Newspapers / The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.) / Aug. 27, 1914, edition 1 / Page 4
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HEAVY CARNAGE IS EXPECTED That a million and a half men would be killed or wounded in the first month of active conflict involving the great armies of Europe is the fore cast which comes from a European surgeon whose position in the world of medical science gives his opinion peculiar authority. This view is pre sented by Dr. Octave Laurent, of St. John's Hospital, Brussels, and who followed the troops in the Balkans for eleven months, and has now issued a book on the .war in Turkey and Bul garia. Following are a few of the facts told by Dr. Laurent: Bulgaria put into the field during the two wars more than 500,000 sol diers, drawn from a population of about 4,300,000. In the first war 30,000 men were killed and about 53.CC0 were wounded. In the second war the killed numbered 16,000 and the wound ed about 62,000. The totals for the two wars were: Killed, 46.000; wounded, 115,000. The total of killed and wounded, 161,000, represented one third of the effective force of the whole army or three per cent of the entire population of the country. The deaths were one in twelve of the whole army, one in four of the wound ed, and one in a hundred of the popu lation. During the month of July, 1913, says Laurent, 150,000 men were killed or wounded on both sides; andfcal jndu'stries, 158,412 or 16.7 per Iu J tne, at least bu, - 000 fell on the banks of the Breg - S, i 1' . e ' ?i Z. v 30 to Ju y 5. What these figures mean for the losses in a war between the great powers oi Europe is indicated by Laurent in his quoting with ap-! provai tne statement oi another com- mentator en these figures, who says: If you put a zero behind each of thesc numbers you will have some juvb vi me tiimi 6irrnKin uj. wie armies and the losses that must be uicauiiicu iv ume place in any war wmcn would tomorrow set tne armed . forces of any two first-class powers ' x " c " ueivie fu , ilfnr-nnn j r j wo? not less w.a.i i,.w,vvv veavi ami wvunueu ui th50Ure of "Ist m0ntn- IA. . That these grim figures are within , the bounds of reason seems likely from the fact that the conditions of conflict in a great European war would be substantially those of the Balkan wars. Large masses of troops would he in rnntinnniis rinse tnnrh nnH riflle and artillery fire would be at doing. least as desructive as in the conflict The other day I was up there on of last vear. If the suggested mllion the back porch romping with Judith and a half of casualities per month their ten-year-okl girl. All of a did not actually occur, there is no sudden we heard a voice.near yet far reason to suppose that the percentage away and Judith jumped up, grabbed of killed and wounded to the forces a big megaphone hanging on the wall engaged in large battles would be and stood at. "attention." I followed materially lower than in the Balkan her eyes and there down at the dairy wars i house a hundred yards away stood The high proportion of the killed to Ml "lazy'i(!add' a,so with a mea the wounded during the Balkan war phone. Jhe following conversation is a modern feature that would be took place: likelv to be repeated. Artillery fire "Judith, tell your mother to get meaning by that the use of expolsives ready. Whiles she's dressing, you run shrapnel, was responsible for more down to the shop and start the en than half of the deaths, but for less pine. The water's getting low and we than one-fifth of the wounded. Rifle wn't get back for some time. And fire was, therefore, relatively ineffect "1!e vou ere at it call up Mr.- ive by its failure to produce those 'and ask him to have that flour ready massive destructive effects which fol- when we come by in the machine. low so swiftly on the skillful use of And Judith, call up Mr and tell artillery. It is precisely the reliance 1 him we'll bring some butter on our! bn the large use of artillery f-e,way by" , - . J which would mark the operations of' 'e"s sir I will Daddy. And the great European armies, and from 'would you believe it? that little that one has but little excuse for fore-! snipe of a girl ran out, pressed a but cSstW' ?nv but h'Kn figures for the ton and the gasolene engine started: v;iiod ilmir irtT..,.. . -. to pump. About that time my sister Killed. -V4siiflimMM ,zsg attached a belt to her C niQden wnditidns nianv of w Wng machine and churn and thos wounded by the small calibre, d j fc t t ()inner on 'gh velocity bullets now used would jn the fireless cockef I probable smal Permanent d'sable-, h fnk tti , ment. One of the surprising features , j d . h h milk , of the wounds in the Balkan wars ..them, ti to find four or were the great number f perforation fie men miikin,. AH I found in the by small bullets which did compara-; b , trifli ..Yan. tively Tittle permanent damage b ther.j ?, sitti down Laurent reports instances in which a Suumiu aur -jadtid n 3uipcaj bullet passed completely ' thuBh the VVas doing the work, brain, or pierced, the chest or Mo . h h machine t th h my men, with surprisingly little resultant brother.in.Iaw gl.2bbed a iine, yank damage. In some of these seemingly , d d t were a,f re. serious cases of wounds, healing was , , He another rapid and umvciiuui. jjvt-u uuura not the rule in bone injuries, however, ., - ,: 4j e lor mere w ere many cum.cu ctitntinn a cnocinl anrtrirnl nrohlem. Fieah wnnn.U from ilirert rifle tire m-ovo nftt.n nhenliitolv Vinvmlpss. nnd j.n naiv cases t'le wounded vre back ere a,m . y " , the cows strolled out to pasture. a" I01"' i'.1"':'. " "Ii Going into the milk house he er serious consraurnixs. mis aa , ...i.:, .i. on t " ruin;; 'vm in two or three weeks . nen a.i ..as lcauy, hiy iu-y Dro.i after wounds that in the older wars er did go to the trouble tD crank his would have meant absoluin disable-; little Ford car and off we went for a ment. The movta'ity was dfaH'.-.-tp-l "my rid?. among fiftv-five per cent wounus oi t. .:.t evemnrr 1 asked my the head; thirty-five to forty per cent . brotner u the engina v.ouldn t run the wounds of the trunk; and five per cent , water tank over. He replied: " hat wounds of the linmbs. A feature that ! it it does! Overflow pipes water the is modern is that amputations were ; done in less than one per cent oi ail the cases treated in the hospitals. In our own civil war amputations figured largely, but that was before the birth of modern medicine and surgery. Tre phining, for skull wounds, was much more often resorted to than amputa tions in wounds of the limbs. MAKING GOOD MAYONNAISE A pint of good mayonnaise , can be made in twenty minutes. Into a bowl drop the yolk of an egg and stir slightly, add a quarter of a tespoon ful of mustard, a speck of cayenne pepper and -stir again. Then add thoroughly chilled olive oil a few drops at aime.When about a cup ful has been used in this way the quantity added at one time inay be increased to a quarter of a cupful. It should be beaten hard until the oil is absorbed. As it gets very stiff, thin it with vinesrar or lemon juice, half a teaspoonful at a time. If the mayon-4 naise is to be kept several days it is best to use vinefar, as lemon juice causes it to separate in a short time. When the required amount of dressing has been.jnde add a teasponful of - salt. If this is done in the beginning it is liable Jto make the dressing cur dle. . ' " Recently -when many of the old tI oneer settlers of Spokane, Wash., vis- - ited the town on the twenty-fifth an niversary of the destruction of the city by fire, the voices--of many of them were recorded on a megaphone u a part of the city historicalsocie ty'a collection. ... NORTH CAROLINA WORKERS There arc 947.S39 Wace-Efarnr This State About Two-thirds Are Farmers. According to a report just inad public by the Census Bureau, there were 947,8o9 persons ten years of age and over in North Carolina enraged in gainful occupations in 1910. These workers formed, 43 per cent of the to tal population of the state an! CO per cent of the population 10 years of age and over. In 1900 the 716,742 gainful workers of the state formed 37.8 per cent of the total population and 52.2 per cent of the population 10 years of age and over. The male gainful workers in North Carolina in 1910 numbered 674,849, or 86.4 per cent of all males 10 years of age and over as compared with 556,- 581, or 84.1 per cent in muu. me le male gainful workers in 1910 number ed 272,990 or 34.2 per cent of all le males 10 years of age and over ai against 161,161 or 23.4 per cent ii 1900. The gainful workers in North Car olina in 1910 were distributed among the main branches of occupations aS follows: Agriculture, forestry and animal husbandry, 612,226 or 64.6 per cent extraction cf minerals, 2,1102 or 0.2 per cent; manufacturing and mechan- cCnt; transportation, 29,601 or 3.1 per cent; trade 39)028 or 4.1 per cent; public service, 4,839 or U.5 per cent; rofeSsional service, 20,336 or 2.1 per cent; domestic and personal service , 70,676 or 7.5 per cent; clerical occu rations, 10,579 or 1.1 per cent. of 67449 gainfully cupied males in North Carolina in 1910, 457,190 were whites of native parent- &ge 2,502 native whites of foreign or mixed parentage, 3,329 foreign born whites, 209,373 negroes, and 2,455 0ther colored. rr 979 oon oainfniiv nnn'aA females in 1910, 129,457 were native whites of native parentage, 561 na- tive whites of foreign or mixed pa- rentage, 362 foregn born whites, 141, 391 negroes, and 1,219 other colored. HOW "YANKEES' DO IT ' My little sister married a Yankee farmer and he is some "lazy." He won't do a thing he can keep from start- '';V ri'?"'" mint (ouier ami me ireaui eeuaiaivr. fted the boU,e3 anJ deanse(, the mk canS. By ths time we heard another "Oo-hoo" from the house and Judith was sayintr :"We are waiting, JDad." orcnard ana garden and aiso carrj water to the tows in the pasture, Getting no consolation there I turned to my sister in the tack of the car and asked her who would look after the supper in the tireless cooker. She sawed me off with "Why goosie it can't burn up in a 'fireless' cooker. Quit worrying and enjoy the great fresh air. I quit worrying long ago." And yet they are not rich. They are just good, every-day Ohio farm folks. If that's "lazy" me for a lazy life. J. A. Martin, in Home & Farm. ANOTHER HEALTH OFFICER HEARD FROM The whole-time county health offi cers continue to report increased ac tivities along all lines of health work in their respective sections. Dr. Wm. M. Jones, health officer for Guilford county, reports that he has adminis tered .over six hundred injections of typhoid vaccine, and that this number could have been gTeatly increased had the vaccirs been obtainable. He says: "I am wutrhing with a great deal of interest one locality where I have vac cinated a large per cent of the popu lation, and where typhoid isnow prevalent." Dr. Jones is "doing considerable work in camp sanitation, and reports encouragingly on lectures given, wells examined, fimallpox vaccination and microscopic examinations. There Is nothing like a summer va cation to make a man appreciate his home. PARAGRAPHS PICKED UP FROM EVERYWHERE Genius can never despise labor. Abel Stevens. The only way to have a friend is to be one. Emerson. Avoid all alcoholic drinks, even beer. Glittering generalities don't always make brilliant conversation. God looks at pure, not full hands. Publius Syrus. No man is such roor bay that he can't occasionally borrow trouble, Keep cool as to temper and your body will not get so not, Some people are too full to cut even an undesirable acquaintance An agreeable person is one who talks of you to yourself, Some courtships end in marriage and some in the courts. It is certainly unlucky for somebody when there are thirteen at the table and not enough to go around If every man has his price, it must be extremely difficult to distinguish between price and value. It is the bonehead subscriber of Port Arthur who postcards this one to us: "If manana is Mexican for to morrow, is banana Mexican for to borrow?" "Wait a moinute. I cannot be seen like this. The Lifeboat makes my coat 'pucker.'" London Bystander. Ignorance is a blank sheet on which we may write; but error is a scrib bled one on which we must erase. Colton. Associate with men of good quali ty if you esteem your reputation, for it is better to be alone than in bad company. George Washington. When you know a thing, to hold that you know it; and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you you do not know it: this is knowlege. Confucius. Lots of men have tried to kill time. but time has seen them all in their graves. The aviator might take a tumble to himself, but he ought to stick up for s passengers. When it comes to occupvine the up per berth, it isn't every fellow who is ambitious to climb up. There is no reason why even the grocer shouldn't realize that honest tea is the best policy. The man who borrows trouble gen erally fca.6 to give his peace of mind as security. - There's one thifig & man continues to accumulate the longer he lives, and that is years. Many an actress can make a scene almost as successfully as she can spoil one. Even the tailor-made girl doesn't always regard a tailor as a successful suitor. There is no preservative and anti septic, nothing that keeps one's heart young like sympathy, like giving one's self with enthusiasm to some worthy thing or cause. John Bur roughs. The most important work to be done in the prosecution of the king dom campaign today is not hustling, but thinking. Hary A. Fosdick. A girl doesn't have to fall out of a hammock to realize what a hard world this is. . When a man makes a god of his money, he sometimes finds that there is the devil to pay. "The min 1 is n?.ter of the mar!. And so 'they can who think they can.' ' Xizon Waterman. Man was made to moi-rn and wo man was made to see that he keeps everlastingly at it. Every man has an excuse for want ing' the earth, but his excuse is ne,ver satisfactory to his neighbors. Even in summer it is just as well to remember that hot words do not make warm friends. In spite of his calling, the iceman is never noted for his freezing polite ness. Happy is the man, who, probing what is meant, By the vague gnawing of his discon tent Traces it back to discontent with self, And then stops cursing his environ ment.. NATION'S HOPE IN POOR BOYS I remember speaking at a school not long ago where I understood that most all the young men were sons of very rich people, and I told them I looked upon them with a great dael of pity, because, I said: Most of you fellows are doomed to obscurity. You will not do anything. You will never try to do anything, and with all the great tasks of the country waiting to be done, probably you are the men who will decline to do them. Some man who has been "up against it", some man who has come out of the crowd, some man whs has had the whip of necessity laid on his back, will emerge out of the crowd and show that he understands the interests of the nation, united and not separated, and will stand up and lead us. From "The New Freedom", by Woodrow Wilson. "TOLSTOY'S VISION" In 1910 Tolstoy, the gifted Russian dictated the following lines, which are being given wide circulation and which predicted the titanic strvggie now embroiling turoce: "This is a revelation of events of a universal character which must short- lv come to Dass. Their spiritual ou lines are now before my eyes. I see floating upon the surface of the sea of human fate the huge silhouette of nude woman. She is with her beau ty, her poise, her smile, her jewels a super-Venus. Nations rush madly ar ter her, each of them eager to attract her especially. But she, like an eternal courtesan, flirts with all. In her hair- ornament of diamonds and rubies is graved her name 'Commercialism'. As alluring and bewitching as she seems, much distraction and agony follow in her wake. Her breath, reek ing of sordid transactions, her voice of metallic character like gold, and her look of greed are as so much poi son to the nations who fall victims to her charms. "And behold! she has three gigantic arms with three torches of universal corruption in her hand. The first torch represents the flame of war that the beautiful courtesan carries from city to city and country to country. Pa triotism answers with flashes of hon est flame, but the end is the roar of guns and musketry. "The second torch bears the flame of bigotry and hypocrisy. It lights the lamps only in temples and on theal tars of sacred institutions. It carries the seed of falsity and fanaticism. It kindles the minds that are still in era' dies and follows them to their graves. "The great conflagration will start about 1912, set by the torch of the first arm in the countries of south eastern Europe. It will develop into a destructive calamity in 1913. I hear the lamentations of huge battlefields But about the year 1915 a strange fig ure from the north a new Napoleon enters the 6tage of the bloody drama. He is a man of little militaris tic training, a writer or a journalist, but in his grip most of Europe will remain until 1925. The end of the great calamity will mark a new nolit cal era for the old world. There will be left no empires and kingdoms, but the world will form a federation of the United States of Nations. There will remain only four great giants the Anglo-Saxons, the Latii'S, the alavs and the Mongolians. "After the year 1925 I see a change in religious sentiments. The second torch of the courtesan hus brought about the fall of the churck The eth ical idea has almost vanishcJ. Hum;ir- lty is without the mora! fe.linj?. But then a great reformer arises. He will clear the world of the relics f mono theism and lay the rnottono .f the temp'e pantheism. God, soiil, spirit and immortality will be molten sn a new furnace, and I see the tieaceful beginning of an ethical era. The an determined to this mission is Mongolian-Slav. He s already wa'kng the earth a man of active aoairg. He himself does not now realize the mis sion asigned to him by a auperior power. ''And behold the flame of the third torch, which has already begun to destroy our lamily relations, our standards of art and morals. The re lation between woman and man is ac cepted as a prosaic partnership of the sexes. Art has become realistic de generacy. Political and religious dis turbances have shaken the spiritual foundations of all nations. Only small spots here and there have remained untouched by those three destructive flames. The anti-national wars in Eu rope, the class war of America, and the race wars in Asia have strangled progress for half a century. But then, in the middle of this century I see a hero of literature and art rising from the ranks of the Latins and purging the world of the tedious stuff of the obvious. It the light of sym bolism that shall outshine the light of the torch of commercialism. It the place of the polygamy and monogamy of today there will come a poetogamy a relation of the sexes based funda mentally upon poteic conceptions of me. "And I see the nations growine wis er and realizing that the alluring do main of their destinies is, after all, nothing but an illusion. There will be a time w hen the w orld will have no uso fir armies, hypou-it'er.! religions and degenerate art. Life is evolution, and evolution is development from the simple to the more complicated lorms or tne nrau and body. 1 see the passing show of the world drama in its present form, how it fades like the blow of evening upon the moun tains, one motion ot the hand of com merciaiism and a new history begins." The Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association will hold a five davs' con vention, four of which will be on a boat, beginning on the afternoon of September 22. TAKE GODSON'S AND STAY ON YOUR FEET Taking calomel means staying home for the day take Dodson's Liver Tone and save a day's work. If an attack of constipation or biliousness hits you, there's no need to take a dose of calo mel and spend at least a day getting over the ececta of it. Asheboro Drug jO. sens uodson s Liver Tone, which they guarantee takes the place of calomel and starts a lazy bver with' out bad aiter-enects. Dodson's Liver Tone does all the good that calomel can do, yet it is absolutely harmless to voumr neonle and old. It is a pleasant tasting veg- oeV.1.. v. i: Z mwiv uijum uiu win relieve cgnsu pation or sour stomach or other trou blesthat go along with a lazy liver, without restriction of habit or diet. You don't leave off any of the things you regularly do when take take Liver love. . A large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone sells for fifty cents. Get the gen nine and if you are not pleased with it the druggist from whom you bought u win give you your money nacK with a smue. STAT ON THE FARM Some Good Advice to Farmers' Boys The Farmer s Day is Coming. There is one thing we should like to urge very strongly in this issue, Mr. Farmer Boy, and that is that you stay on the farm, where you can be your own boss, instead of going off to the city to be somebody's clerk or hir ed man that is unless you have some special marked and definite talent for some particular worn. It is true, of course, that the farm er does not now get all the profit he ought to get nor all he is going to get but it is also true that the work ing man in the country fares better than the working man in town. Read all you can, study all you can, and prepare yourself to be a good farm- er a genuinely wide-awaice prog. ressive farmer and you will, nine chances out of ten, fare better than if you should go to town. As we see it, the farmer's day is coming. The thought of the world is turned as never before to building up the country. The government it self which was once interested in pro tecting manufactures, developing manufactures and building up towns, is beginning to see that the source of all prosperity is the farm. But the one best sign is that the farmers themselves are geting aroused and studying their privileges and rights. Already the awakening and organi zation of the farmers have resulted in untold good, and you ought to resolve now that there shall be a farmer's organization in your neighborhood as long as you live. If you are over 16 years old,, join the Farmers' Uuion or whatever organization is nearest you, and take an active part in it. Speak to your lather about it. Another thing which insures better times for the Southern farmer is this: For a hundred years until very recently we have had to compete with cheap-land farmers in the West. That is to say, any farmer could go out West and stake out a "homestead," and sell his crops without allowance for land values because his land cost him nothing, or practically nothing. But all that is past. The cheap lands of the West have gone, and now when the Western farmer sells his crops he must add $5 to $1U per acre as an al lowance for rent or for interest on land values. And because of this fact crops simply can't be sold as cheaply as formerly. Then, too, city populations have in creased faster than country popula tions the whole world over, and ii is becoming more and more difficult for the city people to get enouirh meats and food stuffs. There are several lion more neonlc in the United States than there were five years ago, while there are several millioi fewer ment animals. This is an indication that farm products must co h:.her. especially live stock. One of the greatest of the world's students of rural problems declared recently that in the future labor on the farm is iroinir to be better naid than labor in the towns and we be lieve he is right. Stick to the farm. The Progressive Farmer, TOLD IN ASHEBORO A Resident Known to all Our Read ers Relates an Experience. Readers of The Courier have been told again and again of the merits of that reliable, time-proved kidney rem edy Doan's Kidney Pills. The ex periences told are not those of un known persons, living far away. The cases are Asheboro cases, told by Asheboro people. Mrs. U. b. Kendall. Church Street. Asheboro, N. C, says: "I have used Doan's Kidney Pills, procured from the Standard Drug Store, and I con sider them a most reliable remedy for regulating the kidneys and curing backache. Doan's Kidney Pills have also been used by others in my family and the results have always been sat- lsiactory. ' tor sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. x. sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan s and take no other. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A ST O R I A Wrighisville Beach North Carolina's Famous Resort Everything Worthwhilein Modern Amusements Bathing Music Fishing Boating . Prizes Dancing; Most popular season , Week end-and-Summer Excursion Fares Via the Atlantic Coast line The Standard Railroad of the South For Schedule, ratss c! fare, etc'itV Ticket Agents, or address, ' - r ., , W. J. Cralc, T.kW&ils, Piss. Tiaf. Mgr. ; . , K 6si. Piss. Ami . Wllsingtoa, FIFTEEN MEN ' FOR ARMY Largest Number of Recruits Dnri, I Time in Two Years. " Fifteen men have been accented i.j ' enlisted in the United States armv ' the local recruiting station durinnk ' month of August. This is the gW est number that has been enlisted t ' the local station since Sergeant Iw ' took charge, which is two years. I Several more applicants are now W ing investigated and it is likely tw' more will be accepted and sent k 1 the training baracks at Columbus ' Ohio, during this month. Men that have been received this month young men of good caliber, and'lc cording to the recruiting officer, th old sentiment against army service ii wearing off. Canvassing officers are now i charge of stations at Danville oi Greensboro, and permanent office may be established at both of these cities. The Lynchburg office has been an noyed slightly by a disgruntled sol. dier, who has been "knocking" the army service in the presence of an. plicants. Investigation showed that this man had been dishonorably di. charged from the army and he made a black record while in the service. In spite of his talk, he asked the offi cer in charge of the local station to use his influence toward getting him back in the army, but in view of the circumstances, his request was not granted. Charlotte News. NOT SO STRANGE AFTER ALi You may (nink it strange that io many people are cured of stomach trouble by Chamberlain's Tablets. You would not, however, if you should give them a trial. They strengthen and invigorate the stomach and ena ble it to perform its functions natu rally. Mrs. Rosie Rish, Wabash, Ind, writes, "Nothing did me the leait good until I began using Chamber lain's Tablets. It is decidedly the best medicine for stomach trouble I have ever used." For Bale by all dealers. What Shall It Be? Baltimore Sun. The newspapers have yet to agree upon a name for the titanic conflict now going on across the sea, but the indications are that it will go down into history simply as the "European War." It seems too vast and too widespread for any less general desig nation, ine principal German papers of the United States are inclined to adopt this name, though the New York Staats-Zeitung of yesterday, in an article in English, stopped at the European situation." and the Deutsches Journal proceeded to "the European World-War." Our own Deutche correspondent still seems to differentiate between parts of the war: for e ''" Vriev .. xtoi- scnen xngi the war b many." ax. Post and th choose "der European w The war which we mt.. designation on August ou. ceased' to be descriptive, for the Slav is now uojnax m puv punoaS jpeq euj u; hurls his main strength, against his fellow-Teuton and the Latin. "The War of 1914" is also unsatisfactory, for the prospect is that it will run far into 1915 if not even longer. But "Kaiser Wilhelm's War" and "the War Against Germany" still remain candiatcs and so does "the War of the Nations'.' with the right reserved to change the number from day to day as new powers wade in! LONG HOURS FOR NORTH CARO LINA FARM LABORERS. Washington, D. C, Aug. 2S. The farm laborers of North Carolina work on an average of 9 hours and 47 minutes per day, according to a report that has just been issued by the United States Department of Ag riculture. Farm laborers in only 12 states work longer than' those cf North Carolina. The farms of North Carolina employ 357,000 laborers and the average monthly compensation is $15.90 with board and $22.30 if the laborer boards himself. These figures relate to the year 1913. The average farm labor wage in Continental United States is $13.85 with board and $19.97 without board. i7 C. .
The Courier (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 27, 1914, edition 1
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