Newspapers / Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.) / April 4, 1919, edition 1 / Page 4
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riUDAY. APRIL 4tk 191ft. THE BREVAM) NEWS, BRE^UUU^ N. a ^ V BREVARD NEWS > NHine changed from Cjlvan Valley Nowk,January i.i9i7> M. L. SHIPMAN, Editor C. 6. OSBORNE, Managing Editctf and Publisher GERTRUDE R. ZACHARY City Editor Published every Thursday. Entered at postotHcp at Brevard. N.C..as i^euund-class matter. SUBSCRIPTION PKICE: One year - - - $1.50 Six months - - - - .75 Throe months - - - .60 Two months - - - .35 Payable by check, stamps or money order. Cards of thanks, resolutions and memorials published only at half com mercial mte. oostinjr to cents per inch or one-half cent per word. Subscriptions not continued after ex piration of time paid for except on re quest. FRIDAY, APRIL 4lh 1919. THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS Party ambitions and party issues are plentifully charged in the lay press as explaining attitudes for or against the League of Nations. Violent language may be used in some cases, but without violent language, just as deep conviction seems to ac tuate the religious press, with this diflference—that not one member of it, so far as we have observed, op poses the League in toto, summarizes the Literary Digest. “Four-fifths of the opposition or indifference to the League of Nations,” asserts The Congregation- alist, “is due we believe, to prejudice against, or distrust of. President Wil son.” It points to the fears of his critics and opponents, “that he is go ing to secure some personal or politi cal advantage if he tarries through the proposition on which he is consen- trating all his energies” and and won ders why “the worth of a proposal af fecting the destines of niani;ind be pivoted upon the character or char acteristics of any one m.m.” It ;ro3S further: » “Air:ericans have a right to think what they please of their President, provided they seek to appraise him fairly and honestly; but they have no right to let their judgement with re ference to his domestic policies or his political methods prevent them from forming a candid and intelligent opin ion of this proposed Society of Nations. Defective as it may be, re quiring, as it probably does, clarifica- t W and amendment here and there, the twenty-six points block out a path of progress for the human race. “Forget Mr. Wilson’s personality for the moment and study the docu ment. As a matter of fact, it is a composite product. The idea behind it was publicly championed by Mr. Taft long before Mr. Wilson pro claimed his adherence to the general plan. English, French, and Italian statesmen have had much to do with its basis and its phraseologj'. They are as keen for it today as is Presi dent Wilson himself. “We cannot, therefore, understand the attitude of these who would be secretiy or openly happy if the League should fail, because of the effect of such failure upon the feel ings and fortunes of Woodrow Wil son. He can stand defeat better than this great American nation. Having once taken a man’s part in the world problems of our time, shall we now heed the counsels of those who would have the nation undertake to crawl hack into a shell has been fcreve” shattered? “Our own belief is that in the long view of history the American nation will be proud of the share v/hich its President has had in helping to shape a project designed to avert wars and bind the nations together.’* The Christian Advocate (New York) ssys: “It is quite discreditable to assume an attitifde of hostility to the plan that in the event of success some ad vantage will inure to the opposite party. As politics were largely sub ordinated to winning the war, so they should be sternly relegated to the rear at this time, when the one ob jective of the world’s effort ought to be the establi.shment of peace upon foundations v/hich give t;i, greatest prouiise of permanence. .Any nation should be willing to th.io boon at a considerable price to itself. This is no time to limit one’s thought to the self-interest of his country. There are too many Ameri can gfraves in foreign soil for us ever to drop back to that prewar isolation. As Bishop Quayle said, ‘It is a mil lion years since 1914,’ yet some men in responsible station continue to wtite and speak as if the events of 1918 were not. They seem to forget th*t the Yankee pel:1ier? died in the Ituih Uiat they were t^ius bringing an eikl* not to one, but to all wars." Tlij» ClnriliaB Work (New York) has -lilRiil that the League shall rise above tb^lash of party turmoih ^ ^Whiie there are pessimists wbo .€3^ that it is a Utopian idea and can sr be made practicable; and Vv'hile here are very grave difficulties in the ,vay, and 'while nations ^ay have to make distasteful sacrifices perhaps, itill we most believe that the estab- ishment of a workable League of Nations will surely be achieved and it will be the only possible eliding to !;he victory which we have won. Pres ident Wilson is working as hard as any other man to bring about this hing , and every intelligent citizen cannot fail to see how important it s that he should have the whole hearted support of the nation behind him.” The First “No Beer” button to make its appearence in North, Caro lina, so far as we can leam, was one seen in Raleigh recently. It was not worn by a workingman or a, blear- eyed ne’er-do-well, but was in the lapel of the coat worn by the head of a corporation! The bankers of the state introduc ed at the recent session of the Gen eral. Assembly a bill to abolish the observance of Lee’s birthday and the signing of the Mecklenburg Declarar- tion as legal holidays in North ^/Caro lina . The time had not yet come ivhen the people were willing to sanc tion such a step, and the bill was tabled. As bearing on the necessity for and the physical and intellectual value of holidays, and as showing their place in preventive medicine, the following from the American Medical Associa tion is worth considerinf: “There is such a thing as intellec tual indigestion resulting from inor dinate concentration. “Distinctly intellectual processes become impaired unless a reasonable period for reflection and mental re cuperation is allowed. “The physician has a special con cern in the threatened abolition of the institution of holidays. To him who watches the mode of life of his feliov/ citizens the beneficence of an ! t occasional holiday has not escaped j notice. The institution of suitable ! holiday porio is is for the most part i ir.orc than likely to make good. ‘The rinht use of a holiday is one of the co’.^'eiEm secrets in the practice of the noble art of keeping alive.’ “A change of work may become a holiday in essence. The best holiday is not one spent in languid idleness, but one that contains the largest amounts of new experience.” HAD GOOD POINTS ■ / Hot-Tempered Woman Evidently Not Altogether Bad. i The Germans declare the Peace . Conference is sowing seeds of future j wars. Trust the Allies to see that I none of them are viable!. j Senator Borah Stole No Turkeys, ! But He Paid For Them,” reads a I ' headline. Senator Borah today cuts no ice; but he will feel the chill of ' -rj.blic displeasure at his present at- tiliiclc. •urely No High'Priced Lawyer Could Have Surpassed Pathetic Plaa ^of Husband Which Won Her Her Liberty. There was a negro family living In Bowiing Green, Ky. The wife had a notoriously ungovernable temper, Hsnaily taking it out on her husband, who was meek and lowly. On this oc casion she struck him with a skillet, inflicting k wound so painful and dan gerous as to necessitate his having to be taken to the hospital for treat ment. The neighbors, knowing the violent temper of the wife, and the cruel treatment she had inflicted upon her husband for such a long time, were so outraged they could endure It no longer, and procured a warrant for her arrest on the charge of assault with a deadly weapon. The huHband sat through tiie trial, giving rapt attention to its every de tail. The case was hande<l over to the jury and after very brief delii)ei'a- tion it brought in a verdict of guilty. The old darkey husband rose and said: “Marse .Tedge, I don’t reckon noth ing a oie nigger could say wouhl make much dllTunee, but I wouhl I:ik t() say a word before you send the 'old 'ornan to the penitenshy. She’s always been a good niotlier to the chlllun. all the neighbors will tell j’ou that. Slie washes and scrubs and sews and mends for 'em, and keeps ’em clean and nice, an when Ihey’s sick she sits up wltli ’em at night. And, Marse .Tedge, I jest want to ax you if you won’t Jet her go by the house and s^ the chillun befo’ you send her to the penitenshy. They’s at home all alone right now. cryin’ they po little hearts out and it would do ’em good, and the ole ’onian. too. if she could just go and iciss ’em good-by befo’ she v.’as put in llie pt'nitenshy.” P>y this time the Judge and the spec- tatoi's were in tears and tho judge said: “(JentUMnen of tlie jury, I iiaven't |!:iss<*d sotiteni’e yt»t' and if you a ant a few mrnnies-4»;;^-ui^her consider tliis case. I. wjHto grant it." The jury a few minutes rotiu*ned with a verdict of “not guilty.” TOO STROKG ON SYMPATHY mn SIDES OF THE QUESTION One of the Transylvania soldiers in writing a very newsy letter to his I home paper and speaking of the work i of the various war relief organiza- i ! lions said that the Y. M. C. A. charg- j i ed exhorbitant prices for cigarettes, j candy and other commodities necces- j sary to the soldiers comfort. After reading the letter referred to Mrs. E. H. Norwood whose interest' in all good works is unflagging, ^ brought to our attention an editorial in the New York Tribune which pleads i that “to disiruss with a thoughtless, I uninformed word the efforts of an I organization which has earnestly tri- ! cd to do its best is not fair play. Sec- Iretaries were mentioned in citations j and were elected honorary members j of outfits. Many were wounded, I "ome were killed. When you remem- i ber that each military unit formed ; its opinion of the whole Y. M. C. A. ! from one of the Y. M. C. A' secre- I taries you can realize how much I energy, tact and resourcefulness each j of many hundred of secretaries ' should have had. Unfortunately I many of them didn’t measure up. i That was inevitable.” Sailor Values Charm. The kins and queen re<;ently re ceived at Windsor castle tlie Austra lian. New Zealand and South .\friean prfss dele;ralt‘s now on a visit to Great Britain. His majesty spoke warmly of the gallantry of the Dominions troops, and exchanged re(‘i>llections of his empire tour of 1901. When Mr. I’irani of New Zealand mentioned the name of Maggie Papakura, the Maori guide who conducted the king round the liot springs wonderland of Rotorua, the king recalled her at once, and was in terested to learn that she is now in England. The New Zealand delegates found that Princess Mary knew all about the pre-war Maori prophecy con cerning the battle-eruiser New Zea land—that she would go into action within a given number of yeairs and would be hit but escape serious dam age if her captain wore a Maori tiki (greenstone charm). The first part of the prophecy came true, and so up to date has the second. The captain does not forget to wear his tiki. Uvira Parkins Had a Fault Fi'om ^ Whieh Too Many of Us Ara . Not Quite Free. **Is she gone?” Annt Harriet In quired breathlessly. Annt Hflrriet‘8 niece, Eileen, turned from the flowers she was arranging—> flowers left- by the departing guest. "She’s Just going down the path,” she replied. **Shall I call her back? Do you want to see her again? Did she leave anything?” **If you call her back, 1*11 disown yon, even If you are my fav<^lte niece,” Aunt Harriet retorted. “Tell me the minute the gate clicks.” Bileen’s eyes began to dance. Months of illnesH had not broken Aunt Harriet’s spirit. She left the flowers and devoted herself to the window. “Now!” she anh'dunced. Aunt Harriet drew a long breath, “I wish,” she declared, “that Elvira Parkins never had had a mother! There, I’ve said It, and I feel better!** “Aunt Harriet!” Eileen cried, with a laugh that broke bounds in spite of her. “I know, I suppose I ought to be aslianied, and maybe I shall be some day, but* just this minute that seems to me the most*relieving thing I ever said In my life. Elvira Parkins is a good woman. She wouldn’t hurt the feelings of a fly. and she’d run her feet off doing kind things for people. I could stand the kindness, but what I can’t stand is her sympathy. “If I so much as mention a twinge in i!iy little finger, she will draw down her face and lower her voice and say, ‘I know—you can’t tell me anything about it. My mother suffered that way for years.’ I have discovered that Elvira’s mother had an accident like mine and was hard of hearing like me and had a heart just like mine. Elvira saw me dodging a streak of sun light for a minute, and she jumped for the shade and pulled it clear down and came l)ack and patted my shoul der, murmuring, ‘My mother had just such sensitive eyes. You must be very, very careful. Mother suffered so with iiers the last of her life.’ ” Aunt Harriet’s mimicry was delight ful. Eileen was enjoying herself greatly. “Do tell me soiUe it»ore of Elvira's conversation!” she plejuled. “I’m ready to vow never to be sympa thetic again as long* as I live.” Aunt Harriet sank i)ack on her pil lows, but her eyes were twinkling. ‘Tin not saylug that I’d advise you to go quite as far as that,. Eileen.** she retorted. “I’d only call your at tention to tlie fact that there’s sym pathy and .sympathy, and advise you t« exercise a little care in choosing the kind you use.”—Youth’s Com panion. NOmS TO TEACHESS Passed by Sentry. A colonel of a colored regiment com ing in ai)out 10:30 was duly challenged by the sentry, and responded: “Col onel , oflicer of the camp.” The The «:(‘ntry tried his host to pierce the darkness, gave it up, and finally said; “Look ’eah, man, yo-all ah de foth man what’s done tried to make me think he’s Cunnel . Go way wid dat stuff.” The colonel pretty warmly reaffirm ed that he was Colonel ^^and de manded immediate admission. The guard, unal)ashed, told him to step up* so tliat he could see him. The colonel walked up to him in a rage, and you can imagine his consternation when the sentry took hold of the silver eagle on his shoulder, looked up at him witli a grin on his face and said: “Oh, Lawsy! ’Tls de ole bird, ain’t ItT’—The Bayonet. The Brevard Printerr has some ' very beautiful eam:>l9s for the Com- ' menccment programs^ The supply ' is limited and it will pay you to conic I fn early and select yours. Let Us Print Your Saie Bills i “Seek and shall find” I through the Diversified column “Flu” Marketing. Marie, who was three Thanksgiv ing. was out trying her new mask. Pa.‘?sing a grccerj', she decided to buy some bananas. ^Mother, not having worn her “llu” protector, sent Marie In to make the purchase. Mother saw the grocer pulling off tons of bananas, it seemed. At length, when there was nothing left !>ut the stalks, Marie htnd- ed the grocer her little pocketbool: con taining one solitary dime. “How many bananas did your little girl want?” asked the grocer as, he came to the door. “Ten cents’ worth,” replied mother. “She told me she wanted a peck,” saiil the grocer. Cecil Rhodes' Dream Realized. The early completion of a tunnel ua der the Straits of Gibraltar, which, in connection with the tunnel from Dover to Calais, will practically complete as all-rail connection between Cape Town and London, win more than realize the dream of Cecil ithodes of a Cai)e-to- Ca?n) ••••'’road. The necessary llnk> al. ir; Darhary coast will be simple m; ' when the intervening waters Ilf' ' li s’isinned. England is takins ’ r.ie ('ilir;»lt:ir tunne! in a waj ijieans siicceiS of that nterprlse. Growing Sugar Cane Under Paper. A new and very odd method ot growing sugar cane is proving highly successful in the Hawaiian islands. When the cane is beginning to sprout, yard-wide strips are laid lengthwise ov’er the rows of little plants and held in place with cane-field trash. The pa per is strong enough to keep down and smother the starting weeds, but not to kill the stout and hardy young cane. In five or six weeks the weed seeds beneath tlie paper have all germinat ed and been smothered to death, but the cane shoots have either forced their way through or erected, them* selves sufliciently to make little tent like elevations. Laborers then pass along the rows and with long knives make slits in the sheet.s, permitting the shoots to come tiirough. The lib erated shoots at first are blanched white, but quickly turn green and lusty. Weeding thereafter is almost wholly needless, because there are very few weeds. There Is an increase of ten tons (about 28 per cent) in the yield of cane per acre. Half the labor is saved and the production of actual sugar per acre is augmented by more than a ton. The p»per used is made out of “bagasse.” which is the residue of the cane after the sugary sap has been squeezed out of It. “At Attention*' Before God. Pa.ying tribute to the services per formed by tlie British Y. M. C. A., W. Gordon Spriggs, writing in Associa tion Men, the organ of the Ameri can “Y,” is reminded of the reply made by Field Marshal Sir George White to an inquiry addressed to him at the close of the three months’ siege of Ladysmith; South Africa, in the Boer war. Sir George was a.sked to explain how he maintained his cheer fulness and upheld the spirit and mo rale of his weary troops amidst so much discomfort, depression and un certainty. “Because,” said the field marshal, “I stand at attention before God every morning «o that I may re ceive my daily marching orders.” Here's Flapjack Frying Record. Here’s the world’s flapjack frying record: Eight thousand six hundred and forty in 20 hours, all fried on one iiot cake yilate, four feet square, at the rate of 3G everj' five minutes. The big flapjack fry started at 7:30 o’clock one morning up at the front and con tinued without intermission till "3:30 o’clock the next morning. Yanks Just out of the trenches ate the hot .cakes, swimming In rich sirup. The frying crew was made up of Salvation Army men, led by Ensign Fred Huderson. Hostilities Are at an End. .7ane had broken her second doll that inoming. and mother, very much pro voked, was putting the careless baby tiirough the third degree when f»)m~ ihe depths of the apron in vdiich the >\vw».y :7;tS“ face was buried c.«me the v.ords: ‘'Iloi.hcf. di<i 70a kaow tlie *rar was ovaiT* WASTOOPBEVIflyS Sarcasm That Berlin Mewspapcr Probably Regrets. Prophecy That ^ American Soldier;! Would Soon Cross the Rhine and Enter German Fortresses Has Been Very Literally Fulfilled. The most biting Irony that came out of Germany during the war was con tained in the Berlin Lokai Anzelger, a little more than a year ago. Several of our soldiers had been captured by the Germans, ^'hoy wore dragged all over the empire and exhibited to the enraged populace. Just to show the Germans that the Americans were “not to be feared." The day the un fortunate priisoners arrived in Berliit the paper printed the following undei the heading, “Good Morning. Boys:” “Three cheers for the Americans! Clever chaps tliey are, it cannot be de nied. Scarcely have they touched the soil of this putrefied Europe when already they are forcing their way into Germany. Before long they will cross the Ithine and also enter our for tresses. That Is express train sjieed for American smartness. “It is our 'rood fortune that we are equipped to oUtertain numerous guests and that we shall be able to provide quarters for the.se gentlemen. How ever, we cannot promise them <l«>ug!i nuts or jam, and to this extent they will be obliged to recede from their former standard of living. “As Americans are accustomed to travel in luxury and comfort, we as sume that these advance arrivals meroly represent couriers for larger nund>ers to fi»llow. “We jire sure the Tatter will come rsnd he gatliered in by us. At lionie they believe tliey posse.ss tiie biggest and most colossal everything, but stjcl; estaldishments us we have iiere tiie^>’ have not .seen. “Look iiere, my boys, here is the big firm of Hindenburg & Co., with which you want to compete. Look at its ac complishments and consider wlietlier it would not be better to haul down ytnw sign and engage in s(uue oilier line. “IVrhnps your boss. Wiison. will re consider his newest line of biisin'>ss before we gj-ab olT more of hfs young lH?op!e.” “Clover chaps they are, it cannot he- denied.” Yes. they were “clev«T <*haps.” So clever that today, a short year after the sarcasm was priiite<1 In the Berlin newspaper, they are actual ly crossing the lihine and entering fortresses which seemed so stcure vvlien the fiippant editor gibe«l the lit tle handful of soldiers who had been <»vercome. Yank Artillery Made Record. The French take more pride in tlieir artillery than in almost any other fea ture of their military service, writes C. W. Barron in the Wall Street .lour- nal. In this war they made world rec ords in eiTective gunnery. The Amer ican boys watched the French move 1314-Inch guns into position in 4.'3 min utes with horses and mott»rs. Then the Frenchmen .saw the .Vmerican boys do it in 12i/4 minutes, and they did not use either horses or motors. Fifty American officers and men put the* gr.a into place and they were the talk of the town at that Frencli camp. Afterward th*e French called upon theii oiRcers for themselves and all thoir man power to do this work wlien the tra' tor was not about. When the Germans met the Anieri- cari gunners they thought a nev. kind of rapid-fire three-inch gun had come Into the war because it shot so much more rapidly. How He Got Nesded Umbrella. W. M. Hughes, the premier of Aus tralia, once came by an umbrella through illicit means. He is fond of telling the tale against bim.self. While he was walking home one pitch-black night a sudden storm broke and, seeking shelter from the rain, he hastened to the nearest door way. After waiting there for a fe« minutes, he spied a small boy coming along with an enormous umbrella. The premier, thinking the owner might ofl'er to shar^ called out shar^ ly: “Hi, there, young man! Where are you going with that umbrella?” The lad, startled at the sound which apparently emanated from nowhere, dropped the umbrella and fled up the street as hard as his legs would carry him, Ke vanished utterly, and Mr. Hughes* predicament was solved. Some Fliers Are Anchored. “I picked you out to write to becausf I can see by your eyes you’re the lone some kid,” gushed a letter addres.sed tc; the handsome young aviator wh.is« likeness had Just appeared in the Great Lakes Recruit. The haudfiome young aviator Is a Kansas City man. “Now, Mary.” he wtote to his wife, “In don’t feel toward me as you iised toXl<ir the,time.to speak up, as yon will serve by the inclosed." And he her the letter. FOR THE BENEFIT OF HUTERATES Bill Introduced In Senate and House In Their Behalf—The Church Organization Will Also Give Practical Aidl WILL PROMOTE EOUCATIOR The Significant Moveihent of the Times Is That of the Centenary of the Methodist Episcopal Church South--Will SpenjJ Mil lions Among the Uneducated. The fact that several thousand sol diers were unable to understand tho orders given them from their superiors and that many, many thousands could not s^gn their own names to their questionnaires brought to light a COJ dition so serious that two Soutb Representatives at Washington now introducing bills to promote thl education of illiterates throughout tha length and breadth of America. Sena* tor Hoke Smith, of Georgia, has intro duced a bill in the Senate “to promota the education ot illiterates, of persons unable to understand and use the Bns- lish language, and other resident per sons of foreign birth,” and the sama measure has been introduced in tha House by Hon. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. The introduction of th:s important bill means a great deal to the South, which, because of its negroes and mountain whites, has long borne a reputation for illiteracy out of propor tion to that of the rest of the coun try. Just what steps wiil be immedi ately taken as the result of the passage of the education of illiterates bill at Washington cannot be stated at this time, but, certainly, practical meas ures will be put into operat.on tor tha establishment of schools in both rural districts and cities. Other organizations besides that of the government are at Vvork on the same problem—the establishment of schools in tho heart of tenement dis tricts and rur:il communities bsing a matter of first importance with all of them. One of the most significant movements of the times in this con nection is that of the Centenary of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. befnuKR that denomination will expena v, iriiin the next five years over $3,000,OCO among the uneducated classes in the Southern and "Western States. The church is to raise a fund of $35,000,000 in an eight-day drive in April, the financial campaign being a part of the Centenary Celebration of the denomination. The money is be ing raised with a view to putting the work of the church on a business basis, the church considering its duty to th(B illiterates here in America to be among the matters of first importance which it s’houfd undertake.' A survey has been made and the result of the campaign will be the apportionment of $3,000,000 among the various illiterate population as follows: Mountain poi>- ulatlon, $750,000; immigrant, $900,000; negroes, $500,000; Indians, $150 000; cotton mill population, $150,000: Chris tian literature for all of them. $100,000. With the definite step undertaken at Washington, with one denomination already completing its plans for fur thering the work among them, and with other churches and organizations getting ready to join hands in their behalf, it is more than possible that . the illiterates of the South are in a fair way to soon become educated citl- sens of the United States. Lived Long After Burial All John Boyle, who died at .Terseyj N. J., recently, was one of th men reKcned alive in 1891 froj Joan.'^yille mines of J. C. Hayj Oo.^ wlicn 2l miners were enj for li* days by a’" rush of wat« four survivors ate a mil drowr,<-d with their 17 comrat lio.vle vns widely known as In t!»v» .A>hlgh field, but lost- 'Or tl'.e con» ri'jrlocs 'f dnT*!T:u’*«s noVi”* METHODIST LEADERS RETURN FROM FRANCE Three prominent leaders of tha Methodist Episcopal Church, South, have just landed in America, after spending two months in Europe, whersij they went for the purpose of inves^ gating actual conditions and deck upon a program for the expenditure of $5,000,000, which sum will be allotted to European upbuilding by the Cente* nary Commission of the denomination, three returning church leaders ^lishop James Atkinj!, Chairman ol ■ lentenary Commission; Bishop Lambuth, who has been in Eu ir nearly a year in the interes* ^ church; and Dr. W. W. Pinson, jral Secretary of the Mission Ird . - :. 'l*in3ou and Bishop Atkins re lied to the headquarters of the d» Ion at Nashville the latter part week, and Bishop Lambuth went to his home at Oakdale, Cali- thcT^Ians for the Europeaii Ifa not been annonnced as yet members of the commit lit they have mapped oat a lactory p^gram and that r. dollars of the Centenary ^ expeikded in upbuildliig. ^hnrfihes la the devastatil inm^ Italy and Fratu*^' ■Jh ¥ ♦ •
Brevard News (Brevard, N.C.)
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April 4, 1919, edition 1
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