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'he Monroe Journal ' VOL. 19. No. 10. MONROE, N. C, TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1913. ONE DOLilv, A YEAR. i f.xixgtox i-oi.kt.m.w killed. l.ce Ford I U-itigtoti Fires Three lamds f Itucksliol Into Body nf J. M. tiaHand Xo Reason is known fur Act. Lexington. April 4. Policeman J M. Garland w;.s killed here this of Urnoon by Lee Ford. The causae of the tragedy Is shrouded In mystery find n one, not even the family of the man who did the killing, nor the family of the dead man, can throw any light on the subject. The killing took place this after noon at 1 o'clock. Mr. Garland, who wag a member of the night force and did police duty from 7 to 12 o'clock, worked during the day at the overall plant of the Siceloff Manufacturing Company, lie was on iiis way back to the factory and had just crossed Second avenue and supped upon the sidewalk, about 50 feet from the factory door, when Ford stepped out from behind the Men board fence surrounding the shops of the C. M. Thompson Sons Company, where he was employed, with a repeating shotgun In his hands. Without saying a word to his vic tim, he raised the gun and fired. Garland was not looking toward him when the first shot was fired, but wheeled around and faced him. Rapidly advancing toward hint, Ford fired twice more, and at the third shot Garland fell. Three loads of buckshot had taken effect in his body, from the pit of his stomach to the top of his head. About a dozen shot penetrated his breast and seven or eight more entered his face. His hat was shot full of holes. Ford slipped his gun under his arm and walked away after looking at Garland unconcernedly for a moment. Peputy Sheriff Fletcher Caudle, who was at the Southern depot, 50 yards away, heard the shooting and was on the scene quickly. He overtook Ford, who was walking away quietly, and placed him under arrest. He made no statement other than to say that he had a good reason for killing Garland. Miss Nella Everhart, also an em ploye of the Siceloff Manufacturing Company, was just a few feet be hind Mr. Garland when the ghoot ing occurred. A stray shot struck her In the arm. Inflicting a very painful wound. Ford was livine with his father, Mr. Frank Ford, and had been with his father since Christmas. His wife and three children are living with her father out In the country. About six years ago Ford moved to Texas. He returned at Christ mas time and has since been em ployed as a mechanic with C, M. Thompson Sons Company. He Is not a drinking man. He has never been a fighter or trouble-maker and was generally respected. His father said this afternoon that If his son and Garland had had any trouble In re cent years he knew nothing of it. He said that many years ago, be fore his son went to Texas, he and Garland had had trouble of some eort, but that since then he had heard nothing of It. Today, when Ford went home to his dinner, his father noted that he seemed to be in a hurry to get back to work and when he left he carried his shotgun with him In a ease. He thought that he was taking It to the shop to clean it up and said nothing to him. Ford's friends are saying that he was mentally unbalanced and has been acting abnormally for some time. It is related that he went to Mr. E. E. Haper, Lexington's leading lawyer, and asked him If there was not some way in which he could get even with Garland, say ing that Garland had slandered him while he was living In Texas. There are other rumors to the effect that Garland wrote a letter to the pas tor of a church which Ford attend ed in Texas several years ago, making Borne sort of charges against him. Garland leaves a wife and three small children. Mrs. Garland has in verv noor health for sever al months and the schock of the kllh Ing was a terrible one to ner. tne Is still In a very serious condition fa the result of it. A gold medal to the school boy or girl between the ages of 10 and 15 who writes the best composition, not to exceed 800 words, on the re pair and maintenance of earth roads, Is to be awarded by Logan Waller Page, Director, Office of rubllc Roads. United States Depart ment of Agriculture, Washington. D. C. All compositions must be submit ted to Mr. Page before May 15. 1913, and the medal will be award ed as soon thereafter as the compo sitions can be graded. The composition may be based on knowledge gained from books, or other sources, but no quotations should be made. R. N. NESBIT, County Supt. Senator Nommonii Think Wilson Can't lie Kaslly lniocd On. Senator Simmons, says the Wash ington correspondent of the Raleigh News and Observer, thinks President Wilson Is going to make one of the greatest executive officers the coun try has had. President Wilson weighs men and their statements," said Mr. Sim mons. "He listens, absorbs and then acts. President Taft took up a thing today and dropped it to morrow. Roosevelt watched the popular wind and sometime rode it. Mr. Wilson is weighing everything and everybody. It would be a dif ficult task to impose upon him." YoUXG r.l IKil.AKS Kll.l i:i. Prominent Young .Veil We if Caught Mini Shot in ,rt entitle Stoic Sun day Night. Greenville, S. C, April fi. Upon breaking into the basement of u shionablo dry good store shonly ,.i;er 3 o'clock this morning, Leon ard Smith, 17 years old, son of a prominent and wealthy family, mid his 20-year old companion, Rowley Martin, engaged in a pistol battle with three policemen who had con cealed themselves in the store in anticipation of a burglurly, with the result that the young men were shot to death and one of the policemen severely wounded. With five bullets In his body and a wound through his heart, young Smith, ran up a flight of stairs to the second floor, where the employes ef the firm had stationed themselves in waiting. He was met at the top step by one of the clerks who shout ed to him not to fire again, and passing on, tearing a mask from his face with one hand and gripping the pistol with the other, sank to the floor and expired. Martin ran to the rear of the base ment, with a bullet hole through his head and another in his hand, and concealed himself in a closet. policeman followed closely upon him and pulled him out, at the same time tearing a mask from the lad's face. Martin was placed in the po lice ambulance and rushed to the city hospital, where he expired two hours later. News of this terrible tragedy spread quickly even at that hour of the night and has created a pro found sensation throughout the city. At noon In the court house in the presence of a thousand or more citizens of all rank, the coroner con ducted a dual Inquest Into the kill ing. The two juries returned ver diets asserting that Leonard Smith and Rowley Martin came to their death from pistol shot wounds from the hands of Policemen H. C. Alex ander, A. M. Blair and J. A. May field. Chief of Police Holcombe was deputized to take the officers into custody until Monday when their commitments will be Issued by the coroner. At the same time applica tion for bail for the three officers will be made before Judge Shipp who convenes the Spring term of the Court of Common Hesse for Greenville county tomorrow morn ing. The Inquest was the most dramat Ic ever held In this county. The father of young Smith, overwhelmed with grief and dumfounded at the tragic occurrence, appeared at the inquest und conducted the examlna tion of the various witnesses. IXDHT TTTOX Oil. to. Young Man From Monroe Make Scene in Semite. George B. Clemmer, a young man hailing from Monroe, caused some. thing of a sensation in the Senate of the united States yesterday by rising In the gallery and attempting to make a speech. "Mr. President. he shouted, but he got no further. The gallery was filled with women suffragists and it was thought at first that they had started a dis turbance. The sergeant at arms quickly hustled the young man out under arrest. When It Is found that he is probably unballanced he will no doubt be liberated and sent home. On his cards appear these words: "George 11. Clemmer, Herald of the Prince of Peace. The young man 'is a son of Mr. A. J. Clemmer, who lately moved here from Anson county. Little is known of the family, and the fath er seems to be taken tip with the same fancies that trouble his son A dispatch from Monroe to the Charlotte Chronicle yesterday said: When seen by a representative of The Chronicle this morning the eld er Clemmer stated that he had sent Ills son to Washington himself to tell Congress something it did not want to hear. He stated that his son professed religion four years ago and joined the Methodist church but that he was not of that faith now. The elder Clemmer refused to tell what his religious faith was now or that of his son. Clemmer stated that he received a letter this morning from his son stating that he had arrived In Wash ington and was prepared and had made arrangements to deliver his message. Russell-Austin. At Wingate on Tuesday evening, at the residence of Rev. 8. N. Wat son, Miss Kate Austin and Mr. Luke Russell were married. They were returning from a wedding In Lancaster county and were accompa nied by Mr. and Mrs. Justls Aus tin. They left for Charlotte that night, where they will live. Mrs. Russell Is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Austin and Is an at tractive and popular young lady. Mr. Russell is a young medical stu dent and is a gentleman of merit. It is now time that the boys' corn club list should be complete. Therefore If there are still those who would like to enter the contest they will please send In their names at once to me. I'nlon county has thus far 45 contestants, and in point of num bers is the tenth county in the state. Wilkes stands at the head with 134 contestants. Can we not bring our number up a little? Let us try. It. N. NESB1T, County Supt. Many a man has been patted on the back so much that It has stunt ed hit growth. Charge of il lation t Anti-TruM laiw Made in ( Tt,ia. Macon, Ga April 5. Announce ment was made tonight by Alexan d;r Akerman, I'nited Stales Attor uty for the Southern District of Georgia, that he will lay before a Federal grand jury which mots in August a -Monday morning, evidemvs looking to t lie indictment of Un American Cotton Oil Company of New York under the Sherman anti trust law. It will be charged that this com pany, with branches and nftiiations in every cotton state in the Tnion has fixed and attempted to fix arbi trarily the prii'e of cotton seed from the producers. One hundred and forty witnesses from every branch of the cotton seed oil Industry have been subpoened to appear. Mr. Akerman has been working on the case lor IS months and was instructed to spare no expense In gathering in formation. As cotton seed and its product make up about one-fifth of the pro duce of the cotton plant the indus try embraces a business annually of $100.000,1100, Mr. Akerman brought the suit against the .Merchants and .Miners' Transportation Company for grant ing rebates, the latter company pay ing a fine of $20,0o0 at Savannah recently. The naval stores case is pending. iH-atli of Mr. T. M. Itrown. Mr. T. M. Brown, for many years a well-known citizen of Monroe, died at the home of his son, Mr. T. B. Brown, In Greensboro, last Wed nesday, at the age of 62 years. The remains were brought here for bur ial, lying at the residence of Mr. J. A. Stewart Wednesday night, and the funeral taking place Thursday. Mr. Brown came to Monroe In 1877, and was proprietor of the old Stew art House for twelve years, being a very popular and efficient hotel man In his day. Since then he liv ed in Monroe and other places, and spent part of his time, since his wife's death In 1904, in traveling. .Mr. Brown was an educated and cul tured man and a student of wide reading and versatility. Mr. Brown is survived by two sons, Messrs. T. B. Brown, of Greensboro, and R. Henry Brown, of Charleston S. C, and one daughter, Miss .Mary Brown, who is teaching near Greensboro. Messrs. J. A. Brown and R. E. L. Brown of Chad. liurn are Mr. Brown's brothers al his sisters are Mesdames J. C. Ed wards and Jas. Newman, of Chad bourn, and Walter Clough of Panama. The Old Darky's Prayer. Lancaster News. One evening last week while the storm in the Middle Western States was at Its highest, Mr. Jack Bai ley, cotton-weigher and all-round good fellow, received a message that the storm was headed this way. That afternoon he spread the news to the darkles working on his farm at Springdell. Some frills were ad ded to the original story as the boys passed it along. One old fel low seemed greatly worried when they told him that It would pass right through Springdell. It was a tremendous storm, he was told, sweeping everything as It went; a thousand negroes in one State had been blown from the earth, etc. That night when the old darky went to his home he told his wife that he only wanted a bite to eat as he was feeling badly. After eating a few mouthfuls he went to his room. Of course the boys were watching him and also listening. He dropped on his knees and began: "O, Lord, 1 ain't had much to do with you here of late and I can t talk to you jes' like I want to, but you sho am dead after me now. De only thing I ax of you Is that you see me through tonight and 1 11 see you later. Amen." CAIRO PRKIVUCIXG FOR FLOOD. Flood Sufferers Needing Help, The Red Cross Society estimates that more than 77,000 people need help in Ohio on account of the flood. The Journal has received one dollar from Mrs. Nan Carlile and ten dollars from Mrs. Roscoe Phlfer, from the Women's Mlssion- ry Society of Central church, for this purpose. These funds have been turned over to the Bank of Union to be forwarded. Other con tributions have been made from Monroe. Wilson and Marshall Namesakes. l S. Geological Survey. There are twenty towns and four counties in the I'nited States bear ing the name of Wilson, and a chain of mountains in Colorado and Utah. There are eleven Marshall coun ties situated In Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mlssisslpt, South Dakota. Tennessee and West Virginia. The majority of these were named for John Marshall, Chief Justice of the I'nited States from 1801 to 1835. There are also 16 cities or towns of the same name, besides numer ous Marshalltowns. Itectinler's Court. Mary Caldwell, colored, selling whiskey; $50 and costs. R. May, gambling; $10 and cost. G. Hinson, gambling; $10 and cost. Eilhu McDonald, colored, larce ny; 4 months on roads and cost. If it was as hard to please God aa It is some people, not a few- might be driven to despair. I. Ife Rafts Placed in the ilj Kaius Swell Rivers t-i Such Extent That People I'riptire for Wor-l. Cairo, 111.. April 4. In their anx iety to prevent the levee lrim break ing on the Oh!o river side of Cairo, j citizens overlooked unv dinger! which might come from the .Missis sippi river side with the result tha a force of workmen had to ho rush ed there early today when a wash out was threatened between Nine teenth and Twenty-fourth streets. High winds had caused the river to cut into the bank to Mich an ex tent that the danger was emminent before it was discovered. Several bags of sand were hurried ly carried to the place from the Ohio river levee In automobiles and further erosion of the bank was pre vented for the time. The water on the Mississippi side is well below the levee top. Arrangements being made by Lieutenant Buckner, United S'ates army, for the safety of the people went ahead today, and it was ex pected that by night winll life rafts would lie placed throughout the city in readiness for a possible big break. Believing that the precautions for saving life In Cairo In case the water flows into the town have been made about as complete ns they can be with the faculties at hand. Lieu tenant Buckner today diverted his attention to the countryside. AID SENT TO FARMERS. Four non-commissioned officers, who accompanied the lieutenant here from Paducah, were assigned to Investigate the needs of the farm ers who may have cattle or other live stock in danger. Two of these officers with a group of men started for "Dog Tooth Bend," that portion of the Mississippi which forms one of the two southern peninsulas of Illinois. It was reported In that vicinity were In danger of losing cattle. It Is the plan to carry them out with ferryboats. Another expedition was sent to the Kentucky side of the Ohio with similar equipment for the aid of farmers. "I believe we could take care of every soul in Cairo," said Lieuten ant Buckner, "provided, of course the water did not come in with a rush." Later in the day the sun came out brightly and the weather became warm again. The gauge continued to hover around 64.7, with no no ticeable change. Flood waters In the Ohio began to rise again early today, and at 7 o'clock the gauge reading was 54.7. The water had hoered about the 54.6 mark for nearly 12 hours de spite a steady rain. The banking of sand bags at Fourteenth street was found to be permitting a considerable amount of seepage early today and all the workmen available were gather ed there to reinforce it. The con dition was not considered alarming. Reports from Reelfoot levee dis trict said that l.ooo men were v oiking to save a break In the dikes of that section. A break there would bring relief here with in less than an hour. The weather today was chilly and the wind had swept to the north. Considered from every standpoint, conditions were regard ed as hopeful for" a least another week. mi: MAY tu:i IWI.I. '"4 Work of the Presbyterian Church. Dr. H. E. Gurney and Dr. J. M. Belk left this morning for Albe marle to attend the meeting of the Mecklenburg Presbytery which opens there tonight. Today the Presby terians are being entertained at Whitney by the Whitney Company. The report from the Monroe Pres byterian church Is very fine. The total contributions for all causes for the year aggregate $7,229, which is an average of forty dollars and fif ty cents per member. The Presbyterian work in this county is very active and success ful. A few years ago this denomina tion was very small In the county, but now it has twelve churches, all of which will be represented at the Presbytery. Two modem church houses have lately been built Montgomery in Buford township, and Rehobeth in Jackson. A new church has lately been organized at Indian Trail. Wm l ami St, i I Iti.iK Will li ! mil l ui Free Income Tax Will .Make Up the IM-f ici ncj. "Washington. April I. With ! iv s IJent Wilson and congressional lead ers practically agreed uy.ia f:ve wool an. I a very low di;,) o:i mc er. eventually lo Ici-onte fr-e, ti. was and means cc:uiuittce 'oday b-gaii drawing its r.-port on the new tar iff bill, estimating the lot- of rev enues from the new rales at $V,- a year. The r-venue from the Income tax will lie estimated at a like amount to be derived this way: Incomes of $4.0011 t0 $2i).00i, 1 per cent; $2",Imih to ?jii, (;', 2 per cent; $5i),uihi to $!i0,ooo,.itni, j p.-r cent; Hat tax on corporal ions, 1 per cent. The exemption will be on all Incomes under $4. 0011. The Income tax provision now slamls this way and it Is not expected to be chang ed. Among- the numerous additions to the free list will be steel rails. Cuts will be made all along the line on the metal schedule. After the senate finance commit tee reviewed the bill today a sub committee went to conference with Chairman Underwood, of the ways and means committee. There 1; now- believed to be a general agreement all around. Democrat members of the senate finance committee, who met this morning to take up for the first time In detail the question of tariff revisions, were much encouraged by the reports they received from the delegation that it sent to con fer with President Wilson at the White House last night. Senator Simmons, of North Caw lina, the chairman, and Senators Hpke Smith, of Georgia, and Stone of Missouri, received the finance committee in the conference with the President. The attitude of the president con cerning sugar Is now known defi nitely, and It Is now believed that eventually the sugar schedule will provide for a tariff tax of one cent n pound with the abolition of the Dutch standard and differential. A further provision that after three years the commodity will go on the free list will be made. A duty of 1 cent a hundred or $1 per hundred weight would be a reduction in the present rate of nearly 100 per cent. The present duty Is $193 per hun dred. The sennte finance committee re ceived Its first copy of the new tar iff bill today and spent three hours discussing It. The possibility of a compromise on sugar makes it ap parent that there will be less diffi culty than was first expected. It appeared certain after the meeting that free wool would he retained In the measure. Senators Simmons, James and Hughes were appointed a committee to confer at once with Chairman Underwood, of the ways and means committee. The cabinet discussed the sugar compromise and the whole tariff bill situation at the regular meeting today. It was said there were 110 difference of opinion among the members or with the President. K DID YOU LOOK UP ? Commencement Exercises Wesley CliaN'l High School. The commencement exercises of Wesley Chapel High School will be gin Friday night April IS, with a concert by the primary and Inter mediate departments; hat unlay morning at 11 o'clock the gradua ting exercises; at 2 p. m.. the an nual literary address by Prof. M. C. S. Noble, head of Department of Education of University of North Carolina; at 8 p. m., the play. "Champagne and Oysters, given by the pupils of the High School. The following are the marshals: Ernest H. Broom, chief, James Gor don. Tommte Fowler, Law son Price. Earl Price. Mgrs: Carr Broom, chief; Amy House, Ennlce Broom, Lela Winches ter, Calhoun Redwine, Minnie Un derwood, Grady Hawfleld. Public cordially Invited to attend all the exercises. J. T. YEARGIX. The baby especially appreciates a rattling good time. Occasional depression no one can avoid, but 111 temper everybody. lllrntl Old Dal ke y Can Sec to Steal Trail Betrayed 1 1 int. Atlanta Journal. A. Pope, an aged negro who is totally blind, wus caught in his at telllDt to Hle.'il four saeks of nats Thursday night. Although he is sightless, a keen foresight must have told him that there were nut to be a feed famine on account of the flood situation in the middle west. Pope, whom Detective Hollings- worth (lechlliH to lie the worst thief In Atlanta, is enabled to get all ov er the city unaided, but is too bent with age to carry off what he form erly could. At one time he swiped tt car load of brick, the detectives said, and for this he was given twelve months. Another time he saw a wagon he liked, so he hitch ed his horse to It and drove it to his coal yard at the comer of Pied mont avenue and Cain street, said the detective. Thursday night Charlie Long, aged thirteen, colored, drove a wag on to 187 Piedmont avenue, just a block from Pope's Wagon yard, and with the assistance of Charley Wil liams, a husky colored man, go: tour sacks of oats out of a man's stable. One of the sacks had a hole in it, and this was all the clue the detectives wanted. A stream of outs dripped all the way and made a perfectly good track from 187 Piedmont avenue to the thief's yard. Hence the State cell Friday hnd three more negroes in it. Radium to Cure Cancer. Phlladalphla, April 3. Physicians of this city will watch with Inter est the result of an injection of one three-hundreths of an ounce of radi um Into the liver of Malcotu Wat son, as a cure for cancer. The operation was performed yes terday in the Methodist Episcopal hospital by Dr. G. J. Schwartz. The radium was brought to Philadelphia b) Dr. Otto Brill, an Austrian chem ist, now living in Pittsburg. The dose put Into Watson's liver was worth Just $2,500. It Is be lieved that the radium rays will act on the cancer as they do on a num ber of diseases and gradually kill It. Several prominent medic-el men witnessed the operation. The only anaetheUc used was a local applica tion of cocaine. Of business, the more you know about It the more you know there la to know about it. Lots of our friends he w 1,. ; n coming and sending, saving that they had been "Locking ui tWi-o" at their latels. This i.-. aij p . us ing, but there are many who fail d to l.iok, or at least have laiied to let us know about it One man looked n:id sent a dollar with a ho!e in it. As we have been unable to pass it off on any one else, he can come and get it lack it he wains it. We have sent letters to n large minders of our subscribers and ex pect to hear from every one of lliein. .Many have already responded and we expect all to do so. Today many will look at their la bel with satisfaction he cause they are no longer out of date. If your date looks right today accept our thanks. If it looks wrong we are waiting to hear from you. CHILD llUKNF.D TO MiUII. Little Son ,f Mr. Howell lliusoii Died in Toil u iv 4 coin Ituius From Clothing n Five. The little fifteen months old baby boy of Mr. and Mrs. Howell llinsou ot Monroe was burned to death yes terday. The burns were received during the morning hours and the child died atone o'clock in the after noon. Just how Its clothing caught is not known. The mother had stepped from the room, leaving the baby and an older child in the room where a small heater was burniug. Returning In a few minutes she found the child's clothing on fire and its whole body in flames. She seized the child and covered it with a blanket and extinguished the flames, but too late. The little fel low was horribly burned all over the body and head. It died in a few hours. Funeral services was held at the residence this morning by Rev. Mr. Craig. SUFFRAGETTE GIYK.N A YEARS. Yows She Will Cuiic Out Dead or Alive Afur a Hunger Strike De nounced Laws Assuiik il the ICe sKiiisibili(y of the l,lo)d-(ieai g FAplosh 11. Loudon. April 3. Mrs. Emmelino Pnnkhurst, militant suffragette leader, was today found guilty of malicious destruction of property in connection with the recent bomb ex plosion at the home of Lloyd George. The jury considered the evidence but a few moments before returning the verdict. .Mrs. Punk hurst yesterday pleaded not guilty and nnnnuueed that she would plead her own case. Mrs. Pankhurst was this after noon sentenced to three years to p nal servitude. Suffragists In court when the Jury's verdict was announced hissed and hooted t he jurors. Nevertht lehs the toreinnn recommended chimney In making his announcement. The verdict came after a dramat ic plea for the prisoner in which she denounced the laws that effect women, calling thim unjust In the extreme. She declared the blowing up of Lloyd-George's residence was not malicious but assumed the re sponsibility of the explosion inas much as it was placed at the door of the suffragettes. Dramatically ending her plea. Mrs. Pnnkhurst de clared she would start a hunger strike In prison and come forth dead or alive at the earliest possi ble moment. As Mrs. Pankhurst stood In the prisoner's enclosure her sympathiz ers cheered her wildly, then filed out of the court room singing March On; March." The defend ant's closing address to Hie Jury asted fifteen minutes. In her ad dress she digressed so far from the matter before the court that the Judge censured her. She fiercely criticised man-made laws and said the divorce law Itself was sufficient to Justify revolution by women. In Impassioned tones she shouted: "From the very moment I leave court, I will refuse to eat." She broke down when sentence was pronounced. CUT WIRES. Plymouth, Eng., April 3. Suffra gettes here today cut all telephone and telegraph wires ns a protest against the sentence imposed on Mrs. Pankhurst in London. Conductor IVijil Was to Have lleen Married on the Kith. In the Charlotte Observer's ac count of the ConovT wreck It is stated that both Conductor Boyd and Fireman Huddle were on substi tute runs. The report, under date of March 31st. further savs: "Mr. Boyd was to have married a young lady who lives at Cataw ba, the date for the ceremony be ing April 10th. He was at Cataw ba yesterday and was heard to re mark to a friend coming up on the train that he was to go out on a run for some one else and that he would be In a bad fix If No. 12 was late, so that he could not get back to Salisbury In time to take charge ot his regular train." If you are satisfied to take things at they come, you won' get much.
The Monroe Journal (Monroe, N.C.)
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April 8, 1913, edition 1
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