Newspapers / The Southport Leader (Southport, … / Jan. 1, 1891, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE WOES OF FARM EH FRILL. My son Lord Byron James Fitzjamcs Orlando Homer Frill, To poetry baa lalely turned. While I the land must till. Attuned by Nature' harmony, Inspired by autumn's breeze. Hi tender verse my poet weave; No hoe nor spade he seta. Of country life, sweet rural scenes. And happiness galore, I le's ground off "pomes" enough to reach From berc to Baltimore. lie sings of ' 'brown and rustling leaves. In dark and ahad'wv wood" Now, 111 admit in "ta'ter" hills Brown leaves are mighty good. In frenzy fine be rolls his eyes. While'l roll up my sleeves. He Kings of Autumn's aututnness. While I rake up the leaves. Of "wild wood nuts now falling fast, With soft, seductive sound" He'd better help me "goobers" dig, . f 1 1 n ey re wasting in me grounu.. Of '"lowing kine he sweetly raves Hut-ne'er milks lie the cow; The "glory of a farmer's life" Hut ne'er drives he the plow. He nings of "birdlet by the brook. And flow'rets in the fen" Twould better pay, I think, to feed The piglets. in the pen. I tell vou, folks, I'm gettin' riled! N'-'if Ird ami-no- forth Frill - Ion't hump himxelf and get to work I'll c ut hlra In my will. -Pleasant Hiderhood, in Free Press. as a messenger appeared, ''take this little girl where she wants to go and, say, get her a good supper at the res taurant on the corner there's a dol lar." The two closed the door behind them and went out into the night. "Half an' hour lost, ejaculated the worker as he turned to his desk. A reported sent in his matter. It was police court news. The quick blue pencil flashed across the most impor tant item in the list a precociously bad youth sent to the reform school. "It means a scoop, but it may make the little thing's life easier," thought the 'worker, and moved, somehow, by j the spirit of the moment he softened AGRICULTURAL NOTES. Alwavs save the best for seed. How about dry f ael for winter? Make a good seed bed for wheat. Have you selected good seed corn? Oxen in harness do not look as clumsy as you may think. Boiling water destroys the germs of miasma which it contains. By weight, ducks will lay more eggs during the year than hens. An animal -raised on the farm will not introduce disease there. Two hundred and nine feet on each side will make a square acre. earlier designs. But of the 4Hl patented substitutes for wood but eleven are metal. St. Louis Globe-1 Democrat. The New DIseoTery. SOtlTIIPORT ACADEMY itAii.no.uis. :o:- ATLANTIC COAST LINR .CONDENSED SCI1KWI.E. As nearly as possible, follow a line some criticisms to appear in the uusrm,K ults Juu morning, and now ready for putting j Gather the eggs regularly every day into type. Land keep in a dry, cool place. Change the feeding coops for the "Say, Matthews, how'd you come to j young poultry every few days. 1 THE MISSED ITEM. :o: By Charles Moreatt Harger. The city editor was exceedingly busy. It had been a day of conventions and visitors, and his head fairly throbbed with the consciousness of the details lie must look after. The presses were making the bailding tremble as! they turned out the Sunday supple ments. With coat off, he plunged into the mass of manuscript before him and was covering it with cabalistic blue pencil marks at a wonderful rate when the door of his room opened. Angry that any one should interrupt him at ''that busy hour, he whirled in his chair to snap out a reprimand. Hut a sight of the visitor halted him. A timid, brown -eyed girl stood just inside, the door, looking beseechingly at him through the tangled curls that half covered her tear-stained face. The ringlets fell, too, upon a coarse jacket that made; a thin covering in such a raw and blustering evening as it was outside. Are vou the editor rnan?" The voice was sweet and plaintive. -" Yes; what can 1 do for you?" He had not intended to be even civil, but something moved him to tenderness just then. "It's about Jule. D' you know Jule?'! Never heard of him," with a suspi cion of a laugh drawing down the miss th' best police news last night?" growled the managing editor as he came into the ffice the next day. "I happened to be in the court when it happened. One of the toughest young rascals I ever saw was sent up for a spell. ...Won't do to be scooped on such things. They teach a lesson, you know." . "Must have overlooked it," muttered some of the reporters enow." "Yes. Oh, well, I suppose the world will go on as well. as usual if we didn't get it." The city editor thought it might go a little better Detroit Free Press. the city editor, got in late, you You haTe heard your friends and neigh bors about it. You mar yourself be one of the many who know from personal expe rience just how good a thing it is. If you have ever tried it. you are one of its staunch friends, because the wonderful thins about it is. that when once given a trial. Dr. j King's New IHscoTery ever after holds a j f r; place in the house. If you bare never used j -UA it and should be afflicted with a cough, cold j or any Throat. Lung or Chest trouble. ! secure a bottle at once and give it a fair : trial, it is guaranteed c ery time, or utttoev 1 rriuuuru iruu iMAim r rw ai nmsouK; Drugstore. K2V. H. A. 1)UB()CVA. M.. PKINCIIWI- IWd AjrU SS, lsj. TKAl.NS IXH.Ntt I MTU. JHNNll: C.-.1)UBPC, jt AYnvtingtun... 6 15 ... iJ3 ... 1 Si No. 23. Nv 27. N. U a. :i. IMM&KPTItKSS. WEEKLY MABKET BEPOET. ! ENQLISH BRANCHES, CLASSICS, SCIENCES, Lv r"U crtMv . Aruuur. I.v Sumter. .. Ar VJuinbu. Nv . 4 it". 4 .Vi G 15 A. JU. r. m. n to ..... is 4o r. l 2l A. M. No. 58 A. M, 2 . " U il Nt.5. A. SI. V45 ... H 55 ... . A Clever Woman. In 1848 Mrs. M. T. Hollander of Boston, her wits being sharps n-d by the necessity of earning a living for herself and her little ones, conceived the idea of making and selling ready made clothing for children, which before that time could not be bought atall. Furnishing only good material and honest workmanship with excellent taste and judgment, she secured an immediate clientage, and gradually built up one of the largest and soundest businesses of its kind (for it was copied at once) in the country, "Hollander's" being the symbol of elegant and ex clusive fashions. Besides being an excellent financier, a farseeing manu facturer, and a successful designer, Mrs. Hollander was a philanthropist, i giving thought, labor, and time to all reforms, but especially to the cause of the advancement and education of women. And when she diet!, not long ago, she bequeathed to her child en not only a fortune, earned by her unaided capacity, but a reputation for ability, honesty, and benevolence such as few women have hail the opportunity corners of the mustached mouth. mm. lies my urotner, an j to win. Harpers Bazaar. been took up. 1 hey said he stold, but he didn't and I know it. Jule was always! good ter me, an' he told me he didn't steal the mittens he found There is scarcely any danger of giving too much variety of food. Remember that flat culture is best for dry soils and ridging for wet. As far as possible, own your tools and keep them in a eoou condition. I . Don't be afraid of keeping your dairy stable too clean and parlor-like. Composting manure reduces bulk and saves in the amount of handling. Chopped onions, with a little ginger mixed in, is z-aid to be a sure cure for chicken cholera. Harness oil made of one gallon of i neats'-foot oil with four ounces of lampblack, well mixed, is simple and effective. You can beat a bacon trust dead sure by raising your own pigs. Pigs make pork, pork makes bacon, bacon makes your family happy when grub time draws near. Uye is one of our most valuable plants to use as a green manure especially on an impoverished soil. It can be grown to its full development between the middle of September and the middle of the following May, and thus we are able to grow our fertilizing crop and get some other crop from the land everv vear. An old experienced farmer says that hickory cut in July or August will not become worm-eaten. Oak, chestnut, walnut or other timber cut from the middle of July to the last of August will last twice as long as when cut in winter. White oak cut at this season, if kept off the ground, will season through if two feet in diameter, and remain perfectly sound for many years, whereas it cut in winter or spring it will become sap-rotten in a few years. SOUTH PORT RETAIL VAEKKT. Irish potatoes, 45 cents per peck. "Sweet potatoes 50 cents i-r bushel. Shell corn, 80 cents per bushel. Corn meal, firm at 80 cents per bushel Peas, $1.10 per bushel... Lady Peas $1.60 per bushel. Wheat bran, $1.85 a cwt Hay. A3 cents per cwt. Corn Bran, 50 cents per cwt, Oats, 65 cents per, bushel. Hice flour, $1.00 per cwt. Eggs, 23 cents per dozen. Pork, 8 cents per pound, light demand. Beef, 10 cents per pound. Chickens. 30 .cents a piece. Spring chickens 20 cents a piece. Oysters in shell, 50 cents a bushel. Oysters. K cents a quart. WILMINGTON MABKETS. COTTON REPORTS. Good middling. 0 v cts Middling. 8 cts Low middling .8 1-16 TUnPEXTISE. MODERN LANGUAGES, Send for Circular. i ,i ; PYTHAGORAS LODGE, No. 249 A. P. and A.M. j Regular Communication first Tucs idav in everv month, at S P. M. Visiting brethren always welcoiri j ft. M. hoBHIXS, w. If. W. S. DOSIIEK SKH. No. 53 run l!mib fnrfu i IitrU-4tn ia (Vtiiral raUrMl. ImUiij 1-uix -ISO a. m. Mamitaj; P.l A. M. ,j Train on C. & I. U. It. r.ncts at YU ifHv ilh Ni. .V, Ijp ColumLU. Ar Sumler. . . Ix IiuimtiT. . . , Ar LJutvim . . ; Ijp Klrencr. I Ia MsritHi. i Ar Wihuiugiim. r TRAIN iilN NMTH. No. 51. No. 59 P. M. . 11 5.H . 11 5M . 1 15 A. M. No. IH. A. M. . 4 2.1 . 5 yl . 35 No, SX. r. m. 5 'JO 0 S3 ics: ..... 4,50 ..... r. m. No.fi No. 14. a. m. r. M. ..... H 13 ..... 55 ..... 11 KAIMCOAUS. Turpentine, crude firm; liard $1.20; vir gin $1.90; yellow dip $1.90. Tar nrm at fl.4U Hosin Strained, $1.15; Gootl Strained $1 20 em. "Wouldn't the officers believe him?" The newspaper man found himself growing ieterested against his will. "No; an' that's what I come for. You see they tried him to day an' th' judge said he must go to th' perform school, or something like that. An' an' I thought mebbc if you knew alxmt it you wouldn't put it in th pa er. Jule an' me is all alone now. ince mamma went away to Heaven we've lived bv ourselves. Julo sold jixrs an' I run errands, an' we was getting along fine. We had a lot saved, too; almost two dollars. I'll give it to you if you won't print nothin' about Jule," her face clouding as she thought she saw the shadow of a frown on tho man's face. It was not a frown, but an emotion which caused his eyes to grow suspi ciously moist, and he turned away to hide them. A clinking sound recalled him, and he saw the little one's hands dropping the whole store of pennies and dunes and nickels upon his deskthe scant savings of weeks, or, perhaps, of months. "No, no, my girl," he hastened to sav, "take them back. I do not want them. I will see that nothing is said about your brother." A smile lighted up her wistful face. "I am so glad." she exclaimed "My aunt, where I'll have to go, now though she jlon't like us, always takes your panerj an if she don t know what's happened to Jule, mebbe shell be better to me an' I can help Julo out. He was always so good ter me." The presses were roaring and rattling still louder, and, as the child turned "t go, she looked bewildered. "Hold on," said the editor, as he touched an electric bell, "Here, John," Do Thy Best X young painter was directed by i ns master to complete a picture on which the master had been obliged to suspend his labor on account of his growing infirmities. "I commission thee, my son," said the aged artist, to do thy best upon this work. Do thy best." The young man had such a reverence for his master's skill, that he felt incompetent to touch canvas which bore the work of that renowned hand. But "Do thy best" was the old man's calm reply; and again, to re GAPE FEAR AND YADKIN VALLEY E. R., Co. SCHEDULE No. If. I--.cd Mondav IktrmWr I. l-HUO. THAIXS MOVIMt NOUTU, The First Stop. Perhaps you are run down.ean't eat, can't sleep.can't think, can't do anything to your satisfaction, and you wonder what ails yoti. You should heed the warning, ypu are tak ing the first step into Nervous Prostration. Vou need a Nerve Tonic and in Electric Bitters you will find the exact remedy for restoring your nervous system to its normal health)' condition. Surprising results fol low the use of this great Nerve Tonic and Alterative, Your appetite returns, good digestion in restored, and the Liver and Kidneys resume healthy action. Try n bottle. Price 50c. at Watsons's Drug Store. GRAND BARBECUE The Democrats of Brunswick County propose to celebrate their great victory at the last election by giving A GRAND BARBECUE at Lockwood's Folly Bridge, Wednesday, January 7, t)l Prominent Speakers have been invited and will be present on this occasion. The C. F. S. Cornet Band of Southport, will furnish music. With Good Speaking, Good Music and plenty of good things to eat, a good time is promised to all. All Democrats, their families and their friends are cordially invited to attend. II. W. McKeithan, Chairman of Committee. No. I No. :l l4xv Wilmington 0 00 u in Ar Favetteville. . 12 25 p i: Lvetnyetteville.12 50 ' Lve Sanford 2 22 ' Ar Urfenslxiro. .. 5oov Lve Greensboro.. 5 10 " Lve Walnut Cove 6:$2 " ArMt. Airy 8 25 ' Lve llenncusville. ....... 8 0 a m Ar Maxton . 9 40 " Lve Maxton 3 50 " Ar Favetteville 11 45 " Lve Millbnro Ar Greensboro. Lve Greens! Nro. 1010 Ar Mmlison.... .12 15 Iaily. flkdly except Sunday, No. 53 rum tlimugli tu C1arleUo, S. C. vb Central H. It. arri1n at 3Inn!tif: 1.14 p. m., lNtie 7.42 p. m., (larlti4oj 9. U0 p. in. No. 59 connect at FlerrtHx with C, & IK train front Client w and Watleb N. T8 and 14 make t ! r4ittevtk)l at Wibninirton with W. A: W. U. It. fir ail Mints Nrth Train tm Florence It. It. leavtt lHr IK-c daily extt-pt Sunday 4.40 p. ni., arrite at Holland T.00 p. in. lteturtiin Kne Iiov. land Q.UI a. in,. arrient leelHtt.50 a. nt. Train on MMiiclicKtcriV. Augusta lutilntd Uitvett Sumter daily extvpt Sunday, 10.50 a. m.. arrivinjr at Itiehnnln 12.01 p. tu. I Itetuniin leiive ItkltanlMm 12.15 p. m, I arrie l Mi niter I.5SU p. in. ! JOHN F. DIVINE. i General Suptf InteutUiit. ; J. It, KKM.Y, AwilMant General Manager. . C 50 n nt T 31. LxiKitMix. Gi-ihtaI laeutcer A cent. . 25 " No. 15 ; Passenger and Mail northlounl '.dinner ut Favetteville and supier ot Greenslioro. j WILMINGTON & WSLDON B. E. Ami llrwarli. CONDKN8KI) SCHEDULE. " THAIXJ MOVINO tMHTII No. 2 No. 4 rjcave 3It. Airv. . 0 (K) a m Ar GreenslKm. . . 9 20 " Lve Greensltom.. 0 50 ' Lve Sanfonl 12 10pm.' Ar Favetteville.. 150 No. 10 ' latel June 15..1rtK. TUAIXK OOIXO HUTU Lve Favetteville, Ar Wilmington.. Lve Fnyetteville. . Ar Maxton. . . Lve Maxton. Ar IJennettsville. . Lve Madison. . . . . .r Gnfitslioro. . . Lve Greensltoro. . Ar 3Iilllon 2 15 5 45 3 00 p in 5 20 5 550 " 0 45 ' I A' Wt -ldon. . . Ar li kv Ait . Ar TrUro. Ia; TurUint. 1 2f p ni 3 35 p in ! 1 00 p m i 0 55 p m '.'Ar WiW.n Passengers Alail nnd wmthlxamd break- I- Wilson ! fast at Gn-ensln)ro dinner at Favetteville. i ....... . I All Trains run daily e.eejt Sunday. 1 J. W. FUY, General Sij4 riite;.dei,t. j W. E. KYLE. Genl Passenger Agent. Ar SM-liiia Ai Favtitev'lv a- (Joldslmm. Ia- att-aw... 4e3lHgnli.i.. Ar i irntun OAEOLINA CENTRAL E. R. Co. CHANGE OF SCIIKDI'LE. WtTlJM"M TUAIXS. Substitutes for Wooden Railroad Ties. The wooden ties now in use upon the tracks of the United States number 515,89,918. The average life of a peated solicitations, be answered, "Do j wooden tie in this country is six and a thv best." The youth tremblingly The Improved Shannon ;june2o,ioo Letter ami Bill File. No. 41. No. 55 daily exept daily exepl Mindav i Iv Wilniinjrton O.HO a m I Iav Hamlet.... 1.25 pm ! Ix-v Wadesljro .2.41 p m Ar Charlotte . . . . 4.23 p in i Ixv Charlotte.. . . . .4.3:1 p m .. p m seized . the brush, and kneeling before his appointed work, he prayed: ldt is for the sake of my beloved master that I implore skill and power to do this deed." His hand grew steady as he painted. Slumberincr genius awoke in his eye. Enthusiasm took the place of fear. Forgetfulness of himself sup planted his self-distrust, and with a half years. Everv vear. therefore, calls for 80,000,000 new ties. The interest in this subject is well shown by the iact that 401 patents have ben issued in this country to inventors of substitutes for wooden ties. One in genious individual has protected an idea for glass ties. An Englishman has taken out letters in his own coun- Ix'V Lineolnton . . : Ix'v Mielby . . ...... .H..0 p in !, Ar Kutlteffordton. . .M.o5 p in Acme Bank Check File. Legal Blank Cabinet. U. S. Document File. ; r Metal Roller Book Shelf j Cabinet. 1 Lve Shelbv ....tf.50 Write for complete in- Eveijntnton . ...n w I Ar Crh.tr lot te. . . . . . formation about any or all j fcv"S i SnndMV I'V .MOETlloiia. Ia Warsaw 8.00 p m ; Ar Jldbi f Hi M 111 1 -r , : a' Fa vet lev k .r rx-iiitM. . . Ar 1141. . i t a m i.:50 a m KATIMI XIi TUl.f. No. ijn. daily exept hunday No. 24. daily exept ; t:ittlav Ar'l-k .Mt. Ar TarUiro. Ia Trlnr. Ar YYMi.. :o. 2.1 No. jS't No. 41 laily. daily. daily. fnM mT ex bun P.M. 1VM. A.M. 12 ! 5 ! it w 1 40 .... 10 1 M . 10 i0 .... .... 1VM. 1. M. A. 1L t u ; io ; 4.1 5 m m 0 tlO n 15 : 40 h :$5 4 10 .... U M 4 24 M 40 V 411 5 5o V 5-i 11 L'O No. 14 No. ;h No. 40 dailv. daflv. ex Nft A. M. A. M. I , i 12 01 U Wt 4 Hi I. M. I .SI- 10 ?A 5 M .... 10 4M 5 5tf . 2 21 11 45 6 5:1 .... 4t 40 ... t in A. M. V. M. 1. M. . '3 ttf 12 7 T 47 . .... 1 10 H 18 I ' M . ut A.M. I tt 4 t p. M. . 4 m i 45 I Iaily exeipt Smnbiy. . 900 r in Train tm fvlarwl Ntk llraruh ItwI 12.f0 p m leave Halifax 2. p. n.. rrr SmlUtMl 2.00 a in Xfe u 3,45 w IHterlitfi 6.10 p.Jft. I 'M m jyrnfnr Kiwrion 7 . w. rWi4. ! t . 11 1. . ) III n n. jtrv, the United States. France, Bel- j 01 tllC l l)0 C gOOUS. ! Ar Wilmincloit. . ... 7.30 p m calm jov he finished his labor. The g"". and pam lora tubular tie maoe . Trim. .. 43 ami 3 make c-ir fnawr.' -N"k l l 2 . dally r ttn. i.t.1. 4 . )m nf ennrrete or some Other composition i WALlLa ii. OlI VXiilO. Agin tir MMti Imrltittr and iwr nl imIii. HxY. " ir-ii t-i lla lkz 1 in uvi vii tux ; a - 1 - couch into the studio, to pass judg- j to be cast around a core 01 wire rnent on the result. As his eve fell netting. One proposition is to manu- upon the triumph of art before him, j he burst into tears, and throwing his enfeebled arms around the young artist, he exclaimed, "My son, I paint no more if That youth, Leonardo da Vinci, became the painter of "The last Supper," the ruins of whicb, after the lapse of 300 years, still attracts annually to the refectory of an obscure convent in Milan hundreds of the worshippers of art Ex. BueklenY Amies Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers. Salt Rheum. Fever facture rails, ties, and other articles for trackage from a composition of paper pulp, silicate soda, and barytes. The proportions are 500 parts pulp, 25 parts soda, and 10 parts barytes. Two inventors, working jointly, have evolved the suggestion of terra cotta or earthenware pyramids to support the rails. The pyramids are to be connected by iron metal ties. An earlier device is a concrete tie with wooden blocks inserted for the rails to i j be spiked upon. The idea of a metal j skeleton or framework tie covered j with concrete or artificial stone comes for the State of North Carolina. SOTTTHPORT. N. C. gf-Liberal Discount to the Trade. M . FARGUSSON, Civil Engineer and Contractor. SOUTHPORT. X. C STUART HO USE SOUTHPOBT, H. C. OPEN ALL TIIE TEAR BOCNP at I.intlnton fr Hickory anl Western North C'urolitia. 1 No. 25 and 24 make cle emnertifn at llanik t to and from IUIeijeh. TIi rot 1 irh leeTinff CTirs liet wn WHmin?- tim tid Clutrlolle ami Vilmingtt and IUMglt. Train on Midland N. C. Ilntmb leairs (UAdiXMtr-i btilr rstept utulay, 6.C4) a. m. arrire at JndtWtld T VI fr IletMrpfug k-are KmlthnVM m.,rrie at Uthl lmrt 1.S0 a. in. Train oallintnti Branrli l-are Warsaw Ixal freight cUilv between Wflmlnfton ) for Vlinum UUy. rxtxA Sunday at fi.UU p. and Charlotte with timeerttcU attached i TlJi tndn leave Wilmington at 4.M a. m. ! T. WHISNANT. Su-rintmU-r.1. F W. Clack, G ktaI Fa-tJpT Agent. Irk - Lz ." D r Sores. Tetter. Chapped Hands, Chilblains , f rom France to patented. Concrete I J PETERSOX. HOUSE MOVER Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and .pod-j, . , ,afa, , fha M;f..A rues, w uv iti -v t 1 tivelv cures is suaranteed to ffire perfect satisfaction, or money reiunnea. iTice cents per wx For Sale by Dr. D. I WaLson. Tite Soctupobt Jiucxr $1 a year a - rat uDon are suffireUexi. oncreir chairs anl blocks and eouijosuions of filser snaked with asphaltura and shaped by pressure were among the CONTRACTOR. SOUTHPORT. K. C. Croats. wuA TnMUrtn ttl4alad. mi all rV ret btat cuodactc4 for Miitrata f. Of Ota i Ofaatia V.t.totm oaa. aa4vteaarc pttr&l La Vet Uaa llxa thew reaaota Waartcs. heztl drafts j cr prw dcrtr- Voz. TTe fcSI If uM r c fft 4 2VT?t- 0S icC OTt hsc Utl Utt-5t U WMTC. a Wiafclit T1 ta OMala rscai.na ufartaal citU tarur6Utc.Haty. O.A.CrJOV7iOO ,01 m. an-1 1 1.10 a. m. IMurninsr Hlu. ui at H.30 c m.. ami 3.10 . m ettnertin$ ' it WtrMw with N. 41. 40. 2a and T. NNitbUuml train on WIW & Jajetle ' ilfc Branch U N. 51. N1hl-uwl t Nu ? .VI. I Mil extvpt Sndy. j Train No. J7 rimitlt w CI atrip ijat Wilauft. Goklaburu and MamJU. I Tra'ti $H nuk- cluw cur.fcrtiko at WI Um t , all puUita Nrtb tlaily. All fal t . rbnMiod, actl daily eirept iHtctlay la I Bar iJne. - Train nuU cVemnrrtk ftrall i4nt North vb HkftrsI asd Waahfcvaj. 'ami 0.int.i m! batr itllman I'aUf Slrt-iit-r attjrfied. JOHN Y. iMVirr, GerT4l Sufcr ttr ... J. It Kplt. Sept Trart m T. 3!, K;uw-t.tCtftn r-fxit"
The Southport Leader (Southport, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 1, 1891, edition 1
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