Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / Nov. 9, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
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, -I i 1 v . ( I " t ' ' tl JZBJS. 1 ; THE WEATHER ! X SHOWERS Circulation Daily Orer. 8,000 :MJDa ; , ASHEVILLE, N. G, THURSDAY MQI&IXG, NOVE MBER9, 1911 VOL.XXVIILtNO:i8 PRICE FIVE CENTS ' - . r i ' . : - A LiW ,f -TP if Trrir t.1r.balf0urfeel5 iveightofpAssing and drops helm Unionist Leader Staggers His Constituents by Announc ' tng His Retirement REMAINS IN COMMONS: HE WANT NO PEERAGE Report to the Effect That Landsdowso Would Retire is Vigorously Denied J LONDON, Nov. . The .unionist sarty ,1s to swap horse ;yhlle crosi ' Inn the home rule stream. Arthur J. Balfour, t an emergency meeting of the city of London Cor.servs tl ve -sociatlon. this afternoon, announced to hli constituents bis retirement front the. leadership of the opposition. Im paired health, Increasing age and the desirability of the leadership passing Intoj younger hands,' Were the reasons which he gave , for this step in a speech which was marked by much j feeling. But no one doubt that the Increasing attack against him by the ambitious younger conservatives, par ' tlcularly the tariff " reformers, were the principal factors In Inspiring his decision. ' v " ". While, a number of : Influential unionists and would-be leaders, nota bly Austen Chamberlain and F. E. Smith, have been demanding Jhla re-, ttrement , from-- the leadership, few believed Mr.. Balfour 'would drop' the' helm in such an ImporUnt sUge of In party's fortanes. . ' ' The announcement was a snarp surprise to all parties and made an immense apolitical : sensation. No eoooner was Mr.Balfour's withdrawal known that report were circulated - that.Lorfl Lansdowne, leader of the apposition In the house of lord who shared In th attacks would accom. yany his colleague to the background, But Lord .Lansdown issued a denial f thl tonight ' :. Hofuse Peerage . Mr, ,' Balfour win remain ' in; th hou if . commpns, ' altbough . he wnnld be elevated to the peerage tf he 4 so desired. While he. as ex-premier, - was rscetnlxed a -the leader of the. whele' Brt.jiK dfhttr:wW-ir be divided, his successor snanng With Lord Lansdowne. That sueces or doubtles will be the ,Rt., Hon. Walter vHume ,Long, who repreaenU the Strand. ' A caucus has been called for Mon day to choose a new leader. Mr. Long commands the confidence of. th older and' younger elements of the party. --'.". . Mr. Balfour, was received In audi ence this afternoon by the king and Informed his majesty of his decis ion. Many conservatives contend that the question of hi health was the only reason for Mr. Balfour' retire ment. The liberals and the adherents of the '.Irish party join the unionists in resrettlng that the, house of com mon debates will loose great share of interest when the flftu're. to whom follower and opponent sJIker con ceded Intellectual prominence Is no longer In. the forefront of the battle., Dissatisfaction With' M. Balfour a : leader has long been growing: among the tariff ' reformers, who criticised his apparent lack of conviction on that Issue, and gained great impetus when he advised the house ef lords to swallow the veto bill. MOOTS. TRIED Oil THE CHAHEt OF GIVING HIS WIFE POISON Jury Secured and is Expect ed to GeJ; Case Not Later Than Tonight WITNESSES HEARD LEBSBURG, Ga., Nov. I. Stat Chemist R. E. Stalllngs and Dr. A. O. Eberhardt of Atlanta were the principal witnesses today at the op ening session of the trial of Mort a Childers. charged with causing the death of his wife -by administering poison. Dr. 8tal!lngs testified as to the amount of strychnine found In Mrs. Childers' stomach, while Dr. Eberhardt gave bis analysis of the poison found in the medicine remain ing in the bottle from which the. dead woman took the fatal dose.., Five other witnesses also were pre sented thl afternoon by the state, bat their testimony was practically the same as developed st the commitment trial of the prisoner. The Childers Jury vas secured this morning after one hundred talesmen had been examined. : Tbe case Is ex pected to go ro the Jury tomorrow evening. The charges against Robert Kennedy, former sweetheart of the dead woman and also charged Wit V her murder, were not taken up by t"i grand Jury, action being defemt pending the outcome' of tbe Childers HANKOW GOES UP IN FLAMES WITH LOSS OF $50,000,000 Four Hundred Destitute Hundreds of Half Burned Bodies Rebels Declared : J . ' ' ' ' HANKOW, Nor. . via Wn-Hu,len the opportunity of witnessing the Hav. t The cltv of Hankow has been destroyed by fire over two-third of ita extent. The lowest estimate 01 me loss Is J50.000.000. ' Four hundred thousand persona, are destitute. Hun- dreds ef Vialf burned bodlca He among the ruin. Many of them are the bodle of women and children. - The custom house, th postofflce and the American missions have been pared. The city aa been , looted. the Imperialist .taking a hand In the pillage. Imperialist officers tried to etieck this work and executed a number of the soldiers. -Riefugee were deprived of their loot on en- torlne the British: concessions, cart-1 loads of valuable fur, , silk and Jewelry being seised. OirFriday af ternoon the consuls appealed to the Imperialists ' to cease burning : the town. A', proclamation, which was issued immediately, declared that the rebel .were responsible for the fire and ordered that these be . cheeked. The following day new fires started in various Quarters. '' .' . Mission property Protected The David .Hill v Memorial school for ty , blind," connected wlttti ' the Wealeyan ' mission, . hss been looted, while, in - contrast, , all the mission property In Wu-Chang, which' Is Aeld by the-revolutionaries, hss been pro tected. rt . v ;'. '-.V 6n Novernber S there wa consid erable 4 gunnery practice, beginning before daylight. The lmperlalslt bat tery behind Hankow moved to the southwest;, in "belated fulfillment of th promise to shift the line of . fire from the concession. This battery' and another stationed on the plain engaged In a heavy duet with Han Tank; hill. Wu-Chang fort used pow der occasionally and Joined in the defense of Han-Yang. A few hun dred of the revolutionists are still In Hankow. Riflemen on opposite sides of the Han river fought all day fiat urday and there has y been similar flghting today, but steadily decreasing III volume. There Is much open re volutionary talk among Jh ImperiaJ. uts. Horiifrln Stories wh0 have not been glv. ASSERTS LUR HOT . SET II mi POSITION JPTEBJITTfJilS 010 Significant Declaration Be fore Employers! Liability Commission OTHER SPEAKERS WASHINGTON, Nov. f That a man cannot get a new position after he. Is forty year old wa asserted be fore the employer' . liability and workmen' compensation cpmmlsslon today by Arthur E. Holder, of the American . Federation of Labor. . Ifft had been (peaking of the operation of the British compensation act of 1108, which recently he had investigated, when a question Was asked as to it effect on the employment of men of advanced age. J s In reply Mr. Holder said that re gardless of this lsw there was a marked discrimination among the aged, not In Great Britain alone, but tbroughout the industrial world. This condition was not due, said Mr. Holder to. any agitation but was tbe result of economic condition and cause of the determination to get th greatest possible product out of th human being employed by other. With reference to the extent of the eompenstalon for death or Injuries, Mr. Holder' aaid he thought the law should grant "all that th traffic will bear." He declared no death benefit should be less than ft. 000 and that no injury award less than a dollar a day, regardless of the ordinary com pensation of tbe injured employe. Robert J. Carey, of the New Tork Central, who made an appeal for a moderate law, would 1 not require a greater Insurance fund than now is expended by. the railroads of , the country. Gsrdiner Lathrop, ef the Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe railway, advo cated the extension of th terms of the proposed law to Industrie,- &ther than the railroads, contending that such a course was possible under re cent supreme court decisions. BATTLE IX MEXICO CITY MEXICO CITT, Nov., V. A bttle between -federal and rebel occurred yesterday at Juchltan, Oaxaca, ac cording to meagre information obtain ed from official source tier today. The number of dead wa placed at ,100. . The city i eut eff from rail and wire communication. : . A gentleman from Oaxaca carried a. report that Jose Gomez, deposed Jef politico and chief of th rebels, was captured and shot ' Thousand People Lie Among Ruins. Responsible. engagement except at a distance are bearing Aorrifylng storlee of brutal ity, : The Imperialists have hanged men,1 and falling to' strangle them, tortured them to death, prodded them with bayonets or crushed them to death with atone. The . outrage against women cannot be told. Red Cross bearers have been killed or wounded.- Soldiers on both side have slaughtered their wounded enemies.- ' A thousand revolutionary soldier from Hu-Nan reached Wu-Chang yesterday.. Consular report from I Chang ay refugees from Chung-King In Fie-Chuan province. . are bound thither. Secret socitles. It is reported. are gaining control In Bse-Cbuan, The mobs at KJu-Klang are violent. The revolutionaries commandeered a British tug which wa proceeded up the river with two lighters of coal. It wa suspected that the coal was destined for Admiral Ban's fleet. A British gunboat made a demand for the captured boats, which were Af terward restored to the revolutionists. Two thousand trained soldiers hav arrived from the Poyang district Klang-So. A fort sunk an imperialist gunboat which was .seeking to pas down th river accompanied by tor pedo boats. ' The latter escaped. IMPERIALISTS JOIN REBELS : SHANGHAI, Nov, I. Latest ad vice 'received bare say . that the at tempt of the Insurgent to seize Nanking wa only partly successful. They wars repulsed .at some point, but captured the 'armory fort be hind th city. They lost mor than ont. hundred men killed At the south gats 8.000 lmperiallU joined th revolutionaries on receipt of JOO.000 tael (1200,000.) . The Manchu general Chang Chun, la still holding out. Th foreign rest debt have either left th city or tak en refuge in the consulate. EXILE BOUND FOH PEKING TOKIO, Nov. I. Clang-Cgtao, the noted Chinese reformer And edltpr who has been riving in exile In Japan for som years past,, left here today for' Peking. , It Is believed that he 1 returning to China, with th taten- tlon-of caking a pMmlnntart'in hseomb. Ke siiewwf m judgev r reform movement.' TUFT INVAQES THE DAT AFTERKISPAHTY IS SO BIT DEFEATED Greeted With Same Enthus iasm as if Republicans Had Won DAY'S ACTIVITIES LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov, g. Coming into Kentucky the day after the state was overwhelmingly returned to th democratic rank and meeting crowd en route celebrating the victory of ballot, President Taft wa greeted .apparently the same as if result of yesterday' election had been the re verse. At Frankfort, the capital, to day the president dedicated an heroic bronx statu to Abraham Lincoln and tonight in Louisville be made a brief talk on peace at the armory and was entertained by the Louisville Press club at a banquet. The banquet was the feature of the visit to Louisville and unique in pres idential visits, in that Mr. Taft divided honors, with bis military aide. Major Archibald Butt. Major Butt formerly was a Louisville newspaper man and as the president himself saw service as a reporter in Cincinnati the affair was given on tbe basis of one news paper man to another. Early In the night Henry Watteraon suggested ev ry on stop calling, him Mr. Pre! dent "or even Mr. Taft and substitute just "BUI.' It was adopted to some extent. Th president will remain here tonight and leave tomorrow morning for Hodgevllle, Ky., where he will dedicate the Lincoln memorial hall, the function principally for which be came to Kentucky. : Th Lincoln statue dedicated b President Taft -today at Frankfort wax evetled In the capltol building of th stats in which the martyred pres ident- was from. The monument was given by the descendants of a long line of Kentucky- pioneers - Colonel Henry Wstterson, the veteran editor and Confederate general, presenteM the statue to the state and Governo Wlllson accepted it on behalf of th State. ; ..; - Prior to these ceremonies, Mr, Tart talked o a score of negroe who became freedmen under the Lin coln administration, r Huddled ' in Governor Wlllson' public office, these negroes, who had never seen a presi dent before, listened to Mr. Taft's ex planation of the things that went to make up Lincoln's eminence over oth er men.. :" X: ' - The , same attributes Mr. Taft later described to the throng that wit nessed tb monument dedication. f 1 "Another u. f ,.ii".'-.r .mi...:..;,., j . t .T.i.- .-.. . . ..'.. 'r,' ..i. .;; ;; ": ';: DISSOLUTION TOKCO. SUBSTANTIALLY APPROVED ' V- f 4 Counsel For Independent Concerns Declare That Attempt Will) be Made to Have . r-li.ili t 'it... St. . . J r. . ' r jm ..." .' ,':::.: svcbww j.evieweu oy ' ...,".', lu'd Are NEW TORJC Nolr. The" litiga tion which th federal government began four and half years ago to break up the ' AnlcMcan . Tobacco company a a mon pol.v In restraint of , trad spproachwd the stag of completion today bj Judicial accept ance, with, a few' nodiflcstlnn. . of themuch-dlMuased plan which th tobacco company ttfclf drew up for dissolution of , thai teombIne In. ac cordant with . a , mandate, ' tt r th United States Sunreirie ourt. Th decision of approval was filed by Judge Lacomb of, tb Utitted Btates Circuit .court shortly, after stock , market honr , this afternoon nd supplementary 'opinion wer filed by Judge Coxe Sntl Noye ton ctirrmg .generally 'h,t-Jtidg La- garoea in pian, as nerract, our an declared that th ideal J. beyond attainment and that as suhntsntlsl compliance with the, taw, ths plnn tightly modified, appeared the best attainable. Farh JudK asserted his belief that the plan Is honest, and that there la no question of the good faith of Ita author. S The features of that th dissolu tion should be consummated without d"lay; lhat the request-of the At torney General Wlnkersham for -the reservation . by the government of right fo apply for further or other relief within a period of five yar if the plan did not result In harmony With the law, la declared not to be wltbln the authority of the court to grant;, that the court , doe en loin for a period of three years the twenty-nine Individual defendant in th suit from cqulrlng fcoy additional holding In the companies 'Into which the trust 1 spilt; end that th p. ON SPECIAL Tfli TO SCENE OF ORGANIZATION Presbyterian Synod o t North Carolina Visits His toric Old Center Church CHARLOTTE, N. G. Nov, . Trav eling on a special train 'the Presby terian synod of North Carolina today In a body visited historic did Center church In Iredell county,, where, near ly a century and a quarter ago Its organisation was effected, Ths oil grlmage was made in at pelting rain which continued all day, but this did not Interfere with th excitement In oldent to the dedication of a hand some tablet reciting th fact that it was on that spot that Presbyterlan ism was formally implanted In North Laroiina on Jvovemner , J7S, nor with the picnic dinner served in the grove at noon. The presentation ad dress was by retiring Moderator Scale and the acceptance by Editor Clark, of ' the StatesvllI Landmark. Two little boys unveiled the tsblet. A feature of the exercise Wat the singing of an original ' hymn com posed for the occasion by President Henry Jerome Stockard,-of Peace in stitute. The synod returned here to night for a night session. 6HOWER& WASHINGTON, Nor. I.Forecast for North Carolina; " Rain Thursday; Friday unsettled, moderate east wind becoming variablb. Mi Case For The S. PLAKS OF AMERICAN unnea ocarc oupreme covert ModipcaUona I- , AH Considered of Minor Importance. . , ' ' , plication mad by Independent for dissolution of th United Cigar Store company- lay outside the authority of th court but that this did not preclude .any Independent action later against th Cigar Store com pany as, an Individual corporation, v . . May Carry tt Higher, ; Th announnemant of th court's action vwa followed almost 1 Imme diately by the declaration of counsel for several of the opposing Indepeiid ent tobacco Interest that i - At tempt undoubtedly would be mad t have th decision reviewed by th United Btaies Supreme court," Judge Nays drew 'general moral frnm th case. - In 'conclusion be '! i Vv'.v - - "Th extent td Which If; has been necsary to tear apart thl eombln. Hon and fore it into new form with th attendant burden, ought to dem onstrate that th , federal anti-trust tlit I a drastic -statute which so-' aofnpllshe effectlv results, which so long as tt stands on th statute book must b obeyed, - s,nd which cannot be disobeyed without incurring , far reaching penalties. And, on th oth er hand th successful reconstruc tion of f!il organisation' should teach that th effect of enforcing this sta tute against Industrial, combination 1 net to destroy but to recreate in I aceordanc with ths conditions which i ths congress has declared shall exist among th people of th United fltate.'? , ...... ' Judge Ijacmnbe' CVtmntemt ' In commenting upon th request of Attorney General Wlckershsm for the reservation to th government of the right to pply to the court t any Toopoipoin Lorimer Hearing Brings Out Evidence of Personal Animosities CHICAGO, Nov. I. Ut Repre sentative Geo. W. English, of Vienna, III., today testified before the commit tee of United State senators Invest!. gating the Lorimer election that Lee O'Netl Browne threatened English with physical violence because of what the Vienna legislator had said regarding lirowne's activity for Lorl mer.' ' English said that In speech en the floor of the house on the day1 of Senator Lorlmer'a election , h j cused Browne of atemptlng to cash votes. the witness said that while he could name no specific Instance of corruption In relation to the election he -held personal knowledge that he believed then and no-v that corrup tion controlled th lection. Former Judge eCouraoi fMhul, of Mt. Vernon, III., took the witness stand when Engllab bad concluded. Schul declared that former State Re preaehlslTve Charles B. Luk boasted that Luke was going to.' get money to vote for. a republican for United States senator. Luke later voted for Lorimer. ., , , MISSIONARY COVHCW MEJ-7T1XO. BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. t. The nfrslonary council of the third de partment of th Protestant EplMo pal church of America opened In Old St Paul s church, parish house her today with twelve bishop and hundred clergymen and lay dele gates, representing dine in Penn sylvania. -.Virginia, '-West Virginia, Dent war and Maryland In att- aooe. P. C. A. tlm within flv year for further or omer reiler. Judge Lacomb savs: v 'But nalther In th Buprorn court' mandat nor it opinion ! ther any warrant far th conclusion that this eourt is w prescrlb th temporary term of the modus vlvendl with th power to reassembleoureelve . , or our survivor arid aunceaaor and moflfly those terms, whll In th In- terim by parch of txchang of tnes nonds of on hundred million dollarf worth of property shall nave hangl. band irrvoebly, Th only function assigned to us Is to consider ny proposed -plan which rcsponst bl bartle engai to rarry out and pprov br rejtet it, In th svent of rJoctlon the bnlyUemtv being tnt JunottoB,; receivership and sal. Th ims umn rixea in the mandate, six month and possibly two ie, pre eiude any thr construction of its ims. t-.' '.,.;-'-'; f ' :i :t;:- .;."? ry., Judg Lacomb says that -whll th plan for disintegration : Is correctly described s th prpposed plan of th American Tobapco company !nc that corporation, and the other d fendsnts offer ,to carry It : out, ' it should be remembered that In. it present form th plan I th fruit of much discussion during th on; hesrlngs. H say also that th ob jection sf Attorney General Wlcker shsm wer followed by moiMflcatloh of th plan, som of It moat drastic provision being Inserted In order to meet his criticism.- II says also that provision should b mad In car rylng out th plan for kseplng Intact th book and records ef th Am- - '-fct . n (ConHninrd on Page Xevew) 0EATEN DTSPECUUTOfiS Secretary Wilson Says That Options on Land Offered Are Too High WASHINGTON, NoV. ' 0. EfforU by land . speculator to , charge th government more for land desired for national forest In th Appalachian and Whit Mountain, than land is worth will be met by refusal to con sider such offer, according to Sen. retary of Agriculture Wilson. No lands will b 'examined or recom mended for purnhaae, he declared, on which options have been obtained for the purpose of selling to ths gov srnment at a profit, . . , The Weeks law, passed last Feb ruary during the planing day of th fist congress, provided , 12,000,000 year until J9U for th purchase of Appalachian, and White mountain timber land. More' than 1,100,000 acre hav been offered, ef which mor than 10,000 hav ben exatn Ined and : agreement have already been reached with owner of 140,400 acre. . ... ... ., ,- ' '.' Th secretary said today th de partment desire to deal direct with the owners, rather than with others who Jiave obtained options. Only land, will be bought which geological survey examinations now being made show will promot the navigation bf the streams on whose watersheds they lie. ", ;. TO BLOW fP PVLLMA3T CAR EL PABO. Tex., . Nor. , An at tempt wa mad to blow op m Pull man car attached to a west sound Southern' Pacific passenger train at th Union depot here about 10 o'clock tonight A bomb about on foot long, wrapped with straw, wag exploded nnrfer th middle o fthe ear, which wa filled with passengers enroute to California, ,;.!.- N.Y; SUICIDEMAYv PROVE TO BELORO PERCYSJOUGUS Believed at This rime Rea. Scion of British Arlstoc- . racy nas passed Away CONFUCTING REPORTS ' CONCERNING HIS DEAtK Body Found In New; York Ho. tel Identified by Woman . the Body of Dourjlas : " NEW TORK. Nov. l.iOne f th most perpteiing identlflcatinn my terle which vr developed In New tork iroud th ; body of man which I lee in an uptown undertaker' establishment tonight. In th-otiinion of two person it i th body of Lord Shoito Iiugla. brother of th Mar--qui of Qunsberry, member of ons or th bat known noble families of England. Rut, according to the Mar quia, who I quoted in dispatches from Chicago, the body cannot b that of his brother, for h say h had k, letter from Lord Douglas enly two - day go indicating .that th writer was r and well in th far wet. To add to th mystery It will b recalled that som year ago a man bearing marked rosmblanc to Lord Douglas passed himself off a tuctt, nd wa arrested In thl country on several occasions on charge of btg m Th body I that of a man who registered at the Hotel Astor, October It, "Maurtc Stuart, San Frn eico," H wa ; found , dd In hi room Monday even; from a self. Inflicted bullet wound In hi heart. Thr w every vlden that - th nun wit of English parentage and had been' tentleman, HI bagga bore the hotel iabnl from all part of th world, but outsld th entry "Afaurtc Stuart, ther was no clu to hi Identity. Th announcement that th hoU had been Identified a that nf Lord Douglas tonight cem from Coroner t'elnben He bad. nown r.nr.t Douglas a a ptlnt, some years mho, nd suspected that the sul.-He nilglit be Pouglns. Tonight Mary Mohle, n nctres, who bnd knnwn i nri rtlSla('-. til th . Weft, ' :-::rr1 . th wa ur th body m that of Lord DotiglssO : .' Miss Nobis' Said h knew T.ord txiugls when h wa appearing on th t nut wst with hi wife, in ll. - - . CONSCL SAT NOT ttlBAtV IjORO. Bnarn,w, wasn,, ov. . urit- Ish Vic Consul Barnard Ptlhy sabl tonight that Lord fthalto Pougta was in hi offlc on last Monday, th i day th- man registered under the nam of Maurla Stuart, and de clared by the New Tork coroner t b Lord "Douglas, eommlttsd sulcld In New Tork, POSTAL GLEBrAHBESTED 'ft Man . Arrested Has Had Oood Record in Eailway ; Mail Service for Years CONFINED IN JAIL LTUCHBURO, Va.,Kov l.-lut today Oeorge B. Huffman, postal olrk on th Southern Railway bs- iwwn nMiiiimivn matt vnarioi.ie, n, a C, wa arrtd her on th .vharg , of stealing a registered pack from : th mail here during th night ot city jail to await examination befor October II. H wa confined In th city jail to await examination b ' fors Commissioner O'Brien. , Huffman, who ha been -under sur veillance by postal Inspector sine be th elt, was reported, wa brought , her several days ago ostensibly to -aid the Inspectors. .The Inspector y ' Itoffman v wa : spandlng money . freely the day following the robbery i and that thl ted up to hi arrest. Up to tonight, however, - they seem te) ' say ' Huffman wa apendlnw money .. . The registered ' . package stelen, -wfilch -wa Insured' by a private onm pany, wa consigned by a .Keyetona W. Va.) bank to a correspondent In Philadelphia. Hoffman. I II years ; old and . fives at Penn Laird. Rock Ingham, county, this state. , and has had s ood record In the railway -mall aervlc for-terr year., ; -- . COXFERKSrCB CIX)SFJ1. I CINCINNATI, O., Nov. Hailing America a the "Mother of Peace.", th third ; annual conference of th society for the Judicial settlement of international dispute end'd toblght. with an: elaborate banquet at th Rusiness Men's Club t which qe-j-try of State. -Philander C Knox pnk on th arbitration treaM- Among1 the guest were Mr. Tlril Tiant Howard Taft and Ml Il'cn Taft, Wife and daughter of t- pn i tdnt Of th United BtatM e. t t- -orary president of the - Officer were elec'' ' 1
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
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Nov. 9, 1911, edition 1
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