Newspapers / The Concord Times (Concord, … / June 26, 1906, edition 1 / Page 1
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i CONCORD TIMFS ' V . dirv s I'wijf Kach Week and Price v, O.ily The Times Covers Concord and Cabarrus Like the Dew. H J Oa- I).lla,l. Juhn 13. Shrrhill, Kditor and Publisher. Volume XXXIII. PUBLISHED TWICE A WEEK". $1.C Year, Due in Advance. a e.tr. f ' CONCORD, N. C, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1906. Number 103. t. jz r riECTons: 1 '. O r.i:!;. '.. r.ot H. I,. I'm!) rgt r A X n:.rs M L M-irsli Paul F. Sfallings W. V. Morrison t'has McDonald Pi P V.-rkr, J L1-1-; CROWI'LL. Attorney. CLOTHING ..June Invitation.. Not to :i wedding, lut to coiiii' in our I'lii'-c of. I .limitless andct aciu:iintnl uiih eurjines. Costs nothing to look, and c will st'll you better goods for less tinuiev than vou ever bought hetoiv. It is not so nuicli what you pay, hut what von get for what you pay that counts. ()ur linos are all brim full and await vonr inspection. ( inn lemon matrimonially inclined re. -rive special attention. Don't be afraid, We v, i hi' t tell. HATS MEN'S FURNISHINGS Browns-Cannon Co. r. Why a NATIONAL BANK is Best 1 A National Bank is under the supervision ot the I'nited States Government. Laws governing National Banks are very strict. :' They are required to submit to the government a sworn detailed statement FIVE TIMES a year. 4- The stockholders are held responsible for DOUBLE the amount of their stock. This is for the benefit ot the depositors. .". The apital stock is required to be paid in cash, ami must he heal intact for the benefit of the depositors. 0 Ti e Bank is required each year to add to its surplus account before declaring dividends. This is tor the further security of the depositors. 7. A National Bank cannot loan more than 10 kt cent, of its capital to one man or firm. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $26,000 No large amount required to start an account. EII 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I g4 Vk Dsvt-M Co. 1 3 We have our Warehouse filled ,with Flour, ShipstufT, ? Meal, Corn and Oats. Be - sure and get our prices be- s fore you buy. E Bring us your Butter, Eggs, and Chickens. S Will give you the best 5 market price. S 1 DOVE-BOST COMPA'Y C 1 1 1 1 a i u i u 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 u i irtiuuiu i u u rn j ins Fur sale--A splendid 46-acre farm on Dutch Buffalo creek, in No. 6 township, adjoining Mrs. Mary L Kitchie and Oook A Foil, with dwelling, bam, oiitliuihlitigs and orchard. Price nly f 105X J no. K Patterson & Co. bb- tf V P. I 'ember ton Clias P Wagoner A . J vines Yorke II I. Parks (ie. L Patterson SHOES J i in r i ti it we Lan i Maxe mat Watch of Yours Go, You may just as well give it the li.ihv to play with. Its days ot service are surely ended- and it is a quest on with vou now of buying a new one. You ought to come here for a new watch for the same reason that prompts vou to lirinir us your repair work 'lecause we are in a position to give you the highest grade ot satisfaction. As we said, we can get all the service out of a watch that there is in it, down to the last tick, if you will let us look at it occa sionally. And as lor new Watches well just take a few minutes some day to look over what we have. That's all we ask. i 1 t W. C. CORRELL ZION MILLIONS SHORT. Large Capitalization in Dowio's Enter prises, but Little Money Had Been In vested. Wilburi Voliva, the present head of Zion City, who succeeded Dowie as manager of the city and its proper ties, was the first witness for the de fense in the hearing now going on before Judge JUandis, in the Federal Court at Chicago, to determine the rightful manager of Zion City and its interests. Voliva testified that when he as sumed control of Zion City he found in the candy industry a paid-up stock of $155,000, an actual investment of $18,000 and a total operating loss up to January 31, l'KHi, of $9:3,000. In the Supply Manufacturing Associa tion, invested in stock, $Li57, (XX) : amount actually invested, $22,000 1 total loss in operation, $21!.0)0. In the lace industry, paid on the stoek, $2,822,000; actually invested $415, 000; operating loss, $1,200,000. Losses on the other industries were on January 111, 11MM, as follows: Food supply, $27,000; railway con struction. $4,000; printing house, $"i0,000; hotel. Snii.OOO ; transpor tation, $11,000. "Zion City Bank," sail! Voliva, "had deposits amounting to $50o,(Mi. but not one dollar in the bank to pay any of the $500, ooo. Fvery day there was a long line of people in front of the bank looking for their money. Some of them would get 50 cents, some 75 cents and some nothing at all. Every one of these people had $1,000 or more on deposit. I found that $2. ooo, mm) had lieen diverted and that the losses of operating the different industries up to that time amounted to $2.52.SiM). "1 found that the laboring men were receiving only enough to exist on. Their pay was far behind. Many of thorn were paid in coupons, and when I assumed the management there were about $:!0,ihM) of these coupons outstanding. I found many persons at the verge of starvation, notably a Mr. Haskins, who had an annual income in Australia of $0,000. I gave him a ton of coal and food to keep him alive." Voliva declared that many men in Zion City had not been able to secure employment for two years and hail been supported out of a lienevolent fund which he had established. He said that he attempted to reform con ditions, but was stopped bv a tele gram from Dowie, who. ordered him to allow things to remain as. they vre. Salisbury's Big Celebration July 4. Sai.isbi ky, N. (. June 2.'!. May or Iiuden has received acceptances from a numlier of the state's mayors to the invitations sent them to lie present here on the Fourth of July celebration. About fifteen have been invited and these will take prominent part in the parade. Congressman VY. W. Kitchin will make the princi pal speech and Senator Overman will introduce him. Col. George Hamilton of New York wi'l build and burn 'Frisco, and the display of fireworks will be in the handsomest pyrotechnic feature ever seen in Piedmont North Carolina. There will be a baby show, and the pretti est child under one year old will re ceive $10 for its looks, the finest looker between the ages of one and three receiving the same money, as will also the best decorated carriage carrying a baby. There will be a balloon ascension, and Salisbury and Statesville have signed agreement for a big game of baseball. CooK?e mee and Concord will also play on that dav. The town is expecting 10,000 visitors, and it will almost re ceive them. Keen Sense of Humor. I'hila'Ii'li'lii.i liullrtin. "There's nothing like a sense of humor," said Rear Admiral Buehler at Atlantic City. "In a woman, in a soldier, in a sailor, in a clerk, a sense of humor is a help and a blessing through life. "At the same time, even a sense of humor may exist in success. I, for my part, shouldn't care to have so great a sense of humor as a British soldier I once heard about. "This soldier was ordered to lie flogged. During the flogging he laughed. The lash was laid on all the harder, but under the rain of blows the soldier laughed. "What are you laughing at?' the sergeant finally asked. 'Why,' the soldier chuckled, 'I'm the wrong man.' " That there is still another fool con nected with our Postoffice Depart ment at Washington is evidenced by the recent regulation announced that a fine of $200 will he imposed upon any person who, by mistake, shall open a letter addressed to an other. This rule enforced would have caught the editor of the Advo cate at least a dozen times during the last five years. A business man naturally presumes that the post master puts only his own mail in his box and splits open the letters with out thinking of the probability of gettinjr into the mail of some one i else. The man who distributes the mail is the man to get after. --North Carolina Advocate. They may think the thing is fixed - but the truth is that the Republican party in North Carolina is worse off to-day than ever in its history. The idea of talking about harmony with Butler and the office holders still proposing to dictate is an absurdity that even an epileptic idiot could see through. Fairbrother's Everything. No man is interested in another man's troubles - except a lawyer. THE INCREASE OF TEMPERATENESS. Youth' 'ii'ipanion Only a little more than thirty years ago the attention of a woman was called to the effects of alcohol and tobacco on the brain. She be came interested in the subjectr and through her efforts, with the assis tance of others whom she enlisted in the cause, the United States Con gress and the legislature of every state in the Union passed laws pro viding for compulsory instruction in these subjects. She hoped that if the children knew what injury is done by the excessive use of tobacco and alcohol they would refrain, and the cause of temperance" and moral ity would be advanced. This woman, Mrs. Mary H. Hunt, died last month, at the age of seventy-five years. She enjoyed the dis tinction of lieing one of the most successful reformers, in that within her lifetime she had secured the pas sage of those laws for which she be gan to work, not in her youth, but when she was about forty-five years old. There is less intemperance to-day than there was in 1875. The instruc tion of the young, for which Mrs. Hunt worked, has been one of the causes of the greater sobriety of the present generation. There are other causes, as she her self would have admitted. The com tietition in business is so great that men who desire to succeed have dis covered that they must keep them selves in condition to work. Al though they may not have moral scruples on the subject of intemper ance, they have learned that sobriety pays. They insist that their employes shall be able to do good work. The wise carpenter does not work with dull tools. The employes, therefore, learn also that it pays not to be "dull," else they will be discarded for better men. barge quantities of alcoholic drinks are still consumed, but statis tics on such matters are misleading, when used in attempts to prove an increase of drunkenness. The con trary is the truth, and the friends of temperance have good grounds for encouragement. Waiting tor a Flood New rk .st:n. A New York man with a propen sity for saving tried to impress upon the mind of his wife, in the begin ning of their married life, the neces sity of laying up for a rainy day. Two years later things ceased to go well with the man. The" firm he worked for failed, a defalcation wrecked the building and loan com pany in which his savings were in vested, and then his mother died, thereby throwing on his hands heavy funeral and doctor's hills. For weeks he spent most of his waking moments rushing around trying to borrow money, and when at last he negotiated loans sufficient to pay his debt he settled down to the luxury of nervous prostration. One day when on the road to recovery he happened to look through his wife's account hook. Orcat Scott: he cried. "Is it possible that you have $300 of your exjiense money put away in a sav ings bank? Why on earth didn't you offer to help a fellow out of some of the awful holes I have been floundering in lately?" Why, dear, saul his wire, in genuine surprise, 1 am saving up for a rainy day. The Function of the Senate. Pertinent at the present time, when the Senate is somewhat freely criticized as obstructionist, is an anecdote which is told in a biography of Sir John Macdonald, the first prime minister of the Dominion of Canada. On his return from France, Jeffer son called Washington to account for having agreed, as a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1787, to a second chamber. "Of what use is a Senate?" he asked, as he stood before the fire with a cup of tea in his hand, pour ing the tea into the saucer as he spoke. iou have answered your own question," replied Washington. "What do you mean?" "Why do you pour that tea into your saucer?" "To cool it," said Jefferson. "Even so," Washington said, "the Senate is the saucer into which we pour legislation to cool." This Is Right. Stiitv-ville Landmark. At the opening session of Meek lenburg Superior Court Monday three grand jurors tailed to answer to their names and were fined $40 each by Judge Bryan. The law re quires the attendance of witnesses and jurors, and when they fail to re snond it is the duty of the court to punish them unless they can give a proper explanation of their conduct Put a judge can turn up at a court a day or a half late; he can adjourn in the middle of a term and inconveni ence hundreds ot people as well as impose burdens on the tax-payers He is not punished, but he ought to be. There should be some way to comoel a iudcre to perform his duties. The following slander on the poor but honest coal man recently ap peared in the "Judge : Teacher - A coal dealer has ten tons of coal, which he sells at five dollars a ton. How much does he get for it ? Scholar About sixty-five dollars. Teacher - That's wrong. Scholar Yes'm; hut all coal dea ers do it. YEARLY REPAIR OF RUBLIC ROADS. The yearly repair of our public roads will soon commence through out the State and a large amount of tax money and tax labor will be used in this work; but what will be its re sult and effect on the public roads? n some instances it will be of some permanent help to the road; in oth ers, it will be ot temporary renei; while in the great majority of cases it will do no good whatever, or be an actual detriment to the road. One of the main reasons for this ack of satisfactory repair to our public roads under our existing laws for repair of most of our country roads is that there is no on'available to act as overseer who has sufficient knowledge regarding the construe- j tion of a road; its drainage; and the value of available material and ena ble him to construct a good road or to permanently repair an old one. The result is that the annual tax of both money and labor is often ex pended in simply cleaning out the ditches alongside of the road, or dig ging them deeper and throwing the material, regardless of whether it is eaves, mud, sand or clay, into the middle of the road, which occasion ally accidentally falls into a rut. onsequently the ditches become deep gulleys, the road is constantly becoming narrower and the first heavy rain washes all of the material back into the gulleys again. Thus a great deal of money and laoor is yearly expended to little or no ad vantage. There is sufficient money and labor expended each year by our counties to thoroughly repair the present public roads, if it was judiciously ex pended under the supervision of one who had some training in the man ner of construction of public roads. There should be a more general construction of briges over the creeks streams crossed by the roads and also a more general use of culverts or carrving the water across the road instead of allowing it to flow into the road, cutting out and wear ing it away and in many instances flowing down the middle of the road for some distance before it has an opportunity of leaving the road on the opposite. A Corn-Fed Humorist. Two gentlemen were traveling in one of the hill countries of Kentucky not long ago. bound on an explora tion for pitch pine, says the Reader Magazine. They had been driving for two hours without encountering a human" being, when they came in sight of a cabin in a clearing. It was very still. The hogs lay where they had fallen, the thin clay-bank mule grazed 'round and 'round in a neat circle, to save the trouble of walking, and one lean, lank man. whose garments were the color of the clay-bank mule, leaned against tree and let time roll by. "Wonder if he can speak'.1" said one traveler to the other. "Try him," said his companion. The two approached the man, whose yellowish eyes regarded them without apparent curiosity. Howdv, remarked the Southern er languidly. Pleasant country. "Fur them thet likes it." "Lived here all your life?" The Southerner spat pensively in the dust. 'Not vit," he said. A Texas Wonder. There's a Hill at Bowie, Texas, that's twice as bi as last year. This wondtr is V. L. Hill, who from a weight of iM) pounds has (rrown to over ISO. He says : I suffered with a terrible cough, and doctors gave me up to die of Consump tion. I was reduced to 90 pounds. when I began taking Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. Now, after taking 12 bottles, I have more than doubled in weight and am completely cured." Only sure Cough and Cold cure. Guaranteed by all Druggists, 50c and $1.00. Trial bot tle free. Last Chance. Werkly Telrurapli A iron monger in a small country town recently posted the following announcement in front of his shop "The reason why I have hitherto been able to sell my goods so much cheaper than anybody else is that I am a bachelor and do not need to make a profit for the maintenance of a wife and children. It is now my duty to inform the public that this advantage will be shortly withdrawn from them, as I am about to be mar ried. They will, therefore, do well to make their purchases at once at the old rate." How to Break l'p a Cold. It may be a surprise to many to learn that a severe cold can be completely broken up in one or two days' time The first symptoms of a rold are a dry, loud cough, a prof use watery discharge from the nose, .and a thin, white coat ing on the tongue. When Chamber lain's cough remedy is taken every hour on the first appearance of these symp toms, it counteracts the effect of the cold and restores the system to a healthy condition within a day or two For sale by M L. Marsh and D. D. Johnson. Concord, A. W. Moose, Mt. Pleasant. "Well," said Morrell, "nature has its compensations for all. Light ning, you know, never strikes twice in the same place." "Huh!" snorted Worrell, "that's small comfort for the man who is struck in the first place." In favor of internal Invalid. improvements LAUGHTER AS A MEDICINE. Laughter is Nature's device for exercising the internal organs and giving us pleasure at the same time. It sends the blood bounding through the body, increases the respiration, and gives warmth and glow to the whole system. It expands the chest, and forces the poisoned air from ths least used lung cells. It brings into harmoniens action all the functions of the body. Perfect health, wh'ch may he de stroyed by a piece of bad news, by grief or anxiety, is often restored by a good, hearty laugh. A jolly physician is often better Lnfn nis pills Laughter induces a mental exhil aration. The habit of frequent and hearty laughter will not only save you many a doctor's bill but will also save you years of your life. There is good philosphy as well as good health in "the maxim "Laugh and be fat." Laughter is a foe to pain and dis ease and a sure cure for the "blues," melancholy, and worry. Laughter is contagious. lie cheer ful, and you make everybody around vou happv. harmonious, and health ful. Laughter and good cheer make love of life, and love of life is half-of health. Use laughter as a table sauce; it sets the organs to dancing, and thus stimulates the digestive process, j Laughter keeps the heart and face young, a and enhances physical beauty. The Wrong Word for a Wedding Gift. New S .i k "i:n. Into a Madi.son avenue car came a boy carrying a tloral masterpiece. Full four feet from the ground it stood, in the form of a cross. Roses read and white composed the body of the cross and dainty white blossoms and green reaves formed the trimmings. In the center the won! "Peace" was spelled out in red rosebuds. My an by an old gentle man with a harassed cast of coun tenance stood up and readjusted his glasses in urder to get a letter loolj at it. "That is a mighty pretty posy you've got there," he said. "May I ask who is dead.'" The boy giggled. "There ain't nfe body dead't L know of," he sai "This ain't for a funeral. P's for a weddin'." The old gentleman sat down heavily, "Good Ixrd!" he said, "what idiot ever ordered 'Peace' in scribed on a wedding gift ?" What Troubled Him. Atl.iM.i i .'-orC'-vn. A well known Atlanta minister tells an amusing story of an Atlan tian who has a wife with a sharp tongue. Jones had come home about 'J in the morning rather the worse for a few highballs. As soon as he opened the door his wife, who was waiting for him n the accustomed place at the top of the stairs, where she could watch his uncertain ascent, started upbraiding him for his conduct. Jones went to bed and when he was almost asleep could hear her still scolding him unmercifully. Hedroi ped off to sleep and awoke after a couple of hours, only to hear his wife remark : "1 hope all the women don't have to put up with such conduct as this." "Annie," said Jones, "are you talking again or yet?" What the Spinal Column is ror. Representative Fitzgerald, says the Brooklyn Eagle, has a bright little youngster in the public school. The other day the boy reported to his father that he was studying -"anna torn v." "What's that?" asked Mr. Fitz gerald. "It's all about the system and the bones," said the boy. "Do you know anything of the bones?" asked Mr. Fitzgerald. "Yes," said the proud youngster. "There is the spinal bone that runs up and down your back. Your head sits on one end and you sit on the other." Mrs. Arthur Presset of Indian Or chard Mast;., found a nold band wedding ring imbedded in a baked potato at dinner. The potato was apparently sound, but in cutting it Mrs. C resst s knile came in contact . i .i l! : l I .L witn tne ring, wmcn oore tne in scription "A. L. P. H. K. R. 1842." As the potatoes were a western variety Mrs. Presset scarcely ex pects to find the owner of the me mento of a wedding ot more than sixtv vears ago. At the meeting of the State Press Association at Corpus Christi, Texas, one of the toasts at the banquefwas, "Should a black, waxy editor take an annual bath'."' J. W. Lowny re sponded, and when he sat down they all took a bath inside. Mother to little daughter). I am surprised Ethel, that you 'should talk so impertinently to your father. I'm sure you never heard me talk that way to him. Ethel Well, you choosed him, and I didn't. Mrs. Miikins . uur little Mabel is the brightest child you ever saw. She picks up everything she hears. Mrs. tsiiKins- bometning like our little Johnny, I suppose. He picks up everything he sees. A SHARP POLITICAL MOVE Charlotte Chrouicir. In the appointment of Mr. George H. Brown as collector of internal revenue, and the removal of the of fice from Asheville which is in a Democratic congressional district, to Statesville, which is in the only Re publican congressional district in the State, the Republican managers have made a sharp political move one that will give much strength to Blackburn, whose defeat is threaten ed. The SalisburyiPost puts the Dem ocrats of the eighth on guard. "The importance of this appointment." it says, "cannot be overestimated. While the influence of the new col lector and his appointees cannot of itself change the result in the dis trict, the fact that President Roose velt, Speaker Cannon and Chairman Sherman, of the congressional com mittee, are interested to that extent where they are ready and willing to go many lengths to re-elect Black burn, is fair warning that Blackburn will not be single handed in the cam paign." It is plain enough that the Washington officials will give Black burn all the aid in their power, and this collectorship move shows that it is uapauie oi giving- materia an . The Demorcrats of the eiirhth had bettej- not try to satisfy themselves and the rest of the country with the orag that Hackett can beat Black burn. Of course he can d that but he will need votes. It is troinir to take the strongest sort of a tight to defeat Blackburn. The hurrah and the flopping of wings is not go ing to do it. In this case, votes count. The mayor of Haverhill Mss i a friend of the children. A circus is billed to appear in the town shortly and the mayor ordered that the pub lic schools be closed so that the chil dren might witness the parade and chance attend the performance un der the tents. The school committee refused to close the schools to allow them to attend and the mayor de clared he would station a policeman at every school house door and for bid the children to enter. The school committee at once sought i backing in the courts and asked for an order restraining the mayor from interfering with the running of the public schools. The mayor says he j has authority to suspend the schools I if he so desires. -Charlotte Obser-' . i If your stomach trouble you do not ; conclude that ther is no cure, for a preat many have been permanently 1 cared by Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Try them, they are cer tain to prove beneficial. They only cost a quarter. For sale by M. L Marsh and D. D. Johnson, Concord, A. ; W. Moose. Mt. Pleasant. ' The Store That Satisfies "She can look out, but you can't look in" traoc 2ucor M"K PATCNTIO PORCH SHADES Asks you to "have a DAVENPORT II IS Just the thing everybody needs. Are you worried and worn out about your kitchen work ? Get one of our "Perfection" Blue Flame ( )il Stoves. Costs next to nothing to run. No smoke, just strike a match and let her go, and if 3 0U haven't a Monitor Smoothing Iron you should get one. Use the same match and iron on until you feel like taking a rest in a Vudor Chair Hammock in your cozy corner on the front porch, made by the use of Vudor Shades. Everything in tho Furniture Line at prices in keeping with ten-cent cotton. m 4'-.. 1 m m it .if..-.."-.-it. . Do You Want to Buy a Farm? it so, no doubt one of lots will suit you. ti use lol ;uus on main line o( Southern R;ulro;iv1. (,ii!v three miles from Coneorvl Station on Clurlotte turnpike, deeuledlv the bv-t Ntnailam road leading out tiom ioiivot.l. A j public brniivh road passes through thetarm. The farm is only two miles Irom the Franklin anil Voun-Hartsell mills, in n well settled community, one mile irom White Hall school anil c'jurch. C.ood two-stotv house, newly covered ami shcildcvl barn, vorn inb, spring house, cow pasture, etv .splendid bottom, well ditched. which docs not owrtlow. plenty of orchard. Kood Miiyaul and garden. In fact, lived (or h im;. Also 1.'-' . av ics on Three Mile Hraneh between the Ml. C.jlead and Mt. Fleas ant publii roads. About one-half of this tract will make fine meadow, the other halt wil! produce either cotton or grain Cheap at $.iO per acre. To acres in No. 2 township adjoining the lands o W. F. Cannon, John White. the V. C. Hoyd lands, with tenement , house and outbuildings, at a bargain. IN'u. K. PATTF.KSON & CO. Our Mission In the Grocery Business is to supply the thrifty housewife with the Ik-sI at the low est prices compatible wit h such goods to raise the standard of living and to reduce the stock. Our stock comprises everything you mav want in Staple and I'ancv Oi ov 1 1 ies. Goods and prices both KIOHT. 'Phone 9.' LIPPAPwD 3c BARRIER FLatn and Fancy Qrooera. . WINDSOR HOTEL, :. 1 ;" " St , rhiUi'U'li-ln.i, I'j , 'I hr ti'iin.ws fi in TUoad Mrcet Station. ti. minutrs tmm Rea-litik; 'rcrnim.il, one mi 1 1 'in W uiamakei s. A im-ry an pl.ui f : icr i.iy mml upwunU. Kurupc.ui plan t prr day and up. FRANK M. SCHKIBI.KY, Manar. PEACE Institute for young women ar)d Conserv atory o1 t VIMC i.l.in- ten ymr daughter. I ill- i IliKh Miinvlarvl. Catalogue free. J AS. FINWII'Idi:. President. Kaleigli, N C'i 'llf'.t-S. A. ulr.- Hi m v-.t it!- m w m look" .-it those combination m m r.v m irii 4?' it v; m 4i '. i L'rl w& 1
The Concord Times (Concord, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1906, edition 1
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