Newspapers / Everything (Greensboro, N.C.) / May 4, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
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-.V fagc two CREENSBOHO. N. C C0Ncnn:;iNc am anonymous SCRIBBLER. The fccra i. u fit 'J cf Ltrtsture does r.ct furrliij anything rr.zt UuhalU than scm c tht c-s.-.:ry wttktr papers with pstti. inards and the need cl tatrat outardt. The ether day t chanced to rCtk up cr.c from - Uiii r fsund an Able Duf cn the A&scfTicsii Cccrtipccdrr.t. and it it need less to tar that the Atte ELtcr who wroie the Abe Duy ccr.tigr.ed to deep and dixk darik ciruo all the anonymous ccrte spcedents In the srceli. ana their chilixrt and their chUdrens dirta Nsr It It a!:ce the country drtsiful with iu aptaii fcr cordwood and a httle ready ah that tssae LL'y uii( the Wet lis cl the Anjrsv3'- CofTrrpcedtnt. It it under-, stood Ln U print shop d low and high de C Out nothing goes unless the c-ir cf a mpcruihle creature is scrawled thereto. AU cl which surfeited to the Old DarLL-.g cl this pecxiluf. peritccpcc and priiiir.e pub lication that liter a3 the Anonymous Cor rtiycridrr.t. cr in t:t fullrr sense, the Anccymous Writer, hid made good and held the beard to far aa the pecrles who ac cepted hit works art ccrvccrned. It might hare been La the day cl thc;r tirth that the name cl tht writer wt known hut. be that at it may. it had bm cbppd c3 when the historians coenmrnced to pant for relic cl annuity. ird thrfefe urJevown it the rasse cl the greatest writer who wrcte the rreatrtt bock knoirn to the feadmg world. Thertfeee. brtthrra. vre would admccJah you to b not too gay with manuscript un signed. It might fc-t that, by this cken, some purer stuph than feat yet beet recently rrin;ed tleept t:t Ut: tlerp In the watte bat ke? la the ccTrver yccxlrr. We hareitocae tustt fjeat rrpet fcr the aRonyrsout tcrio Urr. aad while we do est prist hit ttuil we always read it. Uxaatc we fee that U that tchocJ w-rctt the ttcry cl Jcb It rrJbt be wcrth whue to tee tl asy p-upilt d the Wit ter who arrar.td that rr-ir.uariyt were yet rtr-rJr. at U?te. 5ti3 it it true that ia thit ae. when tnrn w-i-t their r-asea peisted la the black ct type La the rjfir.t thep cr ca the title page La Ctudea Irttrtt, that cl all the writert nje arid teer. piulcicjher ad phiictcfer. theto rklaa asd reriewrr. thartodKit aad thysver, he who euctet the tra rtc csuae cr he who 'Ut with. the lifhter L-"rt cl cecsedy ecsedy co crve eTrrt ipprtacia. to ccr ttersrtt cricka tay. the tuij-rse asd diiry height t cl thocx-? laSfcUax climbed by thit anciriyrsct tcriiblrr who wide the ttcry d the eoa cl the lard cl Uf. Frcca a.-.ciher tirs-e asd arther clime thit frarmetttary bst cl titrtature cl a iott age ai a Ui wretd wat catheted and cher lihed. arxS to ttrare ar,J wtlrd and deeti. and withal to philosophical and teautiiul it termed, that thoe cl the wet Id who Lived tie ihctaand yean ajo dunj to it foe art'a take then for God'a take, and CnaUy Irvccr pceated it with other mieHaneouj wr.tir.rt and ccmUed the roJumt knowra at the Holy m:e. "hea thVpanalatcrt Vacocspleitdit vandalara and had takes it from tfr CtaCi I dak cr Arabic cr tome ether tocx wripped it ia a ha!l dcxra different laa pucra, to ttrcx it femained that it yet thrwt the can who readi and pxxsdert! God! What wouU it hare been La lit r-a-tire tcsruf f te tfanalatce hare cl re cetairy tcra it into thjedt and left a di lioct ttyle ttiU. what wculi it hare been rixbt cSL the reel without a change, without emiaaioo. with erery tyUable clear and ccco- : prthended. At Frmxh it tattered by thote who would tranalate. think cl the majeity ; d a bock d wcrdi that hat floated threcga the cvrtentt d a dor en wet lit d let ten ar,d yet retaina in criminality to a degree that the beat and ccit learned d txhdart pro- . i ccune it at ence the crandett and taoet magricent array d wcrdt known La the Lir xuage cl men. Tike a barque d tteel and let it adriit La the hurrying and tumultuoca eddyt d a awcren nttr; let it Coat cn to the ocean't boicca and rrceire the wild wieet totted by angry forte, and net many yean until the floating craft It battered beyond uae cr rec ognition. But here wat a bock, with wordt tet ia tuhlime array by aa unknown acrib bler centuxiet before tune begin, to fir at we hare hiitcry. and tranaiatora here and trxntlaton there hare fed upon it. drunk La the wcrdt d the Poet d the Woe id. dragged it here and yonder, lott itt Identity, ti it erer had any. and preter.ted it to ut at the tpawn d an asccymcct tcritbler who failed in hii name, and with all thit rude triage It ttanda today the mott brilLlnt ttar. the brigbteat eahaliticn La the literary trsuscsL Take the ttuU and analyie it. ttudy it. a--! c2 the locea with a matt era wit Job meet all argument, all aHttry, all coating and all beguihng, and la erer , ready with a phHoicphy that thowa a depth rerer fathomed by the tcr&Uert who haTe tignxd their ttuU tince then. like the hungered trtrz woleet which how! throughout the Ii;bte. there were many attempt! made to prore that th.Book cl Jcb wat written by Mete and other men. but a3 the attempt hiTe failed failed at Lngloriocaly at the attempt maie to ttea! frxxn the immortal Shaketpeare the name and fame that were duly hi. It it taiJ that La the cllrr day, betauie the Bock cl Job wat tuch a tirccg and ttnking ccmpotiucn, there were lhoe who d;J a!l that wat poiii ble to make thit character d fiction real, and La Oriental countries' a many at tia different tembt d Jcb, the Hero d the Bock d Jcb. are thorrrto curiout trirelers. ind tto t Crxli d Bblical Utera- t"t tst that to La a high ttate d thowt that there ri .the lame it ia v-r;t arvJ with a - t the aubfect he author el the Bock. There ( thcugbta; but cn thoulJ hare a iteadaat faith La a lirL-r God. rrraented In a title entertaining and forceiul and n Ithed. and yet a ttylt that ttandt alone ia the -solitude cl itt own cri ginali t T. nd it a wtif. the child, to fir at any cl ut know, d an anonymous and unknown scribbler who may hart been full d prunet and Peru na when he wrote! Admittedly the ddtit man uteri pt la tht hiatory d tht world, and yet tiled with what thit age It plcited to term slang and ruJgaritms. TiUing with doubt tht mindt d the wise men who once upon a time re riaed the Holy Bible, the Bock cl Job got in by the game d chance like others which for centuries had put on a front d dirine origin and been accepted aa the word, it wit rcted upon and. "by the akin d Itt teeth" crdy, wit accepted, and human pow cr mid doubts and fears finally concluded that it wat direct from God. or at leatt wit sacred ttuff. And yet Lf it wit, it had been rerealed in another age and another tongue, and the joyous sage who wrote it down wit d a ra Morality that it today unknown be longed to a world cl letters that the accu mulating jctaarn thrown frccj the unieerte d rdanets centurict ago hat covered and teafed. He didn't cr en know the bunch that wrote the rett cl It- He cerer heard of Motet cr Aaron, cr Solomon in all hit glory he limply wrote the Bock d Job, turned it loose, and years after, when the coenp na tion began, tome d the wite men githered it to their bosoms and fathered the home less wail. But as there wit no family re semblance to any d the wTitia men of the compilation age outline cf the failure to attempt to put the job on Motes, it still re mains fitherlest and the author was an anonymous scribbler. "By the akin d hit teeth" wit an eipretticn d this Clastic cf the Lett Age. and it Is aa expression used today by the Gamin d the street. For over six thousand years d recorded time this one eipresaion which the aesthetic world today terms low, cr rulgsr, has lived and made clear the meaning d him who used it and we. in our boasted progress and enlighten ment, go back before history begin and tike the rude hieroglyphics which tyro bel lied human thought and tranalate them to mean that the writer d the bock cl Job that thriving epic serioualr suggested that he escaped by the skin of his teeth and hit teeth had no skin therefore it was a striking: and singular me tar her signifying the superlative d the Last Chance. And it lived, that expression d the anonymous scribbler did and it will Live so long as men employ characters to express thought or the vocal crrsns perform their functions. And the world received la its psrlors and in its pewt and in its studies and in its sane , tuaries, the grim philosopher, Bildad the Sbuhite. diplomat, rr alter, politician a Mr. Smooth, the same then aa now -and he was introduced by aa anonymous scribbler. And it wss up to him to make the story complete to give to the leading man cl this greatest drama d any age. his lines. Had Bildad not been introduced the Bock & Job would have been as the play cl Ham kt wi:hllamiet emitted. It wis that austere critic whose geniut was dyspepsia. Thomas Carljle. who wrote to the Anonymous Scribbler whom ws are now considering this beautiful tribute: l call that (the Bock d Job), apart from all theories about it. one d the grmdest things erer written with pen. One feels. In deed, as if it were not Hebrew; such a noble universality, different from noble patriotism cr sectarianism, reigns La it. A noble Bock; all men's Bock. It is cur first, oldest state ment cf the never-ending Problem man's destiny and God'i wiya with him here In this earth. And all in such free-flowing out lines; grand in its sincerity, in Its simplicity; La its epic melody, and repose d reconcile ment. There is the seeing eye, the mildly understanding heart. So true erery way; true eyesight and vision d all things; ma terial things no less than spiritual; the Horse 'Hast thou 'clothed ms neck with thunder? he laughs at the shaking d the spear! Such living likenesses were never Since drawn. Suhhme sorrow, sublime rec onciliation; oldest choral melody as ol the heart d mankind; so soft, and great: as the summer midnight as the world with its seas and stars! There is nothing written, I think, in the Bible or out d it. d equal literary merit," And yet this tribute wis a tribute to aa anonymous scribbler! It wis this anony mous scribbler who propounded tht ques tion that has perplexed all philosophers d all ages and ia turn been asked by them: "If a man die. shall he live again?" It wis this anonymous scribbler who gave us the expression to the effect that a man "glvsth up the ghost"- and it wis this anonymous scribbler who did not attempt to palm off on a ww id d wonders the proposition that God made the world La six days' labor. He was an astronomer and told us about Artturua and Orion and Pleiades and the chambers d the South, and the stars he designated in that long ago are still known by the names given them by this anonymous scribbler. Nq less geologist than astronomer, for he told us that Silver had its reins and that gold was where It was found. He was also a sociologist and measured the depths of society knew that a politician Lf he had pie would hold his yawp cr that Lf a man had money he would be stilled. For did he not ask: "Doth the wild ass bny when he hath gnss cr loweth the cx over his fod der r It wis also this anonymous scribbler who had fathomed the human heart and who wss touched to pity by the sorrows of oth ers; who knew that charity wss due to the unfortunate, for It wis he who rpeke d the poor that cried, tht fatherless thit had none to help him. and suggested that it was not a knave who caused the widow'a hesrt to sing fcr joy. Whether the Bohemian, the unknown writer who penned the wonderful book, had locked upon the land d Ux makes no de ference but that he loved nature and Erst heard the-rocrnlng stars as they sang to- gether is dxJf recorded La his own words. Ant so It Is. we again suggest to the fatherless and the orphaned press that alsxi MANUFACTURERS CAN HELP. Several cl Greensboro's manufacturers, the Cones and Oettingers being among those so far reported, are encouraging in every way possible the planting of gardens by their employes. It will be lntereUng to know the result cf their experiments in actual dollars and cents saved during the corning summer, to say nothing d the amount d food relcised for those who can not enjoy a similar privilege. . ' One Large manuficturins concern in Ohio provided girdens for its. employes La 1917 and required them to keep an accurate rec ord ol the time spent working the girdens and the value cf the crop grown. At the end cf the season the results showed thit the gardeners had received 9 s cents an hour for their spare time spent in the gsrdens. Another large manufacturing concern in Illinois plowed, up a prise ao-acre alfalfa field and divided it Into garden plots for the use d its employes. The results ob tained from this garden plot far exceeded the expectations cf both the company and its employes. I Manufacturers ail over the country are providing gardena for their employes this year, according to reports to the United States Department cf Agriculture. THE PRESIDENT RIGHT. The StatetriUe Iniaaark, always level headed. In ccrnmentingCpon the action of the President on the court-martial bill, con cludes that he wis right, as usuaL Natur ally, argues the Landmark, "when we think cf the pro-Germans In this country, cf the traitors in America who are doing what they can to help Germany and to hurt the home ol their birth or adoption; who are guilty d sabotage or ether offenses thit would destroy our Tercet rn land and sea; the explosions and fires that cause loss of property and life; the attempts to poion -all the numeroua thinps Ut have been done by Germans and Gerrran sympathizers in this country; when we consider these things the blood boils and the feeling is strong that these pxople deserve death by the most direct and shortest method. The court martial seemed to offer the remedy. In a military court there are none cf the delays that so often block the law's course in the civil courts and delay justice. "But on sober reflection we must concede that the President is right. Not only is there grave doubt as to the constitutionality d the proposed laW, but In character, as the President says, 'it would put us nearly upon the level of the very people we are fighting' and affecting to despise. It would be altogether inconsistent with the spirit and practice d America. . "When the blood runs hot and the feeling cf hate takes possession, all of us would be law breakers if we yielded to our feeling. Often, probably in the majority d cases, the victims d mobs get only what they richly deserve, but that docs not excuse the mob, and aa lawlessness begets lawlessness, the action d (the mob inj the execution of criminals wbci detect ?th Is as danger ous, if not morx dangerous, to the pxace and safety d society as the act of the criminal, "Therefore, while the court-martial would more quickly and promptly, dispose of the disloysX it would at the same time tend to build up military courts that would be dan gerous. It is not sympathy for the offend ers, but .the proposed method oi dealing with them is too dangerous a precedent. "The presidents opposition has settled the court-martial bill, and It is well. The - duty devolving upon our citizenship is not to spend time in denouncing the disloyal and the government for not bringing them to trial, but to aid the government by. help ing to secure evidence and speed up the trial d real and not imaginary offenses. Many ol the loudest critics d the failure of the government to take action against alleged traitors are not willing to bear witness about the things they have heard or make report to an officer. "Another thing is that while hatred of our enemies is natural and proper, we must not allow the feeling of hate to so take pos session d us that we forget to be just. Many d the reports we hear d disloyalty may not be true. - We should be sure to have the prod before making charges, so that injustice or Injury may not be done; and, above alL we must guard against be coming so filled with hatred that we should be tempted to engage in the deeds cf fright fulness by which the German military forces have shocked the world and have sunk be low the level d barbarians.w o Get ready for the wood-cutting cam paign, which will perhaps be on one d these days this summer, when Greensboro people propose to fell a forest and get la a winter's supply of wood for at least five hundred fsmilies. SELL YOUR WHEAT. Farmers must sell their wheat. The or der has gone forth that no boarding cr for . ther delays will be allowed. The soldiers must have bread and the government is go ing to provide It for them if there is any wheat in the country. If the farmer will not sell voluntarily, the government will sell it for him. Beginning Msy first the county food ad ministrators will begin sending ia the names d people who have wheat on hand, and the man who waits for the government to act will not get as much as those who sell La advance. II you are a wheat grower or have wheat on hand, don't wait to be made to selL Sell it now. o And cf course this last big storm wasn't intended by the weather man, but the weath er man has to stand for it. so loudly agin anonymous manuscript that the stuff Is not discredited and will never be until some savant comss to us with a scroll in his trembling hard aid shows us the autogrsph d tho man who wrote the Booked job. SAVING THE BABIES. , As in all other worth while movements, Greensboro is taking an active part in the baby saving campaign which is to be on this year throughout the United States. The plan suggested by the Children's Bu reau appealed strongly to memDera of the Mothers'. Club, which began at once to set in motion the machinery necessary for carry ing it out. A mass meeting for mothers in the Municipal theatre was called for April 6; committees for the city and county" were appointed and enthusiastic workers are now on the job of saving the babies. North Carolina is asked to save 3,130 as -its quota, and it win do better than that, be cause the people of the state are already alive to the importance of this kind of con servation along with the saving . of other raw material. The present world war is being fought out for the benefit of future generations, and there is no use to sacri fice the present Lf there are not going to be any future generations to enjoy the fruits of our sacrifice. This is why the babies must be looked after theconservation of human life and reduction of waste through avoidable infant mortality. April 6, the anniversary of America's en try into the war, was chosen as the open ing of the children's year, during which it is hoped to cut the infant mortality rate in the United States by one-third. In order that each state shall bear its full share of the responsibility quotas have been assign ed, based on the federal census of 19x0. These quotas range from New York's total d 8,435 and Pennsylvania's total of 8,3x8 to Nevada's quota cf 60. Illinois must save 5.65 babies. Texas 5,070, Ohio 4,510, Geor gia 3,543. Missouri 3,391, Massachusetts 3.094, New Jersey, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Virginia, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ala-, bama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana and Oklahoma must each save between 2,000 and 3.000; Connecticut, Nebraska, Kansas, Maryland, West Virginia, Washington and California each between 1,000 and 3,000. Not content with its assignment of 3.500, Missouri wants to save 5,006 more. "Save 50 children in your county this year and wear the cross of honor, if not the cross of war' says the state chairman of the de- rartment of child welfare. "You will need 1,500 to secure a county nurse and pro vide funds for carrying on the work for a year. That is only $30 per baby. Do you have any babies in your county that are not worth $30?" New Orleans has raised $41,000 toward the work of the children's year. Illinois boasts an ample budget, with 40 counties al ready organized and asking for visiting nurses. Iowa has collected $45,000, of which $9,000 will be used in a baby health contest at the state fair. Oregon has coun ty welfare stations, visiting nurses, and ma ternity hospitals. Each state and town is working out its own child salvation under guidance and advice from " the Children's Bureau and the Woman's Committee. THE'liOUR OF ACTION. The Asheville Times rings true when It says in double leads: "Day by day the war comes nearer home. It has been so far away and our minds have been engrossed with Young Men's Christian Association campaigns, Young Women s Christian Association work, the. betterment of social and physical conditions at the training camps, the S mileage theatres and so many other side issues, all good and needed, they have helped distract attention from the fact that very soon entire columns would be necessary to tell the simple story of namesdead, wounded and missing. We had not lost interest, but we had not felt the hurt so deeply until just now. There is a dark cloud and a deep burning, blistering heat in our souls today. "It is the hour of intense service. Amer icansin memory of the fathers of other days days when men, ragged and cold and hungry, fought through the question of America's freedom the men of '76. In memory of those men, .go at the job and go" at it hard. Every atom of American energy is needed. Tighten your belts. Grit your, teeth. With determined mien and se pur pose do it the work of freeing the world. Your boys are yonder, fighting along the Somme -fighting desperately and valiantly. Their bravery and courage and daring are astounding the world of fighters. They are acquitting themselves like men. Will you do less? "It is not the hour of prayer it is the hour of service. . In olden days the Israel- . ites were fleeing from the army of the Egyptians. The night fell and camp was set beside the Red sea. In the rear came the tramping of Pharaoh's host. The grind ing of the chariot wheels was heard dis tinctly.' Fear mastered the nation only re cently out of bondage. They cried. Moses prayed. God answered, and it was the an swer of the hour. 'Why criest thou unto Me? Say unto the Children of Israel, Go forward. There are times when prayer is essen tial; there are times when action is the more essential. This is the hour of action. -Do it just now what? Either carry a gun or buy a bond. Take, your choice. There is no middle ground. Show your col ors. Fight with the colors or support the fighter. Men are needed 'over there and if you cannot go, feed and clothe the man who can go. Selfishness must not prevail. Your money must be placed in the hands of the nation. It is not sacrifice ; it is really a good investment; but is there a man so ymaTt and - narrow that an argument of profit must be made in this hour of crisis? Stand by the Red Cross and other agencies of aid and help, and stand by the nation, not in lip service, but ir work that (counts. Loan the government" your money; loan every dollar." o ' The man who will not defend himself when he has been insulted is a coward. No matter what it costs, self-respect -is worth fighting for. THE TEACHER IN THE WAR. In her address in Greensboro Thursday night Dr. Anna Howard Shaw stated that she received hundreds of letters from teach ers in all parts , of the country explaining that they wanted to render some real pa triotic service to their country and appealed to her, as chairman of the Woman's Com 1 mittee, National Council of Defense, to know in what way that would be. Her an swer to such inquiries was invariably the same: "Stay in your school room; stick to your job ; you are in a position to render the greatest service right where you are." All. of which is true. The generation of men and women who are to come imme diately after this world conflict will be faced by the most complex and cHfficult problems that have ever confronted the peoples of the earth. In the readjustments that must come we must have strong minds as. well as strong arms, trained minds as well as train ed hands. And how are we to havethem " if we neglect the men and women in the niaking who are to perform these herculean tasks? And the teacher question is something to . think about. . It is 'getting to be a serious matter and one upon which the people of this state and nation must become aroused. With all sorts of opportunities for earning salaries largely in excess of what the best paid teacher gets with far less work and " easy hours it is only the man or woman who loves the profession and follows it as a mis sionary follows his who will continue long in the ranks , unless there - is evidence of ' greater appreciation of their labor than has been exhibited in the past. Even the mis sionary cannot live on air, no matter what the temperature, , and though the teacher may be an angel, as . many of them are, as long as she is alive and in the flesh there are certain temporal needs that are supplied only throuvh the usual channels of com merce where coin is the circulating me dium. Along with other readjustments this war is bringing hcie, to those who have never thought of it before, that in this state and in many other states the public school teacher is the poorest paid laborer in any field of en deavor, and the time has come when the value of that labor must be, recognized in a way worthy of a free and enlightened na-, tion. APPEAL TO NEGROES. Recognizing the negro as a great eco nomic factor, and hence a great military factor, United States Food Administrator Herbert Hoover has addressed a special ap-y peal to the 12,000,000 negroes of the coun-r try to heed the appeal of the f oocy adminis tration in the matter of food conservation and food production. The appeal follows : "Our nation is engaged in a war for its very existence. To win this, wkr' we must . save lood, grow great crops 01 toodstutts and 'substitute other foods for those most easily shipped to our associate in this war and our own soldiers in Frce, thousands, of whom are men of your ownrace. The food administration realizes that he negnfv ' people of this nation can be of the utmost ' helo in food conservation and food oroduc- tion. Every negro man, woman sjnd child ' can render a definite service by responding to the appeal and instructions of the food aminiefrafirtn arv4 ifo ranraesnt9fltrafl " rPt negroes have shown themselves loyal and responsive in every national crisis. Their greatest opportunity of the present day, to exercise this loyalty, is to help save and grow food. I am confident that they will respond to the suggestions of the food ad ministration and thus proye again their pa triotism for the winning of the war." o NOT NEEDED. The talk about an extra session of the legislature is on, and the Raleigh News and : Observer has this to sav about it: It seems to be a settled conviction among, those who ought to . know that ' North Carolina people do not take kindly to an extra session of the legis lature. This is probably based on the . theory that North Carolina people are naturally conservative and therefore not inclined to radical action of any sort. But the nation is at war and steps that seem inadvisable and unnec essary in peace may be very advisable, wise and necessary in war. The war doesn't wait for public sentiment to produce radical decisive action. The kaiser isn't waiting. Nothing waits in war except the losing side. It would, be very unfortunate if North Carolina's established record for conservatism should prevent it from measuring up fully to its obligation to the nation and to the world in this great emergency The existing vagrancy statute is not 1 meeting the situation. An extra sess ion of the legislature to add teeth to the law is the only way to make it effective. It is argued. that members of the legis lature would hesitate to vote for the drastic labor law that is needed because to do so would alienate the voters who would be put to work by such a law. We should hate to believe that of a , t single member of the legislature. What is a man's political life worth if the Germans gain the whole world? The truth is we need no extra session. In , fact, the legislature should not meet oftener than once in ten years, and then only on a special call with its specific business named in the proclamation. North Carolina doesn't need the farce ena'cted every other year, and . some day people will realize it. o : One of these days there will come a time when every man will own his own newspa per and perhaps run it according to his no tions and then the world will be one grand swell Of harmony. : o f . If the Germans get the English' channel ports, there will be something more doing than has been done. And they are moving that way. , .
Everything (Greensboro, N.C.)
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May 4, 1918, edition 1
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