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RUG BY PALMER ALLIED TO STAND RECONSIDERATION WILL ONLY COME WHEN REQUESTED BY TREASURY DEPARTMENT. BEER BY CASE AS MEDICINE Whole Enforcement Theory la Over thrown Under Which Revenue Bu reau Has Been Operated. . Washington.-"-The recent ruling of former Attorney General Palmer per mitting the practically unlimited manufacture of beer, wines and whis key for medicinal purposes will stand, « Solicitor General Frlerson said, de spite a number Of protects, unless treasury department should ask for Its reconcideration. Such a request Is not under contemplation, It was said later at the treasury. Under this most recent interpre tation of the prohibition law, officials declared it would appear that a pa tient for whom beer was prescribed would be able to obtain it by the case ! as it would probably be ordered as a tonic and It would appeal - unreal sonable to require a person to pro cure only one or two bottles- Study of the new ruling, officials said, has disclosed that the whole theory of prohibition enforcement on ■which the internal revenue bureau has been proceeding, has been over thrown. , The prohibition unit, offi cials explained, has worked on the theory that it possessed regulatory | powers under the act which permits | it to limit the use and distribution of intoxicants excepted by Congress J from the genral ban. Druggists Seek Whiskey. San Francisco. Druggists united ! in a rtrnh on the customs house when ' they learned that 100,000 quarts of | Bcotch whiskey were to be sold at $3 | per gallon. Twenty-seven druggists { appeared. Sales amounted to 500 j gallons, It was announced. The liquor J is the accumulation of seizures made on ships entering this port, and It is ' being sold to druggists under orders] from Washington. Reward of $2lO Offered. Warsaw. Leon Trotzky, Russian soviet war minister, has offered a re- ward of five million - ruble* for the * body, dead or alive; of General Kos- | lovsky, revolutionary leader. Genefal Koslovsky. in return, is re- j ported to have offered ten million ru bles for Trotsky's body. It Is pointed out here that a mil lion rubles Is now worth about SSO. ' Pensioned by Bt«fel Company. Pittsburgh.—An aggregate of $779,- 768 60 In pensions was paid to retired employees of the United States Steel - corporation and its subsidiary com panies during the yea* 1920, accord ing to the tenth annual report of the I United States Steel and Carnegie pension fund. This Is $46,059.15 more i than was disbursed last year, and greater than any year since the es tablishment of the fund. __ Three Drops Will Kill. New York.-—The chemical warfare J service has discovered a liquid poison ; so strong that thfce drops will kill 1 anyone whose skin It touches, It be came known here. Falling like roln from nozzles at-1 tached to airplanes the liquid would kill everything in the aircraft's path,j according to a high official of the ser-1 flee. .# ' Hf"" Bonus Bill Passed. Des .Moines, lowa. —A soldiers' bo nus bill was passed by moth the house and senate, tfhe bill providing a pay-1 ment of 70 cents a day for each day ! 1 of war service will be submitted to the electorate in 1922. Railway Shops Closed. j Albany. N. Y. The West Albany-! shops of the New York Central closed down for an Indefinite period. About 1,200 men were affected. Esch and Potter Nomlnsted. Washington. Former Represents- j v tive John J. Esch, of Wisconsin, and ( Mark W. Potter of New York, were ~ nominated by President Harding to be members ot the Interstate Com merce Commission. Farmers Believe In Burning Wood. Washington. -» Farmers burned up C 8.244.000 ct>rds of wood, valued at 9546.866.000 for fuel last year, depatt men't of agriculture figures disclose. The average was 10.6 cords per farm, the report states. No Change In Jap Situation. Washington The diplomatic ax changes between the American and Japanese governments concerning the status of the Pacific cable center of Tap have left, the situation un changed. While Mexico Ik Quiet . , Mexico City.—The present lull in Mexico has meant an increased im portation of gasoline from this co«n --r (try of nearly 1M per cent Cmde oil Is coming in from the Tampico fields mi rate of 200,000,000 barrels annnally JOHN W. WEEKS j New photograph of former Senator '.John W. Weeks of MassacbMntts, 1 secretary of war in the HardiiqPcab ; Inet ARE ARRANGING. CONFERENCES ! * # Men In Eighty-ftve Classes of Labor Expect to Open Negotiations with Their Employers at Once, New York. —A general move by the nation's railroads to ' cut war-time wage scales, long forecast by rail offi cials, appeared to be in full swing. I Following the lead of several lines, I which earlier had announced cuts, the New York Central and the New York, j New Havtjn'and Hartford railroads in | the EaUt'and virtually every railroad j In the West announced proposed wage (reductions. Further statements from ! lines that have not yet announced proposed cuts were predicted. ; Offilcals of various lines were ar ranging conferences with employes !In an effort to reach agreements on the proposed reductions. The plans,\ ias announced, affect only unskilled: and Beml-skllled labor. ! The New York Central and the i I New York, New Haven and Hartford,] ! whose proposed reduction announce- [ i ments Included men in 85 classes of 1 labor, were expected to open negotia- Hons with their men next week. Prussian Cabinet Resigns. Berlin.—The Prussian cabinet ten dered its resignation in consequence of the recent elections. The minis-J try will continue to function, how- j ever, pending the formation of a new | cabinet. Revise Price Napped Cotton. New York. —A long expected revi sion in the prices of napped cotton for the Fall of 1921 was announced after the close of business by a large manufacturing concern (Amoskeag Manufacturing company). The reductions were from a basis of 3T4 cents a yard for Daisy cloth last year to 12V4 cents net, this year, and on the widely known 1921 cloth, from 35 cents to 12ft cents. These are net mill prices. .\ . * Revolts are Spreading. London.—Trustworthy news receiv ed Irom the Interior of Russia, says a dispatch to The London Times, from Reval, shows thst anti-soviet revolts are spreading throughout the country. To Review Palmer Decision. Washington.-—Early review by At torney General Dougherty of the re cent rulffig of former Attorney Gen eral Palmer making valid the pres cription ,of beer as medicine under the Volstead act 1b expected., Five from Baltimore. Tarnowitz." Silesia. —Five Germans qualified to vote In the coming plebis cite In upper Silesia have arrived here Baltimore, Md. Another 120 elig ible to vote are on the way from A» gentlne and Chile. I * 4 * Bureau Ordered to Stop. Dulsburg.—The French authorities In the newly-occupied area have dered the local bureau of the upper Silesia voters league to cehse its ac tivities. —; •r * Urge Restricted Shipments. Chicago.—The livestock ( exchange Issued a statement urging restricted shipments of all livestock effective now. The statement was issued be- : cause of what was termed "unsettled labor conditions In packing houses." j inauguration Cost 91.500. Washington.—President Harding's inauguration cost Just $1,500 out of the $60,000 special appropriation made by congress according to Elliott Wood|j. superintendent of the Capital buildings and grounds. Job Hunters Must Wslt Washlniyxm.— Job hunters seeking f places In the department of Justice will have to wait, according to n pol icy outlined by. Attorney General Daugherty. ' Belgian Guard Wounded. Bru itself. — A Belgian guard #as wounded by a bullet fired by ap un known person In the streets of Duls burg, according to a dispatch from that city to the DernMr* Hears. The circumstances of the shooting hnre not been disclosed. AMERICAN TROOPS TO STAY ON RHINE , ■ PRESENT EMERGENCY RENDERS STEPS FOR REMOVAL JUST NOW INAOVJSABLE. HUNS MIGHT MISCONSTRUE * , ,""-H The Harding Policy Is Thst Nothing be Done to Aggrava£e«the Situa tion With Allies or Germany. 0 ' 2 * Washington.—American troops will remain on the Rhine until the present emergency arising out of Ger many's refusal to accept the repara tion proposal of the allies is cleared The first act of the Harding admin istration toward Eufrope, is to be sure, a passive policy but it is not without a significance. Mr. Harding had an i anounced during the campaign that American troops would be brought back from the Rhine as quickly as possible after his election. Arrange j mentsrhad been made through the re- I publican leaders in congress who han dle appropriations to cause the with drawal of the American contingent at ian early date. The sudden turn of | ovents abroad has,"however, made it j necessary to make a temporary change here, too. The argument has been effectively made that if the United Btales with ; drew her troops at the very moment when the allied forces were advanc ing, it might hpjjiiaconstrued by the | i Germans as an act of disapproval by (the United States of allied policy and | might stiffen the backs of the Ger jmans. j So for the present it Is the Harding ' policy as communicated to the state land war departments and concurred in 'by Secretaries Hughes and Weeks i that nothing be done td aggravate the situation abroad either with respect | |to the alies or Germany and Ameri- i I can troops therefore will sit tight and 'maintain a 1 neutral attitude. Graves are Decorated I Allied Military Headquarters, Neuss, | —General Gaucher, commander of i French troops engaged in the occupa tion of the new'tariff pone along the j | Rhine, jjlaced weaths on the graves !of French and German soldiers who j died during the war of JB7O and the j burled in the military cemefiVy near here. French to Evacuate Cilllcla. London— BHand. before t j leaving for Paris conferred with the j | Turkish nationalist delegation in Lon-1 j don and /eached an agreement with lit on the question of the rapid evacua tion by the French of Cilllcla, Asia i Minor. Panama Balks on White Award. Washington.—Panama refused to | accept the White award as a basis of peace with Costa Rica, it informs the American government in a note made public by the State Department. The note is in reply to that sent to Panama and Costa Rica by the State Department demanding oimmediate cessation of hostilities and was made public without comment , «—,— Italy Prepares to Bay. Washington. ltaly is preparing j through rehabilitating her Internal, fi nancial oondition. setting 1 in motion ; again the machinery of commercial | relations and resuming the production I of staples of commerce utilized in for- j eign trade to discharge her debt to the United States States. Rolando Rlccl, the new Italian ambassador, said. May Present Modified League. P^fls.— It was stated at the foreign office that the negotiations were un der way between thft French embassy In Washington and the State Depart ment, in an effort to indufe President Harding to favor acceptance of a mod ified League of Nations. Boycott by Coffee Berlin.—The executive committee of the Association ot Coljy Importers of» Hiimburg, has recomnßbded that the members of the association make no turcbases from or France mh.ie the governments of those coun tries continue "their policy of oppres sion," says a Hamburg /iispfttch. j : Belgians Occupy Hambsrn Berln.—'The Belgians have occupied .Jlambern, to the north of Dulsburg and the coaling port of the Thyssen works. The occupation was without; Incident. ' % Want Help From Harding. ! Omaha.—President Harding was ap pealed to by representatives of pack ing house employees with a request that he try to prevent a proposed re-., duction of wages and readjustment of , working hours announced by meat packers. Allen Land Bill Passes. • ' Austin, Te*.—The anti-alien land ownership bill preventing aliens inell- ■ gible to cltisenship In the United 1 States from owning or acquiring land i In Texas, was passed to engrossment lln the house. Dr. Sawyer to Confirmed. ; Washington —The nomination of, Dr. C. E. Sawyer, of Marion, .Ohio. President Harding's personal physi etna, to be brigadier general in the medical reserve corps of the army, was cMflrmsd by the senate. K ' •-* Tii ' m. *£ ■ ' 4 / * .. . THE ALAMANCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C I #.Vmßhvc ' 1 . Ajl ..- * 2•• ROSOLIE COHEN. Blind lince bfrth, fourteen-year old Rosalie Winters Cohen, an inmate !of the Sunshine Home for Blind |Children in Brooklyn, has just grad j uated from pubtis school, *lx months | ahead of her scheduled time, and J with the highest honors of her clasr jof 35 pupils. She hds already com ; posed several pieces of music, is an j accomplished piano, violin and man dolin player, and an expert needle ! worker. NO LIMIT TO MANUFACTURE - ; Thinks Intention of Law on Question Is to Leave the Physician Unfet tered by Government Control. Washington.—The government . is | without authority to prohibit or limit fthe manufacture and sale of iiquors. ! wines or beer for non-beverage pur ! poses, according to an opinion by the Attorn, y Genera', made public by the internal revenue bureau. Th 9 jjiinion„.one of the iiu.s* com preheji 'e dealing with the question of prjaiMtlon, express r states (hot ther« u.i«t be no linuUM m on th«gu»e jof liquors purposes except that prescribe by congress in | limiting the sale tl spirituous liquors ]to one pint for ten days. "Subject to this limitation," the opinion continued, "obviously there has been committed, not to the judge ment of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and the -Secretary of the Treasury, but to the profesional judg ment of the physician, the question of ! the quantity of liquor that may be used as a medicine In each case. "As to this question, I think the in tention was to leave the physician un fettered by governmental control but subject to be dealt with ertirinally and by revocation of his permit if be acts in bad faith." The opinion was signed by the then Attorney General Palmer and was dated March 3. Sailors Killed by Mexicans. Mexico City.—Four sailors, said to be Americans, were killed in Tam !pico, according to newspaper dis patches received here. Up to noon the United States embassy here had received no reports of the killing other than the newspaper advices. Tobacco Goes Up. Vienna. —Prices of tobacco, a gov ernment monopoly, will be greatly in creased in the effort to secure addi tional revenue. Cigars will go up from 43 per cent to 233 per cent, ac cording to quality, and cigarettes from 100 per cent to 150 per cent. To Restore 1920 Wages. \ Boston. —Boston and Albany rail road officials at a meeting with repre sentatives* of various classes of un skilled labor notified them that, effec tive April 4, the rates of pay In effect April 30, 1920, would be restored. Woman Disarms Bandits. Chicago.—Miss L. Overstuff, chief of police oh Buckner, Is the terror of bandits. -She overtook two- men who had held up a Crap game, obtaining ||7oo and wounding a bystander, dls j armed them and locked them up. Notion Served on Austria. Vienna. —Formal notice that it i would be required to fulfill the live- I stock provisions of the treaty of St. j Germsn has been served upon the j Austrian government by the re para | tlons commission. Sugar Business Increased. New York. —The volume of business dene by Uv> American Sugar Refining I company in 1920 shows an increase of , $50,000,000 over the previous year, ac cording' to the annual report made publie. Preclalm Independence. Warsaw.—The white Ruthenians ' have proclaimed their independence ' from Russia according to a Minsk re port received her*. Approximately 10,000 Strike. I New York. —Approximately 10,000 ! workers In misses' and children's dress factories went on strike, it was announced at the headquarters of the international Ladies' Garment Work ers' Union, where it wps claimed that the Industry la greater l -New York was tied o» **> ■ ■ . v* ' • \ - * - -. ,V \ TAX REVISION AND ' PERMANENT TARIFF THE GREAT MATVERB THAT THE CONGRESS WILL TAKE UP IN EXTRA BEBSION. OOTH QUESTIONS ARE URGENT Agreement Is Unanimous Against Any Attempt Towards the Enactment * of Any Stop-Gap Tariff Bill. Washington.—Anti-dumping legisla tion to protect American industries from European competition will be rushed through at the special session of congress under a decision reached at a conference of republican mem bers of 'the senate finance and the house ways and means committees with Secretary of the Treasury Mel lon. Whether tariff or" internal /tax re vision shall be accorded second place on the fiscal program was left for final determination at a conferense which Chairman Penrose of the senate com mittee and Chairman Fordney of the house committee plan to hold with President Harding. Agreement, it was said, was unan imous against attempting to enact any temporary stop-gap tariff bill, the feel ing being that any tariff legislation enacted should be of a permanent na ture. , Harvey Nomination Protested. - Washington.—Protests against ap pointment of Colonel George Harvey as American ambassador to Great Britain have been pouring into the White House as well as to folks in congress who are presumed to have influence with President Harding. 5.000 Given Promotions. Washington.—Approximately 5,000 army promotion nominations, Includ ing the rank of captain, submitted by President -Wilson before the change in administrations, were confirmed by the senate after considerable debate. Special Session on April 11. Washington -Congress will be call ed into Special session Monday, April 11, Senator Lodge announced at the White House after a conference with President Harming. \ Germany Lodges Protest.,- Berlin. —The government has ad dressed a note to the secretarylat of the League of Nations protesting agaist the penalties being enforced by the entente for Germany's non-ful fillment of reparations obliga tions. ' . " j Six Hanged In Dublin. Publln. —Six prisoners, convicted of complicity in the killing of British intelligence bfficers and, members of the crown forces in Ireland,, were ex ecuted in Mount Joy prison, this city. Royalty May Visit U. S. Athens. —Queen Marie of Rumania, intends to visit America soon and she declared she believed King Ferdinand would* L &ccompany her at least as far as New York city. Dlsolution Is Voted. Berlin. —The'federal council adopt ed the government's draft law provid ing for the definite disolution of all German civilian guards and self-de fense organizations. Not to Ask Withdrawal. Managua, Nlc.—The senate reject ed a motion to request the United States to withdraw the American troops stationed in Managua. Assistant Secretary of War. Washington.—J. Mayhew Watp wright, a New York lawyer, was nom inated by President Harding to be as sistant Secretary of War; * * 1 Virginia Tax Law Upheld. Washington.—The merchants " li cense tax law of Virginia was in ef fect declared valid by the suf-eme court. Camp Merrltt Barracks Burned. Camp Merritt, 'N. J —Six wooden barracks wpre destroyed on the army reservation here by a fire which broke out simultaneously in all six buildings and was apparently of in cendiary orgin. Strangled and Beaten to Death. . Perth, Amboy, N. J. —Attacked by an unknown man late during a heavy fog, Mrs. Edith Wilson, 26, was strangled and beaten to death with a black jack in an open lot within & short distance of her home here. Death by Fire In Richmond. Richmond, Va —Five are known to be dead, two are missing and over a tec ore injured, six of whom are in hoe pitals, as. the result of one of the most destructive fires In this city in yean, the loss being intense. Lynching Bee In Kentucky. Versailles. Ky.—Richard James, ne gro. charged with the murder of Bee T. Rogers and Homer Nave at Mid way, on October 8 last, was take* from the comity jail by a nob aad baoged. CONDENSED NEWS FROM . THE OLD NORTH STATE % fflorrr NOTES OF DMTERCCST TO CAROLQIIANB. Charlotte. —Two more divorces were granted making a total of seven for the two days of the term. ) Winston-Salem. —Fire completely de stroyed one of the large wood working buildings of the Briggs-Shafft - com pany's plant here entailing a loss of SIOO,OOO covered by insurance. " ✓ ' Kinston. —The death of W. R. Her ring, a prominent Greene county man, was announced here. Mr. Herring was a wealthy planter. He was a brother of the sheriff of the county. Reidsville. —John W:' Blum, a form er resident of this county, fell from an electric light pole while repairing the line at fjew Kensington, Pa., March 1, and -was almost instantly tilled. « Constantinople.—Smallpox has been added to the lisf of the contagious di seases prevalent in this city. Tom Cox, of New Bern, N. C., a sailor on the United States destroyer Overton, died of smallpox and was buried here. Raleigh.—The first marriage license issued by Register of Deeds William H. Penney undef the new law requir ing that certificate of health "be filed by the contracting parties was issued to H, G. Poole and Miss Z. Annie Bar ker, both of New Hill. Raleigh.—The pen with which Har ry P. Grier, of Iredell county, speaker of the house of representatives, signed the $50,000,000 road bill, has been sent by Mr. Grier to Col T. L. Kirkpatrick, of Charlotte the champion good roads enthusiast of the South. Washington, (Special). Senator Simmons left for New Bern, where he *ill rest until the extra session of con gress convenes. He is worried over the business outlook, sees but little hope for improvement in the cotton and tobacco sections for months to come. Gastonia. —R. B. Babington received a telegram stating that the appropri ation of SIOO,OOO for permanent build ings and's62,ooo for maintenance for the North Carolina Ohtropaedic hos pital had passed both houses of the general assembly and had been rati fied. Lumberton. —A move starred here to change the name, of the town met with very little encouragement. Winston-Salem. Deputy SherifT Watson Joyce, of Stokes county, waj sentenced to the cpunty roads for ltt montfis in municipal court for trans porting illicit whiskey from Stokes to this city. f». Raleigh.—Governor Morrison pard oned Roscoe Hawley, of Johnston county, who was conyicted at the Au gust term of court and sentenced to four months on the public roads for retailing. - ' ( . Winston-Salem. —Winston-Salem is running other cities in the United State® a close race for distinction as the world's greatest leaf tobacco mar ket. This city has sold 57,080,000 pounds thus far this season. 4*s f Charlotte. —Watson Bell, former sporting editor of the Spartanburg kerald. is here to take the sport col umn on The Evening News. Mr. Bell came to Charlotte from the telegraph room of the Norfolk Virginia-Pilot. Concord.—William Wallace, said to have been in a drunken condition, pressed a pistol to his forehead and shot himself to death. The pistol fell from Jailer McCurdy's pocket when he went to Wallace's cell in the coun ty jail. Raleigh—Daclarlng their intention i of fighting the open shop movement in Raleigh to the last ditch, union members of the building* trades em ployed by "open shop" contractors quit their Jobs and announced readi ness to assume contracts for building Mount Airy.—The new Methodist tabernacle built by Rev. G. W. Wil liams, pastor of the Mount Airy circuit on Rockford street opened its doors for its first Sunday school. Gastonia. —Of the many surprises and novel news stories developed in Gaston within recent years there is •one* more interesting than that tell ing of a boy, a 12-year-old farmer boy of Gaston county, winninw first priz» in a better biscuit contest staged by the county home demonstration agent among the county schools. Durham. —George W. Watts, 70, banker and director of a number of large corporations and reputed to'be the wealthiest man In North Carolina, dleT here following an illness of sev eral months. Mr. Watts was born In Cumberland, Md., and had resided in Durham 40 years. Durham. —The Liggett and Myers Tobacco company branch in this city announced abandonment of Ita plan of furnishing , homes for operatives, through the sale of mora than ninety residences to a local trust company. ■ Am ; v . M - About all that can be said for those galoshes the girls are wearing Is that they look like—galoshes. That it is easier to come down thai* go np Is not the idea of consumers watching price movements. Between communism and the rest of the world Is something closely resem bling an Inevitable conflict Germany takes no Interest In the Chinese custom of settling all debt* at the beginning of each year. The 5.000,000 American school chil dren suffering from malnutrition won der when their turns will come. Holdup men are Only one variety of an extensive genus that likes money but is timid about working for it More employment bureaus are be ing favored, but what the fellow out of work needs Is more employment Of course, the girlie lifts >her hir sute ear awnings when the right fel» low comes to whisper soft nothings. HOW DOCTORS TREAT COLDS •AND THE ELO ' « P First Step in Treatment Is a Brisk Purgative With' Calotabs, the Purified and Refined Calomel Tablets that are Nausea less, Safe and Sure. Doctors have found by experience that no medicine for colds and influ enza can be depended upon for full ef fectiveness until the liver is made thor oughly active. That is why tho first step in. the treartment is the new, nausea less cojomel tablets called Calotabs, which are free from the sickening and weakening effects pi the old style calo mel. Doctors also point out the fact that an active liver may go a long way towards preventing influenza and is ona of the most important factors in en abling the patient to successfully with stand an attack and Ward off pneu monia. One Calotab on tho tongue at bed time with a swallow of water —that'a alt No salts, no nausea nor the slight est interference with your eating, pleas ure or work. Next morning your cold has vanished, your'liver is active, your system is purified, and you afe feeling fine, with a hearty appetite for break fast. Druggists sell Calotabs only ia original sealed packages, price thirty five cents. Your money will be cheer fully refunded if you do not find than delightful,—(Adv.) —~~ Yes, Why? "I shall tell mother you have kissed ' me!"' "Why Incite jealousy?" Th« Cuticura Toilet Trio. Having cleared your skin keep it cleat by making Cuticura your every-daj toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per fume. No table Is complete without them* 26c everywhere.—Adv. . m, % Some people fail to recognize oppor tunity when It comes up and shakes hands with them. The holdup man is in the impera tive mood when he requests you to "stand and deliver." IVSTRIKEJ T CIGARETTE No cigarette has > . the saftie delicious flavor as Lucky Strike. Becatise Lucky Strike Is the * toasted cigarette. • . i . • As One Raised From Dead STOMACH PAINS GONE Cmlonto Made Wall "After suffering, ten long months with stomach pains, I have taken Eetonlc and am %ow without any pain whatever. Am as one raised from the dead." writes A. Percifleld. Thousands of stomach sufferers re port wonderful relief. Their trouble is too much acidity and (as which Eatonic quickly takes op and carries out, restoring the stomach to a healthy, active condition. Always car ry a few Ka tonics, take one after eat- In*. food will digest well—yon wfD tod line. Big box costs only s trifle mt» your druggist's guarantee.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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March 17, 1921, edition 1
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