Newspapers / Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, … / July 24, 1912, edition 1 / Page 1
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UBL MtDIUH DGER mm IMI' BEST LARCLSi CiRCULAllON Of ANY NEWSPAPER IN THIS SECTION OF STATE. OF STATE. 0 TP IL1K Our .MoUo Granville Count", Hep People, Thsir Progress and Development in Education, Happiness and Prosperity. .VKrtKIjV OXFORD, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1912. VOLUME an. NO. TO iP a r I'AUTY x r . . 1 " LEADER! ... Should Vote for Sen- VVhv :,tor Sin"" ilis Seat. ons to Retain .v '.rax mvk- Sn.? :iS Xocal Wavelets. 1 I I 1 "EveitU of interest (Bath er e5 3fere an5 3l)re. We want the sound of the rock crush er again heard iu town. Mr. Bert Taylor has enninnprl him self with a new 5 passenger Hudson automobile. The machinery of the HnlriVti Rh Manufacturing Co. is arriving and be ing put in place. Miss Minor is playing the large nine organ at the Baptist Church while Miss Mary Webb is at Montreat. Mr. Will Fleming will enlarge the floor space of the Owen Warehouse by putting down a floor in the drive way. Little Alice, the 14 months old in fant daughter of Mr. r.ri Mr R F The bfist way to get what U coming Ball near r&vfnrd ir Th.,ri,. - I " ' I - M. IU i ItUI V fl-.rner Bro, Co. has had the floor in their storage house repaired. The road leading from wealth i even ro.-kier than the one leading to it. I M SIMMON'S. li. gave us v,.2t I'mHv berviM: i ' J .. . . . rx l AlHt'ii'iliK-lii.tMIHUl.iUii! uuiiuHi Ruv Mcr Ksile. Wegro Magis ioi'u) Si -liool ('ommittemen the f an.! lli x. K: Mi,) ivtit :uid Grand Jury " sVcnnil: iJrosr ii i Pari v leadership; The DriiKH rati.' Senators have placed j-j.ii ii cliiirii- of our TarilT biils in the Si:iif. en;ue. Hetier Roads: He favors rn. t 1 fVticial aid r public roa-ls. mat wouin Uf lav aii'l ',!'-'e ot-iiei maus. . u t liiianu wuier-ways; ins caiising e.unrds and rivers d. This will make cheaper freights, especially lor tanners. Fifth: Justice to South: Freelum berouiiiit to carry free hammers, free -iws li -c nails He demands for the to you meet, it more than half-way The world is growing better just as fast as the people in it will allow it to. A inan must own himself ; a friend becomes a tyrant, a foe, your master. Business always comes quickest to business man who persists in adyer- usioy. The new store of Mr Banister Rob- i'imdi, near me Norton Mills, will soon be completed. Rev. J. B. Wheatherpoon is assist ing in a protracted meeting at Moun tain Creek this week. morning and was buried Friday in the graveyard at Poplar Creek Church. The Phiiathea Class of the Bantis.t Church will serve ice cream and cake on the lawn of Mrs. G-ioeh on Frid.iv night, July 2Grh, and you are cordially invited to attend and aid a worthy cause. Mr. J G. Shotwell. our noeonvTiod a- ting Clerk ol the Court who was con fined at home last wek on account of sickness, was able to be at his office Monday morning to the gratification of his friends. Unite! Thin! jcsseii Fourth support i: to he opei Dr. and Mrs. C. E. d itcher, who were married at Bird Nest. Va.. on the 17th. The farmers are making preparations have returned from their bridal trio for curing tobacco as flues are being and are receiving the congratulations hauled out of town daily. of many friends. They will make their y ... . . . . home near Culbreth. Let the candidates explain their own position and it might help them to get Farmer friends we want you to heed some other candidate's situation. what Mr. Chappell has to say about A , , . , flues on the fourth page, as he puts up Aycock was our Educational Gov- hinh trad flnp nri innt n,om t ernor Glenn our Temperance Governor fit. Extend him your patronage and and lUtcnin is our Campaign Governor. ne wiH do his best to nlease von rioutii i ! of the r Sixiii . 1 . - ie sam treairnent oiuer puns afitry ,yct.s. Kci-'iiulieaa Reciprocity: It to the farmers. Simmons it. our iNationai piaiiorm "till iiiiu The Western farmers WSS IliiJ. oppos i'i agrees v oppose if. Seventh: Fiicndship for Farmers: He introduced the Fanner's Free List Bill. He thinks if any favors are shown they should he iven them If they eli in free markets he wants them to buy in free ma: kets. Fiahth: Majority rule the Country: He dua't abuse Democrat s,or make fun of Deinocraiic Conventions. He stands hy tiie majority. Ninth: Democratic Endorsement The Democratic State Convention ex-pr.-s iv eudorseil his course. Our na tion d platform is n complete endorse jnent of him. D nth Oa his job: No amount of abuse or ini-iicnreseiitatlon can make him Rpjilef:! his ditty. He has faith in the people. Speaking of the river and harbor bill, which has passed both houses of Congress ami is now in the hands of the President, Senator Simmons said it rnijmt iioi he penerally understood v. hat th- appropriations in the bill for inland vaterwavs. (lone Lookout and (ape fear River signified. He said that the six hundred thousand for the purchase ai.d improvement of the Al ht iiiaih and Chesapeake canal was an adoption. S,y C.)iu?res, when com plMnd, would cost about five million dollar::: thai the appropriation of three li'uidred thoasaml for Cap Lookout was an adoption of that project, when oinpietcd. would cost about three If'iidre.i thousand dollars and for the 'ap'- i'ar was the adoption of the prop'ci increasing the dentil from A 1 i yv man may succeea in maKing a business of his politics, but he will not succeed at making politics of his busi ness. Your special attention is called to the sale of good land advertised in an other column by Hicks &. Stem, At torneys. The many friends of Mr. Jesse Fur- gerson are much pleased to see him out again after a severe attack of sick - ness. You will find the tabulated form of vote cast in the Granville county pri maries last Saturday on the fourth page of this paper. All the precincts save witKins nave Deem neara irom. me table is as near accurate as it is poss ible to haye it at the hour of going to press . Come back to me, dreams of Granville, as you come on wings of the day When the air is as bright and as cooling as the dew of the dawns of May Dreams of old Granville, A woman may not be able to keep a The green, sweet place of rest, secret, but when it comes to suffering By the ripple of creeks and Tar river in silence she has a man beaten to a And trie tolls ol the sunlit crest iue nougoou noau rorce is now Last Friday morning Miss Georgia working the road from Gnssom tp the Winston royally entertained a number Wake county line, and when that road of her friends at her horpe qn Williams- is completed will work the road from boro street Grissom to Creedmoor, and also the , , . . . , 1 road leading to Wilton. Mr. Hobgood iiic mau vynu is r4uuiUK ior u Bcauien dn., Wftrfcprjln(i ni hpanrPlndivP at the "pie counter" can see great dan- the ,e of South Granville excellent The Public Highways. A young man who makes frequent trips to and from Oxford in a buggy stated the other day that he had pur chased a large red bandanna, which he uses as a signal to stop automobiles on the public highway until he passes them. He said something about what he would do in the event they failed to take warning When a license to run an automobile is granted to an indi vidual in Norih Carolina the presump tion is that the State gives him certain privileges on the highways The reve nue from this source alone has grown to $250,000 annually. Whether it be a two-wheeled cart, a threshing ma chine or an automobile the law of the highway is very explicit give half of the road and goide to the right. This is an old law revised and brought down to date, aod it is difficult to see where an amendment would improve the law The law has been followed by common consent, the world over so long that nearly everybody is famiiiar with it. One of the first things a child of the great cities notices is that the throng of pedestrians and the traffic move to the right. If this was ror the custom the streets woaid beco.ne blocked in short order The j-reat trouble in these latter days is that so many fail to re alize that the horseless carriage has equal rights with other vehicle on the public highway. The simple statement that the law specifies an equal divis sion of the road and to bare to the right in passing embraces everything. Any one is likely to be placed in an em barrassing position on the public high ways at any time by a balky horse or other causes, in that event common sense will dictate the proper couse to persue. A helping hand is sometimes needed, and he who fails to extend it is guilty of an infraction of the divine law. I Jpersottal !ftotes. i J ELMWOOD CEMETERY. Coming anb (Boing of friends and Strangers. Mr. M. L. Coley, town Monday. of Green, was in The Beautiful Little City of the Dead Is Being Used For Immoral Purposes. It is beyond comprehension how any human being can fall so low or forget himself so far as to desecrate the resting place of the dead: yet that i .... - Mr. S T. Coley, of Green, was on our ls tlie humiliating condition of things as they exist in beautiful Elmwood Cemetery, where repose the remains of Oxford s dead. It has been noticed for some time that the tombstones bare the marks of gun and pistol shots and some broken with rocks; things have gone from better to worse, and only a few 1 . ... i , i i oays ago a large lewn picture was drawn by a skilled hand on a white marble 3haft. Not only do the low und degraded colored element of the town flock there in the dead of the night and gamble by the dim rays of a lantern, but the number of evil doers are augmented by the lowest of the low white element of the town. The little city of the dead is not only the rendezvous of gamblers, but it is being converted into a blind tiger joint, and lewd, women, both white and black. dare tread the sacred precincts in the dead hours of night. There are no gates to the cemetery, and cows, dogs and loose horses are permitted to roam over the graves and Mr. K, u Clay, ol Hester section , destroy the plants and flowers placed nrr t 4..t Cnt.i.iln.. 1 1 " j I I T . 1 l w n iii luwu ociiuiuay. streets Tuesday. Col Sidney Minor, of Durham, was in Oxford Sunday. Mr. L. G. Perry, of Tar River, was in town Saturday. Mr. J. P. Bradsher, of Shady Grove, was in town Monday. Miss Lilian Spencer is visiting rela tives at Broadnax, Va. Mr. Forest Hammo, was in town Saturdry. of Route 3, Mrs. Robert Wood is visiting rela tives at Chester, Va. Dr. B. K. Hays, of Buffalo Spring?, was in town Sunday. Mr. Zack McGhee, of Lyon, was in town Tuesday morning. Mr. Charley Dorsey returned yerter day from Tallahasse, Fla. roads. Dun's Review says: "The first half of the year closes with much actual achievement in the betterment of bus iness, and of much promise for the re mainder of the year." So, let us in our own town do all in our power to keep ger to the country in the success of his opponent. How doth the busy little fly Improve each shining minute, And where he finds an apple pie Plant micro-millions in it. tf t tin i in fin t r ho artinthincS dnnri about ourselves or something bad about Pace with x he general progress of our the fellow we don't like, we usually be- country aim seie cveiy o .ponumiy lieve nil that we hear which presents useu 10 aou iu us 1111 provement ana growtn. T Ifa io rxrxt tYxa laur and nmcxiK i XUllX-t l . l uui tun L v. vvv I -r -w Tr r 11. But the blossom of the deed, 1 he Jones-Wee Wedding Bind no rule upon your brow At the home of the bride's sister. Like the rule of kindness now Mrs W. P. Pearce. in Henderson iast X ti;ilmn na.inm ho Thnro. ouiiuqj v-viiij6. i. "i"' j.... u: i,,.. i..k ; I, ........ f Mra W VT auu mi. i.pwn u. .uur weir ii.m ... Cannadv. of Dothan. Ala. After the :"""T;Ir: ! game chojee refreshments vere served. The Carolina Light & Power Co. has swung to the night breeze a brilliantly illumined sign in front of their attrac tive office building on nillsboro street. !ic I weiity !;,ir t(j twenty-six which.when onipiHe,-), w.aid cost about six hun '!)' d thousand dollars. fhe ihre: pip-i:ts when completed will mvoive a total expenditure of -'"-ill mm- million dollars and will o;ar.e u,i. waterway system of Eastern f"1"' :"olina one of the finest in i nid w.a.a way systems in the Union. A ( ( ;;;. t(j re,,ort and reco.ai- ,;n oi she engineers it will take I .v., . ' '''.'inpl.: i lo complete the Cape Fear 1 lrom three to foui years he two other projects. lor t the li (i Tios -Mbits tiuium jiKt Nenrlv KmHv. hist a word jibout the fair. The "'"Hum list, has not been printed yet, "it will h; out within a week or two. l'ie Il.'iUieS ol t!iO?i wlu. Iinvn writtpn 'pies have been filed and will re 'n m as soon as they come from l"-nt, r. The date of the fair will '(her and ?A i oijiises to he a dood cron vear u ir HiC i.tiOalV U r I Ihrji-a Tifill onrrxex - ' aii'l ill. . t: w I ir of fieid croos and farm f- esy man who produces 'i.yti.mj m the county ought to make ' f-Xhi'.i, veft ;f onjy a amau Qne jt "aas n i,,a advertisement to the " Hiit v io have a collection of the best piOMtll iv f.,iiA.ri tr. .1... ,.IJU " i" i in; pit Milt;. he a suggested that a good i'.'-t a &od tobaoco exhibit e I., select the plants in the !' (hen nut them whert thev he f:ic-itj f,2:r..t . I , U T .j -. ""mi in utr: uui u. iu way y,, can avoid having to go lUIl ''linn. it ice '.VMV to v,u!.i j li.id un i -o much tobacco to get a se F. B. Wi:ijb, Secretary. jllAPPEUAS Tobacco Flues will fit; on hua at Oxford. Orchards o'erladen, And harvest so fine You cry to your neighbor Come have some of mine ! Every industrious hardworking man should save enough to buy at least one good watermelon to eat about 5 o clock Sunday afternoon after a refreshing nap. Mr. Will Long, who has been quite sick several days, was able to go to a Richmond hospital Mondav for treat ment, and his many friends wish him a rapid recovery. The Junior Bridge Club has been or ganized in Oxford and was handsome ly entertained Friday morning by Miss Julia Cooper at her attractive home on Horner Heights. BYiends of Judge Walter Clark claim that the sentiment for him is growing among the farmers all over the State, and that his campaign from this time forth will be full of vim. The frame of the large factory of the Excelsior Seat Co. will soon be com nleted as all the timber has been set cured. Oxford is still climbing the pro gressive hill, so don't croak. Well, boys, get your tickets ready as vmi will have to vote again for Treasu rer and two Commissioners on Satur day, August 3rd. Turn out everybody and vote for the men you want to serve you. Some merchants think it right and proper for the county paper to contin ually boost local enterprises, but al most every town has a few business men who hold up their hands in horror if you ask them to aid in sustaining the medium that is working hard to help build up the town. dis Church, pronounced the sacred words that made them man and wife. The Pearce home was never more beautiful in its regalia of flowers and the pleasant faces of the guests, friends of the contracting parties, who gather ed to extend congratulations. The bride is a prepossessing bru nette, and numbers her friends by the score in Oxford. The groom is well known in Oxford, and holds an impor tant position with fhe Tavlor-Cannady Buggy Company. The bride and groom will make their home for the present with the groom s brother, Mr. Sdiney Jones, on Raleigh street. The bride is a sister of Mrs. Sidney Jones. The Public Ledger ex tends to the young people many happy days. Oxford College. DOMESTIC SCIENCE DEPARTMENT. Miss Maria Parris. A B. Salem Col lege 1910; student in University of Tennessee: assistant in Domestic Science in Salem College 1911-12: di ploma in Domestic Science 1912. This course is designed to prepare women to be efficient in every phase of home management. It also offers training for dietitians, matrons and teachers. It intends to teach what combina tions and proportions of food are need ed for the proper nourishment of the body. It proposes to give a broad knowl edge of the relative nutritive value of foods, thus enabling people of limited means to know how to select simple fnrui. hut those that will furnish energy and build up muscle The natural sciences Chemistry and Biology pursued along with this course, make it much more benficial. SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS. Special arrangements will be made for pupils, heads of families and others from the town. FINE COW FOR SALE Have fine cow for sale at a low price. W. E. Dorsey, Route 3, Oxford, N. C. 3tpd Oxford College. An able faculty will maintain during the next session the high standard reached by the College. Most of these teachers have for years been connected with the school. A few new ones will be here next session. Mrs. S. D. Twitty.lady principal, has been with the college twenty-two years. Miss Mary Parmley Koues, B A. Smith College, Mass, 1912; editor of Smith College Journal; for several months on editorial staff of Ladies Home Journal. ENGLISH AND HISTORY. Miss Bess Tilson, B. A. Meredith College, 1908; A. B. Smith College, 1909; teacher in Coker College, S. C, two years; teacher in Oxford College one year. SCIENCE. Miss Mary McMicking, graduate Hollins College, Va., 1888; eight years teacher in Welsh Neck High School, S. C , Coker College; one year teacher in Oxford College. FRENCH AND GERMAN. Mrs. Rosa Jones, graduate Oxford College 1883; seven years teacher in Roanoke College, Danville, Va.; two years teacher in Oxford College. ASSISTANT IN ENGLISH & MATHEMATICS Mrs. F. W. Hancock, graduate Ox ford College 1880. Assistant in Eng lish and Mathematics. F. P. Hobgood, A. M, Latin and Moral Philosophy. CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC PIANO. Miss Janie Lacy, director of music, graduate Oxford College; postgrad uate for two years in Oxford College; studied two terms at Institute of Applied Music, New York; twelve years teacher in Oxford College; two years director of music Oxford Col lege. Miss Mary Whitaker, music graduate Oxford College 1908; director of music in Piedmont Institute, 1909 10; pupil of Institute of Applied Music, New York, 1911; teacher in Oxford College one year and half. VOICE. Mrs. Annie M. Woodall, graduate in Bone Method of Voice, Paris, France; studied under best masters in New York, Boston, Chicago; soloist and choir director for twenty years of Trin ity Church, Nashville, Tenn. EXPRESSION. Mrs. Woodall, graduate of New York School of Expression; studied expres sion also in Curry School of Oratory, Boston, Chicago and in Columbia Col lege of Expression SCHOOL OF ART. Miss Mary Prichard Taylor, student in art in Oxford College, in Meredith College; two years a student in Art League and Pratt Institute, New York; one year student of Noell, Rome, Italy; by loving hands- It is indeed strange that a peaceful, law-abiding communi ty would tolerate for one moment the sinful, shameful ami humiliating uses for which ' the beautiful city of the dead" is being put. It is not enough that those who have desecrated the sacred precincts should fall on their knees and implore forgiveness from on High, but those of our community into whose keeping the sacred spot was placed, should hang, their heads Mr. Frank Lyon is enjoying a con- in sname. aieep on, peaceful ueau, tinuous Sunday at Buffalo Springs. inv memory is sacreu i ii wouiu seem mat rue Desi anu Mrs. George Sherman, of Berea only thing that can be done under the section, was a town visitor Saturday, circumstances is to hang gates, mend Capt. E. G. Gaither, of Statesville. was in Oxford Monday. Mr. E. T. Husketh, of Wilton, was on our streets Saturday morning. Mr. Thomas Pruitt is at Ocean View this week enjoying the breakers. Col. William Osborn, of Greensboro, was an Oxford visitor Saturday. Mrr. Ella Peace, Mrs. Mary Hargrove and Miss Nannie Gregory are at Ocean View. Mr. Frank Bialock returned Friday from enjoying the sea breeze at Ocean View. the fences and remove the stile at the railroad end of the cemetery; lock all gates and place the key in the custody of a stout-hearted official, whose duty it should be to visit the inclosure in the dead hours of night to see that all is right. If this cannot be incorporated and made a part of the duties of the Mr. Walter Crews has returned from chief of police, it is the part of wisdom his summer outing among the lakes of to appoint a keeper of the cemetery. New York. The desecration has covered a period of three vears. nnd dnrint this time Mr. John Dorsey, of South Boston, things have tJrown continually worse Va,wasan Oxford visitor the first of untii the f.oi cataorv of crime has the week. hppn cnmmittpd on thf h.'il lowed sunt. save one, that of robbing the graves, and if a halt is not called Oxford will soon be startled with the cry of van dalism. The citizens must take the Mr. Thos. J. Brummitt, of Fishing matter into their most careful con- Hon. A. D. Watts, of Statesville, was among the Oxford visitors Monday. Creek township, was Saturday. Miss Huske, of Fayetteville, is visit ing her sister, Mrs. R. H. Lewis, on High street. Dr. E. T- White and Mr. Niel Par ham, returned Friday lrom a business trip to Atlanta. Mrs. Mary 1-ove l.uck, ol , is visiting her daughter, Mrs. James Paris, on Venable Place. Mr. C B Ed wards, of Raleigh, vis ited his daughter, Mrs. M. P. Chambk e, Sunday and Monday. Misses Allene Currin and Helen Ben son and Mr. John Haskins left yester day for Ocean View. Mr. R. R. Herring has returned to Oxford and is with Mr. J. G. Hall, the Main street druggist. Messrs Josh King. Allie Morris, Les ter Montague and John Haskins were at Buffalo Springs Sunday. Mr. George Rawlins, of Washington, and Mr. "Gus" Rawlins, of Raleigh, are visiting home folks on Main street. Mrs. E. Ellis Blount and daughter, Miss Lucy, of Richmond, are the guests of Mrs. D. A Coble, on Gilliam street- Mrs. J. C. Elliott has as herguests Miss Dorothy Pierce, of New York, and Miss Catherine Elliott, of Wilmington. Col. Win. A- Babbitt, of Kinston, is visiting his mother in Oxford this week and his old friends are glad to see him again, Mr Jeff Daniel's familiar figure was seen on our streets Saturday. He He lives in Atlanta, Texas, and he on our streets sideration and devise ways and means to prevent a continuance of the uses to which beautiful Elmwood is being placed. Results of the Primaries. Saturday dawned bright and clear and with few exceptions the faces of the candidates reflected their hopes of capturing the coveted prize, but when the white ballots began to flutter about the polls and the golden hues of the sun faded in the west nearly every can didate in the county knew his fate. It was one of the hottest campaigns in the history of Granville county nnd the vote was strong. Enthusiasm, good will and friendship marked the day throughout the county, and in some cases rival candidates talked and joked with each other, which suggests as nothing else could the universal satisfaction the primaries are giving. There were, of course, some surprises, but nearly every one you meet seems to have known some days ago just how the vote would stand, and they re mind you that T told you so." The successful candidates are receiving the congratulations of their host of friends and the Public Ledger joins the pro cession. C. S. Hobgood was elected sheriff' by a substantial majority; J. B. Powell, Register of Deeds, succeeds himself; W. T. Lyon, the present treasurer, and E. A. Bobbitt, the two highest candi dates, go to the second primary. B. I. Breedlove, present member of the Board of County Commissioners, succeeds himself. J. P. Stedman and Zack Allen were nominated for County Commissioners, and W. P. Wilkinson, Henry Floyd, J. N. Tilley and Felix Bumpass, the four highest names, go to the second primary, which is set for Saturday, August 3d. special lessons with Aleathea Piatt and looks exceedingly well, and he was warmly greeted by his old time irienas. Alpheus Cole, New York: two years teacher of Art in Oxford College. BUSINESS COURSE. Miss Verra Lee Cates, graduates Draughan's Business College. DOMESTIC SCIENCE. Miss Maria Paris, A. B Salem Col lege 1910; graduate in Domestic Sci ence 1912. WE WANT QUICK 50 married men of all ages. 50 young men, 50 old bachelor, to sell each one of them a surrey or a hiKjfiv with harness to match. LONG-WINSTON CO. REMEMBER you can get from me frh dmdes of lime, cement and Misses Mary Sherrod, Battleboro, Lina Mayo and Bettie Mayo, of Tarboro; Mvrtle Barnett, of Roxboro; and Dr Fleming, cf Enfield, are the pleasant guests of Miss Annie Bryan. WILL BE AT OXFORD TUESDAY, JULY 30. Dr. N. Rosenstein, the eye specialist of Durham, will make his monthly visit to Oxford next Tuesday, July 30, stopping at Exchange hotel for that day, for the purpose of examining eyes and fitting glasses. Dr. Rosenstein's work speaks for itself for the last ten years. He is an expert in the eve work, and if you are in need of glasses i don't fail to see him at the Hotel Tues- plaster. 4t C. D. RAY. day, July 30th. WANTED: A CLERK. CLERK WANTED: An experienced salesman for a dry goods store in Ox ford. Permanent position. Answering advertisement give age and reference. Addres P. O. Box 404. Oxford. N. C. 2t ONLY one Refrigerator left. Come and get it almost at your own price. It's a good one. Upchurch & Currin. FLUES. We are now unloading car load of flue,iron. Oxford Hardw. Co. EIGHT or ten Baby Carriages must go and will sell at 20 per cent less than regular prices. Upchurch & Currin. Several nice Porch Swings, the good kind, at a low price, call quick. Up church & Currin.
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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July 24, 1912, edition 1
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