Newspapers / The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, … / June 30, 1911, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
YolLXIX. No. 155 The Weather FAIR. RALEIGH, N. C., FRIDAY; JUNE 30, 1911. LAST EDITION PRICE FIVE CENT3 Double the Nuixiber of Paid Sibscri6ers in Raleigh of any Other Newspaper OLD MAN SMITH Says Plural Karriase No Longer Prac- ; - Utani PROPHET HAS FIVE WIVES 81111 Supports His Wives, But is Obey. lug the Iaw Agninstj Plural Star. - tinge Says i,n These lays of Hth , . Cost of Living-One Vlfe la Knough ' for t'e Airtrage Man President ; Smith Left Washington Today Af- ter Appearing Before Sugar Trust : Investigating Committee. Washington, 'June 30. Polygamy is no longer practiced by Mormons, and any man caught taking a plural wife, is promptly excommunicated, declared Joseph F. Smith, the vener able president of the Mormon church In an interview this morning. Smith said he still supports, but does not : live with the wlveB he married prior to the Untied States Supreme Court decision that polygamy was unlawful and before the church issued the famous manifesto, forbidding plural .marriage. . Asked if he thought it best for man to have but one wife, the hus band of five wives and father of 43 children replied: "In -these days of the high cost of living, there Is no doubt the average man Is much better off with, one wife. If a man cannot support one wife decently, It would obviously be impossible for him to , support more. The-women today de mand that they be dressed, fed, and housed, as well as possible. A man f ljh an average income would be In terrible straits If he had several wives on his bands, all crying (or the latest- things in hats and gowns." President Smith, who came - to Washington to appear before the sugar investigation commltttee of the House left the city today. ' BIO WHIBKKY SKIZl'RE, 30,000 " Gallon of Whiskey' Taken Possession of by Officers, Ashoville, N. C, June 30. Reve nue Agent Sams has Just been., in formed of the. seizure of thousands of gallons of whiskey near Clarks ville, Va., by the revenue officers. According to this report a registered distillery was seized and 30,000 gal lons of whiskey taken possession of by the officers. Mr. Sams 'stated that he could not give the details of the seizure and would not give the pme of the distillery seized nor of the officers who seized it, nor the reason for the seizure, but there are doubtless some Interesting feat ures connected with the procedure. Deputy Collector Hendricks and Special Employe Weaver also report the seizure of an Illicit distillery In Carroll county, Va., recently and Deputy Collectors McCoy and Mitch ell report the recent seizure of an Illicit distillery in Polk county. BIG LAN!) DEVELOPMENT. California Man and Guilford County Mn Buy Big Tract in Cumberland and Harnett, Washington, June 30 Ex-Sheriff Jordan of Oullford county and Con gressman William Kent, of California, wlto lias the reputation of being the wealthiest Insurgent In congress, have us closed a deal for forty thousand acres of land near Manchester on the RENEWED ACTIVITY IN JEWELRY MYSTERY New- York, June 30 Government customs agents renewed activity In the Jenkins Jewelry, preparing for the grand Jury Investigation next week. Mrs.' Helen Dwelle Jenkins, whose name has been coupled with those of prominent men, of wealth In this con nection, was subpoenaed to appear be for the grand Jury Thursday. Sev eral former customs Inspectors will be witnesses, according to allegations that the government was def.auded vof duties on Jewelry valued at three hun dred thousand dollars, though conni vance In the customs department. The alleged smuggling occurred' two years ago. A year and a half ago the Jewels mysteriously , disappeared. Detectives ay their seaVch for them met "scan dals at every turn." C P. & T.' V. Railroad between Fay ettevllle and v'Sanford,' A portion of the land Is in Cumberland and part in Harnett. . The large tract of land will be de veloped and the first move will be, to piani out a .,. nunarea-acre orcnara as a demonstration. Work will be started shortly laying put sand-clay roads throughout the estate and roads will be built to Fayett'evllle and also to ' Plnehurst. Efforts will be made to get. people f rom"vthe north whb desire to engage , In farming. fMa land. Is In what Is ' known as the sahd-hl!) ' sections . and Is ' the same kind of land on which Is grown such .splendid fruit In the Plnehurst sec tion. It Is 'said that this sand land around Hamlet is being made, to pro duce'flne, cotton. The, Vraet will be called "Pine Wild." ' Sheriff Jordan , has been connected with some of the largest real estate deals ever put through In this state and every project he has been con nected with . has ' proven a : success. Congressman Kent owns large estates in some half dozen Western states, MRS. GAMHIKR'S SUIT. Trial Finished Today-Decision Later ' Gambler Suit Next. New7 York, June 30 Suit for separa tion brought by Mrs. Edith Russell GUmbiler, the Atlanta belle, against her husband, Edward Victor Gambler, banker, .was concluded before; Justice Pendleton when :' the court, allowed counsel for both sides to submit briefs for' the consideration of the court. The decision comes inter. . Gambler's suit again his wife for an nulment of marriage was then- con sidered. A Jury trial was asked. The court did not pass on this point but sent the case back to the 'general 'cal endar. This Indicated Gambler's stilt will not come to trial until next Octo ber. In the meantime the motion to try case by Jury can be entertained. WOMAN HELD FOB MURDER. Man Has Already Been Convicted, " ''But She Confesses) Deed. Warren, Pa;, June 30 Mrs. Stella Hodge, the woman arrested yesterday upon confession of shooting Emlle Amann, January 27; was taken before a' Justice of the peace and formally charged with murdering :Amann. .In.-. rsrmatlon was made by l harles K. Hheldon, a relative of Mrs. J. M. An drews, whose husbandx was tried for the murder of Amann and convicted of murder in first degree a week ago. The woman said; ' "Why, I killed Emlle Amann. but It was not intentional, it was an ac cident' The woman was committed to Jail. The authorities refuse to dis close. the steps they plan. '.":-:.-,' SIXTY INJURED IN PANIC. Government Stops the Sending .Out v of News About It. Madrid, June i 30. The govern ment" censor stopped all.' news de bpatches filed with the telegraph com panies last night, describing disor ders In connection with the great Eucharlstic procession. It is estimat ed that sixty persons received severe bruises in the street panic following the explosion of a bomb at the mo ment the parade was passing. None were ..Injured directly by the bomb. The crowds cried in alarm started to run in another direction. Women fainted, sinking to the pavement and were trod upon. :"'- '' Three Fires on Arabic. . Liverpool .June 30. Three sepa rate outbreaks of 'fire In different parts of the White Star Line steam er, Arabic were discovered and quenched this afternoon. The "vessel is scheduled to sail from Liverpool tomorrow for New York. White Star officials are unable, to account for the fires except that they were start ed by Incendiaries. Editors Fight Duel. . ; Paris June 30 Polemics between the Matin and the Journal over the Inter national aeroplane race, arranged by the latter resulted In a dramatic sword duel between M. Charlet, managing editor of th'e Journal and M. Jouvenet, edltorln-chlef of the Matin. Each re ceived a wound In the arm The en counter Was witnessed by a small army of Journalists. Asleep For Eleven Weeks. Vandalla 111.. June 30. Physicians attending Miss Hazel Schmidt, who has been sleeping almost continuous, ly eleven weeks, said they believed she was dying. She has not' been awake more, than five hours in eleven weeksi Her condition has greatly puzzled physicians. David Caplan in London. Los Angeles ,Cal., . June 30. a man believed to be David Caplan,; one df the alleged McNamara dyna mite conspirators, Is under surveil- ance in London. Papers are being prepared for his extradition from England. Herr Hirth Makes Good lime. Berlin, June 30 Hirth, the German aviator, who with a passenger In a monoplane frdm Munich arrived here. Wla onfiial fl v-1 n c 1 1 m .1 WAR flvA hours and forty-one mnutes for, J347 miles. Hirth Recently made a. world's record flight with a passenger, ascending 5,182 feet .' ' The Killing of Cope land r J " fa h PA N, ft -Mm 1 " ' ' .MRS. JOHN V. SI'RINtJKR, the central figure in the trial of Krunk H. Henwnod, of New York, who in being tried in Denver,- rharged with' the, nmrjk'i' of tieorge F.'-Coie-lund, in a Denver hotel. A bullet nliueti at S. Iiuls Von Pliul. with whom HeinwXHl hud quarreled, went wild and killed t'opeland. The quarrel . Iiefween Von I'hul niul Hen. wood is (lwlaied to have been ever the young woman shown in this pho tograplt, . ' RALEIGH BOY ON CREW Rufus S. Tucker Rowing With Yale In Annual Race Son of Lnte V. R. Tucker and Ne phew of Mrs; James Iloylan ot This City Wins Plare'on-Team of Old Ell Visited Here Christinas. Mr. Rnfus S. Tucker, a Raleigh boy, has the honor today of rowing in the great Yale-Harvard races on the Thames river, Mr. Tucker being assigned to the fourth oar on the Yale crew. In the 44 varsity races that these institutions have pulled off,' Yale has won 23 and Harvard 2lJ and both crews are reported as in splendid condition. The varsity eight-oar race, the classics of college sports, is an event that brings the largest crowds ot followers of tile two universities to gether, ,the crowds being larger and more enthusiastic than. those that at tend the annual football games. ; Mr. Tucker is a natural athlete, so to speak. All his life he was fond of outdoor exercise, and his fondness for the water was acquired at St, Luke's, Pennsylvania, wiiere he attended school. He w ill graduate from Yale this summer. Mr. Tucker Is 20 years old and is a perfect speci men of physical manhood. He is a son the late W. R. Tucker and a grandson of the late Rufus S, Tucker, for whom he was named. Mr. Tuck er was In Raleigh during the Christ mas holidays. He was the guest ot his, aunt, Mrs. James Iloylan. Senate Olmerves Fourth. Washington, June 30 The senate has agreed to adjourn .from'. tomorrow to next Wednesday to observe the fourth of July. ' TEH WORKMEN ARE CRUSHED TO DEATH Buffalo, N. Y.. June 30 Ten work men were crushed to death and sev eral seriously injured, in the collapse of a roof and other 'portions of the Buffalo water department's new sta- lon. Tht men were working In a pit of the pump house. Encounter Between Curl is t und Re publicans. Barcelona, Spain, June 30 The gar rison is held in barracks as the re sult of a violent encounter between the Carllsta and republicans last even ing. The trouble started when the grinder of a hand organ phiyed the Marseillaise" In front of the Carllst club. . Shots were exchanged. One repub lican was critically wounded. V--. - - : .'. DUKE PICTURE WAS1IJ COURT Alleged Caricature of President J. B. Duke's Wife Exhibited to Jury Today INTEREST IN PROCEEDINGS Drawing ( Woman' U 11 li W art In Left Eye and Wfiite RoIIh 1'aek age in Other Said to Represent Lady Whom I'lvsllliiit Married Mr, Ware' Said Wiluiiiigton Was Not I'Higrcssive Town Recess Ordi'i-cd I nt il .Momluv at I O'clock. That the Ware-Kramer Tobacco Company liad an artist make a car toon which was knowif as ' Tlie Ladv Duke Picture," and hud this picture distributed to the trude was the most nteresting feature brought out in Federal court today. Tnder this car toon was, "Oh, how tt hurts," the picture in question representing u woman with a wart on her left eve and a package of While Rolls past ed in lior, riKhl eye. Mt. R D. Ware, president o the Ware?Kr.amer f'oni pauv, said that this was one of the methods .of ''fighting' back at the trust," which, however, had not taken such an opporfjnnity to offer him on his concern, a similar pleas antry. The defense-, iwho had Mr. Ware under cross examination, in sisted that this pict nr.-: was a gratui tous Insult to President. J. U. Duke and Mrs. Inman, of Atlanta, whom he married. At another time t ho Ware-Kramer people had a lot of v. nlte Rolls cigarettes, thrown in a carriage in which Mr.. Duke was rid ing. . '-'.. "V' Hoth Judge and Jury Inspected with Interest tho .-picitn'e supposed to represent Mr. ami 'Ars. unite: ' Among the loiters written bv Pres ident Ware was one in -which he siinl that V llmiiiKton was not a progres sive town , that if it .had' been, lie would have moved his plant troni Wilson to A ilnungton instead of orfolk. ' Mr. Ware, In another of his letters, congratulated the artist for making such a good picture of ' Ladv nuke," and it was shown that oil paintings of this picture were made and distributed around. The picture cost $2,000. No effort will likelv be made to connect W. M. Carter with the case. Mr. Woodnrd intimating to the court that the plaintiff would not attempt lo prove that he was in a conspiracy with the American Tobacco Companv lo destroy the trade of the Ware Kramer Tobacco Companv. Dr. Albert Anderson ttnd Mr. C W. Gold were placed on the stand after the cross-examination of Mr. Ware to prove that his charcter was good. These gentlemen said it. was. Court took a recess at 12-30 un til Monday at 1 o'clock. Tl'O CAPTAIN' DKAI) AT WHKKL. Stricken as He Is fiuiding Scout ' Cruiser Into Drydock. Boston, June 30 The United Slates scout cruiser Birmingham,' Command er Jones, had a narrow escane from damage In the dry dock at the navv this afternoon,' when Capt.- Joseph .B. Klley.'.of the navv tug Iwanna. drop ped dead In the pilot house. The tug was towins the cruiser into the dry dock. The engineer of the tug, miss ing the accustomed signals, went to investigate and discovered the captain lying over the wheen dead. Death was thought to bo due to heart disease. The engineer took charge of the wheel, and the Birmingham was dock ed without further incident. THE WITHDRAWAL OF TROOPS TO BEGIN Washington. June 30 After a talk with Secretary of War Stlmson, and Major Oenerul Leonard Wood, Presi dent 1'aft lias authorized the with drawal of four regiments from the maneuver division at San Antonio, Texas. The regiments will be with drawn In the next thirty days. Sev eral regiments will be left In Texas all the summer. Express Train Derailed by Wreckers. Paris, June 30 An 1 Express . .tra-in from Havre for Paris was derailed by train wreckers at Pont-De-Arche, near Louvers last night. All the cars turn ed over. None of the passengers were seriously Injured. The press, strikes a note of alarm, demanding that the new cabinet put an end to revolution ary outrages. -. . ;"'' Regaining His Reason V : -.; -';'''-'f W'fjfii1- I'ROK. .MARK V. HAKRIXtiTON, former head of the 1 nili'd Slates Weather lUireau, who cilice June lit, 1!)(7, lias been nil imiiale of tlie New Jersey Stale Insane Asylum, at Mor ris Plains, nnilcr the name ol "John hoc (he Kmlitli", and who is now believed lo lie reniiiiuii; Ins reason. Hitherto, (lie one-time distinguished man ol science has slioiyn not the slightest i$n of interest, even in his own name, answering only to the John lloe appellation, and appe iriiig to regard (lint as Ins proper name. Lately, however, it is said, lie read ily responded In the najiie of "Har rington". North Carolina Agricultural Statistics Made Public I' me Munuiiu lor Hie Stale in the In crease 111 I lie A nine ol I' arm Lands and I :11m Buildings. I arms Made Smaller. I specinl to I lie I lines',) Washington, .Innn ;!.. North (arolnia,s agriciiliiiral slalistics, giv en out I rum the census bureau today, make'-' a. fine showing for Hie state. Th'e Increase in value of 1'ai'm. lands and farm buildings lor the decade ot l!tuU-l!)lu was wiuidi'iiiil. I he value went I'roni $ 1 Ill.ii.iO.OOO In 1 WHO- to $15"i, 7 1,1. 0M0 111 llilil. an increase ot 134 -per cent. I.ie increase in the value of land alone was Ml per cent. I lie increase in Hie use ol luri lli.ers was 17;! per cent. I here was a 1.: per cent decrease in t lie number ol acres per farm. In oilier words the North Carolina larm lias been re duced from .1 01, acres to MS acres. This is a healthy' sign. Tlie. smaller the farm the better the larmer. I ae total acreage loll oft 2 per cent in the ten years. 1 he average value ol land per acre went Ironi $ t. 2 -t to 1 .1 . 2 ! , making a gam ol 141 per cent. 'I Uat is a remarkable showing .. for ' the State. The lanners has fbiurished for (en or more vears and the outcry against the high cost ol living mav give mm a( little set back, but he is able to stand it. The North ( arolinn, lanner is com ing Into his own. l e is -''improving his farm and getting more out of life, NINES STICKS.TO HIS Washington, June 3d Kdward llines of ( 'tili-ago, was subjected to. a .'rigid cross exaininallon bv John H. Marble, attorney for the senate Investigating committee. Hines contradicted the sworn testimony by President Herman H. JU'teler, of the Heteler Lumber of Chicago, that Hines boasted to linn of having personally elected Uorlmcr. He denied the lumber -Interests rals- ed a big sum to lobliv fur larllC leg islation In lHOfl. or that the lumber in terests had anything lo do with Ihe I.orlmer elect 11)11. Hmes decliii'i-d he was "absolulelv certain'', he was not mistaken about his testimony .that former Senator Aldrich stated to bun tlie president was antdous to have .Ixtrnner elected. Asked about the denial of this from Hie white house after Ins testimony at SpvinpftVld. Hines nieielv Said that such doii'nl 1'iid bi-en '-ea'led to Ills fd yi attention." CiEOIMJIA'S .i:w tiOVI':R.r'' : .... ': .. . ' : . Hoke Smith Will Be Sworn in uv (governor of (Jeoila 'I onioirow.i. . Atlanta, Cu.Juiio 'Ihe state house oillelals. new and old. will be sworn in Saturday, and Uoveriior elect. I Joke Smith will lie inaugurated at noiiu. A special committee lias been chosen to prepare Hie program. 'I lie inauguration will be held in tlie house 01 representatives, w.iere tiovernor Smith will deliver- his in augural addrejia. The oath will be, administered bv ( lifet Justice Wil liam If. Fish, 01 the Stale Suiireme Court. The governor-elect s address will lie about an hour long, and will eivbndv. in ihe lonn ot recouiiiienda tluns, . he 'reforms' and improvements tor which, lie stood.' during his "-campaign... ' Among tae stale house olllcers who will be sworn 111 on the same day are 1 honias S. Keliler. ol .Macon, who will succeed Hewlett A. Halt as attorney general: V. A.- Speer," who succeeds Pope -.Brown, as state .treasurer; Comptroller (ieneral William A. Wright, who succeeds himself; ' Sec retary of 'State Pull t ook; Commis sioner ol Agriculture Thomas (.': Hudson: Stale ssinool Coiunimlsslon er M. L. Vlittain, etc. . --.- Preparations have ' all been com pleted lor the clninge in Hie treas urers olhce. Pope Brown will re tarn to private lile at ins Ilawkins vltle home; Hen V. Perrv, assistant treasurer, will remain in Atlanta as secretary and treasurer ot the At lanta Realty Owners. .1. O, Anderson who lias been book keener, will 5e as sistant treasurer, and 11. V. Walker, will continue as cashier. ' CHlfiDRKX Ol lOKIILV MISSl Vt.'. Hiislol 1'iilliir tears l.lllle Hoy und (iirl .Have Been Kidnnppisl. Brisiol, 'len' : June ;!0. .Joseph Mann res !' 1 1 f,d to the police today iIihI bis '. .loSn, age .12, and bis daughter, -Vlvrtle, age 9, liad been mysteriously missing Ironi lionie pinee last Monday. He has been conducting a search day and night without gaining any information. It was the father's lirst impression t.iat his son ran nvav, learing a whipping, and took the little girl Willi . ! 1 111 . but their - long 'absence aroused I cur thai Hie cnlldren may have been kidnapped. . Illt()Wi:i IN RAIN' .BARRKL. f Age Woman ictnu ol Sleep Walking Aciilent ol Suicide. ( nniberland, Md., .lime ,!0 Mrs. A. I-'. ittidka. aged liil, wile of Kd ward Radka. was drowned in a rain barrel at Harnsville, W. Va , , last mglit. She had been making her home with: her son-in-luw, and hud been in failing, health. . . . It is iiiieeilain whether she wnNted olf Hie jiorch in her sleep and tell into the barrel, or committed suicide. She liad been grieving over an 111 J'lry to her son, Kdward, who sus tained .a broken: back while working In t.ie mines. RAT TIOAItS BABV'S HAND. Inlaiit's I'lngcrs ISilien So Badly That Amptitation May e Neces- --sarv. -'--' Harrisburg. Va., June ,!0. Arous ed Ironi her sleep bv shrieks of agony Ironi her N-inonth-old baby, Mrs. Waion II. Mc Kall. ol Mount Solon, rushed to the infant s cril) last mglit and Km lid an .enormous rat biting the child s hand. W hen the mother grasped the animal she was barely able to make it release its hold. One of the babv s lingers Is so -badly lacerated that amputation mav be necessary. T.10 rat escaped. Death ot Mr. Roberts. . Mr. Charles K. Roberts, son ol Mr. and -Mrs. C. N. Roberts, died this morning at Rex Hospintal utter an illness ot several weeks. He is survived by Ins parents three sisters' and two brot ners. The funeral service will be held at Samaria Bap tist c.iurch, three miles esat of, Ral eigh, tomoriMW ulteinoou at ,:.'() o clock. The young man was about 21years old. He had been living in Raleigh about a year. His parents live In the country, near Samaria. IDed lOniiiote to Hospital. Spartanburg, S. C, June SO. R. P. Haldwin, a prominent citizen ot Co lumbus, Ga., died here todny of heart failure soon alter being taken from the' train, enroute to Baltimore t enter a hospital. " . - on crop C POOR ft Fifl)ent All That Can Reason bly t Expected Jn State Tbis Season ' 1 DRY WEATHER THE CAUSE Ihoudis in All Sections of North ( aioflna Responsible for Shortage Plants Scarce and , Stand Was BikI Cotton in Kustern Part of Slate Suplan(s Leaf, High Price of Staple Being Responsible Crop in Wake County Ciod Prices tist Setisou. It tlie tobcaco crop in North Caro 1 1 ii this summer averages as much as titty per cent, farmers and others Interested will be agreeably surpris ed. Reports to the department of agriculture from every section of the the Stale are to the effect that the drouth has greatly curtailed the pro duction, and the Indications now are that forty per cent, of a cr'op Is about all that can be hoped for. With un usually good seasons fro.ni now on, however, tlie average may be made better,- and it is hoped tiat this may be tlie case. ., . " w Commissioner -of Agriculture (Jra l'iim said today that the dry weather was responsible lor tae shortage of Ihe crop in every section where the weed is grown, farmers could not set out their plants owing to lack of water .and where plants were set out, the droutn caused pour stands. In tlie Piedmont section where most, of the lietivy leaf Is grown, prospects are even worse than in the frustem part ol the State. Sherift J. H. Sears:, who lias been doing some intestu.iiUng of his own. confirms the estimate made on lh crop by the department til agricul ture loree. All Hiroiign ttu; east the lanners intended to reduce the .acreage, hi teen cent cotton being re sponsible lor this resolution, but the scarcity ot plants and the unusually dry weather this spring and summer Itirtner reduced the chances ol a.fair crop. In Wake County the tobacco i.i doing tlie best in the Kuquay Springs section, though onlv a fair irop will be produced in that section. Around Apex fhe acreage was not reduced much, but the drouth made the stand so poor that not more than hull a crop is expected. Onlv halt a crop is looked lor around Wendell und Zebulon. In these sections manv ol the lanners planted their lands in rotten. Tlie crop was a poor one last year as regards pounds. The Apex market which nsualy handles about 2.000. OOO'pounds, handled only about 1,-: 2:10,000 pounds last season. The prices, however, were unusually good, the average per pound being over hi t een cents. . I he quality of the weed was good, but light. In the western part ol the State the average per pound was under that on the easern markets, but the weed was heavier. Cotton is a much hardi er crop than tobacco, and many of the tanners gave it a trial this spring in place ot tobacco. 1 he lack of rain during the past month lias caused gardens to burn up. Vegetables are unusually scarce lor this season ot tlie vear, and many lamilv gardens are reported as hav ing been abandoned. 1 lie slight rain last mg In caused many home garden-'- rs to prepare lor a second garden this summer. '. REVISED JURY LIST FOR WAKE COUNTY the I ngest and most complete-Jury list ever. made up in Wake county was today waltnit; to be turned over to the. count y commissioners.' who will meet m monthly session .Monday At Iran 6.:tJt) names are on the list, an Increase ol j.StK) names. Kverv tax paver 'has been placed on the revised list except doctors and newspaper men, and these would ljave- been placed on the list, but It was known that -they would neeesarlly have to -tie excused. The revised list was made up by Messrs. Anderson, Sawyer and Wood. Banner Peach Crop. t New Haven, Conn., June 'JO, Ad vices trom Important centers of the peach industry point to a banner-crop the present year. .'
The Raleigh Times (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 30, 1911, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75