Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 22, 1907, edition 1 / Page 1
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r A -, I Good Advertising r Good Advertisers Is to IJusinoss what Steam is to Machinery, that great propelling power. Tli is paper gives results. Use those column.'' for results. An ail vert iscruent in tliiat raxr will reach a good class of people. E. E. MILLIARD, Editor ond Proprietor. "Excelsior" Is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year. T ,-t.T VVFIJ New S-iti Vol. H.--6-I SCOTLAND KECK, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1307. NUMBER 33. i M H & A II 1 1 II ;erVork Weakens Your Kidneys, ii'ieaMliy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. Ail the blood in your body passes through cr kidneys once every three minutes. , Jj;; rt The kidneys are your iTl'-ft' ' Pains, aches and rheu- f J IrJ matism ccme from ex cess cf uric acid in thc biood, due io neglected ! ' .fpcy trouble. Sidney trouble causes quick cr unsteady ; -i-t tats, end makes cr.e fee! as though ' .-y had h3.irt trouble, becausa the heart is vcr-vorking in pumping thick, kidnev-jui-'.oned blood through veins and siteries.' r "it uied to be. considered that only urinary . cables were to be traced to thr-. kidneys, : ; now modern sci ?nce proves that nearly : 'i constitutional diseases have their begin '.pg in kidney trouble. ii you a.-i sick you can make no mistake fir:t doctoring your kidneys. The mild -1 ho extraordinary effe.-t c'f Dr. Kilmer's ::-H-.-inip-Hool, the great kidney remedy ii . -,r. realized. It stands tha highes: for its ..:derful cures of the most distressing cases -. :.i is soli on its merits f?"Z. " -'-zi''zz :r- '"- e .'.Tt ;nd o!!-uo!iar siz- k"-';--'::;-;i'JHi' ... . You may have a li-jsj -n;:'.-i bc'.tlc by mad i!,..:.c r.t swam-i(oot. -c. al:-.o pamphlet telling you bow to find .'t if you have kidney or bladder trouble, .v.tntion this pancr v.hen writing Dr. Kihne! ;.. Co., Eincharr.ton. N. Y. Don't make any mistake, but re i :n! vv the Swamp IJont, Dr. ' Sv.-atiip i;(.-.t, and the address 'I'm '.l!:iii!ti!, X. Y., c;i every bottle. " Qt F. SMITH, M. E). l'HYSICIAX AND SURGEON, Scotland Xcck, N. C. - 1 in tl'c- New Bank hii!dir.' J. F. VIMBERLCY, 1'IIYSICTAX AND Sl'KGEON, Scotland Neck, X. C. oil Depot Stre"f DENTIST. 0:lico upstairs in White-t-i,k i,.i Ti,,;i ( ice hours from '.) to 1 o'clock tin.l 2 to o o'clock. U W. MIXGft, 1 It E V R ACTING OPTICIAN, V ilea Maker, Jeweler, En graver, Scotland Nook.. X. C. .- roiiNE y and Counselor at L.AVY, !ll Atlantic Trust Building Norfolk, Va. X U rv I'ublic. Bell Phono 37-4 fjzm) L. TRAVIS, lND Counselor at Law, Halifax, N. C. ?t"--n'y Loanod on Farm Lands i?. joscy, i'EN'EitAL Insurance Ac;ent, Scotland Neck, N. C. e.Vrfj HA!R BALSAMS , r.y yi,-C ;f!:cir.f ct.il trii'.t:ic the r.!r. i' ;.'. Et. IT jr.. Iff o lt-x-jfiaiit ffreK. "'"-".W.":- . Ir.ae.v.e Tnila to Uoetoro Orsy ? --- f '-'A tlf.l- to ia Youtbfnl Color. ' '.--''.v' "J-. r?2:l!'-'j-'--'''''t l''""t'-'-''3 Day & Hedges, Livery iuggies Harness LA Rohes Trboros NorOi Carolina ky Kaunfein Tea Buggsts A B;cy Kediahio 11c Euij Fccp'a. -.Has CijIJ.-'a Health cud Eonswed Vigor. r--r.a: f ConsUnntion, In.-'li.-O'tioa, T.Ivr S'i l:w T:"-.u?):-j.-i. i'i:np!r.. Ueoin Impur ' rM ,'irr.ai. t;lucfr!.'.: Bo-.vm.;, TVa'lacr t'.-i'Mar.'r.v. It's Cuo!:y T :OMnt.ui; Te.i if- ta' :t-i. cor.t: v, bur. O'-ii'iKi' tnrtilc b; :ir:.i l:t'-o Comp.vv, I'la '.ison, WTii; "rji NUuGSTS ron sallcw pCP:.r -v a y-i TV? w io QisRE z t. UPS OS 33 'na f o y ft h 3 ' B.-te a $T.oo. A ir pxi TURCfcT AF-1D LUMSTHOL'SLES. i AH.AIJTKUD SATISFACTORY ivHSVy ! ter out thc waste or f TyiTiiVV? Impurities in the blood. I V-. V VTVa 1 f '-hcy Ar sick or out t.-u iiiiLUI, Hlv 111- ' whip THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Observations of Passing Events. As all North Carolinians expected, North Carolina week at the James town Exposition overshadowed every other occasion there thus far. And North Carolina Week. the people of Virginia took a pride in our week almost equal to the pride in their own week. It is gratifying to see the general good feeing the i exposition management has shown towards all who have participated in the great enterprise; and It is doubly gratifying to the stay-at-homes in North Carolina that the good old State was so we'll represented and that the occasion was free from anything but what we can all feel proud of. It wfis truly a great week in the Exposition interest, and the many good things said for the clever host of North Carolinians there will be treasur ed long by cur appreciative people. Judge Landis and the great fine which he imposed upon the Standard Oil Company have been discussed broadly in the papers during the past Wl!! The Fin? bC Fait! 7 f0W wee'cs- Antl t1lie Quc;stion now being asked is, will the fine ever be paid? What gives the question more significance than anything else, perhaps, is the statement which John D. Rockefeller is said to have made. He has been quoted at saying : "Judge Landis will be dead a long while before this fine is paid." This is regarded by the press generally ing law against the trusts. If the fine is paid it will be a triumph against the trusts, and if it is not paid it will be a triumph for the trusts and thev j wilt be more strongly entrenched than ever. Of course it will not be paid j without some resistance, but whether the resistance will be strong enough : and long enough to win is the part that calls forth speculation now. No man living can tell whether the fine will be paid or not; but all the same it is an interesting question, and the governments of the world will note results with care. To be sure, it h a stupendous punishment, and few men in judicial position would have had the nerve to impose such a fine, but almost any corporation would be materially affected by it. The world will watch with interest to see which is the more powerful, the great trust or tile pronouncement of a judge in power. We have not studied the telegraph operators' strike which is now on irou-hout the country; but judging from the results of strikes generally, Telegr Operators' Strike. wo do not beIieve that anythin? of real eood or benefit will come of it to the strikers. As we see it, the motive generally in strikes is wrong; and given a wrong 1110 Live behind malicious, or even unwise manipulations, and it is hard to see how logically any good can come of any movement. The strikers, as a rule, get the worst, of iha novjrt:nt r.n.l . thay aw foolish to allow themselves to be led into any such action. There is just as much reason why clerks in stores, wage earners on the farms, or any where el-;e, should strike together for higher wages or shorter time; and no one could justify such a course on the part cf clerks or farm laborers. If a clerk in a store b-j comes dissatisfied with his work or the pay he gets for it, he has a right to give up his job, unless he is under contract for a certain time. The same holds good with a farm laborer; but neither the store clerk nor farm la-b'.-rcr has any moral right to try to break the relations of their employers with other employes. Every tub should be allowed to stanl on its own bottom. No more have persons engaged in telegraphy, or mining, or railroad building, or any manufacturing enterprise the moral right to induce other such employes to break away from their work. The princi ple and spirit are wrong and it should not be encouraged. To be sure, greedy employers should not impose upon their employes by heaping upon th?m too much labor for the time allotted in which to do it. Such a course is as much a moral wrong as thc action of strikers. All such questions should be looked at from the stand-point of common sense and not through th3 glasses of excitement or unwise enthusiasm. There are almost as many opinions about what a newspaper should print as there are readers. One thinks that nothing should be printed but the good things that can be said of men and ' - things, while another thinks that everything chat happens ought to be printed whether decent or indecent, modest or immodest. Then again some think that newspaper publishers should en deavor to strike the happy mean and print just enough of every kind of news and no more. That is ideal ; but who knows every time just what is enough and no more? Some think that the broad publicity of crime by the newspapers is a means of checking crime, while others think that it tends to increase crime. The Globe-Gazette, of Trenton, N. J., recently made the following thoughtful observations on the subject: "We are in clined to thc opinion that publicity in some instances may act as a deter rent to crime, but we believe that the newspapers ought to be careful to avoid the publication of anything that is calculated to inflame the mind of oasionate men and women to such a degree that they become blind to il-.pir moral responsibility and think only of the satisfaction of their, ur- holy desires. The New York newspapers devote columns every day to the Wtin" forth of facts relative to crime, and the more revolting the crime the greater display of type in describing it. A sharp censorship should be applied to all news of this character that comes to a newspaper office. It -W.uld hp tho aim of every editor of a public journal to make of it a ve- s;i nf el-in and inoffensive information. Every newspaper ought to be an upbuilder father than a downpuller paper ought to be a conservator of newpanr ousht to be a power for ' " -nsTtnr n.irt of its energy miseries, sins and crimes of degenerate 1 tl trr-. fcrrs e-t en rea I? At tin vi c, rs? I Jbaj" WRITE I well it mitcht, for North Carolina and Virgini are so closely related in almost every interest as a test in the matter of enf eniore- of public morals. Every news the best interests ot me home. .vry good, and itcamot be all this if it and space to spectacular display of the men and women. -The ills peculiar to vomen, take different forms. " Some ladies suffer, every month, from dark rings round their eyes, blotches on their skin and t'.red feeling. Others suffer agonies of pain, that words can hardly express. Whatever the symptoms, remember there Is one medicine that will 0 beyond mere symptoms, and act on the cause of their troubles, tb3 weakened vomanly organs. Mrs. M. C. Austin, of Memphis, Tenn., writes: "For five (5) years I suffered with every symptom of female disease, but after" using the well-known Cardui Home Treatment, I was entirely well" if A 0 ' A S Y S ttJ I a Bo.il j 8 Why Laiin is Used by Physicians. (Xew Vut Herald.) "I don't see," said the man who was leaning against the drug store counter, "why a doctor can't write his prescriptions in English instead of Latin." The druggist said, "You think, 1 suppose, that the .doctor writes his prescriptions in Latin so it can't be read so easily so the layman can't steal his trade and learn what he is giving him. But that's all wrong. In the first place, Latin is more ex act and concise language than Eng lish, and, being a dead language, does not change, as all living langu ages do. "Then, again, since a very large part of all the drugs in use are bo tanical, they have in the pharmaco poeia the same names that they have in botany the scientfic names. Two thirds of such drugs haven't any Eng lish names, and so couldn't be writ ten in English. "But suppose a doctor did write a prescription in English for an unedu cated patient. The patient reads it, thinks he remembers it, and so tries to get it filled from memory the sec ond time. Suppose, for instance, it calls for iodide of potassium and he gets it confused with cyanide of po tassium. He could safely take ten grains of the first, but one grain of the second would kill him as dead as a mackerel. That's an exaggerated case, but it will serve for an illustra tion. Don't you see how the Latin is a protection and a safe-guard to the patient? Prescriptions in Latin he can't read, and consequently he doesn't try to remember. "Now for a final reason. Latin is a language that is used by scientific men the world over, and no other language is. You can get Latin pre scriptions filled in any country on the face of the earth where there is a drug store. We had a prescription come in here the other day vhich we had put up originally, and which had since been stamped by druggists, in London, Paris.Berlin, Constantinople, Ctviro and Calcuttf) Whut OOrvl wrmM an English prescription be in St. Petersburg?" A Glnsons Gsrdan In the .Mountains. (Lenoir News.) An iteresf ing enterprise " in the vicinity of Foseoe Watauga county which, is situated two miles up the beautiful Watauga l iver from Shulis Mill, is a ginseng garden owned by Messrs. J. B. Johnson and Julius Calaway. The ginseng plant is a delicate plant that lias its favorite habitat in the densely shaded coves and glens of the mountains. It is of slow growth, attaining its full maturity at the age of seven yeai-s. It takes a year for the seed to ger minate and then under careful atten tion the little plants or sprouting seed are transferred from the germ inating boxes to the muckbeds haul ed in from the woods. The beds of muck are arranged much like an ordinary plant bed and the little ginseng plants are six to ten inches apart in the beds. These beds are all of the rich muck from the moun tain coves a.nd the cultivation of the little plants simply consists in keep ing the beds clear of weeds and keeping a liberal amount of cool, j damp muck around the plants. The whole garden is covered over and fenced in with a substantial lattice, giving to the plants a cool, damp, shaded bed, as near like the- densely shaded coves a? possible. ,The plants begin to produce seed at the age of three to four years and these seed are cai'efuliy harvested and planted. The root of ginseng is the part that is valuable and at the age of seven years the roots are dug and sold. The price ranges from $4 to $7 per pound, for the dry roots and the growers estimate that they can secure a good income from an ordinary garden after the crop is once started and. has been going for seven years. Messrs. Johnson & Cal away have several hundred dollars invested in their garden and expect after a few years to have some gin seng reaay for the market. ' n ' ST Write today for a free copy valuable OHwge illastreted Sock for Women. If yoa need Mrt R ict' , Advice, describe your symptoms. sait;sae. ar.d reply vi!l te C-nt in plain sealed cnvelopi DISS Address- I-adi' Advisory Dept.. The Giattar.oosa Medicine Co., Chattnrooga, j enn. gssassis At the Set cf the Sim. (Boston TranseriptJ) At the set of the sun, When our work is done, With all its tangled web; When the clouds drift low, And the stream runs slow, And life is at its ebb, As we near the goal, When the golden bowl Shall be broken at its fount; With what sweetest thought Shall the hour be f raught, What precious most shall we count? Not the flame cf the sword, Nor the wealth we have stored In perishable things of earth Not the way we have trod With the intellect broad, Though that were of precious worth, Nor the gain we achieved Through the hearts we have griev ed, And left unhelped by the way, Nor the laurel of fame, When, for worldly acclaim, We toiled in the heat and the fray. Ah, no! 'tis not these Will give our hearts ease, When life sinks low in the west; But the passing sweet thought Of the good we have wrought, The saddened lives we have blest. And the love we have won, And the love beckoning on From His islands far and dim; Love out of the light, Shining into the night, The night which leadeth to Him. Japan Owes a tool Billion. (New Vcrk 'omn-.crciaJ ) Latest official figures claim for Japan a present population of 43, 864,000, or about that of the United States in 1870. The revenues for the current jear are estimated at ?30S.220,000, and the national debt is reported as 2,217,722,753 yen, the equivalent, in round figures, of $1,100,000,090. Nearly all the foreign loan and a very large part of the total indebt edness represent inonpy ol-tiI:.-j ' fvr the wars vith China and with Russia. Practically the whole of the interior loan, amounting to a little more than $-500,000,000, bears 5 per cent inter est. There is a foreign loan of $48, 815,000 at 4 per cent for railways and public works. Of the foreign war loan, $107,303,000 bears G per cent. $02,SOO,000 bears 4 1-2 per cent, and $122,037,500 bears 4 per cent. The total foreign debt is $571 , 135,500. A part of the domestic loan also represents military and naval expenditures. In March of this year a loan of $23,000,000 at 5 per cent for 40 years was issued for the refunding of the G per cent loans of May, 1904, ($10, 000,000) and November, 1904, $12, 000,000.) That ftamterd Oil Fine. (Chaiictte Observer.) Of course the figure sharps have got busy on the fine of $20,240,000 imposed by Judge Landis on the Standard Oil Company. Perhaps the most noteworthy of their findings is contained in the statement that this amount in the form of silver dollars would load about fifty ordinary coal cars to full capacity. But there are other comparisons not much less wonderful. Five first-class battle ships could be built, or 2,924 homes at $10,000 each. This sum would yield an annual income of $1,027 a day. It is slightly more than half the money coined each year by the United States government and about 33 cents for every man, woman and child in the country. If they con tributed all their salary the Presi dents of the United States could not work out the amount in les3 than 535 years. It is nearly h i!f the num ber of silver dollars in circulation. In short, it would be a tremendous fine if levied upon any other human institution than the Standard Oil Company. DoWitt's Little Early Kiser.s don't siokou or sripe. Hmull Tills, oay to take. t;old Lv E. T. Whitehead & Co. r ST Opera Glasses, Net Gucs. Our Dumb Animals.) If the small boy were taught to think of the suffering of the turtle or toad, of course the boy would not leave him on his back. If he thought of the starving birdlings in the nest he would hesitate to kill the mother bird. Jeremy Bentham says: "Give your boy an opera glass and send him into the woods to learn the patience, ingenuity and industry of birds." Let him learn to distinguish the song of one bird from another. Arouse his curiosity as to their wonderful habits and give him the innocent de light which the study of natural his tory is sure to bring into his life and holiday pleasure. Teach him the cowardice of torturing helpless birds. Let him know their value as insect-eater3, and that we need many more birds in our woods and near our home3 than we now have. Insist that the coming generation shall realize the sin of cruelty and the bad tendency of any act which gives the question of life or death in to irresponsible hands. Jenkin Lloyd Jones says: "It is the boys I am con cerned about more than the spar rows, and I earnestly object to this putting incipient murder into the hearts of our boys!" And the late Frances E. Willard's words in a letter to Mr. Angell are none to strong: "I look upon your missions as a sac red one, not second to any that are founded in the name of Christ." The man who shoots a thousand birds for anatomical or technical examination learns less than lie who carefully studies the habits and thoroughly learns the song of one. The much abused sparrow has friends among naturalists, who de clare him to be a useful insect-eating bird. Let us encourage birds to build about us by feeding them and put ting up bird boxes for their rests. Let us discourage as far as possible the destruction of birds, and endeav or to teach the small boy, and the large boy as well, that a live bird is muoK mora IntoroctJnir in watVi tVion a dead one. Thus we may change his interest in bh'ds from that of a savage to that of a naturlist. One good way to do this is to form Bands of Mercy in schools and elsewhere. If you will write to George T.Angell, 10 Milk Street, Boston, asking for information, you will receive full directions free of cost I. G. Daniels. Politics ami Politicians. (Wilson Times.) Marion Butler, former United States Senator from North Carolina, has come out for President Roosevelt for a third term. Major John C. Hemphill is out for the seat of United States Senator Latimer, of South Carolina. Major Hemphill belongs to an old South Carolina family and is known as a scholar and an orator of rare attain ments. The Brooklyn Democratic Club has called a conference of Democratic governors to meet at Brighton Beach the latter part of this month to con sider "Encroachments of the Feder al Government on the powers of the States." Ex -Senator Carmack, of Tennessee, does not take kindly to the sugges tion of some of his friends that he should become a candidate for the nomination on the Democratic ticket for Vice-President. He says he doesn't want the job. United States District Judge Lan dis, who imposed the famous $29, 000,000 fine upon the Standard Oil Company, is now mentioned as a possible candidate for the Republi can nomination for governor of Illi nois. Winston Churchill, the novelist, who has entered politics and who wns a candidate for governor of New Hampshire last year, has developed strong political convic'.ions, and his i l. i: c : irienus expect nun wnsun; nently in national affairs before many year3 go by. It is interesting to note that only one member of the House of Repre- x- i i j v, rwac!; sentatives has reached the PieM- dency at the time of his incumbency in the House. That was james t country affords. (Jet a free sample of Dr. Shoop'cs "Health Coifee" at our store. If real cofl'ee disturbs your Stomach, your Heart or Kindeys, thou try this clever Coifee imitation. Dr. Shoopha-s close ly matched Old Java and Mocha Cofi'ec in flavor and taste, yet it has not a pintle grain of real Coilee in it. Dr. Shoops Health Coffee Imitation is mn'te from mire roosted crams or cereab, with Malt, Xuts, etc. .i niiiuife Xo tedius wait- Made You will surely like it. Sold by W. T. Tyler. (larfield. of Ohio, whowasone of the ! blind bleeding, itching or prot ihr "Dark Horse" niles. Guaranteed. l'ricc candidate which the history of the it to-day. E. T. Whitehead Strong Temperance Resolutions. The following strong resolutions passed by the Warrenton Methodist District Conference at Ahoskie somo time ago, show a positive stand by that body for temperance: "Whereas, the liquor traffic is the greatest curse to our homes and the worst foe to our churches, and whereas, every church has spoken out against this evil, therefore, be it resolved by the Warrenton district conference: "First. That we stress the law of our church (Discipline 216, page 91) forbidding a member to hold any po sition in barroom crdispcnsary.orto in any way aid the business. And if a member persist in holding such a position that we proceed as the dis cipline requires. "Second. That we note with joy the success of the temperance forces in Georgia, carrying State prohibi tion, and favor similar action by our legislature in 1009. "Third. That we deplore the fact that a large portion of the Warren ton district still legalizes the accursed liquor traffic, and we urge thechurch everywhere to awake from its lcth ergy and drive out the curse. To this end we pledge our assistance to any places that shall try to overthrow the saloon or dispensary. We are glad to see that Warrenton and Winston are soon to vote on "dispen sary or prohibition," and hope every Methodist will be true to his con science, his Bible and his church, ami thus vote for prohibition. We call on our people to fight for prohibition only, since nothing else is biblical. "Fourth. That we fully endorse the platform and methods of the An Li-Saloon League, and that we will use it and help to support it. We rejoice at the successful work of the State organizer, Rev. R. L. Davi.s and will gladly welcome him in our fields at any time." "C. L. Read, "J. G. Johnson, "C. W. Martin, "B. C. Thompson, W. C. Mkiiiiitt." ENDORSED JY THE COUNTY. "Tlio most popular n-m.-'d y in Olsi-pi County, and tin; hest friend of my fam ily," Win. M. Diet., editor and pub lisher of the Otsego Journal, (Jilherls villi', X. Y., "is Dr. Kin' New Dis covery. Jt has proved to he an infal lible. enn1 for eoliths and eolds, niakiii'.; short work of the worst of them. Vo always keep a hot tie in the house. I believe it to be the most valuable pre script ion known for bunt; and Throat diseases." (Juaranteed to never disap lint the taker, by E. T. Whitehead Si Co' Drutf siore. Price GOe and if l.OO. Trial bottle free. Over $1,000,000 increase in batik deposits in Norfolk as compared with the same time last year is a fine show ing, and we are not suprised that Controller Ridgely notices it--Norfolk Landmark. "We never repent of eating too little," was one of the ten rules of lifeofThomas Jefferson, president of the United Slat'-s, and the rule applfcs to everyone with out exception during this hot weather, because it is hard for food, even in small quantities, to be directed when the blood isathihteniiH'iatuie. At thin season we should eat sparintrly and properly. We should also help tins stomach aS much :i jwissible by the use of a little Kodol For Indigestion and DysjK-psia, which will rest the r-toniaeh by ditf'stintf the food itself. Hold by E. T. Whitehead & Co. "Why do you telegraph your con gratulations on their marriage? A ! letter would do as well." "Oh, no. They may be divorced before a letter can reach them." Cleveland Lead er. "REGULAR AS THE SUN" in an expression as old as thc race. Xo doubt the rising and setting of the sun is the iiiont regular jK-rfonnanee in thJ universe, unless it is the action of the. liver and 1mwc1s when regulated with Dr. Kind's Xew Life I'ills. Guaran teed by E. T. Whitehead it Co., lrtij,'- g,"ts 25c. , ! seen de divil once," said Broth- I t - , .a a i t j: j 1 i er uicKey. awi nuw uw c iw "Well, sun, ter tell the truth, after I J quit runnin, I clean disremembered his favor." Atlanta Constitution. Tri T Man Zan I'l e Remedy comes put up t ft v tQ , , ri ht w.Mfirc sorencss and inflammation exists. It relieves at once nid'rt;; jOo. Oct t Co. "I'm going to Maude's tin wedding tonight." "Been married ten years, has she?" "No; she's to be married to her tenth husband." Judge. 1'ineules are for the Kidneys and Dladder. They bring quick relief to backache, rhctirnatism, lumbago, tired worn out feelings. They produce nat ural action of the kidneys in filtering waste matter out of the Mood. "Odays j treatment $1.00. Money refunded if i Pineules are not satisfactory. E. T. Whitehead & Co. V
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 22, 1907, edition 1
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