits and Pas try of any flour on the .market,J and J you will only have to use the old time shortnlng pure lard to prove our assertion; no hew shortning ' necessary. Call for jCrusader Flour, it is the Finest. B- FtfSlTCIKIELL CO. DISTRIBUTORS. -.Wide Embroidered Suitings, to match the above, embroidery 39g .! Silks, plain, fancy and Jacquerds stripes, 27 inches wide;' U the new 6had es, Special, the yard.. 48c Few new -patterns, $100 Satin Foulard Silks tho yard ......... ....!. 690 25c Cotton Foulards patt erns, fine sheer fabrics Special, the yard ig0" Rajah' Linen, 27 inches wide, also striped Linen, 36 Inches wide, special, yard ...... 25o Ladies Best Black Hose, Linen Heel and Toe, the price 25 Cents. if 2E7 FAKE. Gas Company 500 Tons Navassa Guano, al' 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 Wilmington, N. C. ! ! ? ? ? Crusader Flour of Wilmington: Crusader Flou . i - - . . s
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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April 7, 1910, edition 1
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