Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / June 27, 1909, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
CHAEITTIi DAILY OBSEKVER, SUOTAY, JUNE 27,1909; rubllsbers. EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR SrBSCROTION nuct: One year f 6 ix months Tare mooihs -w beini-woday w. . Blx months ......... Three month PUBLISHERS' AS.XOOCEKEST No 14 South Tryon street. Telephone numbers' Bustne office, Beil phone 7i; 11)' editor's office. Bell pUone 134, sews editor's office. Bell 'phone ii- Advertising rates aie furnliiied on application Advertisers may feel sure that thruugn il.e columns of this paper t!;e may reach all Charlotte snd a portion of the best piool In this State and upper South Carolina. This pptr fives correspondents as wide lauiude as It thinks public i"l lcy pemnils. but it is In n rue le tpoosible for their views It is mui h preferred that correspondents Mtn thew names to their aruoles especial ly in cases where they attack persons or institutions tlough thin i not de manded. The edhoi reserves the right to five the name, of correspondents wheel they are demanded for the pur pose of personal satisfaction To re ceive consideration a communication must be a cmpane4 by trie true name of the correspondent A subscriber if ordering the address Of his paper changed, will plee indi cate the address te which It is going at the time he asks for the change to be made MUXDAY, Jl'NE 27, 108. TARIFF XAMKS WHICH TERRIFY. This from The Charleston Evening Post: "The Charlotte observer thinks that protection is a aound jiollcy for tlie tlon and that t.'ie South nhould staria oddly for a measure of it to her In dustrlet The ObMiH'tr Is not the nnly exponent of .Southern thoug-tit that holds thia Mew, but it hears th ulmon unuiue. distinction of salng what li thinks At lead one Senator from each of Hie Southern !!!. has. by voice and vote contributed to the making of Die Aldru h I high tariff bill at ihe present feaslon of ; ni,srr.s hoi not one of then,, we think. ' has declared openly thsu he supports the measure he is advocating becauHe it puts imo pewJuee i ne iinrinnn m pniincuun It Is either becauee the proposed schedule, will brtng revenue or because as Senator Tillman arguee of his reason for voting to maintain the duty on Iron ore- it is not worth while' removing the tax that thia CT that Democratic Senator from the South comes under the yoke and supports Mr. Aldrlch a programme " The Observer always tries to say what It thinks. It Is pair) a high but hardly merited oompliment when told that on the tariff question it alone has said what many would say if they had the courage. FYm its standpoint The E-venlng Post's statement needs to be amended herein and otherwise. This newspaper holds that a sub stantial amount of protection Is in evitable so long as the bulk of govern ment revenue must be raised by tax ing Imports; that such protection may be either "a sound policy" or an un sound policy according; to the manner In which It Is laid; that the Dlngley and Aldrh'h bills stand for one form of unsoundness and a tariff drawn by believers In the opposite extreme would stand. certainly If failing to recognize the revenue necessity -for a form of n nsouni1ne?3 even worse; that a satisfactorily honest and ra tional tariff cannot be expected until present tariff-making methods are changed. Broadly speaking. The Ob server believes that tariff schedules should follow revenue requirements, exceeding the maximum-revenne point, however. In some cases as where an Industry essential to the national safety In war needs nour ishing or where an industry essential to the) national welfare at all times and not controlled by a trust must con tend against Important foreign ad vantages. On the other hand. the maximum-revenue point should not be attained in some cases as where an industry has become subject to monopolistic influences. To the end that unfair discrimination amomr in terst and section, mav he, avoinVrl the free list should have narrow lini- J. p. CAJLDWEUk D. A. TO XT KINS. . it, Including, besides certain non competitive commodities now untax . d, chiefly commodities under trust control here at home. We oppose t: that lortu of sectional and class dis i'" crimination which would grant the a protected Eastern manufacturer his "Taw materials duty-free at the ijouth--, em farmer's expense; we are glad ' that every Senator and Itepresentative . In Congress from North Carolina save : one voted against free lumber. As a ; rule, luxuries thould be taxed at high rates and necessaries at low. We be .llae that the revenue-protective sys- 'tein, notwithstanding the many ahuses irrJtten into it by ton-powerful bene- tfclariea under both Kepubljean and . Democratic auspices. has. on the whole, done mor, good than evil, ex . Citing? a distinct upward influence upon atandards of livinc. that the rev . . inn necessity whic h originally dic- a tated H and continues to dictate it 'i baa proven a fortunate necessity, that the universal spread of protectionism among; the nations would render its abandonment almost an academic - question even if abundant revenue were obtainable otherwise. We favor. .: ;upplementary to tariff and excise rev :. anue, an Inheritance tax. an income t or auch' other form of direct tax '. af ghall make wealth share with con- gumption the Federal government's eoct .The., briefly, are the views which '"deponent holds upon tariff matters. I - They read like a party platform plank j -that 1a in the nature of the case. If we were to choose any single platform declaration. It would be the . Demo- eratic tariff plank of lags. 'But as a , oailf broadly underlying all onr tariff ' yiewa la the conviction that tariffs and tariff doctrines cannot with wisdom j. ; lgTioVa economic changes. Doctrines demonstrably correct in the past might not salt present Qeeda; there are no Tea GonjrnaBdmenLi of the. tar Iff. The views wkich we regad as appropriate to th South to-day take Issue sharp ly with Calhoun and other slavery economist, wlteee iewi many " still hold. We have cited Calhoun only to how' that en he- was never ao ex treme as hla preaent followers and that he stood by the Houtn on raw materials. Certain excellent people, wanting to place everything In some large cate gory, love melodrama, where the prin cipal characters are either unmistak able heroes or unmistaKaoie v- lalns All such as have neun- er the patience nor mental table for those distinctions and shadings wjiieh accord with human life's real facta, economic and otherwise, may call The Observers tariff views what they please. For our own part if the fail ing mentioned must have a sop in catchword form we prefer to be tail ed tariff moderate ' or something of the kind. We do not frighten at mere words and any one who makes clear our repudiation of Aldnchism and its like may call us ' a protectionist" if he will. This condition the Charles ton paper l cry far from fulfilling I when it speaks of "supporting Mr. Aldri. h s programme." The Southern i Senator? who voted against giving Mr. iAldrich s highly protected Eastern 'manufacturers Southern raw materials jduty-free took sharp issue with many ,'Aldrichites and saved Southern Inter ests which would otherwise have jbeen sacrificed. L'pon the Aldrlch bill as a whole they appear, the. Loulsl laniana possibly excepted, to be of one mind. We gladly believe that South lern .Senators will cast an almost sol lid vote against this abomination. LsHKRIXM'K HOLMES NOT VEEDED That "murder wlli out" Is a true saving and there Hre few of the mys terious homicides that re net in the end unraveled. Ttie murder which In not explained sooner or later forms the exception. , ,inv nersons The first thought to many persons 0n reading of the suicide of the man vulmin was thart hie Roberts or Eastman death put the seal forever on the mystery of the deaih of Mrs. May Edith VYodlH. which occurred on the Eastern Shore of Mr'la-nd some time between eaturday a weelt ago and last Wednesday. If It be true, however, as now surmised, tlmt she was killed Sat urday night and on that evening she was with a party of men and women in the Roberts bungalow the truth will be sure to come out. 6uch a mur der ceuld not be committed on such an occasion with many people pres ent or by the person with whom she left tlhe party alone without some one in time, by word or action, giving the authorities a clu. The mystery can be cleared up and the guilty parties discovered If there were others Impli cated In the affair -besides the man Roberts. The mystery Hboint the unfortunate woman which will most probably nev er be cleared up. so far as the pub lic is concerned, is the parentage of the woman. Most likely It Is known to those with whom she had lived since her adoption and by some of the people who were so greatly in terested in her without apparent rea son. Those who know, if there are such, will keep the aevret to them selves. X EAR-SCIENCE AVD Ml'RDER Within the past few years many cit izens who worked themselves up to the necessarily strenuous point of seeking out and slaughtering other citizens for revenge had either "brain storm," "exaggej-Red ego," or eny among half a dozen auch temporary afflictions. These afflictions have been much descrihed at murder trials, but they became recognized as belonging to what -we may call the realm of near science and so fell Into rpdicule. While Uheir terminology deaJs perhaps scien Itiflcally enough with the general fact of abnormal states of mind in sane men and most of all in the sane men who commit crimes, It paaees into the near-science cla-ss almost every time when brought forward as excuse for homk-lde. By its tests the old "heat of passion," "anima furens," etc., are transformed into complete excuses and the man who deliberately goes brain storming on another man'a trail merits not hanging but no punishment at all. Human life, quita cheap enough already, must become much cheaper If worked-up and perhaps haJf-feigned irresponsibility or hysteria Is made a ground of acquittal for crime. Self- control is certainly placed at an enor mous discount in human relations The conscience and sober sense of this community have been shocked by a verdict rendered in Mecklenburg- Su perior Count yesterday. According to The Southern Tobac ,co Journal. North Carolina produced j 36.375.258 pounds of tobacco in 188. 'The average price for the c"rop was 14 cents. The 1909 crop will amount to 140 000.000 pounds, which will av- erage 10 cents per pound In price. This crop, although nearly four times as large as that of 18S9. lacks over Jl.OOd.OOO of bringing three times as much. The farmers must have made 1 a hi? profit on the other crop if trey i made anything at all on the present I one. The WiimTngton Star has no use for those persons who oppose extra tax for better schools or are not ad vocates of the good roads movement. It says hat "communities which Won't vote for taxes to keep up good schools are undesirable neighborhood for new settlers and a county without good roads 1b a good roosting place for crows" Which leaves no doubt whatever about its opinion upon the subject AX IXSPIRATIOJr FOR VEXiROES. There Uvea on a farm near Mount Olive In Wayne county a negro named Calvin Brock, who is one of the moat successful strawberry grower and truckers in the State- He stands well with the white people of ihe eounty and is known to be as much inter ested in the prosperity and develop ment of has community aa any man in it. , He grows the Klondyke berry, which commands a. higher price than any other variety. He made a boun tiful crop thia year and sold on the railroad platform at Mount Olive to shippers at 14.50 and tS per crate, while his neighbors who raised other varieties were shipping to the North ern markets and selling at much low er prices. Brock Is well contented with his condition. He saya he would not swap places with the Gov ernor of the State because he makes more money raising strawberries and vegetables than the Governor's salary amounts to. When interviewed by The Goldsboro Argus a day or ao ago Brock said It would be the biggest thing that could happen to that sec tion of the State if all the berry grow ers would take to raising the Klon dyke variety, and he expressed will ingness to supply them with the plants to what extent he could. The Argua says of him- "Everybody who knows Calvin respects him, because he mer its their respect. He respecta himself, and while always manifesting deep interest In everything that tenda for uplift, he is modest and retiring, and only by persuasion can he be pre vailed upon to talk, but when he does talk he always says something worth while." It is a pleasure to note the success of such a negro. He should be held up to his race as an example of what the negroes of the South can do when thy exert themselves. What he tiae done and Is still doing marjy othera can do if they' will show hia energy and industry. He is helping to build up his section of the State and to add to Its material wealth. We wlah there were many more negroes like him in North Carolina. Self-interest as well as humanity demands tlhat the white people of the South give all encouragement possible to such ne groee. The Savannah News is kindly so Utltous about the effect upon Deacon Hemphill of his college honors. "Al ready," observes The News with con cern, "he is beginning to speak of Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, aa 'Nick.' Pres ently he may be calling Dr. Eliot 'Cholly,' Dr. Wilson 'Woody' and Dr, Hadley 'Artie.' And that would la the Deacon, himself liable to be call ed 'Jim.' And hew, think you, that woufd sound?" In a word, our 8a vannuh friend Is afraid that the Dea con's head has been turned and that he is riding, with pride just before him, to a fall. He was called down sternly tlfe other day by a correepon dent of The Observer, who alleged an offenW against the definite article un becoming L,L D. s. This afralr may prevent him from attempting further familiarities with any great personage. of the academic world, but should ne cesslty arise we shall g-ive his case our own special attention. Everybody is praising Wood row Wil son nowadays Thi Rochester Democrat and Chronicle speaks of him as "one of the finest educational leaders In the I'nlied States '' We are not suprlsed at that He got his start In South Carolina Charleston News-Courier. And we might add. were we not afraid of Infringing upon the copyrigtit of The Charlotle Observer He had his birth in Virginia Norfolk Virginian Pilot. And he spent his most Impression able yeara in North Carolina, where he effectually overcame any handicap whltTi mliht have attached to him from the other two circumstances. One possible conclusion from the conflicting evidenve in the Gould case is that unless the plaintiff has been greanly maligned by most of the wit nesses for the defence she had good control over her appetite for intoxi cants, knowing before whom to re strain it and before whom she might give It full swing. It can be said that all the attorneys who appeared aa advocates on each side In the sensational murder trial Just concluded In this city did them selves credit. There was one really great speech Judge F. I. Osborne's. and it undoubtedly goes far to explain the almost Incredible verdict. Mrs. Katherine Clemmons Gould had such a sorry citizen as a hus band that her victory suits the pub lic well enough. Miss Helen Gould who is of the salt of the earth ap pears to he the only estimable child whom the late unestimabte Jay Gould left Talk about your fish stories! New Jersey fishermen come to the front with one that will make all other fish ermen turn green with envy. They tell about one haul worth 130,000 the anchoring of a chunk of amber gris worth that sum. Who can beat It? One good thing about that woman murdering affair on the east shore of Maryland; It -was all over and the murderer gone to hia own place with in a very brief period. Bryan's Supreme Test. Windsor Ledger. We are glad to see that Hon. W. J. Bryan will contest for senatorshlp In hjs State next year. If he wins he will in time be a great factor In the South. If he loses that ends hia political career. It is a supreme test he is making. Brave men always take close chances. A term in the Senate, will give Mr, Bryan what ha needs poise, toleration ot the ooin- lon of othera and practicability. f MURDER OF ELSIE 8IGE1 OFFICERS HAVE A XEW. PHASE. Leon Ling. Supposed Murderer of Elsie Higel, XVma in Newark. N. J.. in tlie Afternoon of the Day of the Murder With Heavy Oval -Topped Trunk and Was Very Anxious to IMspoae of It Traak Was Like the One in Which the Otrt's Body Was Found Jfo Confirmation of Report That Elsie Slgel Was Married to Chu Gain, Ling's Hated Rival. New York, June 26. The New York police confirmed to-night the new phase of the Sigel murder case brought to light in Newark, N. J. to-day that Leon Ling was in Newark early in the afternoon of the day of the murder .with a heavy oval topped trunk, like the one in which the body was found, on his hands, and a pressing anxiety to be rid of it. It has been ascertained that he attempt ed to leave the trunk In the Newark restaurant of LI Sing, but prudent Li Sing would not hear of having the trunk dumped on him. The mystery of ;uat how Elsie Sigel was killed was cleared up to some extent with the announcement of the results of the coroner's autopsy, sup porting, in a way, that the murder was not premeditated, but committed on the spur of the moment by the Jealous, crazed Chinaman. Dr. O'Han- on, of the coroner's office, said to night that there had been found no ruptured blood vessela, such as al ways accompany death by violent strangulation, but that, on the con trary, there was evidence of conges tion of the lungs, such as always goes with death by asphyxiation. The analysis of the contents of the Biuiuacn is noi yet complete, and. on account of tha advanced state of decomposition In which the body wa? f"ound, it has presented many difficul ties. There is absolutely no confirmation of the statement made to the police by a clerical friend of the SWrel fam ily that Elsie ever married Chu Gain. Leon ling's rival, who is held under bond as a material witness. Chu Gain protested that he has sorrows enough without being made out a widower The district attorney's office to-day had Ong Fung, an English-speaking Chinaman up for a little qwis 'on the Chinese tongs and their possible af filiations with the case. Ong Fung told the authorities that nothing was kr.own In Chinatown to connect Leon with either of the tonga and that apart from his membership in the Chinese Masons (which the Masons deny), the only other society to which he belonged was the Four Brothers, which embraced all the descendants of four fabled demi-gods who lived In the cloudy days before even Chinese history began and who gather now for nothing more violent than to Taunt their descent. Halsted, the cabman, employed by the Lawrenz Livery Company, of Newark, N. .1, who told the police that he hauled a Chlnamwn and a trunk from LI Ling's restaurant in Newark to a house In Eighth ave nue, presumably the place where Klsle Slgel's body was found, was hrmjght to police headquarters to nleht. He looked at the trunk in which the body was found and it is understood that he identified It as the one he hauled, although the police would not say so. FIRKMKN IvOKK CASK. Georgia Railroad Strike Arbitration Tlord DeHde Again Seniority of White Firemen Over Negroes. Atlanta. Ga., June 26. The Geor gia Railroad strike arbitration hoard to-night decided against the seniority of white firemen over negroes. The arbitrators, however, placed a pre mium on Intelligence among firemen, which it is believed will ultimately result In the gradual elimination of all except the most expert negro fire men. Two Who Agree On One Main Con tention. New York Tribune. The New York Tribune rightly in cludes The Charlotte Observer in the class of hallucinations. Our North Carolina contemporary is in fact an admirable and progressive newspaper, but it lives, moves and. has ite being in a community which is wholly given up to one of the most remarkable historclal .hallucinations that has ever been known. Charleston Newe and Courier. ( The Charlotte Observer may "have some abnormal opinions as to the au thenticity of the Mecklenburg Decla ration of Independence, but it has waked up to the fact that John C. Calhoun's tariff doctrines are out of date In the South and should be aban doned as economically mistaken and injurious. An Inconsistency. Statesville Landmark. Possibly it's none of The Land mark's business, but It occurs to this paper that the towns that allow drug stores to have free range in selling liquor on prescription and without prescription in many cases impose Ing only a small license tax, are rath er over-sealoua, If not inconsistent, in trying to tax the "near-beer" deal ers out of business at 11,000 per. Is Dr. Stiles a Hobby-Rider? Greensboro Telegram. How about that hookworm "busi ness, anyway? ir so many oi our people are suffering from the hook worm, how is It that the fact has never been discovered by our own physicians It doesn't look reason able that Southern doctors would fall down" so conspicuously. We are inclined to believe that Dr. Stiles is a hobby-rldar. A" eating in a Bechiv. London Evening Standard. A wagtail-has oullt its nest in a beehive at West Ash by. near Horn castle, and is sitting on ten eggs, de spite the bees being busy at work below. The bird enters by the roof of the hive through a small hole; it has car ried quite a heap t hay and other material bit toy bit through thia hole. The bees are by n means disturbed by their lodger. , m at Alcoholism. Morohlne I and other drug addk tion cured irxfrom fobri succeauuJ experience. write for our booklet. WTjat do Y Drink The) Keeley Institute. (UKSBORO, N. f. tafccasi GREAT IX SEATTLE. City Itself Most Wonderful Exhibit of Yukon Exposition. New York Sun. Seattle is In Itself an Impressive exhibit of the progress and possibili ties of the Northwest. It has to-day a population of about 276.000, and yet the first white boy born in the city is only 66 years of age and is still a resident of the place. He has seen It grow from a collec tion of woodsheds to a municipality containing fifty-five square miles with 600 miles of paved streets, 26,000 pu pils in its public schools, building op erations reaching (14,000,000 a year, bank clearings of 1150,000.000 a year, an export business of over 120,000. 000 and an Import business which has grown In ten years from a little over $1,000,000 to 118.000.000. Its harbor and docks are ready to take care of the enormous commerce now passing through its doors. It would be an almost endless task, says The Review of Reviews, to enumerate the steamship lines that make Seattle and Puget sound their treminus These lines have over 800 steamers In their service. With the East1Seat U is connected by three trans-continental railroads and will soon have two more. This is the city that was able not only to carry the enormous burden of its rapid local developmen but also to subscribe nearly three-quarters of a million dollars In one day for its fair, to carry through this enormous undertaking without one dollar of assistance from the United Statea government, and have ready to open on time an exposition that is as beau tiful as it is valuable from an edu cational point of view. The character of the harbor of Saatle, which Is known as Elliott Bay. is well Illustrated by the fact that the American fleet in its trip around the world sailed in under its own steam, passed in review and came to anchor without aid. Many fleets of similar size could be accommodated within its harbor. It Is likewise true that the great steamship Minnesota In her trips to and from Japan and China comes to her berth In the Seat tle harbor under her own steais with, out assistance, which Is far different from conditions in New York's har bor and In most harbors of the world In truth Puget sound Is one vast Mediterranean sea and furnishes in numerable harbors and facilities for commerce. lis snore line is over noo statute miiea independent of me American snore oi me strait oi San Juan de Fuca and the archi pelago of Islands known as the San Juan islands, if the Pacific ocean, as Seward predicted, Is to "become tha chief theatre of events In the world's hereafter," Puget sound will assured ly become the chief centre of Ameri can transportation from the western coast of the continent and the port of Seattle the greatest port of entry for this commerce. BUTTONS THEY WEAR. About 50 Pew Cent, of New York's Men Belong to Some) Society. New York Sun. Any one who pays attention to the appearance of the folks he meets wpen out walking is apt to notice the number that sport lapel buttons of some sort. It looks as if about 50 per cent, of the men In this city are Join ers; they belong to some society or other. The habit of Joining is match ed by the desire to show the token of the society. Some man will come along with a Masonic button. Then there will be an Elk or so, an Eagle, a Forester, sandwiched in between a couple of high school buttons and closely fol lowed perchance by an emblem of the Knights of Columbus. The Holland Society lion appears now and -he"n, and there are Republi can club markers and Indicators of membership in those pedigree institu tions which go back to the revolution ary and subsequent wara. Civil war and Spanish war buttons- are to be seen. Occasionally the glance shifts from lapel to waistcoat as a young man comes wandering by with hia hands in his pockets. He is very apt to dis play a Jeweled college fraternity pin. Sian is Held Pending- Outcome of Woman's Injuries. Atlanta, Ga., June 2. Harry Wof ford, 31 years old, was arrested to night, charged with disorderly con duct, and held pending the outcome of Injuries to Mrs. Nellie Jobson. who was injured by a fall from the second floor of the building In which Wof ford had a room. She suffered from sprains and it was feared that she was internally injured. The police found a rope made of sheets near the spot where Mrs. Jobson fell and this rope had been torn apart. The police charged that the woman fell from Wofford's window, but the latter re fused to make any statement. The police were searching for Mrs. Job son when she was hurt and had Just broken into Wofford's room. Evil Results From Iivnohings. Salisbury Post. So much has been said of lynch law and there Is so little to be said in Its defense even in the moat aggravated cases that any discussion of the sub- pet might seem little less than a waste of breath. Its tiearinr unon lawlessness la general, however, makes U an ever-live proposition, the ef fects of which cannot be too freauent- ly reviewed. A White Tigren. London Evening Standard. A white tigress 8 feet 8 Inches in length has been shot ir. Dhenkanal State, Orissa. The ground color was pure white and the stripes were of a deep reddish black. The skin has been presented to the Rajah of Dhenkanal, who has had it mounted and placed In his palace. The shikaris (hunters) of this coun try say that It is the only white tiger they have seen. , Negro Horse Thief Shot to Death. &faben. Miss.. June A negre horse thief was taken from officer near here' to-day and shot todeath He had twice escaped Jail la two days and to-day waa found la a thicket still confined with chain and hand cuff. He had ridden it miles in four hours la making hia escape. fe A O II v i M i i i t , r I but some departments still need reducing and Monda; will see much lower prices on some line. day morning at 9o 'clock and choice of any suit or dies: Poplin, Mull, Batiste and other sheer summer materials will be on sale Monday at about HALF PRK'K- Thev are this season's latest styles and trimmed in many ne fetching ways with embroidered bands, laces, braids, etd Unmatchable in make, style and price are those Keauti- $3.75. On third floor are pretty Lingerie waists and mus lin underwear, consisting o f all new style garment?, bu thev have been a little' tossed, and Monday the will be temptingy lowered to reduce stock. " All our bargain -waist goods and white gns cents yard will be continued through Monday t.,, ot ar,A liifA fnr the "Mill End uuot axiiicu CaUU aW w " 50 dozen large 25c Turkish bath towels and they go o sale Monday at 17c each. MitimmiiiinMMimiim 1 1 1 till Mill M I It 1 1 Mm4 Uy -FOR- I Listen rAny Coat Suit or Silk dress in the whole range oS our stock without a single reserve will be on sale Mon-j 12.50 rAll those little dainty tub dresses in Linen. Repps, SUB fully tailored skirts that are creating so much talk atj pnce at o Sale ' --"A. ' '-'K I : . r c- .1 1" -
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 27, 1909, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75