Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Nov. 2, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
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' O ADVSBTISINQ IF YOU ARE AKUSTLEb Commonw: m BUSINESS - WHAT STEAM IS TO Machinery, rT GisiT Propelling Power ra roc win ADVEKTISE TOOK Business, E. E .HILL.IARD, Editor and Proprietor. EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE 81.00. VOL. XXI. Sew Series-Vol. 8. (7-1 8) SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, W O VEMBER 2, 1 905. NO 45 8rat oitb Advertisement in row eal: Take cold easily? Throat tender? Lungs weak? Any relatives have consumption? I hen a cough means a great Cherry ectoral I deal to you. Follow your doctor's advice and take heals, strengthens, prevents. " For 40 years I have depended on Ayer's Cherry lVi-toral for coughs ami colils. I know it creatlv strengthens weak lungs." 31 us. r. A. Kobinson, Saline, Mich. for J. C. ATIR CO., Lowell. Mass. Weak Lungs Ayer's Pills increase the activity of the liver, and thus aid recovery. PARKER'S HAIP R A I -CAM Cleanu. and fceautifie the ht. Wevtr Fails to Bestore Gnr n.i- n 1 ,1. 1 Cure. Kalp diaeuc. hair falling Wi.aodfl.Wat DniggMU PROFESSIONAL. nK. J. P. WIMBERL.JS1, iJ OFFICE BKICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. tjl A. & ALBION DUNN, Hi ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Neck, N. C. Practice wherever their services are rc-quired. ; Y W. MIXON, Refkactixg Optician, Watch-Maker, Jeweler, Engraver, Scotland Neck, N. C. nuTl. 0. LIVERMON, Dentist. OrriCE-Over New Whitbead Building 0 "k'e ho tira from 9 to 1 o'clock ; 2 to j o'clock, p. m. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C. pMVABD L. TBAVISs, L Attorney and Counselor at Lair, HALIFAX, N. C. g??Hiiey Loaned on Farm Lands, Grim Grasp Caused Heart Disease. Could Not Lie On Left Side. Dr.Miles'Hcart Cure and Nervine Cured Me. . Mrs. H. R. J ibe, formerly of Birmingham, A;., -r.tts from Eidredge, the same state, "It is v.iih the rreateyt Dleasure that I rec-r-.rr.rt'A Dr. J.i.Ies Nervine and Heart t I only wish that I could tell every f :.-rr how much good they have done me. 1 ' t winter 1 had a severe attack of La tie, which left my heart in a very bad c ,vi:':tn. I c.uld not lie down for the iar.tiwinjr spells that would almost over-- -rr-.-s n;e and the feelirg of oppression rr jr: t my heart. I had not been so that I c .. : lie on mv left side for a long time. I L t y-,ur Heart Cure and took three bottles. I fra.e no troubl; now with my heart and ?ti 1c o:i my left side as well as my right. i ' rrr.eriy I had suffered for years with nerv i; I .ro.-tration. I had tried so many rem f: rs ttat I had trot cl. cr out ot heart of cet t ; anything tliat would help me. The r" ts ,f my heatt were so affected that ir.-.iiiiiesit would lose beats so it would f- ni t; ptop altogether. It was on the ad V ' c of a lady frirt.'d tht I tried your Restor- . Nervine. I felt better after the first fey.- cVes ar,;l two bottles of Nervine and or e ..f jlearv Cure made me feel like a new I '-r - n. Mv hc.'rt is all right and my nerv-oj-r : is all gone. I never fail to recom ti en 1 it to otheis afflicted as I was." A"; drjgrists sell and guarantee first bot tle I M i!es' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart liseases. Addresi ir. : i.,ts Medical Co, Elkhart, lad. vi k Heflps, Livery Buggies Harness W li i p s Rob e s Norm Carolina. It U a pleasure to take Dr. Dade'e kittle Liver Pills and eojoy their tonic ect upon the liver. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co., Scotland Neck, and Leggett'a drug store, Hobgood. - - t3 S :-.. 5v..?i.w. O ' 'i 'riisiuis'i. Moro Editor's Leisure Hours. 1 OBSERVATIONS OF Perhaps for the small cost of it no improvements more needed than sign boards at the cross roads and road forks throughout the countryT Sikh Beards Needed. Board8 are needed at a11 s&ch polnts whlch win tell a traveler which road to take tor a certain town or place, and how far it is. Recently we have had occasion to travel the country roads in several parts of Halifax county and we found very few sign boards on the roads. It would not cost much to put them where they are needed and we hope that the road authorities will take the matter up and see that such sign boards are placed that will intelligently direct a traveler on his way from place to place. What is true of Halifax county's need of sign boards is doubtless true of other counties in the State. I t t X Pbesident Roosevelt has said many wise things during his tour through the South. At Raleigh he emphasized the idea that merit is the TheManaudHisMerit.principleoawh,chainan shou,d win and b8 commended by his fellows. In the same strain he said the following in his speech at Little Bock, Ark. : "Thank Heaven, we are free now from all dauger of territorial antagonisms. Now we must see that there shall never come any antagonisms of the classes or antagon isms between capital and labor. Treat each man according to bis worth as a man. Don't hold for or against him that he is either rich or poor. But if he is rich and crooked, hold it against him ; if not rich but crooked, then bold it against him. But if he is a tquare man stand by him. Dis trust all who would have any one class placed before any ether. Other re publics have fallen because of the unscrupulous rich or the unscrupulous poor, who gained ascendency, who substituted loyalty to claes for loyalty to the people as a whole." 1 1 1 r The annual howl is being made by the press of the State, through edito rial and correspondence, about the gambling which is eean at the various s. fairs. ' And Gambling at Fairs that such again. The public has come to believe that promises to keep out fakirs and gamblers mean nothing. The promises are made every year, but the next year when the same man or the man with tricks and devices applies for a license, by some means the license Is granted and in goes the gambler and flip goes the promiee made a year betore that gamblers should no more ba allowed. . The editor of Thj? 0"-i;osr.x.ALiH us seen no fair this sea "son except the State fair at Raleigh, and wa thought it was about as easy for the gamblers there as we had ever seen it anywhere, notwithstanding tbeie has been the annual promise almost "time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary," that "next year they shall not enter." Aud likewise the indecent shows hold their accustomed place there, despite the promise that they shall not show again. It really begins to look like "fair" promises are not to be counted upon and that the fakirs are In for every fair, It matters not who says what. tttt The Washixgton Post recently quoted Cowper "My ear Is pained, my soul is sick with every day's report of wrong and outrage with which earth Prominence of Crim nal News. against the deluge of criminal news which floods the world every day and every week. There are many things to be considered when we begin to study the news that fills the papers to-day as compared with that which filled them more than a century ago. The Post observes that more print ing paper is now used In a single day in New York, London or Paris, than was required to supply the demands for a month In the United States England or France in 1805. It is further observed that the public demands a recital of crime. And therein lies the secret of it all. The ordinary newspaper reader, whether reading the columns of a daily or weekly paper, will read news of crime, disaster or scandal before he reads the news which tells of the less sensational happenings in the world. Murders, theft, out rages, suicides and the like attract the general reader more than the head lines which tell of religious revivals, big crop yields, industrial enter prises, etc. And the more a paper prints of the sensational that is not too shocking, the more popular it is with the people who like such news. The average newspaper is in the work for the business there is in it or at least many are just like a merchant or milliner. The merchant and the milliner try to carry the goods for which there will be most demand. So with the newspapers that simply run to p'ease the public. They print what they know is most popular ; and so the responsibility for more crimi nal news than other kinds, if there is more criminal news than other kinds, lies at the door ot those who make the demand for it. The Post closes with the following pleasing paragraph on the subject : "And he who ar gues, from the increase of criminal news, that there has been, in the last hundred years, or last fifty years, a corresponding Increase of crime, makes a serious mistake. In proportion to population, taking all civilized peo ples into account, every generation shows a decrease of felonies and misde meanors. And in this country, despite the great prevalence of murder and suicide in these days, there is more of philanthropy, more of work by re ligious bodies and educational institutions, more money contributed for charity and benevolence, than there has been at any time in the past. America leads the world by a long distance In the voluntary contribution of wealth to public uses. This is one land whore wealth accumulates "and men do not decay." Croup ia quickly relieved, and Whooping Cough will not "run its cours" if you uee the original Bee'e Laxative Honey and Tar. This Cough Syrup ia different from all others be cause it acts on the bowels. You can not cure Croup and Whooping Cough until you rid the system of all conges tion, by working off the cold through a copious action of the bowels. Bee s Laxative Honey and Tar does this, and cures all Cough. Croup,hooplng Congo, etc. No opiates. Sold ' T. Whitehead Co., Scotland Neck, J PASSING EVENTS. about as much is said in promises and such things shall not be allowed IV.' is filled" and wondered what Cowper would feel if he were living 'n the twentieth century. Perhaps he would be unable to brace bis nerves SHAKE INTO YOUR SHOES Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures painful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrowing nails, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe store, 25e. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package EREE, Ad: L DAT IN TEE AUTUMN WOODS Take-Your Sweetheart-Wife for a Day cf Communion With Nature! Tom Watson's Magazine (Editorial) for October, Did you never, Mr. Busy Man, droj all your crowding tasks for a space snatch one whole day from the noisv world in which you bustle and carry it with you into the brilliant woods o Indian summer? - Did yon never take by the hand the patient wife who loves you with such tried devotion, and say to her : '''Sweetheart, will you ride with me today?" it may be mat l lme is even now frosting your temples, and the shadow beginning to follow wh5re it used tr lead. Quick, then, Mr. Busy Man Now or never, if you would taste the nectar which ro many neglect, and which, thank God ! is as free to the peasant as to the king ! Very quietly we went, my sweetheart and I, taking our way along the path then out across the fallen leaves, say ing little. The sounds ot travel on the road were left far behind, and were alone, she and I, in the majestic forest. How gorgeous it was ! The dress parade of nature was never more thril- Iingly splendid. , The red sugarberry flew its battle flag from every height. The golden maple marched side by side with the red elm, and underneath these stately leaders crowded the dogwood and the sassafras In serried skirmish hue, uonK-uae towered trie Hooded pine over blazing yellow of hickory, over purple heads of oaks, And the falling leaves, bow they drifted down in dazzling showers, dri?t- iug here against a rock, drifting yon der against a bank, falling straight or falling aslnt, but falling, ever fati ng, whispering faintly as they drifted downward through the breezaJess, gold en afternoon. - - - 'What ioot of Persian king ever trcd carpet so rich, so deep, so m.iny-nued? We walked upon it slowly, hushed into perfect silence by the nameless spell oi primeval woods. Above us a squirrel was buey with a nut ; bow silly it was for bim to leap franitcally away, springing from tree to tree till he was hidden in his hol low ! We bad no murder In our hearts that day certainly none that day. The sapsnsker and the yellowham- mer were drumming on dead limb3, and the tattoo which they beat with their long bills rang metallically down the forest. A covey of partridges, sunning them- elves in an open, grassy nook, got al most under our feet before they rose with a startled and startling flutter and whirled away. Over ledge after ledge of rock, be ween two steep bills, dashed a stream from the spring far up the slope. Was music ever sweeter? We sat down beside the brook, and as I noted the record of the water's path on the rocks and reflected bow long that little rill must have been at work cutting Us way downward to the gray stones upon which we sat, I got some idea of how old, how very old, it all was ; and I wondered which one of those smooth worn furrows in the granite marked tbe bed of the stream when Helen ot Tioy, was young, or when chained thousands, groaning beneath the lash, were fitting stones into the Pyramids. Wrapped in this mood of idle thought I bad not noticed that my sweetheart had left me and gone on down the glen, uctil she called me to see tbe minnows, tbe silver-Bided fisfi, wbicb rose by the score to the crumbs she scattered upon the pool, and which she was feeding with all the delight oi one who loves every innocent thing that God made. ' And fo tbe afternoon wore away. We strolled from rock to rock, irom tree to tree, from the hilltop to tbe brook and from the brook to the bill again, each scene so lovely that each seemed lovelier tban the others. A mighty suspense -hnng within these wooded aisles, as if some mjstic interval bad fallen upon tbe vast ca thedral service of nature. One felt that something had gone before, that something would follow after, but that, for the moment, to be reverently Bilent was worship. Boieterons laughter among those fading rovalties of the trees would have been sacrilege. Frivolity amid the showers of these falling leaves would have been crimi nal. And the song of that modest brook, as it hurried away. ov?r the smooth worn grooves in tbe old gray rock, sof tened every thought, chastened every Impulse of mind and heart. The hurly-burly of the everyday world seemed far away and forgotten. Its cares,JU toils, iu strifes, it am were gone. We were alone, my sweetheart and I, and our thoughts had flown back tc tbe time when I, a nameless, homeless suitor, bad found favor in her eyes? There was no need ; she knew, she knew it well. What need that I should say, in words, that her love had bjen to my better self tbe gift of the Order of Knighthood, calling it to h gher arms, inspiring it to nobler works? There was no need ; she knew she kaew it well. Kor was there any need of words to rimind her that I had been thinking of that which ever and forever makes fie lip begin to tremble, and the eve to fill, and tbe soul to writhe in tbe igony that fiuds no v Jce and no relief. There was no need for speech. 1 knew that she bad heard, and she knew that I bad beard, the patter of little feet upon the leaves, leet that follow us invisibly now as we walk toward the setting sun. In tbe song of the water we had heard another voice than that of the brook ; and down every "lade of the wondrous woods I knew there had come to her, as to me, the question ot "Shall she be ours again?" And to know that the sorrow had not lifted for her, any more than it bad lilted for me, I had only io glance at tbe dear face into which grief hud so cruelly stamped its shadow and its pain. As we came forth from tbe forest fur tbe homeward ride the red lancers ol the retiring sun were speeding ever the brown fields, gloriously covering tb? retreat. Their last stand upon the hill tors had scarcely been made before the sil vered legions of the autumn moon came pouring over tbe plains. We rode home along tbe country anes in the radiance of ten thousand stars, and under tbe spell which falls upon the heart after a perfect day in tbe woods of Indian Summer. Mr. Busy Man, leave your task sonte day, let the shop take care of itself, kt the mill go as it may, let the plow- stand in tbe furrow and take yourself into tte depths of the solemn, shadowy woods. Call back, ah,ca'l btick tbe forgotten years, collect around you the old friends, the old thoughts, the old ambitions, tbe mistakes you made, tbe faults you had, tbe wrongs cu did or suffered, the opportunities wasted, tbe vain things you sought, the work that you might have done better, the kind words you might have spoken and did not, tbe good deeds you might have done and did not, the frowns that should have been smiles, the curses that might have been blessings, tbe tears that ought never to have been shed, the wounds that need never have been made. Commune with yourself your past, your present, your future your crime?, your weaknessess, your doubts, your fears, your hopes, your despair ; and thus let Conscience and the Angels of your Better Self baat your soul into tbe prayer : "God be merciful to me, a sinner." Thr in mnrn f!t.arrh in this section of the country tban all other diseases put together, and until the last lew years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure witn local treatment.pro- nounced "it incurable. Science hse proven catarrh to be a constitutional seaso and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured bv F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitution- 1 cure on the market, it is taken in ternally in doses frcin 10 drops to a teasnoonful. It acts directly on tbe blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tem. Tbey offer one hundred dollars for anv cusa it fails to cure. Fend lor circulars and testimonials. Address : F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, Ton. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti pation. 9 ' - - Age brings a man knowledge of many things he would rather not know. Tbe original is always tbe best im itations are cheap. Bees Laxative Honey and Tar is the original Laxative Couch Syrup. It is different from all btbers It is better tban all others, oecause it cures all coughs and colds and leaves the system stronger than before. Tbe letter B In red is on every package. Sold by E. T. Whitehead 4 Co. Scotland Neck, Leggell's drug store, Hobgood. Some men own tteir own homes, but some employ cooks. Philadelphia Record. Many children inherit constitutions weak and feeble, others dus to child nood Jroubles. Hollieter's Rocky Mountain Tea will positively . cure children and make tbem strong. 35 m- - Mi a a VI HI - Iff L oentr, Tea or iiwtu. - j&. ; it h bih-i STRAWBERRY CULTURE. Some Hints That Will Prove Vain able in Growing Next Tear's Crop. It is advisable to plant as early in the spring as possible, for early set plants will grow off better and the loss of plants will be little or none. As soon as the ground is sufficiently dry in the spring, therefore, I would prepare it. Be sure to work It until it is thoroughly pulver ized and then pack the surface all you can with roller or drag. I have better results from planting on firm soil than on that which is very loose. I also find, says a correspondent of the Prairie Farmer, that the later in the spring the plants are set the better condition the ground should be in and the firmer the surface should be. After the ground is thus prepared we mark It off both ways. The rows the wide way should be four feet apart and the distance the narrow way depends on the variety grown. If it is a rank growing variety two to two and one half feet will be close enough. If a shy plant-maker 18 to 24 inches is the proper distance. The best marker we have ever used, and we have tried several, is made by bolting a pair of straight shafts to a piece of timber two by four inches and 12 feet long; brace it well. We bore holes in the piece every four, two and one-half feet. These holes are made slightly slanting. In every four-foot hole we bolt a square iron rod about three feet long, sharpened at the lower end. When the horse is hitched to the shafts you have a device something like a rake, only the teeth slant back so as not to catch on obstructions but slip over them. You are then ready to lay off your ground the wide way. By letting one tooth run in the last mark each time your rows will all be the same width. One boy and man can operate this and mark many acres in a day. When ready to cross and mark the nar row way, put in extra teeth the distance apart that you wish the rows. A mark thus made is not blotted out by the rain, but will show plainly even after a hard rain. I always use a spade for planting, a man and a boy working together. The man uses the spade and carries the basket of plants on his left arm and faces the way the row runs. With his right foot he forces the spade into the ground, pushing the handle forward, which leaves an opening behind the. spade. The boy on tbe left of the row places the plant in the opening, down to the bud, holding it thus while the spade is removed, and the man presses the soil firmly to the plant with his left foot. MAKE CUTTINGS EARLY. Simple and Easy Hatter to Propa gate Your Own Grapevines, Currants, Gooseberries, Etc. It is a very simple and easy matter to propagate your own grapevines, cur rants, gooseberries and most ornamen tal shrubs. If a little skill is used these plants may be readily propagated from cuttings made late in the autumn after the leaves are off and preferably before cold weather comes on, says a writer in Farm and Home. Welr-ripened mature wood, which has grown during the past summer, should be selected and cut into lengths of six to ten inches. The base of these should be cut squarely just below the bud. They can be set in the fall in nursery rows two feet apart or tied in bundles of con venient size, with buds all one way and stored in the cellar or buried in the ground through the winter. When spring comes most of the cut tings will have put on a callous where the butt comes in contact with the moist earth or sawdust, in which they have been buried. Even the roots may have started from some of them. As early as the soil can be worked and before the buds of the cuttings begin to grow, they should be planted out in good garden soil. The soil should be well worked, the rows lined out and the cuttings stuck, at an angle of 45 degrees, down to the top bud. They should be given clean, frequent cultivation and hoed often to keep down all wheels during the summer. Usually an excellent growth will be made. Wil lows, poplars and some other varieties of trees, Marianna and Golden Beauty plums, some varieties of quinces, spirea, privet, barberry, mock orange and most varieties of shrubs can be propagated in this way. CUTTING SMALL BRANCHES A Bight and a Wrong Way of Per forming the Task of Prun ing Small Plants. There is a right and a wrong way to cut small branches. The right way is shown at a, in the accompanying illus tration, the wrong ways at b, c and d. ft RIGHT AND WRONG WAYS OF TRIM MING. A sharp knife is best for pruning small plants, says the Farm and Home. Cut near a bud at an angle of 45 degrees, placing the edge of the knife opposite the bud and about level with its lowest point. This brings the top of the cut at about the top of the bud. The cut at d was made too low, and leaves the bud exposed, so there is danger of its being broken. Cut c was made too high and the limb must die back before the new growth can grow over it. Cut at b has the same objection, but in a lesser degree. ' Ti rr yf Correct Dress The "Modern Method" system cf W mgn-graae tailoring introduced by . I E M. A rv, t: : ... r. I H sahshes good dresserc evcryvvhcie. M All rf"? . . , . . . . vilii ii.cn ia ir:nne OliiCliy to Your Lleisure at moderate price. 500 tyl;t of foreign and domettlc fabrica from wl.iih to choo:i. Ask your dcalor to rhew you cur line, cr ;f r.oi represented, wnto to us lor particulars. L. E. KAYS &, CO. CINCIfDIJAVI, OHIO. WDDICK & Il()OKi;if, Mam facti ki-rs' Ai.i Ms, SCOTLAND NECK, - N. C. 'Whenpi were i engaged THE YSUHG LADY RECEIYtC A DQX Cr ALMOST DAILY . t!0;V OFTEN DOES Y3UR WIFE h'CW RECEIVE A BOX OF THESE DELICIOUS CONFECTIONS? REPEMT- ANQ MAIL YOUR ORDERS. AT SHORT INTERVALS, TO E. T. Whitehead fe Comyuuiv Sale .Agents Scotland I ck, N". C. The Lirge&t and lut Equipped riant in the State CHARLES MILLER WALSR Q;ian-;er ar.'l Manufacturer Moraeets, TOMBS, GRAVESTONES of Every Description. Froil 1 1 prt'i : i id m m 1 1 k i i p lnents. Safo doliwry lvuiii antoed. Write for ksitiis and prions. Iron Fencings for t, Cemetery and othcrSfiS't! purposes a Stecialtv. rETEliSl'.UlMi, Va. J. Y, Savage, Agt, at Scotland Nook, N. C. MANY CIIILPRKN AKB SICKLY. Mother Gray',-; Seet 1'owdars I r Children, used by Mother Grnv, a mirsa In Children's Home, New York, I ro.ilc colds in 21 hour?, euro feverisLsncs-', headache, strimnch troiil'ley, teething disorder.', onf destroy worms. At all druggists. 2."j. Sample mailed Iron. Address, Allen 0. Olmsted, Leltiy, N Y. All old-time cough syrups were dcr. igned to treat tbront, lung and lron chial a (Tactions without dnn repaid for tbe stomach and bowclc, hence mot-t oi tht-m produce cona Ipation. Tee's, the orIina! Laxatne Ilucey rr;d Tat is the original Lnxntivc Cough Pjrnp. Ixok for ilia letter H in rrd on tvrr pnekage. Fo'd by K. T. Whiltler-d Sc Co., Scotland Neck, LpggeU's drrg store, Hobgood. HOLLi STEM'S Hocxy Mountain lea Nuggets A TSvf j Medicine fcr ,1:7 roop.o. Brings Golden Health r.nd Heaocl Viijor. A specific for ConstiprTiori. In-liore-tion. I.iv and Kidney Trouble"-. l'i:np!.-". lfccrn. Impur Ultxxl, B.vl Breath, .Sluirrrish RowN. )!o.-vla-ln Hnd Hnokacrre. It's K-tcky Mountain T".. in tab let form, 35 cents a lxr. (;ciini:i; t ii-.do ty Hoi.lister Drug Company, Jliniis TVia GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEfJFIP KILL the COUGH AND CURE the LUNGS lying's WITH CJov; Dis6vry rONSUMPTICN Price OUGHS and 50c & 51.00 Free Trial. OLDS Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TjELOUE XJSS, or MONEY BACK. KlttaYM Raw Aiyn fc3 X 1 I i 1 j 1 'i il'. 'U 1 4
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 2, 1905, edition 1
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