Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / June 26, 1913, edition 1 / Page 1
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The largest Circulation OF ANY Halifax County Newspaper. Commonwealth if IT Ti The Largest Circulation or ANY Halifax Count' iNcwspefiCr H M j c. HARDY, Editor and Proprietor. 'Excelsior" is Our Motto. Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year VOL. XXIX. SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1913. NUMBER 2S. 31 Thc Circatcst rviuucy iUJ on Earth' Says a Grate ful Woman. fthe ' - ftsvo - 'na'i. n ' 'Inilanvn v hW.'V o.. I -v; Jrefvive : V" i I0' "! you how much good l hi did me. About ,,, I miTered from what Uh ii:3tuln and for th-Vc time I endured era: tell. I a!so had -h bladder and I v. o d i c i a es v: i t h o u t r t -M;. Someone told me mer's Svvamp-Root. it a thorough trial, I so kept on usin it a strnntr and we'd ever feel badly or out : Swamp-Root and it ',v:i-; me out. I hon iat this medicine wou'd you recommend it a pleasure for me to p.r.u pnotograin Kilmer sbwarap uf the greatest medi- f.ink t)r vf,.!- arvl i toyoU. f'ne.- 'n e i vi.h. Ue.-ppct fully yours, Mrs. John Daily. k- V .'t St. Portland, Ind - - .. , , x i;j,cr.i.eil an-1 sworn u ueiu:e 'V.; 1 ii 1 1 1 dav of Julv, 190D. C. A. Bennett, Notary Public. Cow acd Ben Hold Korlbmt Record?. iU W'.i Letter to Dr. Ki!m? r & C- Bingaamion, N. Y. 1'roie What Swamp-Root Will Do Tor You. or,i f Ir. Kilmer & Company, Y., for a sample will convince any one. a'so receive a booklet of information, telling all ' kHnevs and bladder. e sure anu mention a'th. Regular fifty- me dolinr size oouies ior ilniur stores. A. N V.r :.: An:: Farm not DUBOIS lalytkr.l Textile and .!: t. Ortice and y m N. 9th St., N"i iT OX, li C. ii..- . f anything, particular n !'' Fertilizers, Cotton Seed ,-,..d Oil Products, Well a;;d Mineral Water, i rod acts Dairy Pro :i -..1 Earth, etc. v rid have their Well eel at least once a year, art of their laud that - j fi-n''.'7r' fr- nr. ' so it can be added l j make it good and rieo of analysis, which and may save you lots Urir..- Mmneapoli With a Holstein cow that give3 her weight in milk and butter fat in 13 days and a prize hen that laid eggs seven times her wei ght m one season, the agricultural college farm stock has established a new record for food-producing ani mals in the Northwest. Tests made at the college farm by tae dairy department the last month show that one cow produced 2,002 pounds of miik and 82 45 pounds of butter fat in three weeks. The hen during the season laid 220 eggs weighing 28.73 pounds or nearly seven times her weight. Tt st? we: e made by Prof. Ernest. W. Major of of the dairy department of the milk given Lady Oak Sobes De Kob, a prize Holstein cow which weighs approximately 1,300 pounds the rec ord for the three respective weeks was G23, 677, 702 pounds of milk and 29.51, 26.05 and 27.25 pounds butter food for the cow during the tests was give under the regular food schedule recommended by the dairy depart ment for dairy stock. The prize hen is of the ordinary variety kept at the college farm a re cord being made to determine the actual value of a hen to the farmer under ordinary case. The 220 eggs if sold at 20 cent a dozen the average price realized for the year by egg producers would give the hen an earning power of $3.66 annually. According to members of the poul try department a hen can sustain a high productiveness for three years and based on the rate of the above record would earn $11 in three years. Eals Sand. : in ; . l 2. A. L UVESMGN, DENTIST. O. up stairs in White. head Building, hours from 0 to 1 o'clock and 'J to 5 o'clock. 1 V ORGAN Physicia.1 end Surgeon Scotland Neck, N. C. D- t'v building formerly I. P. Wimherley. CilAS. I,. STATON, Stroriiey-at-Law, Seot'and Nck, N. C. "a.'ii.vs wh-rever his services are required. Asiijjv 1)UNX Wiiey CounseSor at Law Scotland Neck, N. C. iaeticGs wherever his services are required. yj.' 'rn " approved security. JUL. SAVAGE OF !lO''KV MOUNT, N. C. D?m Scotland Neck, N. C 5 third Wedrif nf l?n-t,M to treat the diseases o M, har, Nu:-e, Throat, and fi on onth f fit The doorkeeper of the house of representatives suddenly became fa mous in connection with a new and peculiar cure for dyspepsia. The Washington correspondent for the Dubuque (la.) Telegraph-Herald tells the story in this way: The na tional capital boasts at least one sai.d e.iinK man. Hid name is Jul ian Emmons and he is a doorkeeper at the house of representatives. Emmons hails from Noblesville, Ind., and came to "Washington with the democratic regime in the house more than two years ago He is sixty-five years of age, hale, and hearty. Emmons swallows a teaspoonful of sand after each meal. He never leaves home in the morning with out a phial of coarse sand. Us says he was troubled constantly with sour stomach, heartburn, indigestion and kindred ills until he started the "sand cure" Now he asserts that he is never troubled at all, relishes his food, sleeps like a baby and en joys life to the full. He has one remedy for all ills. It is sand. If a dark brown taste is present in the morning, do not fail to reach for the sand bottle. He urges coarse sand, not too sharp, and forswears the fine white variety because, he says, it dissolves in the :ntes:inal processes and is of no value as an aid to the functions of digestion. Commoner. A MOCK ELOPEMENT By MARTHA BILLINGS KaxwcH's Remedy Looks Good. I O. F. Smith Physician aud Surgeon in rhr' ' :''-'".,nt Pharmacy. Inc Li .1 OCOtiarV Nook XT r WtmZ'r- 5r" '"-- the lute Mr. A. J. Maxwell, clerk of th2 State Corporation Commission in a speech to the Merchants Association at Wrightsville Beach Wednesday, proposed as a remedy for the un just freight rates, the establishment of a million dollar steamship line by the business men of the State to run from Wdmington. This with just intra State rates foed by the State looks like a true remedy. Scottish Chief. Which Should He Do? This is to Notify All Persons UHcts of the Mutt& lf-' Company that said COrany has been dissolved, .atChas.L.Staton, sur 'ng rtner, will redeem ad tandin,, tickets collected Tnankin2 you for past favors "0l"c.tmg your future pat ron, I am Yours very truly, CIIAS. L. STATON, Six-year-old Dick was preparing much against his own sweet will, to go calling with his mother. It was the first time Dick had deen allowed to get h!mself ready alone, and to gether with boyish disgust at being obliged to go visiting he felt the im portance of the situation After having put on hi3 hat and coat he suddenly rememdered some thing and called downstairs: "Moth er, shall I wash my hands or wear my gloves?" Harper's Magazine. I idive at Seventy! SMany people at seventy attribute their good health to 45COTTS EMULSION because its concentrated nourish ment creates permanent body-power, and because litis devoid of drugs or stimulants. Scott & Bowae. Bloomflcld. N. J. X'Srfi Jmi Dunlap was a hardworking farmer boy. Ills father died when Jim was very young, and the boy was obliged to scratch early for a living." He worked hard and studied nights, for there was ambition in Jim, though no one would have suspected it. Nev ertheless he seemed content with hard work and net inclined to take a stand above mediocrity. May Stanley was the belle of the village. The moment Jim Dunlap saw her he fell in love with her. Now, while Jim Dunlap was a plod der, with nothing brilliant whatever about him, May was a little witch. She was witty, droll and much inclined to mischief. Her face was a mirror for her thoughts. Nevertheless if she had a preference for any of the young men of the village there were no newcom ersnone of her friends could discover it. But a girl, be she ever so commu nicative on other subjects, may keep that one secret deep hidden iii her breast. As has been said, there was oue young man with whom she was never associated in the minds of her friends. That was Jim Dunlap. In deed, she had been heard to very un feelingly apply to him the name of "sorrel top." While Jim was plowing by day and a student by night, a gangling, awk ward man of twenty, "Walter Swift, the son of a neighboring well to do farmer, was getting ready to leave "college with a degree. He came home with a good deal of eclat, with a fra ternity badge on his chest and a repu tation for scholarship. The. girls look ed for him to take an interest In May Stanley as the only one of their num ber capable of attracting one who had a university cut about him and more citified manners than any of the rest But some of them declared that he wouldn't look at May even. These lat ter he disappointed by not only look ing at her, but looking at her with longing eyes. There was that in her that attracted both sexes a reckless, belter skelter, devil-may-care way she had, which is always fascinating in young persons, especially to young per sons. Swift's 'tnpoarance fresh from col lege tended to put Jim Dunlap by com parison only further in the background. His joints seemed larger, his hair red-: der, while his freckles seemed like brown autumn leaves that some one; had tramped all over his face. Not that he appeared to feel , any inferior-' ity, for he plodded on in the same awk-l ward way as before. It was rather a; feeling in those who saw the two j'oung men In contrast. That winter after Swift's coming home was a gay one among the young er set of the village. It isn't every small town that can number a full fledged college graduate among Its so cial attractions, and Swift, who had played his share of pranks while at the university, originated a good many methods of amusement. When the winter was drawing to a close and Lent was coming on the boys and girls were wondering what they would do by way of a carnival. One of their number suggested that they have a fancy dress ball, but they had had one the year before and wanted something newer. Swift came to the rescue by proposing ! an elopement. , "An elopement!" all exclaimed at once. "What do you mean by that?" "In colonial times," he said, "when a couple were married it was the custom for the bride and groom to race with the guests for a tavern, the party reaching the goal last to pay for a sup per. I propose that we select a couple to elope (for fun, of course) and run for the Beaver inn, the rest to follow, the supper to be paid for as in colonial times." The idea was accepted with enthu siasm. May Stanley waf just the girl to play the part of the bride, and the proposer of the scheme was the man for the groom. May was chosen, but Swift was not While he was the ad miration of the girls, the boys were in clined to be jealous of him. But the boys couldn't settle upon one of their own number each desiring to be the eloper till some one in jest nominated Dunlap. All laughingly assented, and it was considered that there would be more fun with him for groom than any of the others. He would make the af fair more ridiculous. Tuesday night before the opening of Lent Jim saddled two horses, one with a woman's saddle, and at 10 o'clock pulled up under May Stanley's win dow. She Jumped down into his arms, he put her on one of the horses, and away they galloped. At the same hour and minute the rest of the party started from an equi distant point, both making for the Beaver inn. Jim and May stopped for twelve minutes by the way; but. hav ing been given the advantage of the best road and Jim making a cut across fields, the elopers arrived first. "My friends," said Jim, "I'll pay for the supper, for this is the happiest night of my life. May and I stopped by the way at a parson's Just long enough to be married." No one considered his words in ear nest, and all set up a shout, but May produced a certificate that was passed around among the girls, and at last it began to be understood that the pair were married. "For heaven's sake, where and when did they do their courting?" was the universal question. Jim Dunlap is now a judge on the bench. NEW YORK'S WATER TUNNEL Should It Ever Burst It Would Engulf the Subway. Probably the story is based morely upon the hysterical imaginings of one of these chaps who are always discov ering some new terror in metropolitan life, but it is now told us that the most dreadful accident ever known will bo a possibility as soon as the water has been turned into the new tunnel which will carry the city's supply from the Gatskill mountains. The water tunnel, which runs under New York, ranks next to the Panama canal among the tremendous engineering projects of the world. At a height of from 50 to 400 feet it carries a river equal in size to the Licking at its ordinary stage, confined under very considerable pressure. At several points the water tunnel ap proaches closely to the subway. The theory of the new alarmist Is that an explosion, a slight earthquako shock or some other unforeseen cause impos sible to guard against might shatter the dividing wall between the sul mcrged river and the subway, in which eve-.t crowded subway trains would be submerged before the pas sengers would have the slightest chance to escape. I don't think this report will lessen travel on the subway. It's pretty hard to scare New York. Some years ago most of the newspapers shrieked for a week that the Brooklyn bridge was about to fall down, and travel over It was not diminished in the least, ex cept for three hours at the beginning of the scare, during which the police fought back thousands of people who were trjMng to cross. However, a noted engineer, to whom the theory of the possibility of a sub way flood from the water tunnel was submitted, would say only: "Such a thing is highly improbable. It is not at all impossible." New York Cor. Cincinnati Times-Star. REFUTE OSLER'S THEORY. Men Well Past Sixty Who Are High In Uncle Sam's Service. The refutation of Dr. Osier is found in the ages of men in Washington prominent in the service of the co en try: Edward Douglass White, chief jus tice of the United States supreme court, the world's greatest judiciary, sixty-eight; Associate Justices McKen- na, seventy; Oliver Wendell Holmes, seventy-two William R. Day, sixty four; Horace Harmon Lurton, sixty- nine. Judge Martin A. Knapp, president judge of the United States commerce court, seventy; Champ Clark, speaker of the house, sixty-three. Senators Bankhead, seventy-one; Johnston, seventy; Smith of Arizona, sixty-one; Perkins, seventy-four; Works, sixty -six; Thomas, sixty-two; Du Pont, seventy-five; Bacon, seventy four; Kern, sixty-four; Cummins, sixty-three; Bradley, sixty-six: Thornton, sixty-seven; Burleigh, seventy; Smith of Maryland, sixty-eight; Lodge, sixty three; Nelson, seventy; Clapp, sixty two; Stone, sixty-flve; Newlnnds, sixty five; Gallinger, seventy-six; Martino, sixty-three; Root, sixty-eight; Burton, sixty-two. Washington Cor. New York American. Altitude Limit of the Aeroplane. There is believed to be a definite lim it beyond which a man iu an aeroplane cannot ascend. At the Buc aerodrome in France on March 11 M. Perreyon, in a Blerlot monoplane, succeeded in reaching the tremendous height of 6,000 meters (19,073 feet). He thus beat all records. The atmosphere is only about half as dense at these great heights as it is at the earth's surface. Not only does this affect the lifting nower of the aeroplane, but it reduces the horsepower of the motor as well, so that it Is doubtful lf a machine wiil ever be able to climb to a height much greater than four miles. Then, too. there is the difficulty in breathing, and It will be Imperative for the aviator to Inspire oxygen. A Theory By GRACE OGLESBY Read The Commonwealth. . $1.00. Europe's Doctors. A paragraph in the Budapest Orvosi Hetilap to the effect that in the whole of Europe there are about 100,000 med ical men Is the subject of a letter to the London Lancet, in which the writ er says that in Great Britain there are 32,(500, In France 23,057, in Germany 32,449 and in Austria 13,302. These four countries alone would have, ac cording to the figures given, 102.00S. In addition, Italy is credited with 10, 270 physicians and "Russia, Holland, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Norway, Den mark and other countries unaccounted for." According to the Kuracisto, there are 100.000 physicians in Europe. Lonely Australia. Professor Baldwin Spencer, who oc cupies the chair of biology in the Uni versity of Melbourne, has returned from a sojourn among the blacks of that region. What struck him most forcibly was the "extraordinary empti ness and loneliness of that grout land." In its 523.000 square miles there are only 4.000 white people. And within a few days' sail is a small island Japan with 40.000,000 of people, a fact cal culated to "make Australians think about the possibilities of the future." London Chronicle. Antarctic Coalfields. Probably the most practical discov ery made by the ill fated Scott expedi tion to the south pole was a great coal field, said to be at least 650 miles long. Its width has not been ascertained. Australian reports are to the effect that the coal has been analyzed and is declared to be of workable quality. It la one of the largest deposits in the world. A rgona ut. Read The Commonwealth. $1.00, This is an age of reform or at least new formations, and such an age is always attended by a certain amount of hysteria. When people leave a beaten track to strike out into new paths they are liable to bewilderment. and so when they find or believe they have found that they have been influ enced by false ideas in seizins new ones they are prone to jump from the frying pan into the fire. More than this, they are liable to jump from terra flrma Into water altogether too deep for them. One of the new departures of the present Jay is a dissatisfaction with marriage as we in America have known it Kent Blakeman's father and mother had lived together com fortably, bringing up half a dozen children. Kent at twenty-five dlscov ered that they had taken a great risk in binding themselves so closely to gether that there was no easy way for them to break the chain. In their case fortunately they bad not wished to break it. But, as for him, he did not intend thus to tie himself up. He believed in experimental marriage. II he married he would reserve the right to leave his wife as soon as he ceased to love her, and she should have the same privilege with regard to him. Miss Estelle Woodruff, being about the same age as Blakeman, also grew up in the same atmosphere of hyster ical reform. She heard persons talk ing about the frequency of divorce, marriage being a failure and kindred subjects, and her mind was very sus ceptible to absorb new theories. Blake man found few women to sympathize with him In his notions about mar riagemost reforms begin with a paucity of numbers and when he met Miss Woodruff and made an easy con vert of her he was much pleased with her that Is, he was much pleased with himself for having struck into a new path and considered the girl above the ordinary in that she had appreciated his ideas. There is an infinite variety of mental structure among human beings. Blake man, who married Miss Woodruff, was of a different brain. He kept on de veloping in his anti-marriage theories, while she, with the coming of children. ceased to take an interest in them and at last turned against them. Terhaps it was the discovery thai he had been mistaken in his wife's mental caliber that started him in his idea that they were not fitted for eacl) other. Their union had lost its romance and was becoming humdrum. It seem ed to him that the connubial kiss morn ing and night had lost its zest He had asserted when a bachelor that the hon eymoon should last always and thai when it had completely waned it was time for the couple to separate and each find a new mate. Time came when Blakeman conclud ed to "be true to himself," as he put it, and claim the privilege he had re served for himself when he married. He made several attempts to get his courage up to a point where he could tell his wife that she was not his af finity and that he proposed to free him self from her and make another trial to find a real and lasting mate. At last he succeeded. Between a passing Influence In youtb and a woman who had been made over, so to speak, by the possession of two little children a boy and a girl there was an enormous difference. She was not only surprised by her husband's announcement; she was thunderstruck. But if she had not developed she had Insensibly come Into a lot ol horse sense. To attempt to argue hei husband out of bis nonsense she knew would be futile. To oppose him would be equally so. Moreover, she remem bered that at the time of her marriage she had coincided with his views. It was he who had been consistent, she who bad changed. It had been mu tually agreed that when either wished for freedom it should be granted. She held to her agreement, though she recognized the outcome as a great misfortune. But she was a plucky as well as a proud woman and gave no sign of what a blow she suffered. The prenuptlal agreement gave the children If any came to the mother, and this was, of course, a godsend to her. She wondered as she looked back when the provision was made that she had very nearly assented to a conditional propo sition to divide the children between husband and wife. When all preliminary arrangements had been made Mrs. Blakeman and her children the little ones being Igno rant of the separation of their parents took a train for the mother's birth place, where they expected to live. Blakeman saw them off and as the train was starting kissed them all and left the car. He stood on the platform, looking after them as they rolled out of the station, and all of a sudden a great light broke in upon his brain, and he said to himself: "What an addle pated ninny I have made of myself!" Going to the ticket ofiice, he bought a ticket for the next train to follow them, and the same night, when the mother was ruefully hearing the chil dren say their prayers, the father swooped down on them like a cyclone and took them all in one embrace. Has Bltkeman given up theory? Never! His theory now is that the family is all there Is in the world worth living for, and hereafter he pro poses to live for his faniily only. Since bis th'eory Is sound all are happy. COMING! COMING! ?he Commonwealth is $1 a year. . Hi 'ST ..wC-a 4 Iff ' '.' IUI .t,AY ;rawaKr.'3U. " t ?v South look j - -y yig-tTnBtemiliViYi ifr '''-"-ifciv i& ' 'm ' lvt v y' ' M. Polk Miuck; Col' Tom Bgqxcz aw Mi Miller's I'Oio- H rQtARTTrE- V On& cri rc Zsayj "Fmoscv Veaxoss An Evening of Old Plantation and War Time Stories and Songs Mr. Polk Miller, assisted by Col "Tom" Booker OF RICHMOND, VA. OF AMELIA COUNTY, VA. And Mr. Miller's Famous Quartette of Old Virginia Negroes. Madry's Opera House, Sat., June 28. Admission 25, 35 and 50 ccnt3. Re.-eiwd seats on sale '.t J. W. Allsbrook's Store. Curtain will rise at 9 o'clock. Old soldiers admitted free Helped by sn Earthquake. Gallipoli, the ancient Callipolis (beautiful city), passed Into the hands of the Turks in a remarkable fashion nearly a century before Constantino ple. It was among their first Euro pean acquisitions. Invited over by Christians to take part in the quarrels, they had crossed the Dardanelles and seized the castle of Tzympo. Tiion In 135S came a terrific earthquake, which shattered the cities of Thrace. T1k walls of .Gallipoli fell down, the in habitants deserted the place, and t!i Turks marched In over the ruins and stayed there In spite of the remon strances of the Emperor Cantuouzonus. The Sultan Orkhan replied that prov idence hod opened the city to his sol diers and he eould not be guilty of the Impiety of disregarding such a mani festation of the divine will. Repartee. The Boston Globe thought It had put over one when it asked, "Where does a noise go?" But the Toledo Blade hit it on tlie face with the answer, "Sometimes to congress." An enormous amount of intellect in this country is vork'r.g on small sal ary. Minneapolis Journal. Putting It to Good Use. I 6'pose you've been very careful about th books you let your children bave." "Ob, yes, indeed! There's our Jitn we Intend bim for a statesman. Jim vr&s raised on the Congressional Rec ord." "The Congressional Record! Well, well!" "Yes; we let bira sit on it for years so he'd be raised enough to eat from the table."-Clevciand Plain Dealer. Wearisome Anticipation. "I wish I could find some way to live without workln." "What are you working at now?" "Oh. I ain't doin nothln' now, but It gits so blame tiresome expectln I mar have to begin almost any tin)e."-Cli'-cago Record-Herald. rtiic-jot-tlcn. It 5s very cyrrrl-.Ir.s to find In tLo Chcrlctto Ol'.-.crvcr tlia mlsquotalim of an old iiuac, "L'verylhlrff wc3 lovely and t.ka goose v:.a banglrjr L!gV Th!. tha v. ay the unin formed commonality have come to write it, but Li the Tar Heel coun try they know bettor. l'I;o rJgbt rcn dcrir.iT 13 "the f.ooca lior.!;3 high," as the wild gcoco tlccs when the vcith or ia f.no, or, in other words, when "ever tlilvT la Jcve!y." NarhvIIlo Banner. Viia Yoir Ft.t I.e .? from C u r.--, Hunt !:?, Core of OHous Spots, L'i- U .Nc-v orTiijhtFittim: Shots, AlkT.'t; l-Yf,t-rhs the anti septic p--.vk-r to he- p'h:i!:..;:i into th s shoes wiil jiivd i:i(;:nt. rdkf. Geld every vhfre, 25c. Don't j.cei.'pt ; ny substi ut. For free sMupU? akJn ss-, Alien S. OhnstMi. Ldk y, N. Y. Beuty Hint. Red elbows, Bays tbo Evening Nowe, are happily a thorn which may bo re moved. Saw oil the red elbows, soak them In a bleaching mixture of un slaked lime, steep them In carbclio acid, and they will never troub'.e yet again. Cold feet may to treated s!u Uarly. Beet Form of Prayer. When the hearts cf men and wom sn aro f.I!ed wiih Lcavcr.:y love, a power which jjia!:es for rishteoi:r ::e:u constantly emanates from them. Those who pray wltho their lives of fer the most effective prnycr, even though tbey c!o not utler a word.- Chauncey Gllen. Lsit L'.iitlvi For cci. Old ir.cn :im! women fc I the ?;i id of a laxative rr.orf- th:ui y um folks, l.'Ut it must le safe and hMmleas and one v.liich will not cau-c; pain. Dr. Kinpr's New Lifo I'iiis are especially good for the aged, for they fitt promptly and easi!;. Price 2."c. Recommended by E. T. Whitehead Company. Did you know that an application of K Eiit-2 Top Drccscr would abcut double your yield of Cotton and Corn? K ELITE jrive?; the stalk a healthy and viorouj growth. K ELITE will prevent the shedding f cotton squares and tnlls. K ELITE will assist nature in the openirjr of cot ton. K ELITE will restore yellow and drowned cotton to its natural color. K ELITE TOP DRESSER is composed of quick and lasting materials. Ask your merchant for K Elite Top Dresser. If he will not supply you write to us and we will see that you get the goods. Scotland Neck Guano Company Scot hind Neck, N. C.
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 26, 1913, edition 1
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