Newspapers / The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, … / May 31, 1899, edition 1 / Page 2
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' s. THE PATH OF SAFETY DR. TALMAGE DISCUSSES OUR NA TIONAL LIFE. ' The Danvera of Monopoly, NiMlIan and Infidelity Pointed Out Chrla tlanltr the Pillar of the Nation's Strength, and Perpetnltr Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1899. WAsmxaTON, May 28. In this dis course Dr. Talmage speaks of someof tne perils; that threaten our American institutions and points out tbe path of safety text. Isaiah lxii, C "Thy land shall be married." ' As the greater includes the leas, so does the circle of future joy around our entire world include the epicycle of our own republic Bold, exhilarant, unique, divine imagery of the text At the close of a veek in which for three days our national capital was a pageant, and all that grand review and bannered pro cession and national anthems could do celebrated peace, it may not be inapt to anticipate the time when the Prince of Peace and the Heir of Universal Do minion shall take possession of this na tion and "thy land shall be married." In discussing the final destiny of this nation, it- makes all the difference in the world whether we are on the way to a funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this subject. In pul pits and on platforms and in places of public concourse I hear so many of the inn filed drums of evil prophecy sourided, as though we were' on the way to na tional interment, and beside Thebes and Babylon and Tyre in the cemetery of dead nations our republic was to be entombed, that I wish you to under stand it is not to be obsequies, but nup tials; not mausoleum, but-carpeted al tar; not cypress, but orange blossoms; not requiem, but wedding march, for "thy land shall be marriecj. " 1 propose to name eomeof .the suitors who are claiming the hand of this re public. This land is so fair, so beau ti f nl, so affluent that it has many suitors, and it will depend much upon your ad vice whether this or that shall be ac cepted or rejected. In the first place, I remark : There is a greedy, all grasping monster who comes in as suitor seeking the hand of ' this republic, and. that monster is known by the name of mo nopoly. His scepter is made out of the iron of the rail track and the wire of telegraphy. He does everything for his own advantage and for the robbery of the people. - Things went on from bad to worse until in the three legislatures of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania lor a long time monopoly decided every thing. If monopoly favor a law, it .; passes ; if monopoly opposes a law it is rejected. Monopoly stands in the rail Toad depot putting into his pockets in one year 200, 000, 000 in excess of all reasonable charges for services. Mo nopoly holds in his one hand the steam power of locomotion and in the other the electricity of swift communication. Monopoly has the Republican party in one pocket and the Democratic party in the other pocket Monopoly decides nominations and elections city elec " tions, state elections, national elections. With bribes he secures the votes of legislators, giving them free passes, giving appointments to needy relatives to lucrative position, employing them as attorneys if they are lawyers, carry ing their goods 15 per cent less if they are merchants, and if he find a case very stubborn as well as very important puts down before him the hard cash of bribery. - . . Not Easily Overthrown. But monopoly is not so easily caught now as when during the term of Mr. Buchanan the legislative committee in one of our states explored and exposed the manner in which a certain railway company had obtained a donation of public land. It was found out that 13 of the senators of that state received $175,000 among them, 60 members of the lower house of that state received between $5, OOO and $10,000 each, the governor of that state received $50,000, his clerk received $5,000, the lieutenant governor received $10,000, all the clerks of the legislature received $5,000 each, while $50,000 were divided among the lobby agent. That thing cn a larger or smaller scale is all the time going on in some of the states in the union, but it is not so blundering as it- used to be, and therefore not eo easily exposed or arrested. Hell you that the overshad owing curse of the United States today j is monopoly. He puts his hand upon ev ery bushel cf wheat, upon every sack of salt, upon every ton of coal, and every man, woman and-child in the United States feels the touch of thaf moneved despotism. I rejoice that in 24 states of the union already anthnonopoly leagues have been established. God speed them in the work of liberation. I have nothing to say against capital ista A man has a right to all the mon ey he can make honestly I have noth ing to say against corporations as such; without them no great enterprise would be possible, but what I do say is that the same principles are to be applied to capitalists and to corporations that are applied to the poorest man and the plainest laborer. What is wrong for me is wrong foe great corporations. If I take from you your property without any adequate compensation. I am a thief, and if a railway damages the property of the people without making any adequate compensation, that is a gigantic theft. What is wrong on a f mall scale is wrong on a large scale Monopoly in England has ground hun dreds of thousands of her best people Into semistarvation and in Ireland has driven multitudinous tenants almost to madness and in the United! States pro- poses to take tne wealth of 60,000,000 or 70.000.000 of people and few silken wallets. put it in a Monopoly, brazen faced. iron finger- ed, vulture hearted monopoly offers his hand to this . republic. He stretches it out over the lakes and up the great xailroada and over the telegraph polef of the continent and says, "Here is my heart and hand: be mine forever." Let the millions of the people north, 'south, east and west forbid the banns of that marriage, forbid them at the ballot box, forbid them on the platform, for bid them by great organizations, for- bid them by the overwhelming senti- ment of an outraged nation, forbid them by the protest of the church of God, forbid them by prayer to high heaven. That Herod shall not have this Abigail It shall not be to all devour ing monopoly that this land is to be married. Another suitor claiming the hand of this republic is nihilism. The Menace of Nihilism He owns nothing but a knife for uni versal cuttbroatery and a nitroglycerin bomb for universal explosion. Hebe- lieves in no God, no government, no heaven and no hell except what he can make on earth! He slew tne czar of Kussia, keeps many a king practically imprisoned, killed Abraham Lincoln, would put to death every king nd president on earth, and If he bad tne power would climb np until he could drive the God of heaven from his throne and take it himself, the universal butcher. In France it is called com munism; in the United States it is called anarchism ; in Russia it is called nihilism, but that last is the most graphic and descriptive term. It means complete and eternal smash up. It would make the holding of ' property a crime, and it would 'drive a dagger through your heart and put a torch to to your dwelling and turn over this whole land into the possession of theft and lust and rapine and murder. Where does this moster live? In all the towns and cities of this land. It offers its hand to this fair republic. It proposes to tear to pieces tne oaiiot box, the legislative hall, the congres sional assembly. It would take this land and divide it up, or rather divide it down. It would give as much to the idler as to the worker, to the bad as to the good. Nihilism I This panther, hav ing prowled across other lands, has set its paw on our soil, and it is only wait ing for the time in which 1o spring upon its prey. It was nihilism that burned the railroad property at Pitts- burg during the great riots: it was ni hilism that slew black people in our northern cities during the war ; it was nihilism that mauled to death the Chi nese immigrants years ago; it is nihil ism that glares out of the windows of the drt.nkeries upon sober people as they go by. Ahl Its power has never yet been tested. I pray God its power may never be fnlly tested. It would, if it had the power, leave every church, chapel, cathedral, schoolhouse and col lege in ashes. Let me say it is the worst enemy of the laboring classes in anv countrv. The honest cry for reform lifted by op- pressed laboring men is drowned out by the vociferation for anarchy. The criminals and the vagabonds who range through our cities talking about their rights, when their first right is the penitentiary if they could be hushed np and the downtrodden laboring men of this country could be heard there would be more bread for hungry chil dren. In this land riot and bloodshed never gained any wages for the people or gathered up any prosperity. In this land the best weapon is not the club, not the shillalah, not firearms, but the ballot Let not our oppressed laboring men be beguiled to coming under the bloody banner of nihilism. It will make your taxes heavier, yourwages smaller, your table scantier, your children hun grier, your suffering greater. Yet this mmusm, wun ieei red or siaugnter. comes forth and offers its hand for this pnesti Ana wnat wm be the music? xuas auar wiu nave to De wnite witn bleached skulls, the oflSciating priest must be a dripping assassin, the music must be the smothered groan of multi- tudinous victims, the garlands must be swisted ox nightshade, the fruits must be apples of Sodom, the wine must be the blood cf St Batholomew's massacra Not It is not to nihilism, the sanguin ary monster, that this land is to be married. . ' ' Dancer From Infldelltr Another suitor for the hand of this nation is infidelity. When the midnight ruffians despoiled the grave of A. T. Stewart in St. Mark's churchyard, everybody was shocked, but infidelity proposes something worse than that the robbing of all the graves of Chris tendom of the hope of a resurrection It proposes to chisel out from the tomt stones of your Christian dead the words, "Asleep In Jesus" and substi tute the words, Obliteration annihi lation." Infidelity proposes to take the letter from the world's Father, inviting the nations to virtue and happiness and tear it up into fragments so small that you cannot read a word of it It pro poses to take the consolation from the broken hearted and the soqthing pillow from the dying. Infidelity proposes to swear in the president of the United States and the supreme court and the governors of states and the witnesses in the courtroom with their right hand on Paine's "Age of Reason' or Voltaire's 'Philosophy of History." j It proposes to take away from this country the book that makes the difference between the United States and the kingdom of Da homey, between American civilization and BorneMan cannibalism. If infideli ty conld destroy the Scriptures, it would in 200 years turn the civilized cations back to semi barbarism, and then from'semibarbarism into midnight savagery until the morals of a menag erie of tigers, rattlesnakes and chim panzees would be better than the morals of the shipwecked human race. The only impulse in the right direc tion that this world has ever had has come from the Bible. It was the mother of Roman law and of healtbfnl juris prudence. That book has been the mother of all reforms and all charities mother of English magna charta and rPTn hllr Shall tha hanna Ka nKAnloimo f UU ,J . . ' . - . I If so,, where shall the marriage altar God" Wnai d 5 theuguenots drafter BW this popu !wt And raV,n irriii k ii 1 j". ,f I I?.0 .frt lation ? Ah, that shows yon have not Am erica n Declaration of Independence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that Holy hook in nis nana, stood before an in fidel club in Paris and read to them out of the prophecies of Habakkuk, and the infidels, not knowing what book it was, declared it was the best poetry they had ever heard. That book brought George Washington down on his knees in he snow at Valley Forge and led the dying Prince Albert to ask some one to eing "Rock of Ages. 7 I; tell yon that the worst attempted crime of the century is the attempt to destroy this book. Yet infidelity, loath- eome, stenebful, leprous, pestiferous, rotten monster, stretches out its hand. ichorous with the second death, to take the! hand of this republic. It stretches it out through seductive magazines, and through lyceum lectures and through" caricatures of religion. It asks for all that part of the continent already fully settled and the two-thirds not yet oc- cupied. It says: "Give me all east of tbej Mississippi, with the keys of the church'and with the Christian printing presses then give me Wyoming, give me Alaska give me Montana, give me Colorado, give me all the states west of the! Mississippi, and I will take those places and keep them by right of pos session long before the gospel can be fully intrenched. Ana inis suitor presses nis case ap pallingly. Shall the banns of that mar riage be proclaimed? No!" say the home missionaries of the west, a martyr band of whom the world is not worthy, toiling amid fatigues and malaria and starvation. "No I not if we can help it By what we and our children have suf fered, we forbid the banns of that mar riage!" "No!" say all patriotic voices,' Vour institutions were bought at too dear a price and were defended at too great a sacrifice to be so cheaply sur rendered. .Nor says the God f Bunker Hill and Independence hall and Gettysburg, "I did not start this nation for i'snch a farce "Nnl" rrv 1ft flhft voices, "to infidelity this land shall not u uiurrieu i , j 'Christ m the Bridegroom. But there is another suitor that pre sents his claim for the hand of this re public. He is mentioned in the verse following my text where it says, "As the bridegroom rejoiceth over the bride. so shall thy God rejoice ever thee." It is not my figure it is the figure of the Bible. Christ is so desirous to have this world love him that he stops at no hu miliation of simile. He compares his grace to spittle on the eyes of the blind uiau. x-io uuiuutirtH uiuiueix 10 a Den gathering the chickens, and in my text he compares himself to a suitor begging a nana in marriage. Does this Christ, the king, deserve this land? Behold Pi late's hall and the insulting expectora tion on the face of Christ. Behold the Calvarean massacre and the awful hemorrhage of five wounds. Jacob serv- eu 4 years ior rtacnei, our unrisfi. my Lord, the king, suffered in torture 33 years to win the love of this world. As often princesses at their very birth are pledged in treaty of marriage to princes or kings of earth, so this nation at its birth was pledged to Christ for divine- marriage. Before Columbus and his 120 men embarked on the Santa Maria. the Pinta. and the Nina, for their won- derful voyage, what was the last thing they did ? They eat down and took the holy eacrament of the Lord Jesus Christ After they caught the first glimpse of this country and the gun of one ship had announced it to the other vessels! that land had been discovered, what! was the song that went up from all the three decks? "Gloria inexcelsis." Aft4 er Columbus and his 120 men had step? ped from the shin's deck to th snlid around, what' did thev dr? Tho .oil the Holland refugees do after they had landed in New York? What did the pilgrim fathers do after they landed in New England ? With bended knee and uplifted face and heaven besieging ifray- er. thev took Possession of this rnntinont for God. How. was the first American congress opened? By prayer, in I the name of Jesus Christ From its birth this nation was pledged for holy mar riage with Christ ! And then see how good God has been to.usi Just open the map of the con tinent and see how it is shaped for im measurable prosperities. Navigable riv ers, more in number and greater than of any other land, rolling down on all sides into the sea, prophesying large manufactures and easy commerce. Look at the great ranges of mountains tim bered with wealth on the top and sides, metaled with wealth underneath. One hundred and eighty thousand square miles of coal. One hundred and eighty thousand square miles of iron. The land so contoured that extreme weather hardly ever lasts more than three days extreme heat or extreme cold, rni mate for the most part bracing and fa vorable for brawn and. brain. All fruits, all minerals, all Jiarvests. Scenery dis playing, an autumnal pageantry that no land on earth pretends to rival. No South American earthquake. No Scotch mistjB. No London fogs. No Egyptian plagues. No Germanic divisions. The people of the United States are happier than any people on earth. It is the tes timony cf every man that has traveled abroad. For the poor more sympathy, for the industrious more opportunity. Oh, bow good God was to our fathers, and how good he has been to us and our children. To him blessed be his mighty name to him of cross and tri umph, to him who still remembers the prbyjer cf the Huguenots and Holland refugees and the pilgrim fathers, to him shall this land be married. Oh, you Christian patriots, by your con tributions and your prayers hasten on the fulfillment of the text ' The Immigration Question. We have been turning an important leaf in the mighty tome of our national history. One year at the gates of this continent over 500,000 emigrants arriv ed. I was told by the commissioners of emigration that the probability was ud vwtiatiuK iucv laaueti in xne varounas7 wnatdid ( ( I The THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST. Are ufllOV LAUUVJ. Salesmen : Floqk Tog- i .... i . i . i - J. W. Crawford, fWV H, Bees, Harry B. Donnell, Will. B.iBankln. Jo:i T. Bee. hat in that one year 600,000 emigrants would arrive at the different cates of :ommerce. Who were they? the pau pers of Europe? No. At Kansas City, I Was told hv CPTitlpmon xvrin ha A m-L portunity for' large investigation, that a great multitude had gone through there, averaging in worldly estate $800. I was told by an officer of the govern ment, who had opportunity for authen tic investigation, that thousands i and thousands had gone, averaging $1,000 in possession each. I was told by the commission of emigration that 20 fami lies that had recently arrived brought $85,000 with them. Mark you, fami lies, not tramps. Additions to the na tional wealth, not subtractions there from I saw some of them reading their. Bibles and their hymn books, thanking God for his kindness in ! helping them cross the sea. Some of them had Christ in the steerage all across the waves,! and they will have Christ in the; rail trains which at 5 o'clock every after-! noon start for the great west. They are being taken by the commission of emi gration in New York, taken from the vessels, protected from the Shy locks and the r sharper, and in the name of God and humanity passed on to their destination, and there they will turn your wildernesses into gardens, if you will build for them churches and estab lish for them schools and send to them Christian missionaries. Are you afraid this continent is go- been to California, that shows yon have not been to Oregon, that shows that you have not been to Texas. A fishing smack today on Lake Ontario might as well be afraid of being crowded by other shipping before night as for any one of the next ten generations of Americans to be afraid of being over crowded by foreign populations in this country. The one state of Texas is far larger than all the Austrian empire, yet the Austrian empire supports 35,- 000,000 people. The one state of Texas is larger than all France and France supports 86,000,000 people.- The one state of Texas far surpasses in size the Germanic empire, yet the Germanic empire "supports 41,000,000 people. I tell you the great want of the western states is more population. While some people may stand at the gates of the city, saying, "Stay back 1" to foreign populations, I press out as far beyond those gates as I can press out beyond them and beckon to foreign nations, saying, "Come, come, all ye people who are honest and industrious and God loving 1" But say you, "I am so afraid that they will bring their prejudices for foreign governments iand plant them hera " Absurd. They are sick of the governments that have op pressed them and they want free Amer ica 1 Give them the great gospel of "wel come. Throw around them all Christian Hospitalities. They will add their in ausiry and hard earned wages to this country, and then we will dedicate all to Christ and "thy land shall be mar uui wnere snail tne marriage auar dai Let it be the Rocky moun tains, when, through artificial and mighty irrigation, all their tops shall be covered, as tbey will be. with vine yards and orchards and erainfiVld Then let the Bostons and the New Yorks and the Charlestons of the Pacific coast come to the marriage altar on one side, and then let the Bostons and the New Yorks and the Charlestons of the At lantic coast come to the marriage altar on the other side, and there between them let this bridcrof nations kneeL and then if the organ of the loudest thunders that ever shook the Sierra Nevadas on the one side or moved the foundations of the Alleghanies on the other aide should open full diapason of wedding march that organ of thunders could not drown the voice of him who Feather ether." same in hot weather people look for thine cool. w Our linen Crash Suits the delight of everybody that isvIooki comtort, elegance ot ht and a good, durabl ment; Thev are worth from 1 $3.00 to $5.50 per They are the best, and are guaranteed shrink in washing. STROUD would take the hand of this bride of nations, saying, "As a bridegroom re joiceth over a bride, so thy God 'rejoic eth over thee." At that marriage ban quet the platters shall be of Nevada sil ver, and the chalices of California gold, and the fruits of northern orchards, and the spices of southern groves, and the tapestry of American manufacture, and the .congratulations from all 'the free nations of earth and from all the tri-. umpbant armies of heaven. "And thy land shall be married." Kate Chase Spracrue. Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague, whose un fortunate circumstances are constantly appealing to her friends, has recently had reason to learn something of the good beartedness'of Secretary Gage. Her case was brought before him, and he gave her a place in the treasury de partment . Mrs. Sprague still holds possession of Edgewood, which was her father's home. This place is only a few miles out of Washington, but all her efforts to make it profitable have been unavail ing. She has tried farming, raising cowe and chickens and gardening with out success, the outlay in wages for this sort of thing being far in excess of the profita Her eldest daughter, Ethel, who mar ried a physician in Baltimore, has re turned to vaudeville, as her husband is not able to support her. Mrs. Sprague I has their child with her, an additional care. Her estate is now free from debt. uuu nuu iuo IUV.UUJO UUUI IUD UlSUQ 11 IS .1 ' w -v 1.1 hoped Mrs. Sprague will be able to live V Alii llArn K Ol hrOr in comfort. Washington Correanond- ence. I have been a sufferer from chronic. diarrhoea ever since the war and have used all kinds of medicines for it. At last I found one remedy that has been a success as a cure, and that is Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemedy. P. E. Grisham, Gaars Mills, La. For sale br C. E. Holton. Rudyard Kipling is too sham for the autograph hunters. He never takes notice of letters from members of this fraternity unless the mi88ive8 contain stamps and Jhen he simply returns the stamps in empty envelopes directed by a typewriter. Paul Perry, of Columbus. Oa.. mif- fered agony for thirty Tears, and thpn cured bis Piles bv ualni? 1) Wirr. .Witch Hazel Salve. It heals inlnrl. and skin diseases like maple. How ard Gardner. There are four active candidates for the speakership of the House of Representatives General Hen person and Repreientative Hop. kins, from Western StntPo nd Representatives Sherman and Payne, both of New York. TO CURE A COLD IX OWE DAT Take Laxative R DrueJT18ta refnnrl mnno Quinine Tablets. All ir it fails to Cure. 2e f ne genuine hu L. B. Q. on each tablet. - . . a A new set of rules and regula tions have been adopted for the government of the state peniten tiary. Under the new rules the superintendent is shorn of much power. j J, Richmond, Va.. June 10, Goose Gbeas Liniment CoGkkbxsboro.C. ji.ril1"6 you aent me one .rr r; vwu5 urea Liniment to be uaed In our stable amongst our horses, and we ifAl ",,e thaLwe hve thisexclualTelr j Ince reeeifing it, and would state frankly that we have neTer liad anTthine that arave ns as pood satisfaction. We Eare used it on Cut? Bruises, Sore Necks, Scratches rat nearly everr ?hat xvJ?J?D haTe ncl U h orkeJ charms. e need more at once. Please i.tm snow ir you have it put ut in anr ir.iZii IZ.'i.Z or anr lanrer nukim .k! r"'fc? -c r"t' and also prices. VourstruiT. John M. Crt.r. i ours truly. )II sortie. Ing fo not t 8 Suit. 4- - 300 South Elm St., Greensboro CAPACITV, 10,000 JOBS n A- UK, so 8mp. Wlri nuk Ih. m'. r .W. m I in fnmit m !. lw't , i, i. t,..t ; lata bovtac t !,.. In wilrr i. . t I.. . J,,,. i "ROC MILI."li.l, tr -A I. rHf ., , . Hut Ih. ,it,t M.. U, .nl 1- t. t III' j A WAT FRO THE MIDI" n.ki r 'V" ..: t ,. 4. . hold If ftnl rlt.. dnlin i Jr .... M M j la yavr , rlw dlrwt. j ! ROCK HILL BUGGY CO., Rock Hi', SC.'. a. G. NEWELL & CO., Agents, GUEENMItOUO, N. C. 'WEALTH IDEAS in cffin. Istiskt'i lii'.iuit ill ui'jai Wul&a City list cs rt;yr. tl t9-4i. Wi eu ki'.p jn. COPP - rOUUtllUlll limiMU! n, h J a. ' This condcnMJ M hednle in j.ul li't.e J i to lr. ft formation anl if Miljirt notice to the iublic. 'j Train leave GreensUiro, N. .; 7:05 m -No. 87 daily. Wa-hir.ft . n A trestern Limited fr hail.it . m 1 .....r,l. ...tit). Jl'l I "'' Connects at hail tt- f-r o.lm.N- ;; J savannan. jacKiMninr - ti.,l. I'll man Sliil,cr w lnrfc - New York to ili'mpin-:. ' Dining Car and A e.-ti V.t. 1 to Atlanta. r it and all iinl X'Uth. nr- Afheville, Knoxvillfiin l ' " sleeper New Yik t;i - 8:10 a.m. No. "da; Fv.ly 1" and locnil station-. U:06ir. m.-N. ;!' " r' Mail lor Wafhinjrt""'" ,:" Ncrth. CarrifA tr r-i Rora Jki flet Meei-T N' w ' " ' ' Jacksonville to t I .OI O. III. " t, .i I:..-- i. sleeping Car on M"ri''i.i Southern raciflc. - v. - ! 7:24 p7m. N. '.' Mail for Chariot?' t a i : ; A- .' - ; J South and outll, -t for Col u in hi a. A u i: u and local station-. I Buffet Sleeir Nt w "rf; ', York to .larkM!!:-: ham: Charlo-.te to .M -SJeejr Wednilav -' Cisco. 10:43 p. m.-No. '" QAiithnn.lvm I.lllll't ' ' Iioiht .North. ' Washington and New 6:45 p. m.-No. 7 Uai!y points. 8:10 a. in.-N". " d.ti'v. and lo'l Doihtj. ( ' ' ' '"I t -V. for TarbotB. Jivrt- 1W borofor Newbern at Xo7l6 leav? (irt--Raleigh, liohb-boi on .1 lrt ..1 10:50 p. m.-No. 12 y and points ea-t. i ' .'ir to orloiiu -fi-ls a m No. 1C n. JiV . Daily exceut Sunday t Winrton-Salem. . j , w-;r First sections ' -''- ,,,,: carry paenj: erf lictwcen J :neauieu to fctop. illt TV. Cta jtn thial ef umitili w piu;:1 tr ysar 1 dm : tltf ar krtif r BtfoTi upljiil tot UU'A, fit n? itnl A f.OMKA.r. W. A. TURK. iJU-r-- AVu ttC A.'t v- r By I.e. West. B.L. Vro,i.'
The Greensboro Patriot (Greensboro, N.C.)
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May 31, 1899, edition 1
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