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OXFOEEFUBLIC MMl OL. XXXV V' --prilLICAXS ARE AFTER sKXATOK OVERMAN'S SCALP Mon ti republicans Promise Dol- ur Vov Dollar Raised In State, j iKaleidi News and Observer) j rpj, (;tH-UltJ-.uuuc. xjujo vj. mo r . , tl 0'il Party have invaded North 5rS-ri and working through Re- r-.p Get-tiie-Jiuurj dujs ui ma -m clubs organized in parts, of 4-V. ln:xl,..l ! ;-jie a if usscoixis, "muiui i T ,. i rhe total of the Harding war 10 ll-t. In aver.v county where there j c' an' ponen neyuuiRtiiis ivi m a ; club nas oeen iormea, ana l-wer there is found a Republi c-able to swell the golden tide, he la it. The Machine. Be-inninc last February, the work- v:ith quiet a caution, organizers "irentin? the powers of the party ve;' 'forth and began the labor of Sins up a machine wherewith to '!.''ch the Republican offensive in S corning election. Under the sa ;t generalship of Senator Marion B-Ser! albeit his hand does not ap r,eav directly as the manipulator, fiat is regarded as the strongest organization the Republicans fate" had in twenty years has been formed. , Hope To Carry The State. And with it the Republicans are j rVmins: that they will be able to ' eirrv the State this year. The Na tianal Committee has promised help, since it has been assured that North Carolina, properly encouraged with mosey, will be lined up in the Repub lican column this year. Tar Heel Re publicans have been promised as r.uca as dollar for dollar from the National war chest, with perhaps a liule more to be used in the endeav ors to replace Senator Lee S- Overman w;:'u E. A. Holton- Alter Overman's Scalp. Desirable as are the offices in the eyes of the Republican party, the most vigorous assault is expected a eainst the junior Tar Heel Senator. Chairman Hays some days ago stated that the Republicans had, or would delicate a half million dllars to the cause of electing men of his faith in the thirty Senatorial contests to be held this year. North Carolin has on? of the thirty and m a equable : to distribution of the half million would receive somewhat more tEan $16,000. The National organiza tion wants this amount duplicated lo cally. Although Congressmen will not be needed in the work of finally strang le peace treaty, the Republi cans are desirous of having a harmon- party's nominee for President, to nus majority in the other wing of the J gether with small blue buttons, National Capitol, and such of the i bearing the one word "Coxsure," North Carolina delegtion as can be ! also a volume of printed matter have ciarmed are claimed, and the mon eys dedicated to the cause of elect i:;r Congressmen will be likewise Sed Out. It is in the TCie-Mh J Vrrh and Tenth that hopes are j bnehtest. and in these districts thai j tiie T.ony will flow most lavishly. Parker Will Have Help. so far there is no apparent inter- on 'he part of Elder Hays in the I ru-anons of John J. Parker to be Governor 0f the State, and whatever Lo::-y is expended in his behalf will Kw:.b!y be raised in the State. The J'-w or the fiathful have been asked t0 this matter their most careful deration, mindful of the hopes t!a. Wf-l l lhc V.foo c nrA the Un unun a-ia tut? v L'lUH ion county nominee. Ru- Ian ave 1:1 circulation that he will wreo;i f forth expensively and do a uMvinding about among the Sot Taken Seriously. Of which thiners arp rp.srardpr! All V'it some amusement by the chair- !jr p! lhi tate Democratic Execu Cominittee, Thomas D. Warren. - not Particularly the forma- 0. so many Republican clubs in fciate, and is urging Democrats 'r there is Republican activ- to match it with like alterness. KOits at the idea of any possibi CVercomin? the normal De adW'1C raaJiity, or even making thp mJt' but the organization of - publicans locally is recogniz u dS a potential danger. 1)0 X0T looITfoii i I LU AGAIN IN FALL 1 It Probablv Ran uMourse In Two Epidemics. ti: 'JMinion of doctors? hprp Will nnt general recur- tfcVf,"i , influenza epidemic here ?e of the and winter; certainlv not on infitir lhose of the winters of tli,tbdlj. and 1919-1920. While Ill ans do not risk an opinion 'a:-;irj any predictions or fore- the ti av that i Jr. n is thlfei?,idemics of this sort come full andtw 7," uy me rirst year, secor 7 01"dinarily recur the their : . ine' usually run ar'd (V, inai tirne- " is said, V. .J I tfj 11 il. 1 . 0.ierM ' i rn for many seasons. te,in :: JU Wl the iailure of the enl yea y J appear again in succeeding I no . Wls '"aid. is that most people I are affiipV ' . 0 De affected usually second Z a either tne first or the k such , and tnose wno are not tteyc,nd, ? state of health that 'adv in rdPff fal1 victims to the It is or another. "J arp nv,i.. x , :: ' "able trt "t. ieu inat most persons cu evnrc x "V i""uii nave S ,lUndit Has done Masons txls,llkely to do in the two ftCr.. ;aje the influenza have luaL flave passed. 1 ot eve-v : ' "ouia have water Serrio. V: .weeks- Stop at Wll- k3 lUilnn PUBLISHED SE ; STATE HOW SOME MEN DIFFER ON THE SUFFRAGE QUESTION One Man Will Never Again Tin His Hat to a Woman. It is hard for some men to become - wuOUCU iu woman suttrage. Two iconiiug uusmess men of Ox ford were discussing the all-important question the other dsv. flT - ct C!nnnlr. 1 . "fau was uroaa ana. gener- ous. He proposed to let his wifo vote when she pleased and for whom fucuu, auu ma not even in- tu question ner afterwards a- uuul now sue had voted. He was perfectly willing to welcome his wife into the realm of politics on equal terms with himself. me oiner speaker was a "bird of o H;ff,i. 1 , , "va w. 7 U1"ere"t color, and spoke an al lOgetner differpnt ltino ti ir i do! he said; "I won't fepd nnd t , ... . -."t,u.u.&c. xj clothe ,a woman who will not vote as I do."- In a crowd of farmers gathered on the streets here last Saturday per sonal views of woman's suffrage was exchhanged. One old statesman from Tally Ho declared that on and after the third day of November next he will never again raise hi' hat to a woman. A. D. HUGHES IS A BUILDER OF BONES AND' SINEW His Rye Goes Like Hot Cakes For $3 50 the Bushel. Last Saturday Mr. A. D. Hughes, a fine farmer living on Dr. E. T. White's farm two miles west of Ox ford on the-Enon road, drove up to Horner Bros. Company's store and unloaded several large sacks of rye. "What does all of this signify?" we asked Mr. C- W. Bryan, who was standing at side of the wagon. "It means that Mr. Hughes is the champion grower of rye in Granville county" said Mr. Bryan, "and we are glad to take his product at $3.50 per bushel." Continuing Mr. Bryan said: "It means a whole lot to Granville county it means the building of bone and sinew and better health and lar ger" bank deposits. If every farmer in the county had done what Mr. Hughes has done this year there would have been $2,000,000 added their pockets." COX PICTURES AND LITERATURE SENT OUT State Democratic Headquarters Has Begun Work Among Voters. ! Large retrogravure pictures of ! Governor James M. Cox. of Ohio, the been received here by many Demo cratic voters from State Democrat ic headquarters at Raleigh, which has now hpenn to function 'for thp ram. paign under the direction of State Chairman Thomas D. Warren, of New Bern. The literature includes copies of the Democratic platform adopted af San Francisco, the keynote speech by former National Chairman Hom- er S. Cummings, and the acceptance speeches by Governor Cox and Franklin D. Roosevelt, of New York, candidate for Vice-President. Thousands of copies of this same literature are being sent broadcast over the State, it is understood, and is expected to help in rounding the 100.000 majority in North Carolina pledged by Chairman Warren in the coming election in November. SrSISEST OUTLOOK IS GOOD Bradstreets Reports Crops Good, and New Buildings Finest In Years. . Bradstreets summary for Rich- mend and vicinity: Wholsale trade, fair; retail trade, fair; manufacturing, active; crops, good; collections, slow; feature, new yieiaings finest in years. Wholesale trade may be summed up as fair, few lines being really ac- i tive, but the volume as a whole is t moderately satisfactory. Retail trade is quiet and generally in a waiting attitude. Paptjr and paper products continue to advance in price. Cotton good s-how some decline in price. Money continues in very active demand, but legitimate needs are being gen erally cared for. Failures in this district show a slight increase in number and a con siderable increase in liabilities Crops are generally good though some damage is reported as a result of heavy and continued rains. Cotton is in good condition and a good crop is assured with favorable weather. r i Tobacco is in fair condition and 1 the acreage is in excess or recent years. 1 FARMERS NOT PLANNING TO BURN THEIR TOBACCO While Kentucky, tobacco raisers are giving serious consideration to the question of curtailing the acre age of the crop ror Dusiness reasons, there is absolutely no truth to the re ports that farmers in that State are planning to burn their tobacco and take other similar drastic measures on account of low prices, according to W. E. Fenner, prominent Rocky Mount tobacconist and warehouse man, who has just returned from a trip to the Georgia markets and points in Kentucky. Governor Cox denies that "wets" are giving money to aid him in the election- LIBRARY m 1 OXFORD, N. C. TUESDAY, SEPTEMRF1T? 7, ('0V;ERN0R COX AND SENATOR UUUSTIOAS FIT BY THE AMERICAN PRESS M 10on JhVSf rtPrSideUt,iaJ, Ca,ldidates Aie Neiwpaper. Men and Their Views on thehortage aid Exorbitant Price of Newsprint Paper Are Sound. "Having had "considerable yJ "vnm 5A?INCL- . nence in the publication . ' w of news-1 . , ' v. wu""' a iiu. lxietiu- pohtan. and bavins tJLLua . iimri fnn nttitr n . x country z .vine v.-rrl Phases thprpnf T ho n "ui acu Jii nil tt ::r.V .a:? ue- tl TM f A 1 A 1 x j 1 k duct of newspaper plants, with full wv UVU,J aUUUL I l!H I I Til I I M T" OTl 1UU,U Ul me servi the press of the country has rendered to eov eminent in all times and the marked am rendered m all needs of war "I do not care to categorically re- if - j, -- juui nuciies in regara to the Senate Committee's -x.... .-r v paper without a more careful analy sis or that report. I have no hesi tancy whatever in saying to vou that there must be a decisive govern mental action for relief of the print paper situation, especially as it is applied to the small country paper. I am not so sure, however, but what in the extension of this relief there must be a certain curtailment of evi dent waste m extravagant elsewhere." use ALABAMA FARMERS CONTROL . THE PRICE OF COTTON Fix the Price At Forty Cents the Pound. Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 6 The Alabama division of the A merican Cotton Association at its convention here voted to fix 40 cents, middling basis, as the price for the present crop of cot ton." It was adopted after a very spirited discussion. Four teen states were represented on the committee of the National American Cotton Association making the report. The price-recommending com mittee brought in a report fix ing forty cents as the proper fig ure for the minimum price, mid dling, and immediately a discus sion was precipitated. Many of the members wanted it fixed at forty-five cents- The price - re commending committee of the National American Cotton Asso ciation had considered this price fixing matter for the.past three days and it is understood the president, J. S. Wanamaker, was in favor of the 40-cent price for the present crop. SHERIFF OF VANCE CAPTURES A SIXTY GALLON STILL On Tab's Creek Near the Granville, Va"ce, Franklin Lines. The Henderson Daily Dispatch says that a perfect copper still, with a capacity of 60 gallons, was captur ed last Friday by. Sheriff John S. Royster not far from Tab's Creek. More than 400 gallons of beer was poured out, and the entire outfit was tnlrpn tn TTpntiprpon. Tvherp it will reniflin in the sheriff'?; nnssession ! until ordered destroyed by the Board of County Commissioners. The still was said to have been lo cated down in a bottom, with two paths leading down to it It was erected along a small stream that feeds Tab's Creek, near the junction of the boundary lines' of Granville, Franklin and Vance counties. The outfit was all ready to run, the ashes having been already raked cut and the kindling in place, with the matches lying close by. No evidence was found that would ! lead to the arrest or conviction of the guilty parties, the sheriff said. MORE HOUSES ARE BADLY NEEDED IN OXFORD There Is a Great Demand For Four and Five Room Residences. Although several houses have been built or enlarged during the past eighteen months, the need is just as great here as it has ever been To show how great is the .need for smaller houses, one of our promi nent citizens who stated that he in tended to remove his present small house to a vacant lot and erect a more modern dwelling, had eigh teen applications for the small house. ' While there is still a need for the larger houses, the need for the small er is just as great as ever. Thf Public Ledger is constantly having inquiries and people are wanting to move to Oxford to educate their children. THE FLAT RIVER ASSOCIATION wm Meet; At Mt Creek Church In October. Dr. J. D- Harte, pastor of the Ox- foro - Baptist Church, announced from the pulpit last Sunday that the annual session of the , Flat River Baptist Association will hold its two day's session at Mt Creek church be ginning Wednesday, October 20. Dt. Harte stated that a church let ter was being prepared to be mailed to all of the churches of the associa tion. NOTICE I wish to announce to the people of Granville county that all matters pertaining to the "Honor Roll of Granville County," a book now being published at the Oxford Orphanage, are handled by Mr. E. G Hulse. Oxford, N- C. Any informa tion desired regarding this book can be secured from him. This 4th day of Sept, 1920- GEORGE N. THOMAS. D COUNTY OFFER BRILLIANT OPPORTUNITIES-AIL HOME PRINT. HARDING ANSWER I ixx V UVVI1 HY HnPTlPO Q O O publisher I think it is extremely im- . yui taut co encoura-p thp wpaHv , cuuuidee me weeKiy v,.-t ssji-si4. The weeklies are no less im- to the communities they j much more difficult I CQfirA k -1 J T publication is "The government must spp tn th0?r pioieuuon in newsprint supply and can and will help them to the neces sary product. I have cordially ap proved all that Congress has done to 'relieve the newsprint situation. We must go further, however, and plan broadly for the future. Until an nual crops are found to be available for producing print paper we must conserve forests on the one hand and see to replanting and cultivtion on the other. The problem is so vital that the government - ought to give especial attention to the pulp wood supply and its best study to finding the substitutes which may be grown from year to , year to meet the ex panding demands." THE TOWN BEAUTD7UL What a Woman Voter Would Do If She WTas Mayor Of Oxford. A prominent lady of Oxford re marked the other day that if she was mayor of Oxford she would make the following request and sign her name at the end of the document: "To the people of Oxford: . "The unprecedented spell of rain which continued through the entire month of August with only slight in termissions has caused weeds to flou rish on many grass plots, unpaved sidewalks and vacant lots. This un sightly growth has run away ahaed-of the capacity of the weed gang of the street cleaning force. "Few things mar the appearance of a city more than weeds, and few things are more easily gotten rid of when the ground is as soft as it is now. I respectfully request those citizens who have a pride in the city's good appearance to pull up and deposit in their ash cans such weeds growing on the sidewalks andgrass plots adjacent to their homes, and I urge those who have vacant lots to have t!:em cleaned of weeds." CENTURY OF IMMIGRA TION TOTALS 34 MIL LIONS ALIEN PEOPLE During the Same Period the Popu lation Of the United States Has Grown 97 Millions. Washington, Sept. 4 Thirty-four millions immigrants have entered the United States in the past century. In the same time the population of the country has increased 97,000,- Of the 34,000,000 immigrants en- eiiil the country in the last 100 yeajs, nearly one-fourth of them, or 8.205.675 came from England, Ire land, Scotland and Wales. Germany furnished 4,100,740. Austria-Hungary was next behind Italy with 4, 0G 8,448, while Russia was fifth with 3,311,406. The Scandinavian countries Denmark, Norwav and Sweden, have sent 2,134,414 of their citizens to the United States. OXFORD COLLEGE WILL HAVE A MOST SUCCESSFUL SESSION Members of the Facultv and Stu- dents Arriving On Every Train. . . On the opening of Oxford College tomorrow. President Hobgood stat es that, never in the history of the institution has prospects for a suc cessful year been brighter. Every train arriving here today brings in a number of young ladies. Nearly every county in eastern and central North Carolina is represented In the student hody. MORRISON AND PARKER WILL SPEAK AT REEDS OCTOBER 8 Cameron Morrison, Democratic candidate for governor, and John J. Parker, Republican candidate, will speak from the same platform at Reeds, Dawdson County, about five miles west of Lexington, on Oc tober 8- The speeches of the two candidates will be upon the occasion of the annual community fair at that place. OXFORD PUBLIS SCHOOLS OPEN The Faculty Is Equal to the Best In the State. The children from the four quar ters of Oxford gathered at the school building yesterday morning to the number of Jive of six hundred. There were more than th3 combined seat ing capacity of all the school build ings. To overcome the congestion, some of the children will attend tke morning session and make room for those who come in the afternoon. This session starts off with a facul ty equal to the best irr the State. LT. ARTHUR LANDIS PROMOTED Cmmander Of the Torpedo Boat Bagley. Friends in Oxford of Lieut Arthur Landis, United States Navy, will be interested in learning of his recent promotion to be Skipper of the tor pedo boat Bagley. This excellent promotion is very gratifying news to his friends and is justly bestowed on an excellent officer. 1920 . v -. 1 1 GRANVILLE COMMISSIONERS FIX THE COUNTYTAX RATE The Board of County Com missioners in regular session here yesterday and today to set the tax rate for the year, fixed the levy at 53 on the hundred slars' valuation: County .... , 53 State PoU '.'."WW 1.93 A clearer and more complete outline of tfie tax rate will be published by the Public Ledger in our next issue. A RECORD TOBACCO CROP IN THE UNITED STATES I Forty"Five Percent Consistes Of the Bright Tynes. Present indications point to the production of the . largest tobacco crop in the United States the coun try has ever grown, many estimating a production of a billion and a half pounds. The Southern Tobacco Journal says: Of course, much de pends upon the seasons until the crop is all gathered. However, we believe a billion and a half is exces sive, but that the crop will be a large one is admitted. Now this does not mean that an extra large crop will be produced in the tobacco growing WOrld. Thpro aro uacuu countries that will not grow full crops of tobacco because of la bor conditions, and then some of the tobacco-growing countries are paying more attention to something to eat. We. therefore, do not figure on anything likean over-production. Of course the demand in this coun try will be greater for bright tobac cos than for any other types, and we believe that the demand will be sufficient to justify good prices on desirable brights. Some tobaccomen vho keep well posted believe that the production of brights in the Uni ted States will amount to six hun dred million pounds. With this es timate we are prepared to agree, al though the yield may go beyond that estimate. It will be seen that if the total production of tobacco in this country should amount to one and 3 half billion, about 40 per cent of that amount -will consist of brights. At any rate, whatever the produc tion may be, it is safe to say that from 40 to 45 per cent will consist of bright types. AUCTION SALE OF THE S. M. WATKINS FAM There never has been, in Granville county an opportunity for a man with small means to purchase a trak of land so near to Oxford as the track to be sold from the S. M. Watkin's farm on Saturday morning, Septem ber 18. The terms of sale will be 15 per cent cash (not 1 per cent as we. stated in the last issue of the Pub lic Ledger) ; 10 per cent Januarv 1st 1921, and the balance in four equal' installments to bear interest at 6 per cent This sale will be conducted bv the Atlantic Coast Realty Co., of Peters burg, Va. A big barbecue dinner will be served on the grounds and a brass band will furnish music for the entertainment. DEMPSEY KNOCKSOUT MISKE IN 3RD ROUND WITH BLOW ON CHIN Three Hard Smashes Sufficient To Beat St. Paul Heavyweight. Ringside, Benton Harbor. Mich., Sept. 6 Jack Dempsey, heavvweight champion of the world, demonstrated today that he still retains the terrific punch that won him the title. He knocked out Billy Miske, of St Paul, a fighter as big and game as himself' in the third round of their ten round match, Three hard smashes were sufficient to win him between $50,000 and $100,000, his fifty per cent share of the gate receipts. DR. W. C. TYREE WILL PREACH AT HESTER NEXT SUNDAY Rev. George T. Tunstall that Dr. W. C. Tyree, pastor of the First Baptist Church, Greenwood, Miss., will fill the pulpit at Hester Church next Sunday morning. Dr. Tyree is one of the best preach ers and Mr. Tunstall counts it a great privilege to have him fill his pulpit. OXFORD W OMAN'S CLUB TO PLAN YEAR'S WORK The Woman's Club will meet in thp Oxford Library tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock. This is a very impor tant meeting and a full attendance is desired to plan for future work. Attorneys Attend Funeral. Gen. Royster, D. G. Brummitt, B. W- Parham, A. W. Graham, Jr., and possibly other local attorneys, attended the funeral of Mr. Victor S. Bryan in Durham last Friday. They were honorary pallbearers. Gen. Royster At Roxboro. Gen B. S. Royster went over to Roxboro last Sunday to deliver an address at an unveiling of a monu ment to the memory of a Woodman of the World. Pat N. Neff, of Waco, led Jos eph W. Bailey, former United States Senator from Texas, by about 75, 000 votes for the Democratic Guber natorial nomination. Xl 71 NEW MARVELS OF RADIO TRANSMISSION ARE IN EVERY PAPER WE PICK UP A Doctor Who Treated a Patient Three Hundred Miles Away. Scarcely a day has passed during the last two or three months without seeing recorded in the newspapers some new marvel achieved by the comparatively young science of wire less transmission. The new United States high-power station in France opens with a pow- er that encircles the globe, with a radius of 12,000 miles each way; the old battleship Iowa starts on a cruise during which she will not have a hu man being aboard, all of her func tioning being controlled by radio en ergy from another ship; Mme. Mel ba sings and her voice is heard for thousands of miles; Signor Marconi, the inventor, aboard his yatch off the Italian coast, dances with his , 6ucota ui music piayea in .London and l transmitted by wireless through the marvei or tne audion valve and sound amplifiers; a merchant of London, sending a representative to Paris by airplane, receives news that changes his plans, and communicates with his agent in the . air by radio f telephone and gives orders that mean a greatly enhanced profit on the un dertaking. All of these are the high lights of radio progress the sensational things that mark fresh developments in a science that is fraught with al most infinite possibilities for the fu ture. There has recently returned to this country an operator who made a long voyage and whose ingenuity was the means of saving the life of a woman passenger in rather an unu sual way. He was on a cargo ship, bound north from Montevideo for Liverpool. At the Uruguayan port a friend of the captain had- asked him to take a woman and her little ' bahy with them and the captain had consented, though both women and babies are unpopular on board the average tramp. Two days out from port the wo man became seriously ill. The ran- tain did what he could for her with tne books cf medical lore ordinarily supplied to merchant ships and with the small stock of remidies which the vessel carried. The captain was at his wits' end, for the woman's condition was most grave and he. had no medical know ledge to cope with a malady whose nature he did not understand. In this predicament, the operator came to him and said, "Captain, I am in wireless touch with a passenger ship about three hundred miles away and they have a doctor on board. I have got him into the wireless room and he says, if you will describe the woman's symptoms to him and tell him what you have been doing for her, he will advise you." ' The captain at once went into the radio cabin with the operator and he and the distant physician spent near ly two hours exchanging questions and answers, advice and information. At the end of that time the skipper had a prescription which he could fill from the ship's medicine chest and full details of the treatment re quired. The next night, the operator once more got into touch with the doctor on the other shin and the captain re ported the patient's temperature, pulse and other symptoms. Another prescription and further instructions for treatment and diet followed and so, for five consecutive nights, the physician on the liner held a consul tation with his patient and at the end of that time she was well en ough to be out of bed and about the decks. There is no isolation at sea any more. Every night the ether is vi brant with the news of the day and oficers and crew of the dirtiest tramp ship know at breakfast each morning what is going on in the great world which they have physi cally left. " Every day of our lives, we walk through thousands of vital messages teeming with the happiness and sor row, the joy and tragedy, the failure or success of our fellow men. We are not conscious of it; the mystery of the ether wave is beyond the pow er of our sense to feel, but, though it remains a mystery still in its very essence and identity, we know never theless what we can do with it and we are doing marvels undreamed of even in the far visioned imagination of Jules Verne. REVIVAL SERVICES AT BRASSFD3LD BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. J. O. Canipe, of Mebane, will conduct revival services at Brassfield Baptist Church during the week of September 12-19. The members and friends of the church are requested to meet the pastor at the church at 2 o'clock on Saturday September 11. There will also be a service at the church on' Sunday, morning Septem ber 12. Beginning Monday at 1:30 'there will be two services each day. Victor Silas Bryant. In the death of Mr. Victor S- Bry ant at his home in Durham ' last Thursday, the State loses one of its ablest men. Durham, while imbued with a sense of great loss, feels with her grief a solemn pride, in the man he was, and his record as a citizen !' I J r
Oxford Public Ledger (Oxford, N.C.)
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Sept. 7, 1920, edition 1
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