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II. 1. DIG DISCIPLINING NEGRO TROOPS. It SPEECHES MADE DENOUNCING. IHE PEOPLE OF THE SOUTH. HIE Gen. Wood Removes Them Temporarily anij , Threatens to Disarm Them. ' a. Santiago, Nov. 17. General Wood decided today to remove the three negro regiments . with the Immunes (Twenty-third 'Kansas and , Eighth Illinois; the members ot which caused Monday's riot); irom' San Luis, and station them on die tjillsi five miles from town. - . I ' : None of the men will be, allowed to go into ihe town except on import ant buincs. (general Wo;jd told the officers that unless they" speedily got the men into shape for duty he. would disarm -thrm... General Wood will put on the.i-iUnd, near the entrance tonight, to denounce the action cf to' the, rMrbr. the regiment' which the white people at Wilmington, Nj contributtd tbo largesjt number of menfco Monday's mob. TWELVE MR GROUND 10 DEATH "UNDER - IRON . WHEELS yesterday: ' FOR BASEBALL IN CUBA. "SOUTHERN LADIES TOO EASY TO INSULT." What Do the White Republicans of North Caro : - lina Think of This? If Such Speeches Had Been Made in the South the "Orators'' ' Would Be Done Away With In Short Order. , - ' $ ' '. New York, Novi 17. Despite the : best efforts of its organisers, the meeting of negroes : at Cooper Union B. v VVHITE WORKMEN DISCHARGED. And Negro Laborers Substitute at Wilmington ; , by McKinley's Agents. C, evinced a spirit ol revenge. , JX LUC SLICEUK;3ni.ll, UiUUV-l - ate in remarks, but the others wmcn rsar;oused.th most enthusiasm) spoke of "the day to come, sooner or later, when the blacks should revenge themselves for all the persecutions they have undergone," and one speech was along the very lines which resulted in the Wilmington riots. - An amendment to the resolutions which' advocate retaliatory measures was smothered. The meeting was called to order by T. Thomas Fortune, the negro editor, who introduced ex-Minister to Hayti Barrett, as -chairman. Letters of sympathy were read from several t persons. Then Fortune made a speech, in which he appealed against the "mob ocracy ol the South," to the better feeling of this great country. When he asked how negroes should demand their rights, the an- swer came from nil parts of the hall : "Fight for them ! fight ! ! fight ! ! ! " Fortune attempted to calm the . crowd, but a man yelled: "No, no; kill 'em ! , Kill - 'em ! Give them . what they give us ! " . Fortune finally got order and con tinued, as follows : "I can't blame any man for leehng some resentment, but he's a. fool who ! butt's his head against a stone watl. Let the white men of the South pro claim themselves a lawless element. l I W ichinrrf nn M nir X T A ith fho Lawson N. ; Fuller was the next . speaker, and he expressed the opin- reorganization of the fifty-six Con ion that "the Southern ladies are too Sress General W. R. Cox, ot North easily insulted, anyway." - Carolina, secretary of the Senate, will Joseph D. lJeaker, president ot the certainly be relieved of his, duties. His successor cannot be predicted. One thing is certain, and that is that The Men Were on ; the Track When they Were Run Down, by a Local Passenenger Train Thick Smoke and Fog Veiled The. Doom Ap- . " proaching. , .,'" 1 , ' ' - ' - New York, Nov. 1 8--While a gang of twenty track '.-hands " were at work upon the Pennsylvania railway's line over the ; Hackensack. near . Jersey City, they were run down by a local passenger train. Twelve of the workmen were killed outright and '.- . : . ' . '-- ...'.. ' -'I ' five were seriously injured, - 'Qnlv three unhurt. The dead men llutd in Jersey City. r i William Quirk, the foreman of the gangv of workmen made thw state ment : ' - "The smoke and fog are to blame. My men were in a cloud of , smoke when the calamity came upon us. . 1 had Michael. Lawless stationed about fifty yards ahead of the gang to give us warning Lawless was struck first and cut. to pieces. My men were mowed down like grass." , Engineer Vannostrand said : "I felt sure that the track was clear and had no idea that In that cloud of smoke and fog just ahead of me Wilmington, N. C , Nov. 17. The white ship-carpenters, caulker and other workmen, employed at the United States government yard 1 and dock here, have been discharged an negro workmen j employed in iheir places by the United States authori ties. j The men refused to work on Thurs day last; when their homes would by. their doing so have been left : unpro tected, but .nothing was said about discharging them until today, when Capt: William E. Chaighill, the en- were twenty laborers who did not gineer in charge, dismissed the entire know ot my coming. I got within force., ' 100 yards when my - locomotive Great indignation is felt at this ac- struckthe outpost, Michael Lawless, tion of the government. I put on brakes at once, but in an The board ot aldermen hasauthor- other second I was upon the main Ted Sullivan. Plans to Take Rational s Leasrne Teams to Havana. Ted Sullivan appeared in Chicago the other, day after several weeks of. retire ment up in Wisconsin. Whenever Ted is in seclusion for any period, his base ball acquaintances know he will reap pear with some original scheme relating to the - national game, and this time there is no exception. to the rule, i - The old National league and American association manager is now at work on a plan to invade Cuba with a team of National league baseball players the ap proaching winter. "If Cuba is to be Americanized,?' says Ted, "one of the first things it needs is baseball.' Sulli-" van says he has a personal acquaintance with General Fitzhugh Lee,' whom he met when he was manager of the Bich-' mond team, and he thinks Lee will be governor of the island and a friend of his plan to introduce baseball in Ha vana, lie' also relies on the presence of 50,000 American troops, needing . them, not to protect the umpires, but to pat ronize the games. i He does not anticipate any ill feeling toward the American players, but thinks they will be well received. He has not yet made' any effort to pick his teams, but will take about 20 players, several from the Baltimore team. Sullivan has a friend in Tampa, Fla.v through whom, he announces, he already has secured grounds in Havana. He expects to play at points between Chicago and Florida, leaving Chicago if he can by the middle of November. Chicago Tribune. OASTORXA. Bam the . You m A!waVs flight Signature of HANDSOME COLLEGE SUIT. The Fasins of the Rough Rider. the herd has been' corralled and. shipped to - Spain. ,' - ; ' - -. , Much rhanks to you, rough rider! You've roundel 'em upi and we shan't compJidn ' -If, after you;- months in the sun and rain. You elect to 'cfive jour peut fotgs rein , - - : Whoop it up, rough rider! Fill up and be.frisky on coffin paint : ; , . If. you ke, rough rider; - - We never supposed that your. brand was saint.- ,' . . "We wanted" a killer with nary taint ' Of bashful forefinger, and none there ain't ' ; In you. rough rider! - Remember the warning your colonel spoke You know him. rough rider "For a week' or. two-you're a .damned fine bloke; .... ' Then if you stay drunk you're a no 'count ' - soak!." . Now, while you're a hero, old heart of oak. Farewell, rough rider! New York Sun... ' W 1 M(r'jy Vyyjli; j , And a Havana Cljnr Afterward. ; For hi-e lhAukf giving " dinner this year Uncle Sam will try some of. his Manila coffee evf eetoued with a little of his Porto Eican sugar. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. TlTANTED several trustworthy V Y persons in this state to manage our business in their, own and nearby Counties. , It i mainly office work con ducted at home.- Salary straight 900 a year and expf nses definite, bonafide no more, no less salary.; Monthly $75 References. Enclose se1l'-adiressed stamped envelope, Herbert E." Hess, Pi est., Dep. M. Chicago. .. - The Kind You Have Always Bought, and 'which ha been , I in use for over 30 years, 4ias borne the signature of and has Tcen made unaer nis per- ftf- ?- sonal supervision since its infancy. f'GbicUAZ a linw nn on to dpeive vou in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. '4 ?ORTO RICO'S CHIEF NEED. 1 What is CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops i and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It , contains neither Opium, Morphine nor : other Narcotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms ' and allays Feverishness.V It cures Diarrhoea and Wind ' Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. 1 The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. . , GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of ized the chief ol police to add two mounted policemen to the force. These will be placed permanently on nighrduty to patrol the city;-- HartV Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Creosote and the Hypo phosphites, if faithfully used, is a specific in the treatment of Weak Lungs, Consumption, Bronchitis, etc Leading physicians recommend it. Sold by B. W. Hargrave. gang, and my locomotive cut them down belore I could stop the train " There were harrowing scenes when the bodies reached the Pennsylvania : - : railroad yard in Jersey City. The relatives of the dead men were be side themselves with grief " Half a dozen women were overcome and had to be taken home bv the police State Summers. League of Connecti cut, demanded a union ot the colored race. : Then George W. Brown, )one of the negroes who escaped lrom North Carolina onjy to meet , violence in Virginia, was introduced. But , he had nothing to say. . Dr. Scott, a preacher irom North Carolina, made a speech which a white Southerner present said : "He would not have lived to finish it if he had' made it in the South." ; He pointed out the high iavor in which the, blacks were held " before the war, and said the same would be true now if not for the increasing prosperity . of the blackV, and other expressions. - V H. Brooks, another negro "preacher," said in the course of his speech : "Let us keep cool. .Keep a "I don't know, there may be oth ers," he said, "but I' have used Par ker's Tolu Cough Syrup, in my family for years, and would not be without it." He knew better than to buy the inferior preparation that was being urged upon him. Parker's Tolu Cough Syrup has no equal. It will immediately relieve any Cough, or Cold,' Whooping Cough, Sore Hoarsness, Croup, Bronchitis, and ueneral tox will not be succeedea Kinarea ailments. Contain no m by any North Carolina Republican, jurious ingredients, is pleasant to take An eastern representative Senator and a safe remedy for children. Sold who is in the city, said today that by B. W. Hargrave.' General Cox held the confidence and esteem of tlie entire Senate, and might Washington, Nov. 18. Ensign J. t reasonably be considered the most E. Walker, of North Carolina, who popular secretary the Senate has ever served through the war with Spain had. This Senator says, if it were on the cruiser Nasnville, has been possible for any Democrat to remain ordered, to join the criuser Panther, in office under the organization of the which , is to proceed - to San Juan, Senate, General Cox would be the Porto Rico, to be utilized as station first choice of the Representative and ship. This means the future of Ensign Sergeant-at,Arms Bright would be a 1 v aiK" s m m- omnern waiers. 11c win uc LiJiiU'iu uuiiiuianu . ui - inc William K. Vanderbllt, Jr., Will Study Amid Cotly Surroundlnaf. Before Willie K, -Vanderbilt, Jr., re turns to Harvard hia new suit of rooms in West Morley hall will have been made ready for him. Moxley hall has recently been bnilt and is owned by Charles P. Wetmore of New York. It is the finest of the new Harvard dormi tories, and young Vanderbilt's room will be the most magnificent in the col lege. He planned the decorations himV self. The living apartment consists of a study and a large alcove. These two rooms are finished in sage oaks. The woodwork alone will cost $1,000, It is in the old English style. The carved paneling reaches five feet high. Then comes two feet of green Japanese cloth, and then woodwork which reaches the ceiling. The floors are of hard wooi. A large sage oak window seat has been built in the study and the alcove has a magnificent oak bookcase built in the wall. The furnishings are to be in the old English style, rather in the dark order and somber; This will be relieved by a hallway entrance which is finrehed in crimson. .Willie K. Vender bilt re turns to college as a sophomore. He is a member of the Polo club, the swellest freshman society, has won - cups at the shooting club, is a member of Alpha Delta Phi and is business manager of The Harvard Advocate, the oldest of the Harvard magazines. He is as popu lar a man as there is in the class of 1901 and is as simple in his tastes as the average Harvard man. New York World. ' , . 1' Valuable to Women. Especially valuable to women is Browns' Iron Bitters. Backache vanishes, headache disappears, strength takes the place of weakness, and the glow of health readily comes to the pallid cheek when this won derful remedy is taken. For sickly children or overworked men it has no equal. No home should be without this famous remedy. Browns' Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers. , IDEAS ORMR. CHAMBERLAIN. There Mnt Be. Currency Reform Be , fore Great Progress is Possible. : Before iLny important progress can be made in Porto Rico there is one ques tion which must be settled by the American government. . This is the 'Question of the currency. The Porto Bican standard of values is now the sil ver peso, containing 100 centavos, worth $1 were silver at the ratio of .16 to . 1. It contains approximately the same amount i of ' silver as our dollar, but it is not redeemable in gold. Hence gold is at a premium, and this premium is, of . course,- unstable. :. The bullion value of the peso is scarcely more than one-third of a dollar, and the :Porto Bican government, which has stamped it as a dollar, is no more. The peso must be retired, and the question up permost in the minds of the business community in San Juan is the figure at which the United . States government intends to redeem it. , . : When the Americans landed at Ponce, they needed the Porto Bican currency, and for a few days the banks and the tnowlia nta naro Q nocna frr AttOi rtnlla-r in gold. Then the premium suddenly AlWciyS S fell from 100 to 75 per cent. There was an apparent agreement among ; those possessed of pesos to hold on to them if a higher premium were demanded. Gen eral Miles endeavored to keep up the rate by having the custom house make the exchange at two for one, but the customs receipts were not sufficient to supply even the government's needs. Private citizens were obliged to take 75 per cent. At Guayama General Brooke arbitrarily established the rate of ' ex change at 100 per cent, but the mer chants only observed it when purchases were made. You could not get money changed at better than 75. Here in San Juan 75 is te best that can be obtained, and many of the Porto Bicans maintain that the rate will go still lower, some predicting that it will reach 50, and they declare that if the government "at tempts to redeem the pesos at only its bullion value they will make a fight. Thus the whole ' business community is unsettled and must be until - the ques tion is settled. - Fix onoe for all the cur rency of the island, and the prosperity which will follow will soon heal the sores of the war. New York Sun. , S7 The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TUB CCNTAUn COMMMV. T STMBCT. Mf VONK IT. - - - ' ST A R JL ? , - r '"'& ! V " T:i;v . tv : . Popular i - Resort. O ;' COME AND SEE HOW WE ARE KEEPINV UP TATION OF THE HOUSE. ..... 4 c - D E T3 C D s o C -a c f- c c ' a x . THE REPU- THE BEST OF EVERYTHING INtTHE WAY OF ' Whiskey, Brandy, Wine f Beer. FIRST-CLASS POOL AND BILLIARD TABLES. close second. Senator; Pritchard's patronage will be materially increased by the Rep resentative coming into control, and he will probably have several good grip on yourself, and your teeth tight Psitions t his disposal closed. Win peaceluHy if you can, but if not well, ' if. there's nothing else to do, if you've got to die, don't die by yourself." (Cheers and yells.) The Wilmington negro, Manly, did fiot show up. , When a man is suffering from an aching head-a shifrgish body when his muscles; are lax and lazy his brain dull and his stomach disdaining food- he will, if wise heed " these warnings and resort to the right remedy, before it is too late. "Parker's Sarsapa rilla" the "king ok blood purifi ers," makes the appetite keen and hearty, , invigorates the liver, purifies the blood and fills it with life giving el--' ements of the food. It is a wonderful blood maker and flesh builder. Sold by B. W. Hargrave. ; It is the programme of the Repub licans to break the rule of long stand ing with reference to division of Sen ate spoils, and in this way Senator Pritchard will get the positions to give to his favorite henchmen. f f E E P your blood pure, your appe- m. tite good, your digestion perfect by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, which has power to keep you WELL, A Good One Assured. The Steel Rail Deal Off. New York, Nov. i8.The negoti ations between the leading steel-rail manufacturers of the country looking to a partition of territory and control of prices have been abandoned, i It is understood that the chief ob jection to the proposed arrangement was the Carnegie Steel Company, Nevertheless t there is a disposition among the steel rail manufacturers to' Jive up to th: ;rices. The indications are that there will be no -serious-war , between the manufacturers, though neosions are off. , , ', A cup of muddy ooffee is . not whole some, neither is a bottle . of' muddy medicine. One way to know a reliable and skillfully-prepared' blood-purifier is by itsfreedom from sediment: Ayerg Sarsaparilla is alwnj s brifjht and spark ln'ranet is an extract and not a There are so many able men elect ed to the legislature this year that it will be .hard to select the speaker. Among the prominent- men elected any one of whom would make a good presiding-, officer, may be mentioned Locke Craig, Lee S. Overman, D. H. McLean, II. G. Connor, Geo. Roun- tree, Herriot Clarkson, J. D. Bou shall, H. C. Wall and ' others. No mistake will be made in the selection of either of the above named gentle men or of some others whose names ..';. . '. : ..... S. . . ; ..... we do not recall just now. How the two last , legislatures will shrink into nothingness-when compared with the one thati will meet in January. 1 he majoritv ot the last two , bodies were miserable pie hunters with no'regard for the best interest of the Stale while the next will' be composed o the very best etas ol North Caro lina's, citizenship.- As we taid in ihe beginninjj.'i there is so much good material to ..select : lrom that it will be hard to select a speaker ol the House but fvhoever-he may be, he will pre side with dignity aritt wiif. reflect hon or upon himself ard the - State. 'anther. ANARCHY IN PORTO RICO. Bands of Brigands Organize For Robbery and Rapine. Washington, Nov. 1 8. -The Cabi net session today was devoted to a arge extent, to consideration of com plaints that have reached the War Department, alleging that a state of I practical anarchy prevails in Porto Rico. These comolaints asserted America's Deatiny Abroad and Eng land's Friendly Sentiments. The Bight Hon.- Joseph Chamberlain, who is now with his wife's relatives in Dan vers, : Mass., in a recent interview with a Boston Post reporter, has put some of his ideas into new phrases. He is quoted as saying: ' t "Yonr country is growing. You can't resist its development. It is not suppos able that Washington would have main tained the samo attitude if conditions had essentially altered, as they must have altered in 100 years. Your consti tution does not forbid growth or expan sion. Your position in the Philippines is almost parallel with the one we faced in Egypt. Lord Herschell said, 'Why not get out?' But I said, 'How can we get out?' " Cuba, Mr. Chamberlain said, was en tirely different. The people there had some idea of government. He said he did not believe in a protectorate. "Do the - job thoroughly," he said. When asked if - he thought the regard which he held for America extended to all classes in England, he said: " Yes, from the. man with the dinner pail to the lord in the banquet hall. But," he add- that the lawless : elements in Porto Rtco are committing depredations of ed "tne recent change is all on your the gravest character, and that the seriousness of the situation is increased by reason of the fact that United States troops stationed in the island have likely been guilty of yross mis conduct. The Cabinet took cogniz ance of the reports, and on adjourn ment Secretary Alger, at the instance of the : President, cabled General Brooke inquiring as to the accuracy of the complaints. . The most serious allegations are against brigands and lawless elements in the, smaller towns away : from ,the coast. It is said that taking advant age ot the unsettled state N of the country due to the transfer of the Government from Spain-to ihe Unittd Suites, b.uxjk ol men have organized for robbery and rapine, burning houses and fi'anttion. - ar-d levying tribute -'upon' the' pt"p!- wherever possible.; In one av, u is said, that they made a raid on a small town of about l ,500 inhabitants, fittt-t n miles from the nearest troops and burned and destroyed propctty to a consider able value. General Brooke, at Sari Juan, has br:en instructed to use thV full stiengtii of the, mi titary . forces at his command for the supprtgsion ol rioting ana the restoration of peace part. It is not a new growth with us. You have only recognized it now but it has been there long." What the - instructions to the Paris peace commissioners may be it would probably be premature to disclose. The fact that our best two battleships are to be serit to Dewey, however, can have but one interpretation. Philadelphia Record. J - One of the Benefits of No Education. The. young men in the colleges will not derive much encouragement from the fact that Jockey, Maher, 17 years of age, has signed a contract which guarantees him $10,000 a year. Wash ington Post. . The artist who is in search J torture, and poses depicting sunenng, need not go to the Cnristian martyrs old. it he could see through the into tens of thousands of homes all over this land,, he would see women undergoing1 tortures in silence without complaining, uciure waien - me brief ordeals of the martyrs pale into nothingness. .' No one but a aiHini woman can ten -yJlJ the story of the despair, and the despondency endured by women who TkTY 1 28 ?M,t :) GIVE. US A CALL (: Proprietor. .! - jMq. F. Bruton, President . f i. W. E. VVarken, Cashier. Frank VV. Barnfs, Vice President. I lie First national Bank' oiWilsoD. Capital, - - - . . - $51,000. Surplus and undivided profits, 10,000. "We Strive to be Conservative, Accurate' and Accommodating." carry a daily burden of ill-health1 and pain because of disorders and derangement of the delicate and important organs that are distinctly ; feminine. 5 One of the worst effects of troubles of this kind is upon the nervous system. The tortures so bravely endured completely and effectually shatter the nerves. Dr. Pierce's u Favorite Pre scription is an unfailing cure for all weak ness and disease of the feminine organ ism. A It makes it strong and healthy. It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. It checks exhausting drains and tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood and motherhood. Good medicine dealers sell it, and have nothing ."just -as -good." '.:-!::'; (?''" ' " Since my last child was born, thirteen years ago, I have suffered from uterine trouble," writes Mrs. Paul Devraine, of Jellico, Campbell Co.,' Tenn. , "I consulted several doctors and took much medicine, but found no relief. I had -very bad health for twelve years. Every month I was in bed a week before the monthly period and a week after. I was obliged to keep in bed for four months last summer.- I was just like a corpse. I lost . twenty-six pounds in four months. I was coughing so much I was con sidered in consumption. I suffered severely from pains in my back, bearing down pains in the womb, chills and cold sweats. After taking four bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Iis coverys my coughing stopped, and alter six : bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription my periods became regular and were passed with out pain. Now I am fleshy, more I so than ever ce fore. My neighbors are surprised to see me in such good health after having seen me o low." - . . .- ..- - John F. Bruton, VV. J. Davis, DIRECTORS: Frank VV. Barnes, George Hackney, James Ed. YVoodard. Jonas Oettinger, W. E. Warren, H. G. CONNOR, President. J. . HALES, Cashier BRANCH & GO., - 1 . u' . TRANSACTS A. GENERAL BAKING BUSINESS IN. ITS FULLEST SCOPE. SOLICITS THE BUSINESS OF THE PUBLIC GENERALLY. :25-S27-tf .We are .Moving sx GERMAIN Constipation causes and aggravates many ions diseases. It is speedily cured by . Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. - serious Dr. J V O 1 - r ti i i i i n, iFu r nit ure Every day in the week, and : '- , our . customers all come a ()..'. second time. Call and look ,-'at our large and beautiful "m assortment. . FEMALE PILLS. URE The only original and genuine French-Female lU'trulator, of Mme. St. tiermain. Paris. Un surpassed us beinr safe, sure and reliable in every ca.sc. Sold under positive jruarsntee or moTiey ref nndt'd. (Set the trnuine. Price I iy mail. oJe uiiemu for th vnitea Maies and t.'uriiiila K.f rarvrl Co , Whln(r- tun , ;hieaco. 2-ll-Jy .mnAvrPCSP. -firm TH2 I A New and Complete Treatment, consisunR oi SUPPOSITORIES, Capsules of Ojntment "d two Boxes of Ointment. A never-failing cure for Piles of every nature and degree. It makes an operation with the lenife, which is painful, and often results in death, unnecessary. Why endure this terrible disease? We pack a Written Guarantee In each $1 Box. No Cure, No Pay. 50c. and $1 a box, 6 VT $5. Sent by mail. Samples free OINTMENT, 25o and 50 CONSTIPATION Sn,iy& treat LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR and BLOOD PURIFIER. Small mild and pleasant to take: especially adapted for children s use. 50 doses 35 cents, t; '. ..-,- FREE. A vial of these famous little PelleU will be given with a $1 box or more of Pile Care. Notice The otnuimb fresh Jatawess TOM Cure for sale only by . . 7 - - n ,T.'.' IIAKCRAVE'S DRUO r,TOHE
The Wilson Advance (Wilson, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 24, 1898, edition 1
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